Filed pursuant to Rule 424(b)(2)
Registration Nos. 333-224495 and 333-224495-03

 

INDEX SUPPLEMENT NO. IS-01-04 

(To the prospectus and prospectus supplement each dated May 14, 2018)

 

Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. 

Medium-Term Senior Notes, Series N 

Payments Due from Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. 

Fully and Unconditionally Guaranteed by Citigroup Inc. 

Notes Linked to the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index

 

This index supplement sets forth terms that will apply generally to notes that we may offer from time to time using this index supplement. The specific terms of a particular issuance of notes will be set forth in a pricing supplement that we will deliver in connection with that issuance. If the terms specified in any pricing supplement are inconsistent with the terms specified in this index supplement or in the accompanying prospectus supplement or prospectus, the terms specified in the applicable pricing supplement will control. We refer to all notes offered under this index supplement as the “notes.”

 

·Underlying Index. The notes will be linked to the performance of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index (the “Index”). The Index was developed by Citigroup Global Markets Limited (the “Index Sponsor”), an affiliate of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. You should carefully review the sections “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” and “Risk Factors Relating to the Notes” in this index supplement for more information about the Index and for a discussion of important risks relating to the Index.

 

·Payment at Maturity. The notes provide for the repayment of the stated principal amount at maturity, regardless of the performance of the Index. If so specified in the applicable pricing supplement, the notes offer the possibility of an additional payment at maturity based on the performance of the Index.

 

·Coupon. The notes will not pay a coupon unless the applicable pricing supplement specifically provides otherwise. If the applicable pricing supplement provides for the payment of a coupon, the coupon rate, which may be fixed or may vary depending on the performance of the Index or otherwise, and the coupon payment date(s) will be specified in the applicable pricing supplement.

 

·No Guaranteed Return on Your Investment. The notes do not guarantee any positive return on your investment, unless otherwise specified in the applicable pricing supplement. Any potential payment on the notes that depends on the performance of the Index may be zero, unless otherwise specified in the applicable pricing supplement. In that event, you will only receive the stated principal amount at maturity of the notes and will not be compensated for the time value of money.

 

·Credit Risk. The notes are unsecured senior debt securities of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc., and the guarantee of the notes is an unsecured obligation of Citigroup Inc. Accordingly, all payments on the notes are subject to the credit risk of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc. If Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc. default on their obligations, you may not receive any payment owed to you under the notes, including the repayment of principal at maturity.

 

·No Listing. The notes will not be listed on any securities exchange, unless otherwise specified in the applicable pricing supplement. Accordingly, unless otherwise specified, the notes may have limited or no liquidity, and you should not invest in the notes unless you are willing to hold them until maturity. You are entitled to the repayment of the stated principal amount (and any other amount that may be payable at maturity) only if you hold the notes at maturity.

 

·Not Equivalent to Investing in the Index. Investing in the notes is not equivalent to investing directly in the constituents of the Index. You will not have any ownership interest or any other right with respect to the constituents of the Index.

 

·Tax Consequences. For important information regarding certain tax consequences of investing in the notes, see “United States Federal Tax Considerations” beginning on page IS-52.

 

You should carefully review the specific terms of the notes described in the applicable pricing supplement together with the information contained in this index supplement and the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus before investing in the notes.

 

Investing in the notes is subject to risks not associated with an investment in conventional debt securities. See “Risk Factors Relating to the Notes” beginning on page IS-7.

 

Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved of the notes or determined if this index supplement, the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus or any pricing supplement is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

 

The notes, and the guarantee of the notes by Citigroup Inc., are not deposits or savings accounts but are, respectively, unsecured debt obligations of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and unsecured obligations of Citigroup Inc. The notes are not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or by any other governmental agency or instrumentality.

 

Investment Products Not FDIC Insured May Lose Value No Bank Guarantee

 

Citigroup

 

March April 3, 2019

 

 

 

We are responsible for the information contained or incorporated by reference in this index supplement, the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus and any applicable pricing supplement. We have not authorized anyone to give you any other information, and we take no responsibility for any other information that others may give you. You should not assume that the information contained or incorporated by reference in this index supplement, the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus or any applicable pricing supplement is accurate as of any date other than the date on the front of such document. We are not making an offer of these notes in any state where the offer is not permitted.

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Index Supplement  
   
About This Index Supplement IS-3
Summary Description of the Index IS-4
Summary Payment Terms IS-6
Risk Factors Relating to the Notes IS-7
Description of the Notes IS-23
Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index IS-28
Benefit Plan Investor Considerations IS-50
United States Federal Tax Considerations IS-52
Descriptions of the Eligible Constituents IS-59
Annex A IS-114
   
Prospectus Supplement  
   
Risk Factors S-1
Important Currency Information S-4
Forward-Looking Statements S-5
Description of the Notes S-6
United States Federal Tax Considerations S-14
Plan of Distribution S-25
Conflicts of Interest S-26
Benefit Plan Investor Considerations S-31
Legal Matters S-33
   
Prospectus  
   
Prospectus Summary 1
Forward-Looking Statements 6
Citigroup Inc. 6
Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. 9
Use of Proceeds and Hedging 10
European Monetary Union 12
Description of Debt Securities 12
Currency Conversions and Foreign Exchange Risks Affecting  
Debt Securities Denominated in a Foreign Currency 24
Plan of Distribution 26
Legal Matters 28
Experts 28

 

 

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About this INDEX Supplement

 

The pricing supplement for a particular issuance of notes will describe certain specific terms of those notes, but will not describe all of the material terms of those notes or contain all of the other material disclosures that you should consider before investing in those notes. The material terms of the notes and other material disclosures that are not contained in the applicable pricing supplement are set forth in this index supplement and, to the extent not set forth in this index supplement, in the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus. Accordingly, it is important that you read the applicable pricing supplement together with this index supplement and the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus and before investing in the notes.

 

You may find the prospectus and prospectus supplement each dated May 14, 2018 here:
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/200245/000119312518162183/d583728d424b2.htm

 

References in this index supplement, the applicable pricing supplement and the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus, to “we,” “our” or “us” are to Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc., and not any of its subsidiaries, unless the context indicates otherwise.

 

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Summary Description of the Index

 

The Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index (the “Index”) is published by Citigroup Global Markets Limited (the “Index Sponsor”), which is an affiliate of ours. The Index tracks the hypothetical performance of a rules-based investment methodology that, once each month, selects a hypothetical investment portfolio to track for the next month (referred to as the “Selected Portfolio” for that month).  The Selected Portfolio for each month is selected from a universe of eligible constituents consisting of 12 exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”) representing the following asset classes: global equities, fixed income, commodities, real estate equities and preferred stock. In certain circumstances, the Selected Portfolio may also include (or be composed solely of) a hypothetical money market instrument with a return equal to 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR, which we refer to as the “Cash Constituent”. The Index was launched on June 30, 2015 and, therefore, has a limited performance history.

 

The Index selects the Selected Portfolio for each month using certain concepts drawn from the “modern portfolio theory” approach to asset allocation. One tenet of modern portfolio theory is that an optimal investment portfolio is one that maximizes expected return for any given level of risk, where “risk” is measured by the expected volatility of the portfolio. The Index seeks to implement this concept by selecting as the Selected Portfolio to track for each month, out of all possible Eligible Market Portfolios, the portfolio that has the highest expected return without exceeding the Index’s target volatility of 5%. The “Eligible Market Portfolios” are all of the possible hypothetical investment portfolios that could be constructed using the eligible ETFs and that comply with the applicable maximum weights listed in the table below.

 

Although expected return and expected volatility are key concepts in modern portfolio theory, the theory does not prescribe how expected return and expected volatility should be determined. The approach taken by the Index is to determine the expected return and volatility of the Eligible Market Portfolios using historical measures of the returns and volatility of, and the correlation among, the ETFs included in the Eligible Market Portfolios. Accordingly, the Index’s Selected Portfolio for each month will be the Eligible Market Portfolio that, out of all Eligible Market Portfolios, had the greatest historical return while having a historical volatility that did not exceed 5%. The historical measures used by the Index are based on the exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns of the eligible ETFs over a historical period of approximately one year. The exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns is a type of average that gives greater weight to more recent returns. The Index uses this exponential weighting in an attempt to give the greatest weight to the most recent trends in the performances of the eligible ETFs.

 

There can be no assurance that the historical measures used by the Index to select the Selected Portfolio for each month will be indicative of the future performance and volatility of the Selected Portfolio. If future performance and volatility differ significantly from the historical measures used by the Index, the Selected Portfolio tracked by the Index for any given month may, in hindsight, turn out to have been far from the optimal hypothetical investment portfolio for that month.

 

If there is no Eligible Market Portfolio with a historical volatility less than or equal to 5%, the Selected Portfolio will not be selected in the manner described above and, instead, will be the Eligible Market Portfolio with the lowest historical volatility (with a pro rata allocation to the Cash Constituent to the extent necessary to reduce historical volatility to 5%). Furthermore, if the Selected Portfolio otherwise selected would have had a historical performance that is less than 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR, then the Selected Portfolio will not be selected in the manner described above and instead will be allocated 100% to the Cash Constituent. In addition, if the Selected Portfolio declines in value by more than 8% over any period of 21 Index Business Days, an “extraordinary rebalancing” will occur and the Selected Portfolio will be reallocated out of its eligible ETFs and 100% into the Cash Constituent. Any portion of the Index that is allocated to the Cash Constituent will experience a net decline as a result of the excess return deduction and index fee described below.

 

Although the Selected Portfolio may be constructed from eligible ETFs representing a number of different asset classes and market sectors, there is no requirement that the Selected Portfolio be diversified, and it may be concentrated in one or a small number of asset classes and/or market sectors. The Selected Portfolio may consist of as few as two eligible ETFs.

 

The Index’s target volatility of 5% is a relatively low volatility level for most of the eligible ETFs, which means that the Selected Portfolio for each month may need to have a significant allocation to the fixed income asset class in order to meet the requirement that its historical volatility not exceed 5%. Although the fixed income asset

 

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class is typically less volatile than other asset classes such as global equities, commodities, real estate equities and preferred stock, it may also have lower return potential. As a result, in bull markets for the other asset classes, a Selected Portfolio with a significant allocation to the fixed income asset class may significantly underperform an alternative portfolio with a greater allocation to those other asset classes.

 

The Index is an “excess return” index, which means that the performance of the Cash Constituent is deducted from the performance of the Selected Portfolio in calculating the performance of the Index. The performance of the Index is also reduced by an index fee of 0.75% per annum. The excess return deduction and the index fee will place a drag on the performance of the Index, offsetting any appreciation of the Selected Portfolio, exacerbating any depreciation of the Selected Portfolio and causing the level of the Index to decline steadily if the value of the Selected Portfolio remains relatively constant. In addition, the Index is a “volatility target” index, which means that the Index adjusts its exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio, as often as daily, in an attempt to maintain a 20-Day Realized Volatility of 5%.

 

This section contains only a summary description of the Index and does not describe all of its important features in detail. Before investing in the notes, you should carefully review the more detailed description of the Index contained in the section “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index”.

 

Although the Index uses certain concepts drawn from modern portfolio theory, it is important to understand that the Index contains a number of features that are not found in modern portfolio theory or that may be inconsistent with modern portfolio theory, and that the Index may not effectively implement modern portfolio theory. For further information about this and other important risks relating to the Index, see “Risk Factors Relating to the Notes”.

 

The table below lists the eligible ETFs (referred to below as “Eligible Market Constituents”) that may be used to construct the Selected Portfolio to be tracked by the Index for any month as well as the Cash Constituent. We refer to the Eligible Market Constituents, together with the Cash Constituent, as the “Eligible Constituents”. The table also indicates the NYSE Arca ticker and the maximum percentage weight for each Eligible Constituent.

 

Asset Class Eligible Constituent Market Sector Ticker Max. % Weight
Eligible Market Constituents
Global Equities iShares Core S&P 500 ETF Large-cap U.S. equities IVV 50%
Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF Large-, mid- and small-cap developed European equities VGK 25%
iShares MSCI Japan ETF Large- and mid-cap Japanese equities EWJ 25%
Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF Large-, mid- and small-cap emerging market equities VWO 50%
Fixed Income iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF U.S. Treasury bonds with >20-year maturities TLT 50%
iShares TIPS Bond ETF Inflation-protected U.S. Treasury bonds TIP 10%
iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF U.S. dollar investment-grade corporate bonds LQD 25%
SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF U.S. dollar below-investment grade corporate bonds JNK 25%
Real Estate Equities iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF  Real estate sector of U.S. equity market IYR 10%
Preferred Stock iShares U.S. Preferred Stock ETF U.S.-listed preferred stocks PFF 10%
Commodities PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund Selected commodity futures DBC 10%
SPDR Gold Trust Gold bullion GLD 50%
Cash Constituent  
Money Market Citi 3M Cash Constituent Money market N/A 100%

 

You should carefully review the sections “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” and “Risk Factors Relating to the Notes” in this index supplement for more information about the Index and for a discussion of important risks relating to the Index.

 

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Summary Payment Terms

 

The particular payment terms of the notes will be set forth in the applicable pricing supplement and will be linked to the performance of the Index. The notes provide for the repayment of the stated principal amount at maturity, regardless of the performance of the Index. The notes may pay coupon payments at a rate that varies based on the performance of the Index, or the notes may not pay interest and may instead provide for a single payment at maturity based on the performance of the Index. The specific terms of the notes will be specified in the applicable pricing supplement.

 

Any potential payment on the notes that depends on the performance of the Index may be positive, or it may be zero, depending on the specific terms of the notes. You should carefully read the applicable pricing supplement to understand the payment terms of the notes and the circumstances in which you may not receive any return on your investment in the notes. The specific terms of the notes will be determined on the date we price the notes for initial sale to the public, which we refer to as the “Pricing Date.”

 

Any potential payment on the notes that depends on the performance of the Index will be based on the Closing Level of the Index on one or more dates specified in the applicable pricing supplement (each, a “Valuation Date”), subject to the specific terms set forth in the applicable pricing supplement.

 

In addition to the risks associated with the performance of the Index, all payments due on the notes are subject to the credit risk of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc., as guarantor of the obligations of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. If Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc. default on their obligations under the notes, you may not receive any payment owed to you, including the repayment of the stated principal amount of your notes at maturity.

 

Before deciding whether to invest in the notes, you should carefully read and understand the sections “Risk Factors Relating to the Notes” and “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” in this index supplement as well as the particular terms and risk factors described in the applicable pricing supplement.

 

Certain events may happen that could affect any payment owed to you under the notes, such as the occurrence of market disruption events or other events affecting the Index. Those events are described in this index supplement under “Description of the Notes” and “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” and will not be repeated in the applicable pricing supplement. As a result, you should carefully review and understand the section “Description of the Notes” and “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” in this index supplement.

 

IS-6 

 

Risk Factors Relating to the Notes

 

An investment in the notes is significantly riskier than an investment in conventional debt securities. The notes are subject to all of the risks associated with an investment in our conventional debt securities, including the risk that we may default on our obligations under the notes, and are also subject to risks associated with the Index because your return on the notes will depend on the performance of the Index.

 

Risk Factors Relating to All Notes

 

You May Not Receive Any Return On Your Investment in the Notes, in Which Case You Will Suffer a Loss On Your Investment in Real Value Terms. Your return on the notes, if any, will depend on the performance of the Index. If the Index does not perform favorably (which will depend on the specific terms of the notes set forth in the applicable pricing supplement), you may not receive any return on your investment in the notes. Although the notes provide for the repayment of the stated principal amount at maturity regardless of the performance of the Index, you may nevertheless suffer a loss on your investment in the notes, in real value terms, if you do not receive a positive return on the notes. This is because inflation may cause the real value of the stated principal amount to be less at maturity than it is at the time you invest, and because an investment in the notes represents a forgone opportunity to invest in an alternative asset that does generate a positive return. The potential loss in real value terms will be greater the longer the term of the notes.

 

Even if you do receive a positive return on your investment in the notes, there can be no assurance that your total return at maturity on the notes will compensate you for the effects of inflation or be as great as the return you could have achieved on a conventional debt security of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. (guaranteed by Citigroup Inc.) of comparable maturity. You should carefully consider whether an investment that may not provide for any return on your investment, or may provide a return that is lower than the return on conventional debt securities, is appropriate for you.

 

The Notes Will Not Pay Any Coupon Unless Otherwise Specified in the Applicable Pricing Supplement. Unless the applicable pricing supplement specifies that the notes will pay a coupon, the notes will not pay any interest or provide for any other payments prior to maturity. Accordingly, unless the applicable pricing supplement specifically provides for a coupon payment, you should not invest in the notes if you seek current income during the term of the notes.

 

If the Notes Provide For a Coupon That Depends on the Performance of the Index, the Coupon Payment May Be Zero on One or More Coupon Payment Dates. If the applicable pricing supplement provides for a coupon payment but the amount of such payment varies depending on the performance of the Index or otherwise, you should understand that you may not receive any payment on one or more (or any) coupon payment dates during the term of the notes. You should not invest in notes with such terms if you seek certainty of receiving current income during the term of the notes.

 

If a Maximum Return Applies to the Notes, Your Return on the Notes Will Be Limited. If applicable, the maximum return will be a percentage of the stated principal amount of the notes that will be determined on the Pricing Date and set forth in the applicable pricing supplement. Your total return at maturity on notes with a maximum return will be limited to the specified maximum return (excluding any coupon payments, if applicable), even if the return of the Index is significantly greater. You should not invest in notes that have a maximum return if you seek to participate in the full appreciation of the Index.

 

The Notes are Subject to the Credit Risk of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc., the Guarantor of any Payments Due on the Notes. You are subject to the credit risk of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc. The notes are not guaranteed by any entity other than Citigroup Inc. Any actual or anticipated changes to Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc.’s or Citigroup Inc.’s credit ratings or credit spreads may adversely affect the value of the notes. If Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. defaults on its obligations and Citigroup Inc. defaults on its guarantee obligations under the notes, your investment will be at risk and you could lose some or all of your investment. As a result, the value of the notes prior to maturity will be affected by changes in the market’s view of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc.’s and Citigroup Inc.’s creditworthiness. Any decline, or anticipated decline, in either of their credit ratings or increase, or anticipated increase, in the credit spreads charged by the market for taking either of their credit risk is likely to adversely affect the value of the notes.

 

IS-7 

 

Sale of the Notes Prior to Maturity May Result In a Loss of Principal. You will be entitled to receive at least the full stated principal amount of your notes, subject to the credit risk of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc., only if you hold the notes to maturity. The value of the notes may fluctuate during the term of the notes, and if you are able to sell your notes prior to maturity, you may receive less than the full stated principal amount of your notes.

 

The Notes Will Not Be Listed on a Securities Exchange and You May Not Be Able To Sell Your Notes Prior To Maturity. Unless otherwise specified in the applicable pricing supplement, the notes will not be listed on a securities exchange. Accordingly, the notes may have limited or no liquidity, and you should not invest in the notes unless you are willing to hold them to maturity.

 

Citigroup Global Markets Inc. (“CGMI”) or, if applicable, any other entity named as underwriter or agent in the applicable pricing supplement may, but is not obligated to, make a market in the notes. If CGMI or such other underwriter or agent does make a market in the notes, it may discontinue doing so at any time. Because we do not expect that other broker-dealers will participate significantly in any secondary market for the notes, the price at which you may be able to sell your notes prior to maturity is likely to depend on the price, if any, at which CGMI or such other underwriter or agent is willing to transact. If at any time CGMI or such other underwriter or agent were not to make a market in the notes, it is likely that there would be no secondary market at all for the notes. The price, if any, at which CGMI, such other underwriter or agent or any other buyer may be willing to purchase your notes in any secondary market that may develop may be significantly less than the stated principal amount; therefore, any sale of the notes prior to maturity may result in a substantial loss. As a result, you should be prepared to hold your notes to maturity.

 

The Value Of Your Notes Prior To Maturity Will Fluctuate Based On Many Unpredictable Factors. The value of your notes prior to maturity will fluctuate based on the level of the Index and a number of other factors, including those described below. Some of these factors are interrelated in complex ways. As a result, the effect of any one factor may be offset or magnified by the effect of one or more other factors. The paragraphs below describe what we expect to be the impact on the value of the notes of a change in a specific factor, assuming all other conditions remain constant. You should understand that the value of your notes at any time prior to maturity may be significantly less than the stated principal amount.

 

·Level of the Index. We expect that the value of the notes at any time will depend substantially on the level of the Index at that time. If the level of the Index declines following the Pricing Date, the value of your notes will also likely decline, perhaps significantly. Even at a time when the level of the Index exceeds its level on the Pricing Date, the value of your notes may nevertheless be significantly less than the stated principal amount of your notes because of expectations that the level will continue to fluctuate over the term of the notes, among other reasons.

 

The level of the Index will be influenced by the value and volatility of its Eligible Market Constituents, as well as by complex and interrelated political, economic, financial and other factors that affect the capital markets generally. Hedging by us or our counterparties (which may include our affiliates), the issuance of other securities similar to the notes and other trading activities by our affiliates may also affect the level, which could negatively affect the value of the notes.

 

·Volatility of the Index. Volatility refers to the magnitude and frequency of changes in level over any given period. Any change in the expected volatility of the Index may adversely affect the value of the notes.

 

·Interest Rates. We expect that the value of the notes will be affected by changes in U.S. interest rates. In general, if U.S. interest rates increase, the value of the notes may decrease.

 

·Time Remaining to Maturity. At any given time, a portion of the value of the notes will be attributable to time value, which is based on the amount of time then remaining to maturity. You should understand that the value of the notes may be adversely affected solely as a result of the passage of time.

 

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·Creditworthiness of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc. The notes are subject to the credit risk of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc., the guarantor of any payments due on the notes. Therefore, actual or anticipated changes in either of their credit ratings or credit spreads may affect the value of the notes.

 

It is important for you to understand that the impact of one of the factors discussed above may offset, or magnify, some or all of any change in the value of the notes attributable to one or more of the other factors.

 

Our Affiliates May Have Published Research, Expressed Opinions or Provided Recommendations that are Inconsistent With Investing in the Notes and May Do So in the Future, and any such Research, Opinions or Recommendations Could Adversely Affect the Level of the Index. CGMI and other of our affiliates may publish research from time to time relating to the financial markets, any of the Eligible Market Constituents of the Index or the hypothetical investment methodology of the Index. Any research, opinions or recommendations provided by CGMI may influence the price of any Eligible Market Constituent, and they may be inconsistent with purchasing or holding the notes. CGMI and other of our affiliates may have published or may publish research or other opinions that call into question the investment view implicit in an investment in the notes. Any research, opinions or recommendations expressed by such affiliates of ours may not be consistent with each other and may be modified from time to time without notice. Investors should make their own independent investigation of the constituents of the Index, the Index itself and the merits of investing in the notes.

 

The Price of an Eligible Market Constituent or the Level of the Index May Be Affected by Our or Our Affiliates’ Hedging and Other Trading Activities. In anticipation of the sale of the notes, we expect to hedge our obligations under the notes directly or through one of our affiliates, which may involve taking positions directly in the Eligible Market Constituents of the Index or other instruments that may affect the price of the Eligible Market Constituents. We or our counterparties may also adjust this hedge during the term of the notes and close out or unwind this hedge on or before any Valuation Date, which may involve, among other things, us or our counterparties purchasing or selling the Eligible Market Constituents or such other instruments. This hedging activity on or prior to the Pricing Date could potentially affect the price of the Eligible Market Constituents or underlying assets on the Pricing Date and, accordingly, potentially increase the Initial Index Level, which may adversely affect your return on the notes. Additionally, this hedging activity during the term of the notes, including on or near any Valuation Date, could negatively affect the level of the Index and, therefore, adversely affect your return on the notes. This hedging activity may present a conflict of interest between your interests as a holder of the notes and the interests we and/or our counterparties, which may be our affiliates, have in executing, maintaining and adjusting hedging transactions. These hedging activities could also affect the price, if any, at which CGMI or, if applicable, any other entity may be willing to purchase your notes in a secondary market transaction.

 

We and our affiliates may also trade the Eligible Market Constituents, the underlying assets held by the Eligible Market Constituents and/or other instruments that may affect the price of the Eligible Market Constituents on a regular basis (taking long or short positions or both), for our or their accounts, for other accounts under management or to facilitate transactions, including block transactions, on behalf of customers. As with our or our affiliates’ hedging activity, this trading activity could affect the price of the Eligible Market Constituents on any Valuation Date and, therefore, adversely affect the performance of the Index and the notes.

 

It is possible that these hedging or trading activities could result in substantial returns for us or our affiliates while the value of the notes declines.

 

We and Our Affiliates May Have Economic Interests That Are Adverse to Those of the Holders of the Notes as a Result of Our or Our Affiliates’ Business Activities. We or our affiliates may currently or from time to time engage in business with a company whose securities are held by an Eligible Market Constituent of the Index (each, a “relevant company”). These activities may include extending loans to, making equity investments in or providing advisory services to a relevant company, including merger and acquisition advisory services. In the course of this business, we or our affiliates may acquire non-public information about a relevant company and we will not disclose any such information to you. We do not make any representation or warranty to any purchaser of the notes with respect to any matters whatsoever relating to our or our affiliates’ business with any relevant company. If we or any of our affiliates are or become a creditor of a relevant company or otherwise enter into any transaction with a relevant company in the regular course of business, we or such affiliate may exercise remedies against that relevant company without regard to the impact on your interests as a holder of the notes. In addition, we or our affiliates

 

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may make equity investments in a relevant company, which may have a dilutive impact on, and therefore reduce, that relevant company’s share price.

 

The Notes Calculation Agent, Which is an Affiliate of Ours, Will Make Important Determinations With Respect to the Notes. As Notes Calculation Agent, CGMI, our affiliate, will determine, among other things, any level or price required to be determined under the notes and the amount of any payment owed to you under the terms of the notes that depends on the performance of the Index. In addition, if certain events occur, CGMI will be required to make certain discretionary judgments that could significantly affect one or more payments owed to you under the notes. In making these judgments, CGMI’s interests as an affiliate of ours could be adverse to your interests as a holder of the notes. Such judgments could include, among other things:

 

·determining whether a Market Disruption Event exists on any Valuation Date with respect to any Eligible Market Constituent then included in the Index;

 

·if the Index Level is not published by the Index Calculation Agent or if a Market Disruption Event exists with respect to any Eligible Market Constituent then included in the Index on any Valuation Date, determining the Closing Level of the Index with respect to that date, which may require us to make a good faith estimate of the closing price of one or more underlying Eligible Market Constituents if the Market Disruption Event is continuing on the Backstop Date; and

 

·selecting a Successor Index or performing an alternative calculation of the Closing Level of the Index if the Index is discontinued.

 

Any of these determinations made by the Notes Calculation Agent may adversely affect any payment owed to you under the notes.

 

Discontinuance of the Index Could Adversely Affect the Value of the Notes. The Index Sponsor is not required to publish the Index throughout the term of the notes. The Index Sponsor may determine to discontinue the Index, among other reasons, as a result of the occurrence of a Regulatory Event. See “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” for more information. If the Index is discontinued, the Notes Calculation Agent will have the sole discretion to substitute a successor index that is comparable to the discontinued Index and is not precluded from considering other indices that are calculated and published by the Notes Calculation Agent or any of its affiliates. Any such successor index may not perform favorably.

 

If the Notes Calculation Agent does not select a successor index, then the Closing Level of the Index will be calculated from and after the time of discontinuance based on the Eligible Constituents that are included in the Index at the time of discontinuance, without any rebalancing or substitution of such Eligible Constituents after such discontinuance and without giving effect to the Index’s extraordinary rebalancing feature. In such an event, the level that is used as the Closing Level of the Index will cease to reflect the Index’s portfolio selection methodology and instead will track the excess return performance of a fixed portfolio of notional assets, which will consist of the Eligible Constituents included in the Index (or those Eligible Constituents that would have been included the Index but for the event that resulted in such discontinuance of the Index) immediately prior to such discontinuance, each having the weight it had (or would have had) immediately prior to such discontinuance. That level may perform unfavorably after the discontinuance. In addition, in such an event, even though the Index will no longer apply its portfolio selection methodology, the index fee will continue to be deducted. If the Index was allocated 100% to the Cash Constituent at the time of discontinuance, then the level that is used as the Closing Level of the Index thereafter would be based on the performance of the Cash Constituent less the excess return deduction and the index fee. Since the excess return deduction will offset the return on the Cash Constituent, and since the index fee would also continue to be deducted, the level that is used as the Closing Level of the Index in this circumstance would continually decline through to the Maturity Date.

 

Risk Factors Relating to All Notes

 

Certain U.S. Federal Tax Consequences of an Investment in the Notes are Uncertain. The notes may be assumed by Citigroup Inc., as provided in the accompanying prospectus. The law regarding whether or not such an assumption would be considered a “significant modification” of the notes is not entirely clear and, if the Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) were to treat the assumption as a significant modification, a U.S. holder would

 

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generally be required to recognize gain (if any) on the notes and the timing and character of income recognized with respect to the notes, as well as the withholding tax consequences to a non-U.S. holder of the notes, after the assumption could be affected significantly. You should read carefully the discussion under “United States Federal Tax Considerations” in this index supplement. You should also consult your tax adviser regarding the U.S. federal tax consequences of an assumption of the notes.

 

In addition, non-U.S. investors should review the discussion in “United States Federal Tax Considerations—Tax Consequences to Non-U.S. Holders—Possible Withholding Under Section 871(m) of the Code” regarding potential withholding tax risks under Section 871(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”).

 

Risk Factors Relating to the Index

 

The following discussion of risks relating to the Index should be read together with the section “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below, which defines and further describes a number of the terms and concepts referred to in this section.

 

The Index May Not Be Successful and May Underperform Alternative Investment Strategies. There can be no assurance that the Index will achieve positive returns. The Index tracks the performance of a rules-based investment methodology that, once each month, selects a hypothetical investment portfolio (the Selected Portfolio) to track for the next month. The performance of the Index over that next month will depend on the performance of the Selected Portfolio over that time period, minus an excess return deduction and an index fee, and subject to a volatility targeting feature that may adjust the Index’s exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio on a daily basis in an attempt to maintain a 20-Day Realized Volatility of 5%. If the Selected Portfolio declines in value, the Index level will also decline. Even if the Selected Portfolio increases in value, the Index level will nevertheless decline if the excess return deduction and index fee are greater than the increase in value of the Selected Portfolio. The performance of the Index may be less favorable than alternative investment strategies that could have been implemented, including an investment in a passive index fund.

 

The Hypothetical Investment Methodology Tracked by the Index May Not Produce Favorable Returns. Once each month, the Index selects as the Selected Portfolio to track for the next month the Eligible Market Portfolio that, out of all possible Eligible Market Portfolios, had the greatest historical performance without exceeding the Index’s target volatility of 5% (except as otherwise described below). The performance of the Index over the next month will then be based on the performance of that Selected Portfolio, minus an excess return deduction and an index fee, and subject to a volatility targeting feature that may adjust the Index’s exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio on a daily basis in an attempt to maintain a 20-Day Realized Volatility of 5%. This hypothetical investment methodology may not produce favorable returns for a number of reasons, including the following:

 

·Historical Performance May Be a Poor Indicator of Future Performance. A fundamental assumption of the Index is that the historical performance of the Eligible Market Portfolios, as measured by the Index, may be an accurate predictor of their future performance. Accordingly, each month, the Index seeks to select as the Selected Portfolio to track for the next month the Eligible Market Portfolio that had the greatest exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns over the relevant Look-Back Period, while having an exponentially weighted moving average volatility over the Look-Back Period not in excess of 5%. The Look-Back Period for each monthly Selection Day is the historical period of 252 Index Business Days (approximately one year) ending on that Selection Day.

 

However, the fact that the Selected Portfolio performed favorably over the relevant Look-Back Period does not mean that it will necessarily continue to perform favorably over the next month. Future market conditions may differ from past market conditions, and the conditions that may have caused the favorable performance over the Look-Back Period may no longer exist. Moreover, past appreciation may not necessarily be an indicator of future appreciation even if future market conditions do not differ materially from past market conditions. The efficient market hypothesis, a well-known theory in academic financial literature, states that the market is efficient and that current asset prices reflect all available relevant information. If true, the efficient market hypothesis implies that any perceived historical trend in the performance of any Eligible Market Portfolio should not be an accurate predictor of its future performance. If the past performance of the Selected Portfolio proves not to be an accurate indicator of its actual

 

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performance over the next month, then the Selected Portfolio followed by the Index for any given month may, in hindsight, turn out to have been far from the optimal hypothetical investment portfolio for that month, and the Index may perform poorly.

 

By continually seeking to track the last year’s optimal portfolio, the Index may perpetually “buy high”. By the time the Index hypothetically invests in a Selected Portfolio each month, the Selected Portfolio may already have experienced significant appreciation, and the Index may therefore perpetually make hypothetical investments in portfolios when they are expensive, which may lead to poor returns.

 

·Historical Volatility May be a Poor Indicator of Future Volatility and Risk. The Index seeks to take on a defined and limited degree of expected risk by selecting as the Selected Portfolio an Eligible Market Portfolio with an expected risk that does not exceed a pre-defined level. The Index measures the expected risk of an Eligible Market Portfolio based on its historical volatility. However, there can be no assurance that the historical volatility of the Selected Portfolio will be indicative of its future volatility. As circumstances change, a Selected Portfolio that had a relatively low volatility over the Look-Back Period may have significant volatility over the next month. The volatility of a Selected Portfolio may increase as a result of an increase in the volatilities of its Eligible Market Constituents or, even if the volatilities of the Eligible Market Constituents remain the same, as a result of the Eligible Market Constituents becoming more highly correlated with each other than they were in the Look-Back Period. Other potential measures of volatility might be more predictive of future volatility than historical volatility. For example, “implied volatility” derived from the prices of listed options on the Eligible Market Constituents would reflect current market expectations about future volatility and might prove to be a more accurate indicator of future volatility than historical volatility. As a result, the measure of expected risk used by the Index may be less accurate than other measures that could have been used.

 

Moreover, it is important to understand that, although the Index uses historical volatility as a measure of expected risk, historical volatility is not an indication of how likely it is that any Eligible Market Portfolio will decline over the next month. The fact that the Selected Portfolio may have had a historical volatility of 5% over the Look-Back Period does not mean that there is a 5% chance that the Selected Portfolio will decline over the next month. Volatility is simply a statistical measure of the degree of variability in daily returns over a given historical period. It is not possible to predict the likelihood of a future decline in the value of the Selected Portfolio. Even a Selected Portfolio with a low historical volatility may experience significant declines in the future.

 

·The Particular Ways in Which the Index Measures Historical Performance and Volatility May Not Accurately Capture any Trend in the Performance and Volatility of the Eligible Market Portfolios. The Index uses a Look-Back Period of 252 Index Business Days, which is approximately one year, to measure the historical performance and volatility of the Eligible Market Portfolios. That time period may be too long, and performance earlier in the Look-Back Period may mask more recent trends in performance and volatility. Although the Index uses an exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns to determine the historical performance and volatility of the Eligible Market Portfolios, which gives more weight to more recent performance in an attempt to capture more recent trends, there can be no assurance that this will be successful.

 

Furthermore, it is important to understand what the exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns does, and does not, measure. The exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns of an Eligible Market Portfolio is simply the average of daily returns of the Eligible Market Portfolio over the relevant Look-Back Period, where more recent daily returns have exponentially greater weight than daily returns earlier in the Look-Back Period. This measure is not a measure of total performance over the relevant Look-Back Period or any other period. The exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns could show positive historical performance even if the relevant Eligible Market Portfolio has declined overall from the beginning to the end of the Look-Back Period, or over any more recent period, and vice versa. Therefore, the exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns could indicate that an Eligible Market Portfolio is in a positive trend even if other measures would indicate a negative trend. If the Index fails to correctly identify the trend in the performance of the Eligible Market Portfolios, then the Selected Portfolio followed by the Index for any given month may, in hindsight, turn out to have been far from the optimal hypothetical investment portfolio for that month, and the Index may perform poorly.

 

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In addition, the exponentially weighted moving average volatility used by the Index differs from other measures of historical volatility. Other ways of measuring the historical volatility of the Eligible Market Portfolios (for example, using the standard deviation of daily returns or using a different time period) might have yielded a historical volatility that is more predictive of future volatility than the measure used by the Index.

 

·The Index May be Subject to “Whipsaws” in “Choppy” Markets. Past performance is particularly likely to be a poor indicator of future performance in “choppy” markets, which are characterized by short-term volatility and the absence of consistent long-term performance trends. In such markets, strategies that use past performance as an indicator of future performance, such as that followed by the Index, are subject to “whipsaws,” which occur when the market reverses and does the opposite of what is indicated by past performance. In these market conditions, the Index will select a Selected Portfolio assuming a trend in one direction, only to have the trend reverse and move in the other direction. The Index may experience significant declines in such market conditions.

 

·The Excess Return Deduction and Index Fee Will Adversely Affect Index Performance. The Index is an “excess return” index, which means that, in calculating the performance of the Index, the daily performance of the Selected Portfolio tracked by the Index will be reduced by the performance of the Cash Constituent. The Cash Constituent is a hypothetical money market instrument with a return equal to 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR. Three-month U.S. dollar LIBOR reflects the rate at which banks lend U.S. dollars to each other for a term of 3 months in the London interbank market. Although many factors may affect the level of 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR, one important factor is the monetary policy of the Federal Reserve. If the Federal Reserve raises its federal funds target rate, the level of 3-month U.S. Dollar LIBOR is very likely to rise. Although the Federal Reserve maintained the federal funds target rate at relatively low levels in recent years, the Federal Reserve has begun to raise the federal funds target rate and may do so further at any time and, as a result, 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR may rise, perhaps significantly. In the period since January 1, 2006, 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR has been as high as 5.725% per annum. The level of 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR may return to or exceed that level in the future. If the Federal Reserve raises interest rates (specifically, its federal funds target rate), or if 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR rises for any other reason, the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio (and, therefore, the performance of the Index) will be adversely affected. In addition to the excess return deduction, an index fee of 0.75% per annum is deducted in the calculation of the Index.

 

The excess return deduction and the index fee will place a drag on the performance of the Index, offsetting any appreciation of the Selected Portfolio, exacerbating any depreciation of the Selected Portfolio and causing the level of the Index to decline steadily if the value of the Selected Portfolio remains relatively constant. The Index will not appreciate unless the performance of the Selected Portfolio is sufficiently great to offset the negative effects of the excess return deduction and the index fee, and then only to the extent that the favorable performance of the Selected Portfolio is greater than the deducted amounts. As a result of these deductions, the level of the Index may decline even if the Selected Portfolio appreciates.

 

·In Certain Circumstances, the Index Will Select as the Selected Portfolio for a Given Month the Eligible Market Portfolio with the Lowest Historical Volatility, Without Regard to Historical Performance. For any given month, if there is no Eligible Market Portfolio with a historical volatility that is less than or equal to 5%, the Selected Portfolio for that month will not be the Eligible Market Portfolio that maximizes historical performance for its level of risk, but rather will be the Eligible Market Portfolio with the lowest historical volatility, regardless of historical performance (and with a pro rata allocation to the Cash Constituent to reduce its historical volatility to 5%). In this circumstance, the Selected Portfolio would not be determined in a way that seeks to maximize expected returns given the volatility target, but instead would be determined in a manner designed to minimize historical volatility. The Selected Portfolio so chosen may have had poor historical performance and may continue to have poor performance in the future.

 

Any portion of the Selected Portfolio that is allocated to the Cash Constituent in order to reduce its historical volatility to 5% will experience a net decline after giving effect to the excess return deduction and the index fee. The excess return deduction will completely offset the positive accrual on the Cash Constituent, and the deduction of the index fee will then result in a net decline.

 

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·In Certain Circumstances, the Selected Portfolio Will Consist 100% of the Cash Constituent, and in these Circumstances the Index Will Decline. If the Eligible Market Portfolio that is otherwise identified as the Selected Portfolio for any given month has a historical performance that is less than 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR on the relevant monthly Selection Day, that Eligible Market Portfolio will not be the Selected Portfolio and the Selected Portfolio will instead consist of a 100% allocation to the Cash Constituent. If 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR rises, this provision may be triggered with increasing frequency. In addition, if an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event occurs as a result of a decline of more than 8% in the value of the Selected Portfolio over any 21 Index Business Day period, the Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio will be replaced with a 100% allocation to the Cash Constituent. Because the Selected Portfolio during the earlier part of any 21 Index Business Day period may have been different from the current Selected Portfolio, an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event may occur even when the current Selected Portfolio has not experienced so significant a decline over that period.

 

The Cash Constituent reflects a positive accrual at a rate equal to 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR. The excess return deduction reflects a deduction at the same rate, completely offsetting the positive accrual of the Cash Constituent. Although the Cash Constituent and the excess return deduction will offset each other, resulting in no net change, the index fee will continue to be deducted. As a result, at any time when the Index has 100% exposure to the Cash Constituent, the Index will steadily decline at a rate equal to the index fee.

 

One consequence of this is that the reallocation to the Cash Constituent as a result of an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event will lead to continuing declines in the level of the Index. The Index will continue to decline following an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event even in circumstances in which the original Selected Portfolio would have rebounded and recovered from earlier losses, so that the Index would have performed better had the reallocation into the Cash Constituent not occurred.

 

·The Index’s Target Volatility of 5% May Limit its Appreciation Potential Because it May Result in Selected Portfolios With Significant Allocations to the Fixed Income Asset Class, Which May Underperform Alternative Portfolios More Heavily Weighted Toward Equities, Commodities, Real Estate Equities and/or Preferred Stock. Each month, the Index will select as the Selected Portfolio an Eligible Market Portfolio with a historical volatility that does not exceed 5% (unless there is no such Eligible Market Portfolio, in which case the Index will select the Eligible Market Portfolio with the lowest historical volatility). You should understand that, by recent historical standards, a 5% volatility would be relatively low for a portfolio of equities, commodities, real estate equities and/or preferred stock, which means that a significant allocation to the fixed income asset class, which is typically less volatile than equities, commodities, real estate equities and preferred stock, may frequently be needed in order for a hypothetical investment portfolio to achieve a historical volatility that does not exceed 5%. Therefore, the 5% target volatility may tend to cause the Selected Portfolio to have a greater allocation to the fixed income asset class than it would if there were a higher target volatility. The Selected Portfolio may allocate up to 100% of its exposure to the fixed income asset class, and as much as 60% of its exposure to Eligible Market Constituents holding U.S. Treasury bonds alone. Although fixed income instruments are typically less volatile than equities, commodities, real estate equities and preferred stock, they may also have lower return potential. As a result, in bull markets for equities, commodities, real estate equities and/or preferred stock, a Selected Portfolio with a significant allocation to the fixed income asset class may significantly underperform an alternative portfolio with a greater allocation to equities, commodities, real estate equities and/or preferred stock.

 

In addition, if the Selected Portfolio has a relatively high allocation to the fixed income asset class, it will be particularly sensitive to factors that adversely affect the value of fixed income instruments, such as an increase in interest rates or inflation or declining perceptions of credit quality of the U.S. government or the underlying corporate issuers. It is important to understand that a relatively low target volatility does not mean that the Index is less likely to decline than it would be if it had a higher target volatility. In fact, a low-volatility portfolio may decline in value even while a high-volatility portfolio appreciates. For example, in a bull market in equities that is accompanied by rising interest rates, a portfolio heavily weighted toward the fixed income asset class might decline in value as a result of the rising interest rates, while a portfolio heavily weighted toward equities would appreciate.

 

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·The Selected Portfolio May Not be a Diversified Portfolio, and the Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio May Become Correlated in Decline, Especially in Times of Financial Stress. Although the Eligible Market Constituents cover a number of different asset classes and market sectors, there is no requirement that the Selected Portfolio be a diversified portfolio. The Selected Portfolio may allocate as much as 100% of its exposure to a single asset class at any time, and may consist of as few as only two Eligible Market Constituents. At any time when the Selected Portfolio is concentrated in any one asset class, it will be subject to the risks affecting that asset class on a concentrated basis. Moreover, even when the Selected Portfolio is allocated among a number of different asset classes, these asset classes may prove to be correlated with each other in decline, which means that they may all decline at the same time. In that case, you would not receive any benefits from diversification. Especially in times of financial stress, previously uncorrelated asset classes may suddenly become correlated in decline, which may result in significant declines in the level of the Index.

 

·The Selected Portfolio May be Composed of Eligible Market Constituents in a Number of Different Asset Classes and Market Sectors, and They May Offset Each Other. Over any given period of time, some of the Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio may appreciate and others may depreciate. The performance of the depreciating Eligible Market Constituents will offset the performance of any appreciating Eligible Market Constituents. In this circumstance, the performance of the Selected Portfolio overall will be lower than it would have been had the Selected Portfolio only consisted of the appreciating Eligible Market Constituents. The target volatility of 5% is likely to favor Selected Portfolios with a relatively low degree of historical correlation among its Eligible Market Constituents, because lower correlation among Eligible Market Constituents results in lower volatility overall for an Eligible Market Portfolio. If that historical relationship for the Eligible Market Constituents holds in the future, that may increase the likelihood that some Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio will have less favorable performance that will significantly dampen more favorable performance by other Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio.

 

·The Index’s Volatility Targeting Feature May Adversely Affect Index Performance. In addition to selecting a Selected Portfolio with a historical volatility that does not exceed 5%, the Index seeks to maintain a 5% volatility by adjusting its exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio on a daily basis. At any time when the 20-Day Realized Volatility of the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio is greater than 5%, the Index will reduce its exposure to that performance (i.e., its VT Exposure) below 100%. The difference between the VT Exposure and 100% will be effectively uninvested and will not accrue any interest or other return. After giving effect to the deduction of the index fee, that effectively uninvested portion of the Index will experience a net decline. In addition, at any time when the VT Exposure is less than 100%, the Index will not fully participate in any appreciation in the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio. Alternatively, at any time when 20-Day Realized Volatility is less than 5%, the Index will increase the VT Exposure to an amount greater than 100%, subject to a maximum VT Exposure of 120%. At any time when the VT Exposure is greater than 100%, the Index will participate on a leveraged basis in any decline in the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio. Moreover, the Selected Portfolio during the earlier part of the relevant 20 Index Business Day period may be different than the current Selected Portfolio, and if the earlier Selected Portfolio was significantly more volatile than the current Selected Portfolio, the Index may calculate a high 20-Day Realized Volatility, resulting in low VT Exposure, even though the current Selected Portfolio may have much lower volatility.

 

·The Index May Fail to Maintain a 5% Volatility. Although the Index aims to maintain a 20-Day Realized Volatility of 5%, there is no guarantee that it will successfully do so. There is a time lag associated with the Index’s VT Exposure adjustments. Because realized volatility is measured over the period of 20 Index Business Days ending on the second Index Business Day prior to the current day, it may be some period of time before a recent increase in the volatility of the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio is sufficiently reflected in the calculation of 20-Day Realized Volatility to cause a compensating adjustment in the VT Exposure. During the intervening period, if the increased volatility is associated with a significant decline in the value of the Selected Portfolio, the Index may in turn experience a significant decline without the reduction in exposure to the Selected Portfolio that the volatility targeting feature is intended to trigger. Moreover, the Selected Portfolio during the earlier part of the relevant 20 Index Business Day period may be different than the current Selected Portfolio, and if the earlier Selected

 

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Portfolio was significantly less volatile than the current Selected Portfolio, the Index may be slow to adjust to significant volatility in the current Selected Portfolio.

 

·The Selected Portfolio May be Composed of Risky Assets. The Selected Portfolio may include Eligible Market Constituents in the equity, commodity, real estate equities, preferred stock and fixed income asset classes. Set forth below are some of the risks associated with the asset classes and market sectors represented by the Eligible Market Constituents.

 

oRisks Associated with Equities. The Eligible Market Constituents in the equity asset class may track indices of large-capitalization U.S. stocks, large- and mid-capitalization Japanese stocks and large-, mid- and small-capitalization developed European and emerging market stock. Eligible Market Constituents holding equities may make up as much as 100% of the Selected Portfolio. Equities are risky assets and may be subject to significant declines.

 

The Selected Portfolio may have as much as a 100% allocation solely to international equities, and as much as a 50% allocation solely to emerging market equities. International equities, and especially emerging market equities, may be subject to greater volatility and heightened risks as compared to U.S. equities and other asset classes. In addition to the risk of declines in stock prices, international equities are subject to risks associated with currency exchange rate fluctuations. In general, if the U.S. dollar appreciates against the currencies in which international equities trade, the prices of the Eligible Market Constituents that hold international equities would be expected to decline for that reason alone.

 

oRisks Associated with Commodities. The Selected Portfolio may have up to a 50% allocation to the SPDR Gold Trust, which holds gold bullion. Therefore, the Selected Portfolio may have up to a 50% exposure to the price of gold alone. The price of gold may be highly volatile and subject to large and rapid declines. The price of gold has at times been inversely correlated with the strength or weakness of the U.S. dollar relative to other currencies. If the U.S. dollar generally strengthens relative to other currencies and all other conditions remain constant, the price of gold may be expected to decline. However, because many factors other than the value of the U.S. dollar affect the price of gold, the price of gold may decline even at a time when the value of the U.S. dollar is declining.

 

The Selected Portfolio may have up to 10% exposure to the Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund, an ETF that tracks an index of commodity futures. Commodity futures prices tend to be highly volatile and difficult to predict and may be significantly influenced by actions of governments or speculators and unexpected macroeconomic events. As a result of that volatility and unpredictability, the past performance of the Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund may be a particularly unreliable indicator of its future performance. The Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund is also subject to a phenomenon known as “negative roll yield”, which refers to the tendency of commodity futures prices to decline solely as a result of the passage of time in certain market conditions. Accordingly, even if spot prices for the underlying commodities remain stable, futures contracts referencing the underlying commodities may tend to decline over time, and in this circumstance the spot prices of the underlying commodities would need to increase significantly in order for the Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund to avoid a decline and appreciate at all. Like equities, commodity futures are risky assets and may be subject to significant declines.

 

oRisks Associated with Real Estate Equities. The Selected Portfolio may have up to 10% exposure to the iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF, an ETF that tracks an index of U.S. equities in the real estate sector, primarily real estate investment trusts (known as REITs). REITs are subject to the risks of owning real estate directly. In addition, some REITs have relatively small market capitalizations, which can increase the volatility of the market price of securities issued by those REITs. Furthermore, REITs are often dependent upon specialized management skills, have limited diversification and are, as a result, subject to risks inherent in operating and financing a limited number of projects. The real estate industry is cyclical, highly sensitive to general and local economic conditions and developments, and characterized by intense competition and periodic

 

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overbuilding. Accordingly, the iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF may be subject to significant volatility and risk.

 

oRisks Associated with Preferred Stocks. The Selected Portfolio may have up to 10% exposure to the iShares U.S. Preferred Stock ETF, an ETF that tracks the performance of an index of preferred stocks that are publicly traded in the United States. Preferred stocks combine certain risks of fixed income instruments and equities. Because many preferred stocks pay dividends at a fixed rate, their market price can be sensitive to changes in interest rates in a manner similar to bonds — that is, as interest rates rise, the value of preferred stocks is likely to decline. In addition, because many preferred stocks allow holders to convert the preferred stock into common stock of the issuer, the market price of preferred stocks can also be sensitive to changes in the value of the issuer’s common stock.

 

oRisks Associated with Fixed Income. As discussed above, although the fixed income asset class tends to be less volatile than equities, commodities, real estate equities and preferred stock, it is also subject to risks and may decline in value. If general interest rates rise, if inflation increases or if the perceived credit quality of the U.S. government or underlying corporate borrowers deteriorates, the fixed income asset class is likely to decline in value, perhaps significantly.

 

·There is a Time Lag Between the Selection of a Selected Portfolio and its Inclusion in the Index. The Index identifies the allocation of Eligible Constituents in the Selected Portfolio and rebalances the Index to match that allocation on different days. The Selected Portfolio for a given month is selected two Index Business Days prior to the first Index Business Day of that month and then included in the Index gradually over a Rebalancing Period of five Index Business Days beginning on the first Index Business Day of that month. Sudden market movements may occur in the gap between a monthly Selection Day and the completion of the rebalancing and, while it might be desirable to select a different Selected Portfolio as a result of those market movements, this will not be done because it would involve a departure from the Index methodology.

 

·The Performance of the Index Will Be Highly Sensitive to the Specific Parameters by which It Is Calculated. The Index is calculated pursuant to a rules-based methodology that contains a number of specific parameters. These parameters will be significant determinants of the performance of the Index. For example, the Index measures the historical returns, volatility and correlation of the Eligible Market Constituents over a Look-Back Period of 252 Index Business Days, and using the particular exponential weighting factor set forth in the Index Rules. The Index also has a volatility target of 5% and applies specific weighting caps to each Eligible Market Constituent. If the Index used a different Look-Back Period or a different exponential weighting factor (or no exponential weighting at all), or if the Index used a different volatility target or different weighting caps (or no weighting caps at all), the Index would select different Selected Portfolios. Furthermore, the Index seeks to maintain a realized volatility of 5% by observing realized volatility over a prior period of 20 Index Business Days, and the Index rebalances the Selected Portfolio monthly over a period of five Index Business Days. There is nothing inherent in any of these parameters that necessarily makes them the right specific parameters to use for the Index. If the Index had used different parameters, the Index might have achieved significantly better returns.

 

The Index and the Notes May Not be Effective Ways to Implement “Modern Portfolio Theory”. The Index selects a hypothetical investment portfolio to track for each month using certain concepts drawn from the “modern portfolio theory” approach to asset allocation. However, it is important to understand that the Index contains a number of features that are not found in modern portfolio theory or that are inconsistent with modern portfolio theory, and that the Index and the notes may not be effective ways to implement modern portfolio theory. For example:

 

·Modern portfolio theory does not prescribe the manner in which expected return, risk or correlation should be measured, nor does it specify whether 5% is an appropriate level of expected volatility to target. Therefore, although the historical measures of returns, volatility and correlation used by the Index and the 5% volatility target are key features of the Index, they cannot be said to be drawn from modern portfolio theory. Other investment methodologies using the same modern portfolio theory concepts, but that determine expected returns, risk and correlation in different ways or that accept a greater or lesser level of expected risk, may perform significantly better than the Index.

 

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·There is no single way to implement the concepts of modern portfolio theory, and the approach reflected in the Index may not be as successful as other approaches to implementing modern portfolio theory. For example, modern portfolio theory does not necessarily suggest the Index’s approach of maximizing expected returns without exceeding a pre-defined level of expected risk. One alternative approach would be to maximize the ratio of expected returns to expected risk within a defined range of expected risk. For example, if there are two portfolios, one with a 10% expected return and a 5% expected risk (Portfolio A) and one with a 9.8% expected return and a 2.5% expected risk (Portfolio B), the Index would select Portfolio A, because Portfolio A has a higher expected return than Portfolio B and its volatility did not exceed 5%. However, Portfolio B might be viewed as a more optimal portfolio, because although it had a slightly lower expected return than Portfolio A, it had a significantly lower volatility, and therefore a significantly higher ratio of expected return to expected risk. Therefore, the Selected Portfolio that the Index selects may not be the optimal portfolio under alternative approaches to implementing modern portfolio theory.

 

·Under modern portfolio theory, if the assumption is made that investors can lend or borrow at a risk-free rate, there is a single optimal investment portfolio of risky assets that all rational investors would select, regardless of risk tolerance (assuming identical views about expected return, volatility and correlation). All investors would hold the same risky portfolio and would differ only in the amount they would allocate between that risky portfolio and the risk-free asset, or in the amount that they would borrow at the risk-free rate in order to invest in the risky portfolio. An approach designed to implement this feature of modern portfolio theory would identify the optimal portfolio as the one that lies at the point of tangency between the efficient frontier and a line that meets the expected return axis at the risk-free rate, without a target volatility requirement and without seeking to maximize expected returns below a target volatility level. This approach would seek to achieve the target volatility only after the optimal portfolio is identified and would do so by adding either a lending or a borrowing component at the risk-free rate. The approach reflected in the Index, which imposes a target volatility requirement in the selection of the Selected Portfolio and does not reflect either lending or borrowing at the risk-free rate, is entirely different from this approach and will select an entirely different Selected Portfolio. Therefore, the Index does not reflect modern portfolio theory where the assumption is made that investors can lend or borrow at a risk-free rate. Although it may not be possible for most investors to borrow at a risk-free rate, there may be practical approaches that use concepts drawn from this approach to modern portfolio theory, and these approaches may be more successful, and more faithful to modern portfolio theory, than the approach reflected in the Index.

 

·The Index does not construct hypothetical investment portfolios from all assets that would be available to an investor, but only from the limited universe of Eligible Constituents. Although the Eligible Constituents cover a number of different asset classes, they include only a limited number of market sectors within those asset classes. For example, the equities asset class includes large-capitalization U.S. stocks but not mid- or small-capitalization U.S. stocks; the commodities asset class is primarily concentrated in gold and permits only a limited allocation to a more broad-based commodity ETF; and the only U.S. Treasury bonds that are included (other than TIPS) are Treasury bonds with a maturity of greater than 20 years. Moreover, the Eligible Constituents exclude a number of major asset classes altogether, such as currencies. The Index might have achieved a better return if the universe of Eligible Constituents were more representative of the universe of assets available to an investor.

 

·The Index applies weighting constraints to the percentage weights that may be assigned to Eligible Market Constituents, which may result in the selection of a Selected Portfolio that is different from the hypothetical investment portfolio that would be selected in the absence of those constraints.

 

·If no Eligible Market Portfolio has a historical volatility that is less than or equal to 5%, the Selected Portfolio for any given month will not be selected pursuant to concepts drawn from modern portfolio theory, but instead will be the Minimum Volatility Portfolio. In addition, if the Selected Portfolio otherwise chosen has a historical performance below the rate of 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR, or if an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event occurs, the Selected Portfolio will be allocated 100% into the Cash Constituent.

 

·The Index’s excess return deduction and the index fee will exert a drag on Index performance. Even if the Selected Portfolio proves to be the optimal portfolio under modern portfolio theory, the Index will always

 

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underperform the Selected Portfolio, perhaps significantly. The Index’s excess return feature will cause the Index to perform as if the hypothetical investment in the Selected Portfolio were financed by borrowing at the 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR rate, even though you are required to pay the full purchase price of your notes at the time of your initial investment and therefore will not receive the potential benefits that could be realized by an investment financed by borrowing.

 

·Although the Selected Portfolio may include a number of different asset classes and/or market sectors, an investment in the notes is an investment in a single financial instrument and, therefore, is not a diversified investment. If we default on our obligations under the notes, and Citigroup Inc. defaults on its guarantee obligations, your entire investment would be at risk.

 

·Modern portfolio theory does not suggest monthly rebalancing, which may adversely affect Index performance by limiting the exposure of the Index to assets that would otherwise experience long-term appreciation. In addition, the Index’s daily adjustment of VT Exposure may cause the Index to have more or less than 100% exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio at any given time.

 

For these reasons, the Index and the notes may not be effective ways to implement modern portfolio theory and may underperform alternative strategies that could have implemented based on modern portfolio theory.

 

The Index Will be Calculated Pursuant to a Set of Fixed Rules and Will Not be Actively Managed. If the Index Performs Poorly, the Index Sponsor Will Not Change the Rules in an Attempt to Improve Performance. The Index tracks the performance of the rules-based investment methodology described under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below. The Index will not be actively managed. If the rules-based investment methodology tracked by the Index performs poorly, the Index Sponsor will not change the rules in an attempt to improve performance. Accordingly, an investment in notes linked to the Index is not like an investment in a mutual fund. Unlike a mutual fund, which could be actively managed by the fund manager in an attempt to maximize returns in changing market conditions, the Index rules will remain unchanged, even if those rules might prove to be ill-suited to future market conditions.

 

The Index Has Limited Actual Performance Information. The Index launched on June 30, 2015. Accordingly, the Index has limited actual performance data. Because the Index is of recent origin with limited performance history, an investment linked to the Index may involve a greater risk than an investment linked to one or more indices with an established record of performance. A longer history of actual performance may have provided more reliable information on which to assess the validity of the Index’s hypothetical investment methodology. However, any historical performance of the Index is not an indication of how the Index will perform in the future.

 

Hypothetical Back-Tested Index Performance Information is Subject to Significant Limitations. All information regarding the performance of the Index prior to June 30, 2015 is hypothetical and back-tested, as the Index did not exist prior to that time. It is important to understand that hypothetical back-tested Index performance information is subject to significant limitations, in addition to the fact that past performance is never a guarantee of future performance. In particular:

 

·The Index Sponsor developed the rules of the Index with the benefit of hindsight—that is, with the benefit of being able to evaluate how the Index rules would have caused the Index to perform had it existed during the hypothetical back-tested period. The fact that the Index generally appreciated over the hypothetical back-tested period may not therefore be an accurate or reliable indication of any fundamental aspect of the Index methodology.

 

·The hypothetical back-tested performance of the Index might look different if it covered a different historical period. The market conditions that existed during the historical period covered by the hypothetical back-tested Index performance information is not necessarily representative of the market conditions that will exist in the future.

 

·A number of the Eligible Market Constituents did not exist for varying lengths of time prior to December 4, 2007. For any period prior to the date a particular Eligible Market Constituent was created, the back-tested performance of the Index has been calculated using the underlying index tracked by that Eligible Market Constituent (or, in the case of the SPDR Gold Trust, the afternoon gold fixing price published by the

 

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London Bullion Market Association) as a proxy for the performance of that Eligible Market Constituent, as discussed in more detail under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index—Hypothetical Back-Tested Index Performance Information” below. These proxies differ from the corresponding Eligible Market Constituents in a number of ways:

 

oEach proxy reflects the performance of the total return version of the underlying index tracked by the applicable Eligible Market Constituent (or the fixing price of gold, in the case of the SPDR Gold Trust), without giving effect to any fees and expenses that would reduce the performance of the Eligible Market Constituent. Therefore, to the extent that the hypothetical back-tested performance of the Index for the period prior to December 4, 2007 is based on a proxy for an Eligible Market Constituent, that performance information may overstate the performance of the Index as compared to the performance that would have been achieved if these fees and expenses had been reflected.

 

oThe underlying indices do not reflect any tracking error that would have been experienced by the Eligible Market Constituent with respect to its underlying index.

 

oThe total return versions of the underlying indices reflect changes in the prices of the underlying assets and, in addition, reflect (i) in the case of an equity index, the hypothetical reinvestment of dividends and (ii) in the case of a bond index, the hypothetical reinvestment of interest payments. The manner in which these hypothetical reinvestments are made differs from the manner in which the Index accounts for hypothetical reinvestments of dividends or distributions in the Eligible Market Constituents.

 

For these reasons, the hypothetical back-tested Index performance information, to the extent that it utilizes proxy data, may not reflect how the Index would have performed had the relevant Eligible Market Constituents existed during the relevant time period.

 

·Certain of the Eligible Market Constituents have changed the underlying indices that they seek to track, and the underlying indices tracked by certain of the Eligible Market Constituents have made changes to their rules, as discussed in more detail under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index—Hypothetical Back-Tested Index Performance Information” below. As a result of these changes, the underlying indices to be tracked in the future by certain of the Eligible Market Constituents differ in certain respects from the underlying indices tracked by the same Eligible Market Constituents during some or all of the back-tested period. The sponsor of any Eligible Market Constituent or its underlying index may make additional changes in the future. The hypothetical back-tested Index performance may not reflect how the Index would have performed had the relevant Eligible Market Constituents tracked the same underlying indices (with the same rules) during the full back-tested period that they will track in the future.

 

It is impossible to predict whether the Index will rise or fall. The actual future performance of the Index may bear no relation to the historical or hypothetical back-tested levels of the Index.

 

There Are Drawbacks Associated with Tracking the Value of ETFs rather than the Underlying Indices that the ETFs Seek to Track. The Eligible Market Constituents are ETFs. Each ETF seeks to track the performance of its underlying index before giving effect to fees and expenses of the ETF. After giving effect to these fees and expenses, the performance of each ETF is likely to be less favorable than the performance of the underlying index that it tracks. In addition, the price of the shares of each ETF may not perfectly track the performance of its underlying index or its net asset value per share. An ETF may not hold all of the assets that constitute its underlying index or may hold assets and/or derivative contracts not included in that underlying index. Moreover, the trading price of an ETF is determined by market supply and demand and can deviate from the value of the ETF’s assets. As a result, in certain circumstances, the performance of an ETF may diverge significantly from, and may be less favorable than, the performance of its underlying index. In addition, corporate actions with respect to the equity securities constituting an underlying index or held by its ETF (such as mergers and spin-offs) may impact the variance between the performances of the ETF and its underlying index.

 

During periods of market volatility, securities underlying an ETF may be unavailable in the secondary market, market participants may be unable to calculate accurately the net asset value per share of an ETF and the liquidity of

 

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an ETF may be adversely affected. This kind of market volatility may also disrupt the ability of market participants to create and redeem shares in an ETF. Further, market volatility may adversely affect, sometimes materially, the prices at which market participants are willing to buy and sell shares of an ETF. As a result, under these circumstances, the market value of shares of an ETF may vary substantially from its net asset value per share. For all of the foregoing reasons, the performance of an ETF may not correlate with the performance of its underlying index or its net asset value per share, which could materially and adversely affect the performance of the Index and the value of the notes in the secondary market and/or reduce your payment at maturity.

 

Investors in the Notes Will Not Have Any Ownership or Other Interest in the Eligible Constituents Underlying the Index. The Selected Portfolio is described as a hypothetical investment portfolio because there is no actual portfolio of assets to which any investor is entitled or in which any investor has any ownership or other interest. The Index is merely a mathematical calculation that is performed by reference to hypothetical positions in the Eligible Constituents included in the Selected Portfolio and the other Index Rules.

 

The Index Calculation Agent is Our Affiliate, Which May Give Rise to Conflicts of Interest. The Index Calculation Agent, which is also the Index Sponsor, is our affiliate. Although the Index is rules-based, there are certain circumstances in which the Index Calculation Agent may be required to exercise judgment in calculating the Index, including the following:

 

·If any Index Business Day is a Disrupted Day (as determined by the Index Calculation Agent) with respect to any Index Constituent and the disruption is continuing on the fifth succeeding Scheduled Trading Day in respect of such Index Constituent, the Index Calculation Agent will determine the Index Constituent Level of that Index Constituent on that day in its good faith discretion and, if the applicable day is a Rebalancing Date that has been postponed for five Scheduled Trading Days, the Index Calculation Agent will determine the unit weight of that Index Constituent in the rebalancing using its good faith judgment.

 

·If certain events occur with respect to an Eligible Market Constituent, the Index Calculation Agent will be required to exercise discretion in determining whether the event constituted an Adjustment Event and, if so, what action to take in response to that event, which may include revising the weight of the affected Eligible Market Constituent or replacing that Eligible Market Constituent with a substitute constituent and determining any adjustments to the Index Rules that may be appropriate to account for the effect on the Index of that replacement.

 

·The Index Sponsor will determine whether a Regulatory Event has occurred. In determining whether a Regulatory Event has occurred, the Index Sponsor will take into account the effect of any relevant law or regulation that is implemented in order to comply with regulatory requirements on positions, contracts or instruments held by the Index Sponsor or its affiliates in order to hedge any financial instrument linked to the Index, including the notes. The Index Sponsor and/or its affiliates may hold the same positions, contracts or instruments in contexts unrelated to the Index, and the Index Sponsor will be permitted to determine whether any such effect relates to positions, contracts or instruments related to the Index or to such other positions, contracts or instruments.

 

In exercising these judgments, the Index Calculation Agent’s status as our affiliate may cause its interests to be adverse to yours. The Index Calculation Agent is not your fiduciary and is not obligated to take your interests into account in calculating the Index. Any actions taken by the Index Calculation Agent in calculating the level of the Index could adversely affect the performance of the Index.

 

One or More Eligible Market Constituents Could Be Removed from the Index if a Regulatory Event occurs, in which Case the Universe of Eligible Market Constituents Could Become Smaller. If a Regulatory Event occurs, each affected Eligible Market Constituent will be removed from the Index. A Regulatory Event could occur, among other reasons, because the Index Sponsor or any of our other affiliates is required (or there is a reasonable likelihood that, within the next 30 Index Business Days, it will be required) by any applicable law or regulation that is implemented in order to comply with regulatory requirements to dispose of, or it would not be permitted to acquire, any position, contract or instrument that would be appropriate to hedge any financial instrument linked to the Index, including the notes. If one or more Eligible Market Constituents is removed from the Index, the Index will no longer have potential exposure to the market sector represented by that Eligible Market Constituent, and if all of the Eligible Market Constituents in an asset class are removed, then the Index will no longer have potential exposure to

 

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that asset class. That could result in Selected Portfolios that are not as diversified as they would otherwise be and that could have less favorable performance than would have been the case had the relevant Eligible Market Constituent(s) not been removed.

 

For example, the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which was enacted on July 21, 2010, requires the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC”) to establish limits on the size of the positions any person may hold in futures contracts on a commodity, options on such futures contracts and swaps that are economically equivalent to such contracts. In particular, the CFTC has proposed rules to establish position limits that will apply to 28 agricultural, metals and energy futures contracts and futures, options and swaps that are economically equivalent to those futures contracts. The limits will apply to a person’s combined position in futures, options and swaps on the relevant commodity. If these rules are adopted, they could cause the Index Sponsor to determine that a Regulatory Event has occurred, and the Index Sponsor could determine to remove the Eligible Market Constituent that tracks commodity futures from the Index. At the present time, it is impossible to predict when final rules will be adopted or what their provisions will be, or the effect of such final rules on the Index.

 

Changes to Any Eligible Market Constituent or its Underlying Index Could Adversely Affect the Level of the Index. The sponsor of an Eligible Market Constituent may change the underlying index tracked by the Eligible Market Constituent or make a change to its policies or investment methodologies at any time. The sponsor of the underlying index tracked by an Eligible Market Constituent may add, delete or substitute the components that underlie the index or make other methodological changes to the index at any time. In fact, a number of the Eligible Market Constituents have experienced such changes, as described under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index—Hypothetical Back-Tested Index Performance Information” below. In addition, the sponsors of the Eligible Market Constituents may terminate the Eligible Market Constituents at any time, and the sponsors of the underlying indices may discontinue or suspend calculation or publication of the underlying indices at any time. Any change to any Eligible Market Constituent or its underlying index could adversely affect the performance of the Eligible Market Constituent and, therefore, could adversely affect the performance of the Index. The sponsors of the Eligible Market Constituents and their underlying indices are not involved with the Index in any way, and it is not possible to predict what actions they may take in the future that could adversely affect the Index.

 

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Description of the Notes

 

The following description of the general terms of the Notes supplements the general terms and provisions set forth in the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus. If any specific information regarding the Notes in this index supplement is inconsistent with the more general terms described in the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus, you should rely on the information in this index supplement.

 

The pricing supplement applicable to a particular issuance of Notes will contain the specific terms of those Notes. If any information in the applicable pricing supplement is inconsistent with this index supplement, you should rely on the information in the applicable pricing supplement. The applicable pricing supplement may also add, update or change information contained in this index supplement or in the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus. It is important for you to consider carefully the information contained in this index supplement together with the information contained in the applicable pricing supplement and the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus before investing in the Notes.

 

General

 

The notes offered under this index supplement (the “Notes”) are senior unsecured debt securities issued by Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. under the senior debt indenture described in the accompanying prospectus supplement and prospectus. Any payments due on the Notes are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by Citigroup Inc. The Notes will constitute part of the senior debt of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and will rank equally with all other unsecured and unsubordinated debt of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. The guarantee of payments due on the Notes will constitute part of the senior debt of Citigroup Inc. and will rank equally with all other unsecured and unsubordinated debt of Citigroup Inc.

 

The particular payment terms of the Notes will be set forth in the applicable pricing supplement and will be linked to the performance of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index (the “Index”). The Index is described in “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below.

 

The Notes provide for the repayment of the stated principal amount at maturity. If so specified in the applicable pricing supplement, the Notes offer the possibility of an additional payment at maturity (other than any coupon payment, if specified in the applicable pricing supplement) based on the performance of the Index. The stated principal amount of each Note will be specified in the applicable pricing supplement.

 

In addition to the risks associated with the performance of the Index, all payments due on the Notes are subject to the credit risk of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc., as guarantor of any payments due on the Notes. If Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. and Citigroup Inc. default on their obligations under the Notes, you may not receive any payment owed to you, including the repayment of the stated principal amount of your Notes at maturity.

 

Any potential payment on the Notes that depends on the performance of the Index will be based on the Closing Level of the Index on one or more dates specified in the applicable pricing supplement (each, a “Valuation Date”), subject to the specific terms set forth in the applicable pricing supplement. If any scheduled Valuation Date is not an Index Scheduled Trading Day, such Valuation Date will be postponed to the next succeeding Index Scheduled Trading Day.

 

An “Index Scheduled Trading Day” is an Index Business Day that is also a Scheduled Trading Day for each Eligible Market Constituent included in the Index on that Index Business Day.

 

An “Index Business Day” is a day on which commercial banks are open for general business in New York and London.

 

The term “Scheduled Trading Day” has, in respect of each Eligible Constituent, the meaning specified under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below.

 

The term “Eligible Constituent” has the meaning specified under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below.

 

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The term “Eligible Market Constituent” has the meaning specified under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below.

 

Maturity

 

The Notes will mature on the date specified in the applicable pricing supplement (the “Maturity Date”). If the Maturity Date falls on a day that is not a New York Business Day, the payment to be made on the Maturity Date will be made on the next succeeding New York Business Day with the same force and effect as if made on the Maturity Date, and no interest will accrue as a result of such delayed payment. If a Notes Disruption Event occurs on the Valuation Date (or if there is more than one Valuation Date, on the final Valuation Date), then the Maturity Date will be postponed to the third New York Business Day after the Final Determination Date with respect to such Valuation Date. In addition, if the originally scheduled Valuation Date (or if there is more than one Valuation Date, the originally scheduled final Valuation Date) is not an Index Scheduled Trading Day and such Valuation Date is postponed so that it falls fewer than three New York Business Days prior to the Maturity Date, the Maturity Date will be postponed to the third New York Business Day after such Valuation Date as postponed.

 

New York Business Day” means any day that is not a Saturday, a Sunday or a day on which the securities exchanges, bank institutions or trust companies in the City of New York are authorized or obligated by law or executive order to close.

 

Notes Calculation Agent

 

The “Notes Calculation Agent” for each issuance of Notes will be our affiliate, Citigroup Global Markets Inc. (“CGMI”), or any successor appointed by us, unless otherwise specified in the applicable pricing supplement. The Notes Calculation Agent will make the determinations specified in this index supplement or in the applicable pricing supplement. All determinations made by the Notes Calculation Agent will be at the sole discretion of the Notes Calculation Agent and will, in the absence of manifest error, be conclusive for all purposes and binding on Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc., Citigroup Inc. and the holders of the Notes. The Notes Calculation Agent is obligated to carry out its duties and functions in good faith and using its reasonable judgment.

 

Determining the Closing Level of the Index

 

The “Closing Level” of the Index means, on any date of determination, the Index Level (as defined under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below) for such day as published by the Index Calculation Agent, subject to the terms described under “—Discontinuance of the Index” below. If the Index Level is not published by the Index Calculation Agent for any date of determination, or if the Notes Calculation Agent determines that a Market Disruption Event exists with respect to any Eligible Market Constituent then included in the Index on any date of determination, the Notes Calculation Agent will calculate the Closing Level of the Index in respect of that date of determination in good faith in accordance with the formula for and method of calculating the Index last in effect prior to commencement of the Market Disruption Event or failure to publish, using:

 

(i)for each Eligible Constituent with respect to which a Market Disruption Event does not occur on that date of determination, the Index Constituent Level of such Eligible Constituent on that date of determination; and

 

(ii)for each Eligible Constituent with respect to which a Market Disruption Event occurs or is continuing on that date of determination, the Index Constituent Level of such Eligible Constituent on the immediately succeeding Scheduled Trading Day for such Eligible Constituent on which no Market Disruption Event occurs or is continuing with respect to such Eligible Constituent, unless such Scheduled Trading Day has not occurred by the fifth Scheduled Trading Day for such Eligible Constituent following that date of determination (the “Backstop Date”), in which case the Notes Calculation Agent will use an alternative Index Constituent Level for such Eligible Constituent determined using its good faith estimate of the Closing Price of that Eligible Constituent as of such Backstop Date.

 

For any date of determination on which the Index Level is not published or a Market Disruption Event exists, the Notes Calculation Agent will, following that date of determination, calculate the Closing Level in respect of that date, and the Notes Calculation Agent will reflect in such Closing Level the excess return deduction and the index fee described under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” to the date of such calculation. If the Notes Calculation Agent determines that a Market Disruption Event exists with respect to any

 

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Eligible Market Constituent then included in the Index on a Valuation Date (such event, a “Notes Disruption Event”), the date on which the Closing Level of the Index in respect of such Valuation Date is finally determined (i.e., the first date on which the Index Constituent Level has been determined for all Eligible Market Constituents then included in the Index in respect of such Valuation Date) is referred to as the “Final Determination Date” for such Valuation Date.

 

The term “Index Constituent Level” has, in respect of each Eligible Constituent, the meaning specified under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below, except as otherwise provided in the definition of “Closing Level” above.

 

The term “Closing Price” has the meaning specified under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below.

 

The term “Market Disruption Event” means, in respect of each Eligible Constituent, any event that would result in a Disrupted Day with respect to that Eligible Constituent, as described under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below.

 

Discontinuance of the Index

 

If the Index Sponsor discontinues publication of the Index, and it or another entity (including CGMI) publishes a successor or substitute index that the Notes Calculation Agent determines, in its sole discretion, to be comparable to the discontinued Index, then the Closing Level of the Index thereafter will be determined by reference to the level of that index, which we refer to as a “Successor Index.” In such an event, the Notes Calculation Agent will, in its sole discretion, make any adjustment to any level of the Index or the Successor Index used for purposes of the Notes as it may deem appropriate in order to account for the effect of the substitution.

 

If the Index Sponsor discontinues publication of the Index prior to, and such discontinuance is continuing on, a Valuation Date and the Notes Calculation Agent determines, in its sole discretion, that no Successor Index is available at such time, then the Notes Calculation Agent will determine a substitute Closing Level for the Index for such date. Such Closing Level will be determined by the Notes Calculation Agent in accordance with the formula for calculating the Index last in effect prior to such discontinuance, using only the Eligible Constituents included in the Index (or those Eligible Constituents that would have been included the Index but for the event that resulted in such discontinuance of the Index) immediately prior to such discontinuance, without any rebalancing or substitution of such Eligible Constituents after such discontinuance and without giving effect to an extraordinary rebalancing (as described below under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index”). In such an event, the Closing Level of the Index so determined will cease to reflect the Index’s portfolio selection methodology and instead will track the excess return performance of a fixed portfolio of notional assets, which will consist of the Eligible Constituents included in the Index (or those Eligible Constituents that would have been included the Index but for the event that resulted in such discontinuance of the Index) immediately prior to such discontinuance, each having the weight (as defined below under “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index”) it had (or would have had) immediately prior to such discontinuance. In addition, in such an event, the maximum VT Exposure will be 100%, rather than 120% (see “Description of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index” below). For purposes of clarity, if the Index Sponsor discontinues publication of the Index and the Notes Calculation Agent is required to calculate a substitute Closing Level for the Index, the Notes Calculation Agent will make that calculation applying all of the current features of the Index, including the excess return deduction, the volatility targeting and the index fee, with the following exceptions: the Selected Portfolio will no longer be re-selected monthly, the extraordinary rebalancing will not apply and the maximum VT Exposure will be reduced from 120% to 100%.

 

If the discontinuance of the Index was the result of a material modification or permanent cancellation of an Eligible Market Constituent, and such modification or cancellation is continuing on a Valuation Date, or if an Eligible Market Constituent is otherwise unavailable on a Valuation Date, then the Notes Calculation Agent will determine the Constituent Closing Level for such Eligible Market Constituent with respect to any date for which a Constituent Closing Level of such Constituent may be required using its good faith estimate of the closing level of that Eligible Market Constituent on each such date. Notwithstanding these alternative arrangements, discontinuance of the publication of the Index may adversely affect the value of the Notes.

 

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Coupon

 

The Notes will not pay a coupon unless the applicable pricing supplement specifically provides otherwise. If the applicable pricing supplement specifies that the Notes will pay a coupon, the Notes will pay a coupon at the per annum rate specified in the applicable pricing supplement, which may be a fixed rate or may be determined by reference to the performance of the Index or otherwise. If the applicable pricing supplement provides that the Notes will pay a coupon, holders of the Notes will receive the applicable coupon payment on the coupon payment dates specified in the applicable pricing supplement (each, a “Coupon Payment Date”). If the per annum rate varies over the term of the Notes based on the performance of the Index or otherwise, the per annum rate for each Coupon Payment Date will be determined in the manner and on the Valuation Date specified in the applicable pricing supplement. Unless otherwise specified in the applicable pricing supplement, each coupon payment will be computed on the basis of a 360-day year of twelve 30-day months or, in the case of an incomplete month, the number of days elapsed. Unless otherwise specified in the applicable pricing supplement, the coupon payable on the first Coupon Payment Date for an issuance of Notes will accrue from and including the issue date of such Notes to but excluding such first Coupon Payment Date, and the coupon payable on each succeeding Coupon Payment Date for an issuance of Notes will accrue from and including the immediately preceding Coupon Payment Date to but excluding such succeeding Coupon Payment Date.

 

Unless otherwise specified in the applicable pricing supplement, each coupon payment will be payable to the persons in whose names the Notes are registered at the close of business on the New York Business Day immediately preceding the applicable Coupon Payment Date (each a “Regular Record Date”), except that the final coupon payment will be payable to the persons who receive the payment at maturity. If any Coupon Payment Date is not a New York Business Day, the coupon payment to be made on that Coupon Payment Date will be made on the next succeeding New York Business Day with the same force and effect as if made on that Coupon Payment Date, and no interest will accrue as a result of delayed payment. If any coupon payment on the Notes depends on the Closing Level of the Index on a Valuation Date and such Valuation Date is postponed as provided under “—Determining the Closing Level of the Index” and the relevant Coupon Payment Date is specified as a fixed date, such coupon payment will be made on the later of (i) the third New York Business Day after such Valuation Date (or the last such Valuation Date, if two or more consecutive Scheduled Trading Days are each scheduled Valuation Dates), as postponed and (ii) the Coupon Payment Date.

 

Automatic Call

 

If specified in the applicable pricing supplement, an automatic call feature will apply to the Notes in the circumstances and on the date(s) specified in the applicable pricing supplement. If an automatic call is triggered, the Notes will be redeemed for a cash payment that will be determined as set forth in the applicable pricing supplement. The minimum amount of such cash payment will be equal to the stated principal amount per Note. The Notes will not be subject to an automatic call feature unless the applicable pricing supplement so provides.

 

Call Right

 

If specified in the applicable pricing supplement, we will have the right to call the Notes, in whole or in part, on terms specified in the applicable pricing supplement. If applicable, the pricing supplement will specify the dates on which we may call the Notes, the price at which we may call the Notes, the circumstances in which we may call the Notes and the payment to be made upon redemption. If any date on which we elect to redeem the Notes falls on a day that is not a New York Business Day, the payment to be made upon redemption will be made on the next succeeding New York Business Day with the same force and effect as if made on the original date of redemption, and no interest will accrue as a result of delayed payment. We will not have the right to call the Notes unless the applicable pricing supplement so provides.

 

If we have the right to call the Notes, the provisions set forth under “Description of the Notes—Optional Redemption, Repayment and Repurchase” in the accompanying prospectus supplement will apply, subject to the terms set forth in the applicable pricing supplement.

 

Holders of the Notes will not have the right to require us to redeem the Notes prior to maturity, unless otherwise specified in the applicable pricing supplement.

 

No Redemption at the Option of the Holder; Defeasance

 

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The Notes will not be subject to redemption at the option of any holder prior to maturity and will not be subject to the defeasance provisions described in the accompanying prospectus under “Description of Debt Securities—Defeasance.”

 

Events of Default and Acceleration

 

In case an event of default (as described in the accompanying prospectus) with respect to any issuance of Notes shall have occurred and be continuing, the amount declared due and payable upon any acceleration of the Notes will be determined by the Calculation Agent and will equal, for each Note, the amount to be received on the Maturity Date, calculated using the Closing Level of the Index as though the date of acceleration were the Valuation Date (or the final Valuation Date if there is more than one Valuation Date). For purposes of the immediately preceding sentence, if the applicable pricing supplement specifies that the Notes will pay a coupon, your final coupon payment will reflect the portion of the coupon that has accrued (or will be prorated) from and including the immediately preceding Coupon Payment Date on which a coupon payment was made (if required) (or the issue date, if there is no such Coupon Payment Date) to but excluding the date of acceleration.

 

In case of default under the Notes, whether in the payment of a coupon or any other payment due under the Notes, no interest will accrue on such overdue payment either before or after the Maturity Date.

 

Paying Agent, Trustee and CUSIP

 

Citibank, N.A. will serve as paying agent and registrar for the Notes and will also hold the global notes representing each issuance of Notes as custodian for DTC. The Bank of New York Mellon will serve as trustee for the Notes.

 

The CUSIP number for each issuance of Notes will be set forth in the applicable pricing supplement.

 

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DESCRIPTION OF THE CITI ETF MARKET PILOT 5 EXCESS RETURN INDEX

 

Overview

 

The Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index (the “Index”) was developed by Citigroup Global Markets Limited (the “Index Sponsor”). The description of the Index included in this section is based on rules formulated by the Index Sponsor (the “Index Rules”), which are attached as Annex A to this Index Supplement. The Index launched on June 30, 2015 and, therefore, has a limited performance history. The Index is a member of the Index Sponsor’s family of Market Pilot Indices that generally track the rules-based investment methodology described in this section.

 

The Index tracks the performance of the rules-based investment methodology described in this section. Once each month, the Index applies a portfolio selection methodology to select a hypothetical investment portfolio to track for the next month. In general, if that hypothetical investment portfolio appreciates over the next month, the level of the Index will increase, and if that hypothetical investment portfolio depreciates over the next month, the level of the Index will decrease, subject to the excess return deduction, index fee and other features of the Index described in more detail below.

 

The Index selects the hypothetical investment portfolio to track for each month using certain concepts drawn from the “modern portfolio theory” approach to asset allocation. Generally, modern portfolio theory holds that an optimal (or “efficient”) investment portfolio is one that maximizes expected return for any given level of risk, where “risk” is measured by the expected volatility of the portfolio. Further, modern portfolio theory suggests that the investment portfolio that achieves this result is likely to be a diversified portfolio of relatively uncorrelated assets. The Index seeks to implement these ideas in two ways. First, the Index will construct the hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked for each month from a universe of eligible exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”) that represent a number of different asset classes and market sectors. Second, the Index will seek to select as the hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked for each month, out of all possible hypothetical investment portfolios that could be constructed from this universe of eligible ETFs (and that meet certain conditions described below), the portfolio that has the highest expected return without exceeding the Index’s target volatility of 5%.

 

Table I below lists the eligible ETFs that may be used to construct the hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked by the Index for any month. We refer to each of these eligible ETFs as an “Eligible Market Constituent”. In certain circumstances, the hypothetical investment portfolio for a given month may be wholly or partly allocated to a hypothetical money market instrument with a return equal to 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR, which we refer to as the “Cash Constituent”. We refer to the Eligible Market Constituents, together with the Cash Constituent, as the “Eligible Constituents”. Table I also indicates the NYSE Arca ticker and the maximum percentage weight for each Eligible Constituent.

 

Table I

 

Asset Class Eligible Constituent Market Sector Ticker Max. % Weight
Eligible Market Constituents
Global Equities iShares Core S&P 500 ETF Large-cap U.S. equities IVV 50%
Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF Large-, mid- and small-cap developed European equities VGK 25%
iShares MSCI Japan ETF Large- and mid-cap Japanese equities EWJ 25%
Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF Large-, mid- and small-cap emerging market equities VWO 50%
Fixed Income iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF U.S. Treasury bonds with >20-year maturities TLT 50%
iShares TIPS Bond ETF Inflation-protected U.S. Treasury bonds TIP 10%
iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF U.S. dollar investment-grade corporate bonds LQD 25%
SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF U.S. dollar below-investment grade corporate bonds JNK 25%
Real Estate Equities iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF  Real estate sector of U.S. equity market IYR 10%
Preferred Stock iShares U.S. Preferred Stock ETF U.S.-listed preferred stocks PFF 10%
Commodities PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund Selected commodity futures DBC 10%
SPDR Gold Trust Gold bullion GLD 50%
Cash Constituent  
Money Market Citi 3M Cash Constituent Money market N/A 100%

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A “portfolio” is any combination of Eligible Constituents and their percentage weights, where the percentage weights add up to 100%. For example, one possible portfolio would consist of an equal allocation to each Eligible Market Constituent – that portfolio would consist of each Eligible Market Constituent and a percentage weight of 8.33% for each. Another possible portfolio might have a greater concentration in a smaller number of Eligible Market Constituents and consist of a 50% percentage weight in each of only two Eligible Market Constituents. It is important to understand that two different portfolios may be composed of exactly the same Eligible Constituents but allocate different percentage weights to those Eligible Constituents, and those portfolios are regarded as distinct portfolios for purposes of the Index because of the different percentage weights. We refer to all possible hypothetical investment portfolios that could be constructed from the Eligible Market Constituents, and that meet the weighting constraints indicated in Table I, as the “Eligible Market Portfolios”. We refer to the hypothetical investment portfolio that is selected as the portfolio to be tracked by the Index for any given month as the “Selected Portfolio” for that month.

 

As stated above, the Index seeks to select, as the Selected Portfolio for each month, the Eligible Market Portfolio that has the highest expected return without exceeding an expected risk (i.e., volatility) of 5%. The expected return of any Eligible Market Portfolio is the weighted sum of the expected returns of the Eligible Market Constituents that make up that Eligible Market Portfolio. Therefore, to determine the expected return of any Eligible Market Portfolio, the Index requires a measure of the expected return of each of its Eligible Market Constituents. The expected risk (i.e., volatility) of any Eligible Market Portfolio depends on the expected risk (i.e., volatility) of each of the Eligible Market Constituents that make up that Eligible Market Portfolio and on the expected degree of correlation among the returns of those Eligible Market Constituents. Therefore, to determine the expected risk of any Eligible Market Portfolio, the Index requires measures of both the expected volatility of each of the Eligible Market Constituents that make up that Eligible Market Portfolio and the expected degree of correlation among their returns.

 

The Index measures the expected returns and risk of the Eligible Market Constituents in an Eligible Market Portfolio, and the expected degree of correlation among their returns, based on historical measures of their daily returns, volatility and correlation. These historical measures are based on the daily returns of the Eligible Market Constituents over a historical Look-Back Period of approximately one year and are determined using calculations that give greater weight to more recent returns, as described in more detail under “—Selection Methodology” below. Using these historical measures, the Index identifies as the Selected Portfolio for each month the hypothetical investment portfolio that, out of all of the Eligible Market Portfolios, would have had the most favorable historical performance while having a historical volatility equal to or below the Index’s target volatility of 5%.

 

It is important to understand that modern portfolio theory prescribes a method for constructing an optimal investment portfolio assuming that the expected returns and risk of the available assets, and the expected degree of correlation among their returns, are known. Modern portfolio theory does not purport to tell an investor how to determine expected returns, risk or correlation. Therefore, any investment methodology that seeks to implement concepts drawn from modern portfolio theory, including the hypothetical investment methodology followed by the Index, must utilize its own method of determining expected returns, risk and correlation, and that method cannot be said to be derived from modern portfolio theory. Because there are many different ways in which expected returns, risk and correlation could be determined, there are many different ways that the concepts of modern portfolio theory could be implemented. The particular approach reflected in the Index may not be as successful as other approaches that could have been taken.

 

The process by which the Index selects a Selected Portfolio each month may be illustrated by the following hypothetical graph. Each point on the graph represents an Eligible Market Portfolio, with its location on the x-axis representing the historical volatility of that Eligible Market Portfolio and its location on the y-axis representing the historical performance of that Eligible Market Portfolio, in each case based on the historical returns, volatility and correlation of the Eligible Market Constituents that make up that Eligible Market Portfolio. By plotting all Eligible Market Portfolios on the graph, a so-called “efficient frontier” can be identified. The efficient frontier is the line marking the upper boundary of all the Eligible Market Portfolios on the graph. Each Eligible Market Portfolio that falls on that efficient frontier line represents the highest expected return (based on historical performance) out of all Eligible Market Portfolios having the same level of expected risk (based on historical volatility). The Selected Portfolio is the Eligible Market Portfolio that falls on the efficient frontier line with the highest expected return without exceeding the volatility target of 5%. A portion of the graph is shaded in gray to indicate that none of the Eligible Market Portfolios falling in that area of the graph (i.e., exceeding a 5% historical volatility) will be selected

 

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as the Selected Portfolio. The graph below is a theoretical construct created for purposes of illustrating the Index’s hypothetical investment portfolio selection process at a general level. It does not represent and may not resemble any actual graph of Eligible Market Portfolios.

 

 

There can be no assurance that the historical measures used by the Index to select the Selected Portfolio for each month will be indicative of the future performance and volatility of the Selected Portfolio. For example, historical returns, volatility and correlation will not necessarily reflect the most recent information available in the market about an Eligible Market Constituent, the relationship among Eligible Market Constituents or the economy generally. Any Eligible Market Constituent or Eligible Market Portfolio that may have had high returns historically could consistently generate low returns in the future as the market reflects new information. Any Eligible Market Constituent or Eligible Market Portfolio that may have had low volatility historically could consistently generate high volatility in the future (and vice versa). Furthermore, any combination of Eligible Market Constituents that had a low degree of correlation in the past could have a high degree of correlation in the future. In general, a portfolio of relatively uncorrelated assets will have a lower volatility at a portfolio level than a portfolio of more highly correlated assets, even though the individual volatilities of the underlying assets may be the same. Therefore, even if the volatilities of the Eligible Market Constituents in an Eligible Market Portfolio are the same in the future as they were historically, the volatility of the Eligible Market Portfolio may increase if the Eligible Market Constituents become more highly correlated with each other in the future than they were historically. Previously uncorrelated assets may become highly correlated in decline, particularly in times of financial stress. If future returns, volatility and correlation differ significantly from historical returns, volatility and correlation, the Selected Portfolio followed by the Index for any given month may, in hindsight, turn out to have been far from the optimal hypothetical investment portfolio for that month.

 

It is important to understand that the Eligible Market Constituents that make up the Selected Portfolio are not necessarily those that exhibited the highest historical returns or the lowest volatility. The Selected Portfolio may include Eligible Market Constituents that had negative historical returns or high historical volatility but that lowered the historical volatility of the Selected Portfolio overall because they exhibited low historical correlation with the other Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio.

 

If for any given month there is no Eligible Market Portfolio with a historical volatility that is less than or equal to 5%, the Selected Portfolio for that month would not be the Eligible Market Portfolio that maximizes historical performance for its level of risk, but rather would be the Eligible Market Portfolio with the lowest historical volatility, regardless of historical performance. In that event, the percentage weights of the Eligible Market Constituents in that Eligible Market Portfolio would be reduced on a pro rata basis and reallocated into the Cash Constituent to the extent necessary to reduce the expected volatility of the Selected Portfolio to 5% (assuming for these purposes that the Cash Constituent has no volatility). In this circumstance, the Selected Portfolio would not be determined according to principles drawn from modern portfolio theory, but instead would be determined in a

 

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manner designed to minimize risk (as measured by historical volatility). Furthermore, if the Eligible Market Portfolio that is otherwise identified as the Selected Portfolio for any given month has a historical performance that is less than the level of 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR on the relevant monthly Selection Day (as defined below), the Selected Portfolio will instead consist of a 100% allocation to the Cash Constituent. See “—Selection Methodology” below for more information about the methodology by which the Selected Portfolio for each month is selected.

 

It is important to understand that the measure of risk used by the Index is not a measure of the likelihood that any Eligible Market Constituent or Eligible Market Portfolio will decline in value or that the Index will decline in value. For purposes of the Index, “risk” refers to volatility, which is a statistical measure of how much variability there was in the daily returns of an Eligible Market Constituent or Eligible Market Portfolio over a given historical period. Any Eligible Market Constituent or Eligible Market Portfolio may have had low volatility historically but nevertheless experience significant declines in the future.

 

In recognition of that point, the Index contains an “extraordinary rebalancing” feature that will replace the Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio with the Cash Constituent if the Selected Portfolio has declined by more than 8% over any 21 Index Business Day period. In that event, the Selected Portfolio will be reallocated out of the Eligible Market Constituents and into the Cash Constituent over an Extraordinary Rebalancing Period and will then remain 100% allocated to the Cash Constituent until the beginning of the next regular monthly Rebalancing Period, as described below. See “—Extraordinary Rebalancing” below for more information. It is important to understand that the Index will continue to decline after allocating 100% to the Cash Constituent. The Cash Constituent reflects a positive accrual at a rate equal to 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR. The excess return deduction reflects a deduction at the same rate, completely offsetting the positive accrual of the Cash Constituent. Although the Cash Constituent and the excess return deduction will offset each other, resulting in no net change, the index fee will continue to be deducted. As a result, at any time when the Index has 100% exposure to the Cash Constituent, the Index will steadily decline at a rate equal to the index fee. Furthermore, if the Eligible Market Constituents that composed the Selected Portfolio prior to an extraordinary rebalancing recover their losses after the Index has reallocated its exposure into the Cash Constituent, the Index will not participate in that recovery.

 

The Index is an “excess return” index, which means that, in calculating the performance of the Index, the performance of the Selected Portfolio will be reduced by the performance of the Cash Constituent. We refer to this deduction from the performance of the Selected Portfolio as the “excess return deduction”, and we refer to the performance of the Selected Portfolio, as reduced by the excess return deduction, as the “excess return performance” of the Selected Portfolio. The Index reflects the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio, which means that the Index will not have positive returns unless the Selected Portfolio appreciates by more than the excess return deduction, and then only to the extent to which the appreciation of the Selected Portfolio exceeds the excess return deduction (as well as the index fee described below). The Index will have negative returns if the excess return deduction is greater than the performance of the Selected Portfolio. The performance of the Index will also be reduced by a deduction for an index fee of 0.75% per annum. For more details, see “—Excess Return Deduction” and “—Index Fee” below.

 

The Index is also a “volatility target” index, which means that it adjusts its exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio on a daily basis in an attempt to maintain a target volatility for the Index of approximately 5%, subject to a maximum exposure of 120% and a minimum exposure of 0%. We refer to the exposure that the Index has to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio at any time as its “VT Exposure” at that time. If the VT Exposure is less than 100% on any Index Business Day (which will occur if the volatility of the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio is greater than 5% over the preceding 20 Index Business Days), the difference will be hypothetically allocated to uninvested cash, and that uninvested portion will realize a net decline after the index fee is taken into account. For more details, see “—Volatility Target” below.

 

Although the Index uses certain concepts drawn from modern portfolio theory, it is important to understand that the Index contains a number of features that are not found in modern portfolio theory or that may be inconsistent with modern portfolio theory, and that the Index may not effectively implement modern portfolio theory. For example:

 

·Modern portfolio theory does not prescribe the manner in which expected return, risk or correlation should be measured, nor does it specify whether 5% is an appropriate level of expected volatility to target. Therefore, although the historical measures of returns, volatility and correlation used by the Index and the

 

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5% volatility target are key features of the Index, they cannot be said to be drawn from modern portfolio theory. Other investment methodologies using the same modern portfolio theory concepts, but that determine expected return, risk and correlation in different ways or that accept a greater or lesser level of expected risk, may perform significantly better than the Index.

 

·There is no single way to implement the concepts of modern portfolio theory, and the approach reflected in the Index may not be as successful as other approaches to implementing modern portfolio theory. For example, modern portfolio theory does not necessarily suggest the Index’s approach of maximizing expected returns without exceeding a pre-defined level of expected risk. One alternative approach would be to maximize the ratio of expected returns to expected risk. For example, if there are two portfolios, one with a 10% expected return and a 5% expected risk (Portfolio A) and one with a 9.8% expected return and a 2.5% expected risk (Portfolio B), the Index would select Portfolio A, because Portfolio A has a higher expected return than Portfolio B and its volatility did not exceed 5%. However, Portfolio B might be viewed as a more optimal portfolio, because although it had a slightly lower expected return than Portfolio A, it had a significantly lower volatility, and therefore a significantly higher ratio of expected return to expected risk. Therefore, the Selected Portfolio that the Index selects may not be the optimal portfolio under alternative approaches to implementing modern portfolio theory.

 

·Under modern portfolio theory, if the assumption is made that investors can lend or borrow at a risk-free rate, there is a single optimal investment portfolio of risky assets that all rational investors would select, regardless of risk tolerance (assuming identical views about expected return, volatility and correlation). All investors would hold the same risky portfolio and would differ only in the amount they would allocate between that risky portfolio and the risk-free asset, or in the amount that they would borrow at the risk-free rate in order to invest in the risky portfolio. An approach designed to implement this feature of modern portfolio theory would identify the optimal portfolio as the one that lies at the point of tangency between the efficient frontier and a line that meets the expected return axis (see the graph above) at the risk-free rate, without a target volatility requirement and without seeking to maximize expected returns below a target volatility level. This approach would seek to achieve the target volatility only after the optimal portfolio is identified and would do so by adding either a lending or a borrowing component at the risk-free rate. The approach reflected in the Index, which imposes a target volatility requirement in the selection of the Selected Portfolio and does not reflect either lending or borrowing at the risk-free rate, is entirely different from this approach and will select an entirely different Selected Portfolio. Therefore, the Index does not reflect modern portfolio theory where the assumption is made that investors can lend or borrow at a risk-free rate. Although it may not be possible for most investors to borrow at a risk-free rate, there may be practical approaches that use concepts drawn from this approach to modern portfolio theory, and these approaches may be more successful, and more faithful to modern portfolio theory, than the approach reflected in the Index.

 

·The Index does not construct hypothetical investment portfolios from all assets that would be available to an investor, but only from the limited universe of Eligible Constituents. Although the Eligible Constituents cover a number of different asset classes, they include only a limited number of market sectors within those asset classes. For example, the global equities asset class includes large-capitalization U.S. stocks but not mid- or small-capitalization U.S. stocks; the commodities asset class is primarily concentrated in gold and permits only a limited allocation to a more broad-based commodity ETF; and the only U.S. Treasury bonds that are included (other than TIPS) are Treasury bonds with a maturity of greater than 20 years. Moreover, the Eligible Constituents exclude a number of major asset classes altogether, such as currencies. The Index might have achieved a better return if the universe of Eligible Constituents were more representative of the universe of assets available to an investor.

 

·The Index applies weighting constraints to the percentage weights that may be assigned to Eligible Market Constituents, which may result in the selection of a Selected Portfolio that is different from the hypothetical investment portfolio that would be selected in the absence of those constraints.

 

·If no Eligible Market Portfolio has a historical volatility that is less than or equal to 5%, the Selected Portfolio for any given month will not be selected pursuant to concepts drawn from modern portfolio theory, but instead will be the Minimum Volatility Portfolio. In addition, if the Selected Portfolio otherwise chosen has a historical performance below the level of 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR, or if an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event occurs, the Selected Portfolio will be allocated 100% into the Cash

 

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Constituent.

 

·The Index’s excess return deduction and the index fee will exert a drag on Index performance. Even if the Selected Portfolio proves to be the optimal portfolio under modern portfolio theory, the Index will always underperform the Selected Portfolio, perhaps significantly.

 

·Modern portfolio theory does not suggest monthly rebalancing, which may adversely affect Index performance by limiting the exposure of the Index to assets that would otherwise experience long-term appreciation. In addition, the Index’s daily adjustment of VT Exposure may cause the Index to have more or less than 100% exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio at any given time.

 

See “Key Risks Relating to the Index—The Index may not effectively implement modern portfolio theory”.

 

The Selected Portfolio is described as a hypothetical investment portfolio because there is no actual portfolio of assets to which any investor is entitled or in which any investor has any ownership or other interest. The Index is merely a mathematical calculation that is performed by reference to hypothetical positions in the Eligible Constituents included in the Selected Portfolio and the other Index Rules, as described in this section.

 

The Index Rules set forth the specific rules governing the Index. This description of the Index is only a summary of those Index Rules. You should understand that this summary does not describe the mathematical terms used in calculating the Index, and as a result is more general than the precise mathematical formulations used to calculate the Index. The mathematical calculation of the Index is described in the Index Rules. The Index will be governed by and calculated in accordance with the mathematical and other terms set forth in the Index Rules, and not this description of the Index. If this description of the Index conflicts with the Index Rules, the Index Rules control.

 

Descriptions of each of the Eligible Constituents are set forth below in this Index Supplement. The Index Sponsor is not affiliated with the sponsors of any of the Eligible Market Constituents. All information included in this Index Supplement relating to the Eligible Market Constituents is based on publicly available information and has not been independently verified.

 

Selection Methodology

 

On the second to last Index Business Day of each month (each, a “Selection Day”), the Index seeks to identify the Eligible Market Portfolio that, of all Eligible Market Portfolios that could be constructed from the Eligible Market Constituents, has the greatest expected return without exceeding the expected risk target of 5%. To be an Eligible Market Portfolio, the following conditions must be met:

 

(i)the percentage weights allocated to all Eligible Market Constituents must total 100%; and

 

(ii)the percentage weight of each Eligible Market Constituent must not exceed its maximum percentage weight, as indicated in Table I above.

 

An Eligible Market Portfolio may, but need not, include all of the Eligible Market Constituents. An Eligible Market Portfolio may include as few as two, or as many as all twelve, of the Eligible Market Constituents.

 

The Index calculates the expected return of an Eligible Market Portfolio based on its historical performance, and the expected risk of an Eligible Market Portfolio based on its historical volatility.

 

·Historical performance. The historical performance of an Eligible Market Portfolio as of a Selection Day is calculated based on the exponentially weighted moving average of the daily returns of each of its Eligible Market Constituents over the historical period of 252 Index Business Days ending on that Selection Day (approximately one year), which we refer to as the “Look-Back Period”. An exponentially weighted moving average is a type of weighted average that gives exponentially greater weight to more recent daily returns, as illustrated in the chart below. As a result, more recent daily returns will have a greater effect than older daily returns in determining the historical performance of each Eligible Market Portfolio.

 

This measure of the historical performance of an Eligible Market Portfolio differs from other ways in which historical performance could be measured. For example, the exponentially weighted moving

 

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average of daily returns could indicate positive historical performance even if the Eligible Market Portfolio has declined overall from the beginning to the end of the Look-Back Period, and vice versa. The Index uses an exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns in an attempt to reflect more recent trends in the performance of the Eligible Market Portfolios, but there can be no assurance that any trends, if they exist, will continue, or that they will be accurately captured by the exponentially weighted moving average used by the Index, or that this particular measure of historical performance on any Selection Day will be an effective predictor of the future performance of the Eligible Market Portfolios over the next month.

 

·Historical volatility. The historical volatility of an Eligible Market Portfolio as of a Selection Day is calculated in a manner that is similar to the manner in which the historical performance is determined – that is, the historical volatility measure is an exponentially weighted moving average volatility calculated over the Look-Back Period that gives exponentially greater weight to more recent volatility. The historical volatility of an Eligible Market Portfolio as of a Selection Day is determined based on the historical volatility of each of the Eligible Market Constituents that make up that Eligible Market Portfolio, as well as the degree of historical correlation among the Eligible Market Constituents. For this purpose, the historical volatility of the Eligible Market Constituents is a statistical measure of the degree of variability of the exponentially weighted daily returns of the Eligible Market Constituents over the Look-Back Period, and the historical correlation among the Eligible Market Constituents is a statistical measure of the degree to which the exponentially weighted daily returns of the Eligible Market Constituents were similar to each other over the Look-Back Period in terms of timing and direction (i.e., positive or negative). An Eligible Market Portfolio with a lower degree of correlation among its Eligible Market Constituents will have a lower volatility than an Eligible Market Portfolio with a higher degree of correlation among its Eligible Market Constituents, even if the volatilities of the individual Eligible Market Constituents are the same.

 

In this Index Supplement, the concept that we refer to as “correlation” is, in technical terms, actually “covariance”. We use the term “correlation” rather than “covariance” because correlation has a more commonly understood meaning and because that meaning – which refers to the degree of similarity between the returns of two or more assets – applies both to correlation and covariance at a general level. However, we note that correlation and covariance are technically distinct concepts.

 

The chart below illustrates the effect of the exponential weighting in the calculations described above. For each Index Business Day in the Look-Back Period, the chart indicates the percentage weight that will be given to the daily return of an Eligible Market Constituent on that Index Business Day in calculating the exponentially weighted moving average of that Eligible Market Constituent’s daily returns over the Look-Back Period. For example, the return on Day 1 in the Look-Back Period (i.e., the most recent day in the Look-Back Period) has an approximately 2.3495% weight in calculating the exponentially weighted moving average. Day 2 in the Look-Back Period has a slightly smaller percentage weight than the percentage weight given to the daily return on Day 1, and each subsequent earlier Index Business Day has a progressively smaller percentage weight until Day 252 in the Look-Back Period (i.e., the earliest day in the Look-Back Period), which has a percentage weight that is very nearly zero. The percentage weights given to each Index Business Day in the Look-Back Period add up to 100%. As the chart illustrates, the most recent daily returns have a significantly greater weight than older daily returns in determining the exponentially weighted moving average.

 

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On each Selection Day, the Index uses the historical returns and volatility of, and correlation among, the Eligible Market Constituents (measured based on the exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns as described above) as inputs to an optimization model. That optimization model is designed to identify the Eligible Market Portfolio – that is, the combination of Eligible Market Constituents and percentage weights meeting the weighting constraints specified above – that would have had the greatest historical performance (i.e., the greatest exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns) over the Look-Back Period out of all possible Eligible Market Portfolios, without having a historical volatility that exceeds the Index’s volatility target of 5%. That Eligible Market Portfolio will be the Selected Portfolio for the next month, except as described below.

 

If no such Eligible Market Portfolio can be found because every Eligible Market Portfolio would have had a historical volatility greater than the 5% volatility target, the Index will no longer seek to identify the Eligible Market Portfolio that would have had the greatest historical performance for a given level of historical volatility. Instead, the Index will identify the “Minimum Volatility Portfolio”, which is the Eligible Market Portfolio that would have had the lowest historical volatility of all possible Eligible Market Portfolios, regardless of the historical performance of that Eligible Market Portfolio. In this circumstance, the Selected Portfolio for the next month will be the Minimum Volatility Portfolio, but with a pro rata allocation of percentage weight away from the Eligible Market Constituents in the Minimum Volatility Portfolio and into the Cash Constituent to the extent necessary to result in a historical volatility of the Selected Portfolio equal to 5% (assuming for these purposes that the Cash Constituent has no volatility).

 

If the Selected Portfolio that is selected by the above rules would have had a historical performance that is less than or equal to the level of 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR on the Selection Day, then the Selected Portfolio for the next month will not be determined as described above and, instead, will consist of a 100% allocation to the Cash Constituent.

 

After the Selected Portfolio is determined on a Selection Day, the Index will be rebalanced to track that Selected Portfolio during the immediately following Rebalancing Period (as defined below).

 

There can be no assurance that the selection methodology employed by the Index will result in positive Index performance. See “Key Risks Relating to the Index” in this Index Supplement for a discussion of significant risks relating to the Index.

 

Monthly Rebalancing

 

The Selected Portfolio determined on each monthly Selection Day is given effect in the Index over the course of a “Rebalancing Period”, which is the period of five Index Business Days beginning on the second Index Business Day following the Selection Day (so that the first Index Business Day in each Rebalancing Period is the first Index Business Day of each calendar month). Over the five-day Rebalancing Period, the Index gradually rolls out of the old Selected Portfolio and into the new Selected Portfolio at a rate of 20% per day. On the last Index Business Day of the Rebalancing Period, each Eligible Constituent included in the new Selected Portfolio will be given a unit weight that results in that Eligible Constituent having a percentage weight in the Selected Portfolio, based on the value of the Selected Portfolio and each included Eligible Constituent on that Index Business Day, equal to its

 

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percentage weight in the Selected Portfolio as determined on the Selection Day (also referred to as the “target percentage weight”). On each Index Business Day in the Rebalancing Period prior to that last Index Business Day, the Index will track a blend between the old Selected Portfolio and the new Selected Portfolio, and the unit weights of the Eligible Constituents included in either the new Selected Portfolio or the old Selected Portfolio will be reset so that each such Eligible Constituent will represent, on that Index Business Day, a percentage of that blend that is itself a blend between the target percentage weights of the new Selected Portfolio and the then current percentage weights of the old Selected Portfolio.

 

The “percentage weight” of an Eligible Constituent and its “unit weight” in the Selected Portfolio are related but distinct concepts. The unit weight of any Eligible Constituent in the Selected Portfolio is the hypothetical number of “units” of that Eligible Constituent included in the Selected Portfolio. The percentage weight of an Eligible Constituent at any time is the percentage of the overall value of the Selected Portfolio represented by that number of units of that Eligible Constituent (taking into account the value of that Eligible Constituent and the Selected Portfolio at the time). On the last Index Business Day of each Rebalancing Period, the Index sets the number of units of each Eligible Constituent in the Selected Portfolio (i.e., its “unit weight”) so that the number of units of each Eligible Constituent multiplied by its value on the last Index Business Day of the Rebalancing Period represents its percentage weight in the Selected Portfolio as determined on the Selection Day. After the last Index Business Day of each Rebalancing Period, the unit weights will not change until the next Rebalancing Period (or as the result of an extraordinary rebalancing, as described below), but the current percentage weights of the included Eligible Constituents will fluctuate with changes in their values.

 

Extraordinary Rebalancing

 

In addition to the regular monthly rebalancing, the Selected Portfolio may also be rebalanced as a result of an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event. An “Extraordinary Rebalancing Event” will occur if, on any Index Business Day that is not in a regular monthly Rebalancing Period and is not between a Selection Day and the immediately following monthly Rebalancing Period, the Monthly Selected Portfolio Return falls below –8%. The “Monthly Selected Portfolio Return” will be observed on each Index Business Day and will be the percentage return of the Selected Portfolio over the 21-Index Business Day period ending on the current Index Business Day, as measured by the percentage change from the value of the Selected Portfolio on the 20th Index Business Day immediately preceding the current Index Business Day to the value of the Selected Portfolio on the current Index Business Day. The Selected Portfolio on the 20th Index Business Day prior to the current Index Business Day may be a different portfolio than the Selected Portfolio on the current Index Business Day as a result of an intervening monthly rebalancing. As a result, the triggering of an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event may not necessarily be solely attributable to a decline in the value of the current Selected Portfolio, but may also take into account performance of the prior month’s Selected Portfolio.

 

If an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event occurs, then the Eligible Market Constituents included in the Selected Portfolio will be replaced with the Cash Constituent over an Extraordinary Rebalancing Period beginning on the immediately following Index Business Day (the “Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day”). The “Extraordinary Rebalancing Period” is the period commencing on an Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day and ending on the fourth Index Business Day after the Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day or, if earlier, the immediately following Selection Day. As with a monthly rebalancing, an Extraordinary Rebalancing Period consists of five Index Business Days, and the Eligible Market Constituents will be replaced with the Cash Constituent over that period at a rate of 20% each day. After a rebalancing pursuant to an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event, the Selected Portfolio will remain 100% allocated to the Cash Constituent until the next monthly rebalancing. However, if an Extraordinary Rebalancing Period consists of fewer than five Index Business Days because a Selection Day occurs prior to the day that would otherwise be the fifth Index Business Day in the Extraordinary Rebalancing Period, the rebalancing will nevertheless take effect at a rate of 20% each day until, and including, the Selection Day, after which point the unit weights will remain unchanged until the beginning of the immediately following monthly Rebalancing Period. In this circumstance, the aggregate percentage weight of the Eligible Market Constituents would not fall to 0% and the Cash Constituent would not reach 100% in the Extraordinary Rebalancing Period.

 

Excess Return Deduction

 

The Index is an “excess return” index, which means that, in calculating the performance of the Index, the daily performance of the Selected Portfolio will be reduced by the performance of the Cash Constituent. The Cash Constituent is a hypothetical money market instrument with a return equal to 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR, which is

 

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reset on each Rate Reset Day. On any Rate Reset Day, 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR will be the rate displayed on Bloomberg page “US0003M <Index>” (or any successor page or any substitute page that is widely recognized by participants in the relevant market and that the Index Calculation Agent may determine appropriate) on that Rate Reset Day; provided that if 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR is unavailable for any reason, 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR will be the most recently available rate for an Index Business Day preceding the applicable Rate Reset Day. The last day in each Rebalancing Period is a “Rate Reset Day”.

 

Three-month U.S. dollar LIBOR reflects the rate at which banks lend U.S. dollars to each other for a term of 3 months in the London interbank market. Although many factors may affect the level of 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR, one important factor is the monetary policy of the Federal Reserve. Although the Federal Reserve maintained the federal funds target rate at relatively low levels in recent years, the Federal Reserve has begun to raise the federal funds target rate and may do so further at any time. If the Federal Reserve continues to raise interest rates (specifically, its federal funds target rate), or if 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR rises for any other reason, the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio (and, therefore, the performance of the Index) will be adversely affected.

 

The excess return deduction will place a drag on the performance of the Index, offsetting any appreciation of the Selected Portfolio, exacerbating any depreciation of the Selected Portfolio and causing the level of the Index to decline steadily if the value of the Selected Portfolio remains relatively constant. The excess return deduction may cause the performance of the Index to decline even if the Selected Portfolio appreciates.

 

Volatility Target

 

The Index’s exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio (also referred to as its VT Exposure) may vary on each Index Business Day in an attempt to maintain a target volatility for the Index equal to the volatility target of 5% (the “Volatility Target”). For this purpose, volatility is not measured in the way that historical volatility is measured for purposes of selecting the Selected Portfolio for each month. Rather, on any Index Business Day, volatility for this purpose is measured as the standard deviation of the daily excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio over the period of 20 Index Business Days ending two Index Business Days prior to the current Index Business Day (“20-Day Realized Volatility”). In other words, 20-Day Realized Volatility is a measure of the degree of variability in the daily excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio over the relevant 20 Index Business Day period.

 

The 20-Day Realized Volatility measure will be based on the daily excess return performance of the portfolio that was the Selected Portfolio on each day in the relevant 20 Index Business Day period. Because 20 Index Business Days is nearly a month, and because the Selected Portfolio is re-selected on a monthly basis, any given period of 20 Index Business Days is likely to include some number of days prior to the most recent monthly rebalancing and, therefore, some days whose excess return performance will reflect the performance of the prior month’s Selected Portfolio. As a result, the Index’s volatility targeting feature will be based not only on the realized volatility of the current Selected Portfolio, but also, to a greater or lesser extent depending on how recent the most recent monthly rebalancing was, the volatility of the prior month’s Selected Portfolio. Therefore, at the start of a month, the Index’s volatility targeting feature will be driven by the prior month’s Selected Portfolio and, toward the end of that month, the Index’s volatility targeting feature will be increasingly driven by the current month’s Selected Portfolio.

 

The Index’s VT Exposure on any Index Business Day will equal the Target Volatility of 5% divided by the 20-Day Realized Volatility measured as of that Index Business Day, subject to the volatility buffer described below. This means that the Index will have less than 100% exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio when the 20-Day Realized Volatility is greater than 5%, and greater than 100% exposure (subject to a maximum of 120%) when 20-Day Realized Volatility is less than 5%. At any time when the Index has a VT Exposure that is less than 100%, the difference will be hypothetically allocated to uninvested cash, and that uninvested portion will realize a net decline after the index fee is taken into account.

 

For example, if the 20-Day Realized Volatility determined with respect to any Index Business Day is 10%, the Index will have 50% exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio (5% divided by 10%) over the next Index Business Day. This would mean that if the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio appreciates by 2% over the next Index Business Day, the Index would only appreciate by 1%, and if the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio depreciates by 2% over the next Index Business Day, the Index would

 

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only depreciate by 1% (in each case, less the index fee). Alternatively, if the 20-Day Realized Volatility determined with respect to any Index Business Day is less than 5%, the Index will have greater than 100% exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio. For example, if the 20-Day Realized Volatility determined with respect to any Index Business Day is 4%, the Index will have 120% exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio (5% divided by 4%, subject to the maximum of 120%) over the next Index Business Day. This would mean that if the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio appreciates by 2% over the next Index Business Day, the Index would appreciate by 2.4%, and if the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio depreciates by 2% over the next Index Business Day, the Index would depreciate by 2.4% (in each case, less the index fee).

 

The Index will adjust its VT Exposure on any given Index Business Day only if the change in the exposure from the preceding Index Business Day would be greater than a “volatility buffer” of 5%. For example, if the Index has a 50% VT Exposure on any given Index Business Day, the Index will not adjust its VT Exposure on any subsequent Index Business Day unless the VT Exposure would exceed 55% or be less than 45%.

 

Index Fee

 

An index fee is deducted in the calculation of the Index. The index fee is deducted from the daily performance of the Index at a rate of 0.75% per annum.

 

Index Level Calculation

 

The level of the Index (the “Index Level”) is calculated by the Index Calculation Agent on each Index Business Day, subject to the occurrence of a Disrupted Day as described under “—Disruption to Valuation and Other Adjustments—Consequences of Disrupted Days” below. The Index Level as of each Index Business Day is published on Bloomberg page “CIISMP5N <Index>,” generally on the following Index Business Day. The Index Level as of any Index Business Day is the closing level of the Index for that Index Business Day. The Index launched on June 30, 2015 and was set to a base Index Level of 1,000 on the “Index Base Date” of February 3, 2005. “Index Business Day” means each day that is a day on which commercial banks and foreign exchange markets are open for general business (including dealings in foreign exchange and foreign exchange currency deposits) in New York.

 

The Index Level will be determined based on the Index Constituent Level of each Eligible Constituent in the Index. The “Index Constituent Level” for each Eligible Market Constituent is set to 100 on September 22, 2003 and, on each Index Business Day thereafter, fluctuates in a manner that corresponds to changes in the official closing price (“Closing Price”) of the Eligible Market Constituent, subject to the following adjustments:

 

·The Index Constituent Level for each Eligible Market Constituent is calculated in a manner that gives effect to a hypothetical reinvestment of all regular Cash Dividends and Extraordinary Dividends in the applicable Eligible Market Constituent at its Closing Price on the Total Return Business Day immediately preceding the applicable Ex-Dividend Date (or, if such Total Return Business Day is not a Scheduled Trading Day for the applicable Eligible Market Constituent, on the immediately preceding Scheduled Trading Day for the applicable Eligible Market Constituent). For this purpose:

 

oA “Cash Dividend” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any regular dividend (in the form of a cash dividend only) declared by the issuer of such Eligible Market Constituent (excluding any Extraordinary Dividend).

 

oExtraordinary Dividend” means a dividend or a distribution or portion thereof which is determined by the Index Calculation Agent to be an extraordinary dividend relating to such Eligible Market Constituent having regard to general market consensus and will generally include any dividend (in the form of a cash dividend) which is described as “special”, “extra”, “irregular” or a “return of capital”.

 

oEx-Dividend Date” means, in respect of a share and a dividend payment which has been announced by the issuer of such share, the first day on which a purchaser of such share will not be entitled to receive the relevant dividend payment, as fixed by the issuer of such share and/or the primary exchange on which such share is traded.

 

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oTotal Return Business Day” means any weekday from Monday to Friday.

 

oIf a hypothetical U.S. investor would be subject to withholding tax on any Cash Dividend or Extraordinary Dividend, the amount of the dividend that is hypothetically reinvested would be reduced by the amount of the withholding tax.

 

oIf any Extraordinary Dividend is a non-cash dividend, the amount hypothetically reinvested will be equal to the cash value declared by the issuer of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent or, if no cash value is declared by the issuer of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent, the cash value of such non-cash dividend as determined by the Index Calculation Agent, calculated by reference, where available, to the closing price of any shares comprising such non-cash dividend on the last trading day immediately preceding the relevant Ex-Dividend Date. The cash value of a non-cash dividend shall be converted, if necessary, at the applicable FX Rate for the conversion of the currency in which the relevant non-cash dividend is denominated into U.S. dollars. “FX Rate” means, in respect of the notional exchange of one currency to another currency, the applicable WM/Reuters “Closing Spot Rate” as published by The World Markets Company plc in conjunction with Reuters at approximately 4.00 p.m. (London time) on the Ex-Dividend Date or, if such rate is discontinued or unavailable on the relevant day for any reason, such other exchange rate for the relevant currency conversion as the Index Calculation Agent shall determine appropriate by reference to an alternative foreign exchange rate service that is widely used, publicly available and not published by the Index Sponsor or any of its affiliates.

 

·If any Eligible Market Constituent declares a Share Split or a Stock Dividend, the Closing Price of the Eligible Market Constituent will be adjusted so that there is no change in the Index Constituent Level resulting solely from the Share Split or Stock Dividend. For this purpose:

 

oShare Split” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, a share split, subdivision, reverse share split, consolidation or similar reclassification of the share of such Eligible Market Constituent.

 

oStock Dividend” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, a dividend (in the form of a stock dividend) of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent declared by the issuer of such shares (excluding any Extraordinary Dividend) .

 

The Index Constituent Level for the Cash Constituent on any Index Business Day is calculated by the Index Calculation Agent in the manner described under “Descriptions of the Eligible Constituents—Cash Constituent” in this Index Supplement.

 

Index Calculation Agent

 

The Index Sponsor currently also acts as the “Index Calculation Agent” and calculates, maintains and publishes the Index. The Index Sponsor may, in its sole discretion and without notice, appoint an alternative Index Calculation Agent at any time (which may be an affiliate of the Index Sponsor). The Index Calculation Agent’s determinations in respect of the Index will be final.

 

Disruption to Valuation and Other Adjustments

 

The Index Level will be published on every Index Business Day. On any Index Business Day, the markets for the Eligible Market Constituents may be disrupted or other events may occur that affect the Eligible Market Constituents. This section describes certain events and circumstances and the consequences of those events and circumstances that may affect an Eligible Market Constituent and/or the calculation of the Index.

 

Consequences of Disrupted Days or Non-Scheduled Trading Days

 

Daily Index Calculation. If any Index Business Day is not a Scheduled Trading Day for one or more Eligible Market Constituents then included in the Index (each Eligible Market Constituent then included in the Index, an “Index Constituent”, and each Index Constituent affected by a non-Scheduled Trading Day or Disrupted Day, an “Affected Constituent”), the Index Calculation Agent will calculate the Index Level for such Index Business Day by reference to (i) for each Index Constituent which is not an Affected Constituent, the Index Constituent Level of the

 

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relevant Index Constituent on such Index Business Day and (ii) in respect of each Affected Constituent, the Index Constituent Level of such Affected Constituent on the first preceding Scheduled Trading Day in respect of such Affected Constituent which is not a Disrupted Day for such Affected Constituent. If any Index Business Day is a Disrupted Day for one or more Index Constituents, the Index Calculation Agent will calculate the Index Level in respect of such Index Business Day by reference to (i) for each Index Constituent which is not an Affected Constituent, the Index Constituent Level of the relevant Index Constituent on such Index Business Day and (ii) in respect of each Affected Constituent, the Index Constituent Level of such Affected Constituent on the first succeeding Scheduled Trading Day in respect of such Affected Constituent which is not a Disrupted Day for such Affected Constituent; provided that if such date has not occurred by the fifth Scheduled Trading Day for such Affected Constituent following the original Index Business Day, the Index Calculation Agent will determine the Index Constituent Level in respect of such Affected Constituent using its good faith estimate of the Index Constituent Level at the Valuation Time on or for such day. In the alternative, if any Index Business Day is a Disrupted Day for any Index Constituent, the Index Calculation Agent may, in its sole discretion, suspend the calculation, publication and dissemination of the Index and the Index Level until the first succeeding Index Business Day which is not a Disrupted Day for any Index Constituent.

 

Rebalancing Date. If any scheduled Rebalancing Date is a Disrupted Day for one or more Eligible Market Constituents then included (or scheduled to be included) in the Index (each, a “Rebalancing Constituent”) or is not a Scheduled Trading Day for one or more Rebalancing Constituents, then the rebalancing will be effected for each Rebalancing Constituent that is not affected by a Disrupted Day or non-Scheduled Trading Day on the originally scheduled Rebalancing Date but will not be effected on the originally scheduled Rebalancing Date for any Rebalancing Constituent that is so affected (each, an “Affected Rebalancing Constituent”), and instead the Rebalancing Date for each Affected Rebalancing Constituent (and each subsequent Rebalancing Date for such Affected Rebalancing Constituent in the same Rebalancing Period) will be postponed to the next succeeding Scheduled Trading Day for such Affected Rebalancing Constituent that is not a Disrupted Day for such Affected Rebalancing Constituent; provided that such Rebalancing Date will not be postponed past the fifth Scheduled Trading Day for such Affected Rebalancing Constituent following the scheduled Rebalancing Date and, if such fifth Scheduled Trading Day is a Disrupted Day for such Affected Rebalancing Constituent, the Index Calculation Agent will determine the unit weight of such Affected Rebalancing Constituent in respect of the rebalancing using its good faith judgment. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if a scheduled Rebalancing Date in an Extraordinary Rebalancing Period is postponed for any Affected Rebalancing Constituent past a Selection Day, that scheduled Rebalancing Date will no longer be a Rebalancing Date for that Affected Rebalancing Constituent.

 

A “Rebalancing Date” means any Index Business Day within a Rebalancing Period or Extraordinary Rebalancing Period.

 

Definitions of Disrupted Day, Scheduled Trading Day and Related Definitions

 

A “Disrupted Day” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any Scheduled Trading Day for such Eligible Market Constituent on which any of the events set out below occurs:

 

(a)any relevant Exchange or any relevant Related Exchange fails to open for trading during its regular trading session; or

 

(b)the occurrence or existence at any time during the one hour period which ends at the relevant Valuation Time of any material suspension of or limitation imposed (whether by reason of movements in price exceeding permitted limits or otherwise) on the trading on (i) any relevant Exchange of such Eligible Market Constituent; or (ii) any relevant Related Exchange of futures contracts or options contracts relating to such Eligible Market Constituent; or

 

(c)the occurrence or existence at any time during the one hour period which ends at the relevant Valuation Time of any other event (other than an event described in sub-paragraph (d) or sub-paragraph (e) of this definition) which materially disrupts or impairs the ability of market participants in general (i) (on any relevant Exchange) to effect transactions in or to obtain market values for such Eligible Market Constituent; or (ii) (on any relevant Related Exchange) to effect transactions in or to obtain market values for any futures contracts or options contracts relating to such Eligible Market Constituent; or

 

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(d)the closure on any Exchange Business Day of any relevant Exchange prior to its Scheduled Closing Time (unless such earlier closing time is announced by such Exchange at least one hour prior to the earlier of (i) the actual closing time for the regular trading session on such Exchange on such Exchange Business Day; and (ii) the deadline for the submission of orders to be entered into such Exchange system for execution at the relevant Valuation Time on such Exchange Business Day); or

 

(e)the closure on any Exchange Business Day of any relevant Related Exchange in respect of futures contracts or options contracts relating to such Eligible Market Constituent prior to its Scheduled Closing Time (unless such earlier closing time is announced by such Related Exchange at least one hour prior to the earlier of (i) the actual closing time for the regular trading session on such Related Exchange on such Exchange Business Day; and (ii) the deadline for the submission of orders to be entered into such Related Exchange system for execution at the Valuation Time on such Exchange Business Day).

 

Exchange” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, the primary exchange, trading system or quotation system in respect of such Eligible Market Constituent or any successor to such exchange, trading system or quotation system, or any substitute exchange, trading system or quotation system to which trading in such Eligible Market Constituent has temporarily relocated (provided that, in the determination of the Index Calculation Agent, there is comparable liquidity relative to such Eligible Market Constituent on such temporary substitute exchange, trading system or quotation system as on the original exchange, trading system or quotation system).

 

Exchange Business Day” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any Scheduled Trading Day for such Eligible Market Constituent on which each relevant Exchange and each relevant Related Exchange are open for trading during their respective regular trading sessions, notwithstanding any such Exchange or any such Related Exchange closing prior to its Scheduled Closing Time.

 

Related Exchange” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, each exchange, trading system or quotation system where trading has a material effect on the overall market for futures contracts or options contracts relating to such Eligible Market Constituent.

 

Scheduled Closing Time” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, a Scheduled Trading Day and an Exchange or a Related Exchange (as relevant) for such Eligible Market Constituent, the scheduled weekday closing time on such Exchange or Related Exchange on such Scheduled Trading Day, without regard to after-hours trading or any other trading outside the hours of the regular trading session on such Exchange or Related Exchange.

 

Scheduled Trading Day” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any day on which each relevant Exchange and each relevant Related Exchange is scheduled to be open for trading for its regular trading session.

 

Valuation Time” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent and a Scheduled Trading Day for such Eligible Market Constituent, the Scheduled Closing Time on the relevant Exchange on such Scheduled Trading Day.

 

Adjustments and Modifications

 

Regulatory Events. If either (a) the Index Sponsor or any of its affiliates is required (or there is a reasonable likelihood that, within the next 30 Index Business Days, it will be required) by any applicable law or regulation that is implemented in order to comply with regulatory requirements to dispose of any Hedge Position, or it is not permitted (or there is a reasonable likelihood that, within the next 30 Index Business Days, it will not be permitted) to hold, acquire, increase, decrease or dispose of any Hedge Position, in each case, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent; and/or (b) due to any applicable law or regulation that is implemented in order to comply with regulatory requirements, the Index Sponsor or the Index Calculation Agent is not permitted (or there is a reasonable likelihood that, within the next 30 Index Business Days, it will not be permitted) to continue to sponsor or calculate, as applicable, an index comprising an asset which is an Eligible Market Constituent of the Index, then a regulatory event (a “Regulatory Event”) will be deemed to have occurred. “Hedge Position” means any one or more of: (i) positions or contracts in, or relating to, securities, options, futures, other derivative contracts or foreign exchange, or (ii) other instruments, contracts, transactions or arrangements (howsoever described) that would be appropriate to hedge, individually or on a portfolio basis, any investment product linked to the Index. If a Regulatory Event occurs, then each affected Eligible Market Constituent will be removed from the Index on the date (an “Additional Rebalancing Date”) designated by the Index Calculation Agent or the Index Sponsor. Upon the designation of an

 

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Additional Rebalancing Date, (a) the Index Calculation Agent may suspend the calculation, publication and dissemination of the Index and the Index Level until the first succeeding Index Business Day on which such event does not occur or continue to occur; and/or (b) the Index Calculation Agent may select a replacement Eligible Market Constituent that has substantially similar characteristics to the Eligible Market Constituent that is being replaced, having regard to the replacement criteria in Table II below and the manner in which such Eligible Market Constituent is used in the calculation of the Index, in which case the Index Calculation Agent will (i) determine the effective date of such replacement, and (ii) make such adjustment(s) to the Index rules as it determines appropriate to account for the effect on the Index of such replacement; and/or (c) the Index Sponsor may discontinue and cancel the Index.

 

Consequences of Adjustment Events. If an Adjustment Event (as defined below) occurs in respect of any Eligible Market Constituent (the “Affected Adjustment Event Constituent”), then the Index Calculation Agent will effect as soon as reasonably practicable a Reweighting in respect of such Affected Adjustment Event Constituent. However, if the Index Calculation Agent determines that no such Reweighting it can make will produce a commercially reasonable result, then the Index Calculation Agent will effect as soon as reasonably practicable a Replacement of such Affected Adjustment Event Constituent.

 

Replacement” means that the Index Calculation Agent will remove the Affected Adjustment Event Constituent from the Index and either:

 

(a)replace the Affected Adjustment Event Constituent with an Eligible Market Constituent that has substantially similar characteristics to the Affected Adjustment Event Constituent and is selected in accordance with the replacement criteria specified in Table II below; or

 

(b)if no such replacement can be made or the Index Calculation Agent determines that no such replacement it can make will produce a commercially reasonable result, replace the Affected Adjustment Event Constituent with a replacement constituent which shall confer no investment exposure.

 

Reweighting” means that the Index Calculation Agent will revise the weight attributed to the Affected Adjustment Event Constituent to account for the economic effect on the Index of the relevant Adjustment Event in a manner that is consistent with the commercial objective of the Index. For the avoidance of doubt, the weight attributed to the Affected Adjustment Event Constituent may be zero.

 

In the case of either a Replacement or a Reweighting, the Index Calculation Agent will, in a manner that is consistent with the commercial objective of the Index, (a) make such adjustment to the calculation of the Index and the Index Level as it determines appropriate to account for the effect on the Index of any such Replacement or Reweighting (as applicable) that is made (including without limitation rebalancing the Index); and (b) determine the effective date of any such Replacement or Reweighting that is made.

 

Definition of Adjustment Event and Related Definitions.

 

Adjustment Event” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, the occurrence of any of the following events: a Corporate Action, a Delisting, an Insolvency, a Merger Event, a Nationalization, a Tender Offer, a Cross-contamination, an Issuer Modification, a Regulatory Action, a Strategy Breach or a Failure by a Service Provider.

 

Corporate Action” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any of the following events (provided that, in each case, the relevant event has a diluting or concentrative effect on the theoretical value of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent and provided further that any such event for which an adjustment is described under “Index Level Calculation” above will be subject to adjustment as so described and will not be subject to adjustment as an Adjustment Event):

 

(i)a subdivision, consolidation or reclassification of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent, unless resulting in a Merger Event; or

 

(ii)a free distribution or dividend of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent to existing holders by way of bonus, capitalization or similar issue; or

 

(iii)a distribution, issue or dividend to existing holders of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent of (A) an additional amount of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent; or (B) other share capital or securities

 

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granting the right to payment of dividends and/or the proceeds of the liquidation of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent equally or proportionately with such payments to holders of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent; or (C) share capital or other securities of another issuer acquired or owned (directly or indirectly) by such Eligible Market Constituent as a result of a spin-off or other similar transaction; or (D) any other type of securities, rights or warrants or other assets, in any case for payment (whether in cash or otherwise) at less than their prevailing market price; or

 

(iv)an Extraordinary Dividend; or

 

(v)any repurchase by the relevant Eligible Market Constituent whether:

 

(x) such repurchase is direct or indirect from an investor in such Eligible Market Constituent; or

 

(y) the consideration for such repurchase is cash, securities or otherwise,

 

other than in respect of a redemption of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent initiated by an investor in shares of such Eligible Market Constituent which is consistent with the relevant Offering Documents; or

 

(vi)any other similar event which may have a diluting or concentrative effect on the theoretical value of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent.

 

Delisting” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, that any relevant Exchange announces that pursuant to the rules of such Exchange such Eligible Market Constituent ceases (or will cease) to be listed, traded or publicly quoted on such Exchange for any reason (other than a Merger Event or a Tender Offer) and are not (or will not be) immediately re-listed, re-traded or re-quoted on an exchange or quotation system located in the same country as such Exchange (or, where such Exchange is located within the European Union, in any member state of the European Union) or another exchange or quotation system (that is acceptable to the Index Calculation Agent) located in another country (that is acceptable to the Index Calculation Agent). In addition, it will also constitute a Delisting if the relevant Exchange is located in the United States and the relevant Eligible Market Constituent is not immediately re-listed, re-traded or re-quoted on any of the New York Stock Exchange, the NASDAQ Global Select Market and the NASDAQ Global Market (or their respective successors).

 

Insolvency” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, that either (i) by reason of the voluntary or involuntary liquidation, bankruptcy, insolvency, dissolution or winding up of (or any analogous proceeding) affecting such Eligible Market Constituent (A) all shares of such Eligible Market Constituent are required to be transferred to an Insolvency Officer; or (B) holders of such shares become legally prohibited from transferring or redeeming such shares; or (ii) an Insolvency Event occurs in respect of such Eligible Market Constituent or any of its Service Providers.

 

Insolvency Officer” shall mean an administrator, provisional liquidator, conservator, receiver, trustee, custodian or other similar official.

 

Insolvency Event” shall mean, in respect of an entity, that such entity (i) is dissolved or has a resolution passed for its dissolution, winding-up or official liquidation (other than pursuant to a consolidation, amalgamation or merger); (ii) makes a general assignment or arrangement with or for the benefit of its creditors; (iii) either (A) institutes, or has instituted against it by a Competent Official, a proceeding seeking an Insolvency Judgment, or a petition is presented for its winding-up or liquidation by it or by such Competent Official; or (B) has instituted against it a proceeding seeking an Insolvency Judgment, or a petition is presented for its winding-up or liquidation, and such proceeding or petition is instituted or presented by a person not described in (A) above and either (1) results in an Insolvency Judgment or the entry of an order for relief or the making of an order for its winding up or liquidation; or (2) is not dismissed, discharged, stayed or restrained, in each case within 15 days of the institution or presentation thereof; or (iv) seeks or becomes subject to the appointment of an Insolvency Officer of all or substantially all of its assets; or (v) has a secured party take possession of all or substantially all of its assets (and such secured party maintains possession for not less than 15 days thereafter); or (vi) has a distress, execution, attachment, sequestration or other legal process levied, enforced or sued on or against all or substantially all of its assets (and such process is not dismissed, discharged, stayed or restrained within 15 days thereafter); or (vii) the holders of securities issued by such entity become legally prohibited from transferring such securities; or (viii) causes or is subject to any event which, under the applicable laws of any jurisdiction, has an analogous effect to any of the events specified in (iv) to (vi) above. For these purposes, “Competent Official” shall mean, in respect of such

 

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entity, a regulator, supervisor or other similar official with primary insolvency, rehabilitative or regulatory jurisdiction over it in the jurisdiction of its incorporation or organization or in the jurisdiction of its head office or home office; “Insolvency Law” shall mean any bankruptcy law, insolvency law or other similar law affecting creditors’ rights; and “Insolvency Judgment” shall mean any judgment of insolvency or bankruptcy or any other relief under any Insolvency Law.

 

Merger Event” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any:

 

(i)reclassification or change of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent which results in a transfer of or an irrevocable commitment to transfer all such shares outstanding to another entity or person; or

 

(ii)consolidation, amalgamation, merger or binding share exchange of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent with or into another entity (other than a consolidation, amalgamation, merger or binding share exchange in which it is the continuing entity and which does not result in a reclassification of all such shares outstanding); or

 

(iii)takeover offer, tender offer, exchange offer, solicitation, proposal or other event by any entity or person to purchase or otherwise obtain 100 per cent. of the outstanding shares of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent, which results in a transfer of or an irrevocable commitment to transfer all such shares (other than those owned or controlled by such entity or person); or

 

(iv)consolidation, amalgamation, merger or binding share exchange of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent or its subsidiaries with or into another entity in which such Eligible Market Constituent is the continuing entity and which does not result in the reclassification or change of all such shares outstanding but results in the outstanding shares (other than those owned or controlled by such other entity) immediately prior to such event collectively representing less than 50 per cent. of the outstanding shares immediately following such event.

 

Nationalization” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, that all the shares or all the assets or substantially all the assets of such Eligible Market Constituent are nationalized, expropriated or are otherwise required to be transferred to any governmental agency, authority, entity or instrumentality thereof.

 

Tender Offer” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, a takeover offer, tender offer, exchange offer, solicitation, proposal or other event by any entity or person that results in such entity or person purchasing, or otherwise obtaining or having the right to obtain, by conversion or other means, greater than 10 per cent. and less than 100 per cent. of the outstanding voting shares of such Eligible Market Constituent, as assessed with reference to the filings made with governmental or self-regulatory agencies or such other reasonably relevant information.

 

Cross-contamination” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, the occurrence of a cross-contamination or other failure to segregate effectively assets between different classes, series, cells, compartments or equivalent of such Eligible Market Constituent, and such event continues for the foreseeable future.

 

Issuer Modification” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any change in or modification of the Offering Documents of such Eligible Market Constituent which could reasonably be expected to materially affect (i) the value of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent; or (ii) the rights and remedies of any holder of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent as compared with those rights and remedies prevailing on June 30, 2015.

 

Regulatory Action” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, (i) the cancellation, suspension, or revocation of the registration or approval of such Eligible Market Constituent or its shares by any governmental, legal or regulatory entity with authority over such Eligible Market Constituent; (ii) any change in the legal, tax, accounting or regulatory treatment of such Eligible Market Constituent, its shares or its Adviser which is reasonably likely to have a material adverse impact on the value of such Eligible Market Constituent or its shares or on any investor in such Eligible Market Constituent; or (iii) such Eligible Market Constituent or any of its Service Providers becomes subject to any investigation, proceeding or litigation by any relevant governmental, legal or regulatory authority involving the alleged violation of applicable law or regulation for any activity relating to or resulting from the operation of such Eligible Market Constituent or Service Provider, as the case may be, which in each case is reasonably likely to have a material adverse impact on the value of such shares or on any investor in such Eligible Market Constituent.

 

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Strategy Breach” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any breach or violation of any strategy or investment guidelines stated in the Offering Documents of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent which is reasonably likely to have a material adverse impact on: (i) the value of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent; or (ii) the rights and remedies of any holder of such shares as compared with those rights and remedies prevailing on June 30, 2015.

 

Failure by a Service Provider” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, a failure by a Service Provider in respect of such Eligible Market Constituent to perform any of its obligations in respect of such Eligible Market Constituent in a manner which is reasonably likely to materially affect: (i) the value of shares of such Eligible Market Constituent; or (ii) the rights and remedies of any holder of such shares as compared with those rights and remedies prevailing on June 30, 2015.

 

Administrator” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, the administrator, manager, trustee or similar person with the primary administrative responsibilities for such Eligible Market Constituent, as described in the Offering Documents of such Eligible Market Constituent.

 

Adviser” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any person appointed in the role of discretionary investment manager or non-discretionary investment adviser (including a non-discretionary investment adviser to a discretionary investment manager or to another non-discretionary investment adviser) to such Eligible Market Constituent.

 

Offering Documents” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, the constitutive and governing documents of such Eligible Market Constituent, including the prospectus or offering circular (howsoever described), together with the subscription agreements and other agreements, in each case relating to such Eligible Market Constituent and as amended from time to time.

 

Service Provider” shall mean, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any person who is appointed to provide services, directly or indirectly, for such Eligible Market Constituent, whether or not specified in the relevant Offering Documents, or any successor, including without limitation any Adviser, Administrator, operator, management company, depositary, custodian, sub-custodian, prime broker, trustee, registrar and transfer agent or domiciliary agent.

 

Replacement Criteria. If the Index Calculation Agent chooses to select a replacement Eligible Market Constituent in accordance with this section “—Disruption to Valuation and Other Adjustments,” the following criteria will apply to the replacement of each Eligible Market Constituent as indicated:

 

Table II

 

Eligible Market Constituents Replacement Criteria
iShares Core S&P 500 ETF Exposure to large cap US equities
Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF Exposure to equities from Europe
iShares MSCI Japan ETF Exposure to equities from Japan
Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF Exposure to emerging market equities
iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF Exposure to long term U.S. Treasury bonds
iShares TIPS Bond ETF Exposure to U.S. Treasury inflation-protected securities
iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF Exposure to U.S. dollar denominated, investment-grade corporate bonds

 

 

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SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF Exposure to U.S. dollar denominated, high yield corporate bonds
iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF Exposure to U.S. real estate equities
iShares U.S. Preferred Stock ETF Exposure to the U.S. preferred stock market
PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund Exposure to a basket of commodities that excludes livestock exposure
SPDR Gold Trust Exposure to gold

 

Suspension and Cancellation

 

The Index Sponsor may discontinue and cancel the Index at any time and is under no obligation to continue, or procure the continuation of, the calculation, publication and dissemination of the Index Level.

 

Corrections, Calculations and Determinations

 

If the Index Calculation Agent becomes aware that any information used by it in connection with any calculation under the Index Rules has subsequently been corrected or adjusted within the Correction Period and the Correction Period does not include a Rebalancing Date, then the Index Calculation Agent shall use such corrected or adjusted information and as a consequence make any further calculation that it determines necessary or desirable in order to give effect to or to reflect such corrected or adjusted information, including without limitation any redenomination, exchange or conversion of any currency into a successor currency. If the Correction Period includes a Rebalancing Date, the Index Calculation Agent may, but shall not be obliged to, use such corrected or adjusted information, and in exercising such discretion, the Index Calculation Agent will act in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner that is consistent with the commercial objective of the Index. The Correction Period is two Index Business Days after the date of original publication of the applicable information.

 

The Index Calculation Agent will make all calculations, determinations, rebalancings and adjustments in respect of the Index. Neither the Index Sponsor nor Index Calculation Agent (if separate from the Index Sponsor) shall have any responsibility for good faith errors or omissions in calculations, determinations, rebalancings and adjustments as provided herein or in the Index Rules. The calculations, determinations, rebalancings and adjustments of the Index Calculation Agent shall be made by it as described herein and in the Index Rules, in its sole discretion, but in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner (having regard in each case to the criteria stipulated herein and therein). All calculations, determinations, rebalancings and adjustments shall, in the absence of manifest error, be final, conclusive and binding.

 

Although the Index Rules are intended to be comprehensive, it is possible that ambiguities, errors and omissions may arise in certain circumstances. The Index Sponsor will resolve, acting in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner, any such ambiguity, error or omission, and may amend the Index Rules to reflect the resolution of such ambiguity, error or omission in a manner which is consistent with the commercial objective of the Index.

 

Notwithstanding that certain calculations, determinations, rebalancings and adjustments described herein may be expressed to be “on” a certain date or “at” a certain time, the Index Calculation Agent may make such calculations, determinations, rebalancings and adjustments in respect of that date or time “as of” such date or time on a date or time after that date or time, as determined by it in its discretion.

 

In performing any calculation, determination, rebalancing, adjustment or other action in connection with the Index Rules, each of the Index Sponsor and the Index Calculation Agent (if separate from the Index Sponsor) will act as principal and not as agent of any other person. Neither the Index Sponsor nor the Index Calculation Agent (if separate from the Index Sponsor) owes any duty of care or any fiduciary duty to any person. Each calculation, determination, rebalancing, adjustment and other action performed pursuant to the Index Rules by the Index Sponsor or the Index Calculation Agent (if separate from the Index Sponsor) is performed in reliance on this provision and is subject to this provision.

 

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If through performing any such calculation, determination, rebalancing, adjustment or other action the Index Sponsor or the Index Calculation Agent (if separate from the Index Sponsor) is rendered an agent or fiduciary of another person under applicable law, then (at the option of the Index Calculation Agent or the Index Sponsor, as relevant) the rights and obligations of the Index Sponsor or the Index Calculation Agent (if separate from the Index Sponsor) to perform such calculation, determination, rebalancing, adjustment or other action may be suspended (or, if already performed, the application of such calculation, determination, rebalancing, adjustment or other action may be suspended) until such time when such calculation, determination, rebalancing, adjustment or other action can be performed either by the Index Sponsor or the Index Calculation Agent (if separate from the Index Sponsor) as principal and not as an agent or fiduciary or by an appropriate third party who is both willing and able to perform such calculation, determination, rebalancing, adjustment or other action.

 

Hypothetical Back-Tested Index Performance Information

 

The Index Sponsor has calculated hypothetical back-tested performance information for the Index, which will be included in the applicable pricing supplement. All Index performance information prior to June 30, 2015 is hypothetical and back-tested, as the Index did not exist prior to that date. Hypothetical back-tested Index performance information is subject to significant limitations. The Index Sponsor developed the Index Rules with the benefit of hindsight—that is, with the benefit of being able to evaluate how the Index Rules would have caused the Index to perform had it existed during the hypothetical back-tested period. The fact that the Index generally appreciated over the hypothetical back-tested period may not therefore be an accurate or reliable indication of any fundamental aspect of the Index methodology. Furthermore, the hypothetical back-tested performance of the Index might look different if it covered a different historical period. The market conditions that existed during the hypothetical back-tested period may not be representative of market conditions that will exist in the future.

 

The hypothetical back-tested Index levels have been calculated by the Index Sponsor based on the published historical prices of the Eligible Market Constituents and the published historical 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR rate, applying the Index methodology substantially as described above, except that proxy data for six of the twelve Eligible Market Constituents has been used for certain periods prior to December 4, 2007 when such Eligible Market Constituents did not yet exist. Specifically:

 

·the SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF commenced trading on December 4, 2007;

 

·the iShares U.S. Preferred Stock ETF commenced trading on March 30, 2007;

 

·the PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund commenced trading on February 3, 2006;

 

·the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF commenced trading on March 10, 2005;

 

·the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF commenced trading on March 10, 2005; and

 

·the SPDR Gold Trust commenced trading on November 18, 2004.

 

For all time periods covered by the hypothetical back-tested performance information for the Index during which any Eligible Market Constituent (other than the SPDR Gold Trust) had not yet commenced trading, the total return version of the underlying index tracked by that Eligible Market Constituent as of June 30, 2015 has been used as a proxy for that Eligible Market Constituent for purposes of calculating the hypothetical back-tested performance information. The total return versions of the underlying indices reflect changes in the prices of the underlying assets and, in addition, reflect (i) in the case of an equity index, the hypothetical reinvestment of dividends, (ii) in the case of a bond index, the hypothetical reinvestment of interest payments and (iii) in the case of a commodity index, the yield on a hypothetical investment in 3-month U.S. Treasury bills. In the case of the SPDR Gold Trust, the proxy used is the afternoon gold fixing price published by the London Bullion Market Association.

 

The proxies used in the calculation of the hypothetical back-tested performance information differ from the corresponding Eligible Market Constituents in that they do not reflect fees and expenses of the Eligible Market Constituents that would have reduced the performance of the Eligible Market Constituents; they do not reflect any tracking error with respect to the relevant underlying index that would have been experienced by an Eligible Market Constituent; and they do not reflect the reinvestment of dividends or interest payments in the same manner as dividends or distributions are hypothetically reinvested in the Eligible Market Constituents by the Index.

 

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Accordingly, the hypothetical back-tested Index performance information, to the extent that it utilizes proxy data, may not reflect how the Index would have performed had the relevant Eligible Market Constituents existed during the relevant time period.

 

In addition, certain of the Eligible Market Constituents have changed the underlying indices that they seek to track, and the underlying indices tracked by certain of the Eligible Market Constituents have made changes to their rules. For example:

 

·Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF. Prior to January 2013, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF tracked the MSCI Emerging Markets Index. In January 2013, the ETF began to transition from tracking the MSCI Emerging Markets Index to tracking the FTSE Emerging Index. In order to accomplish that transition, from January 10, 2013 to June 28, 2013 the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF employed an indexing investment approach by investing substantially all of its assets (approximately 95%) in the common stocks included in the FTSE Emerging Transition Index. The FTSE Emerging Transition Index differed from FTSE’s Emerging Index prior to March 18, 2013, in that it contained “P Chip” and South Korean companies, used actual free float in the calculation of the FTSE Emerging Index, and incorporated the indicative additions and deletions that were projected to be applied at the March 2013 index review. A “P Chip” company is one that is controlled by mainland China individuals, with the establishment and origin of the company in mainland China. The company must be incorporated outside of the People’s Republic of China and traded on the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong, with a majority of its revenue or assets derived from mainland China.

 

At the March 2013 FTSE Emerging Index review, the majority of these differences were removed, and the primary difference was that the FTSE Emerging Transition Index contained South Korean companies. FTSE, the publisher of the FTSE Emerging Index and the FTSE Emerging Transition Index, classified South Korea as a Developed Market in September 2009 and since then it has not been a member of FTSE’s emerging indices. As the MSCI Emerging Markets Index included South Korea in its portfolio, constituents of the FTSE Korea Index were initially included in the transition index universe and then over a 25-week time horizon weight of South Korea within the index was gradually reduced. The FTSE Emerging Transition Index was a “dynamic” index that represented the components of the FTSE Emerging Index plus South Korean equity exposure. The FTSE Emerging Transition Index was designed to gradually reduce South Korean equity exposure by approximately 4% each week over a period of 25 weeks while proportionately adding exposure to stocks of companies located in other countries based on their weightings in the FTSE Emerging Index. As of June 28, 2013, the ETF completed its transition and began tracking the performance of the FTSE Emerging Index.

 

Additionally, on June 2, 2015, The Vanguard Group, Inc. announced that the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF will transition to track a new underlying index. According to The Vanguard Group, Inc., the transition to the new underlying index will take place over a period of approximately 12 months starting in the third or fourth quarter of 2015, with the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF ceasing to track the FTSE Emerging Index and beginning to temporarily track the FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Transition Index. By using this transition index, the ETF will gradually move from tracking the FTSE Emerging Index to tracking the FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index. As part of the transition, China A-shares and small capitalization companies will gradually increase in weight by an equal amount after the third Friday of each month over the 12-month period, while the weights of the stocks already in the index will be proportionately reduced. The FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index is a market-capitalization weighted index representing the performance of large-, mid- and small-capitalization stocks in emerging markets, with market-capitalization adjustments in the case of China A-Shares to take into account the quota amount allocated to foreign investors by the Chinese regulator. The FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index is comprised of approximately 3,350 securities from 21 countries, and is part of the FTSE China A Inclusion Indexes. The principal differences between the FTSE Emerging Index and the FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index are that the former represents the performance of large- and mid-cap companies in emerging markets, excluding China A-Shares, whereas the latter also represents the performance of small-cap stocks in emerging markets and includes China A-Shares. As a result of this transition, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF will be exposed to risks associated with investing both in mainland China and in small-capitalization stocks.

 

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·Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF. On June 2, 2015, The Vanguard Group, Inc. announced that the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF will transition to track a new underlying index. According to The Vanguard Group, Inc., the transition to the new underlying index will take place over a period of approximately 12 months starting in the third or fourth quarter of 2015, with the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF ceasing to track the FTSE Developed Europe Index and beginning to track the FTSE Developed Europe All Cap Index. The FTSE Developed Europe Index is a market-capitalization weighted index representing the performance of large-, mid- and small-capitalization stocks in developed European markets. The principal difference between the FTSE Developed Europe Index and the FTSE Developed Europe All Cap Index is that the latter includes small-capitalization stocks.

 

·SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF. On February 1, 2013, the sponsor of the underlying index of the SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF began implementing the following changes to the index rules over a six-month transition period: (i) increasing the number of eligible bonds from the largest bond per issuer to the three largest bonds per issuer; (ii) lowering the minimum security amount outstanding threshold from $600 million to $500 million; (iii) lengthening the seasoning period from issuance for eligible bonds from three to five years; and (iv) capping the exposure of any index eligible issuer at two percent (there was previously no issuer cap in place).

 

As a result of these changes, the underlying indices to be tracked in the future by these Eligible Market Constituents differ in certain respects from the underlying indices tracked by the same Eligible Market Constituents during some or all of the back-tested period. The sponsor of any Eligible Market Constituent or its underlying index may make additional changes in the future. The hypothetical back-tested Index performance may not reflect how the Index would have performed had the relevant Eligible Market Constituents tracked the same underlying indices (with the same rules) during the full back-tested period that they will track in the future.

 

It is impossible to predict whether the Index will rise or fall. By providing hypothetical back-tested and historical Index performance information in connection with the Notes, we are not representing that the Index is likely to achieve gains or losses similar to those shown. In fact, there are frequently sharp differences between hypothetical performance results and the actual results subsequently achieved by any particular investment. One of the limitations of hypothetical performance information is that it did not involve financial risk and cannot account for all factors that would affect actual performance. The actual future performance of the Index may bear no relation to the hypothetical back-tested or historical performance of the Index.

 

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Benefit Plan Investor Considerations

 

A fiduciary of a pension, profit-sharing or other employee benefit plan subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (“ERISA”), including entities such as collective investment funds, partnerships and separate accounts whose underlying assets include the assets of such plans (collectively, “ERISA Plans”), should consider the fiduciary standards of ERISA in the context of the ERISA Plan’s particular circumstances before authorizing an investment in the Notes. Among other factors, the fiduciary should consider whether the investment would satisfy the prudence and diversification requirements of ERISA and would be consistent with the documents and instruments governing the ERISA Plan.

 

Section 406 of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, (the “Code”) prohibit ERISA Plans, as well as plans (including individual retirement accounts and Keogh plans) subject to Section 4975 of the Code (together with ERISA Plans, “Plans”), from engaging in certain transactions involving the “plan assets” with persons who are “parties in interest” under ERISA or “disqualified persons” under Section 4975 of the Code (in either case, “Parties in Interest”) with respect to such Plans. As a result of our business, we, and our current and future affiliates, may be Parties in Interest with respect to many Plans. Where we (or our affiliate) are a Party in Interest with respect to a Plan (either directly or by reason of our ownership interests in our directly or indirectly owned subsidiaries), the purchase and holding of the Notes by or on behalf of the Plan could be a prohibited transaction under Section 406 of ERISA and/or Section 4975 of the Code, unless exemptive relief were available under an applicable exemption (as described below).

 

Certain prohibited transaction class exemptions (“PTCEs”) issued by the U.S. Department of Labor may provide exemptive relief for direct or indirect prohibited transactions resulting from the purchase or holding of the Notes. Those class exemptions are PTCE 96-23 (for certain transactions determined by in-house asset managers), PTCE 95-60 (for certain transactions involving insurance company general accounts), PTCE 91-38 (for certain transactions involving bank collective investment funds), PTCE 90-1 (for certain transactions involving insurance company separate accounts) and PTCE 84-14 (for certain transactions determined by independent qualified asset managers). In addition, ERISA Section 408(b)(17) and Section 4975(d)(20) of the Code may provide a limited exemption for the purchase and sale of the Notes and related lending transactions, provided that neither the issuer of the Notes nor any of its affiliates have or exercise any discretionary authority or control or render any investment advice with respect to the assets of the Plan involved in the transaction and provided further that the Plan pays no more, and receives no less, than adequate consideration in connection with the transaction (the so-called “service provider exemption”). There can be no assurance that any of these statutory or class exemptions will be available with respect to transactions involving the Notes.

 

Accordingly, the Notes may not be purchased or held by any Plan, any entity whose underlying assets include “plan assets” by reason of any Plan’s investment in the entity (a “Plan Asset Entity”) or any person investing “plan assets” of any Plan, unless such purchaser or holder is eligible for the exemptive relief available under PTCE 96-23, 95-60, 91-38, 90-1 or 84-14 or the service provider exemption or there is some other basis on which the purchase and holding of the Notes will not constitute a non-exempt prohibited transaction under ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code. Each purchaser or holder of the Notes or any interest therein will be deemed to have represented by its purchase or holding of the Notes that (a) it is not a Plan and its purchase and holding of the Notes is not made on behalf of or with “plan assets” of any Plan or (b) its purchase and holding of the Notes will not result in a non-exempt prohibited transaction under Section 406 of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code.

 

Certain governmental plans (as defined in Section 3(32) of ERISA), church plans (as defined in Section 3(33) of ERISA) and non-U.S. plans (as described in Section 4(b)(4) of ERISA) (“Non-ERISA Arrangements”) are not subject to these “prohibited transaction” rules of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code, but may be subject to similar rules under other applicable laws or regulations (“Similar Laws”). Accordingly, each such purchaser or holder of the Notes shall be required to represent (and deemed to have represented by its purchase of the Notes) that such purchase and holding is not prohibited under applicable Similar Laws.

 

Due to the complexity of these rules, it is particularly important that fiduciaries or other persons considering purchasing the Notes on behalf of or with “plan assets” of any Plan consult with their counsel regarding the relevant provisions of ERISA, the Code or any Similar Laws and the availability of exemptive relief under PTCE 96-23, 95-60, 91-38, 90-1, 84-14, the service provider exemption or some other basis on which the acquisition and holding will not constitute a non-exempt prohibited transaction under ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code or a violation of any applicable Similar Laws.

 

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The Notes are contractual financial instruments. The financial exposure provided by the Notes is not a substitute or proxy for, and is not intended as a substitute or proxy for, individualized investment management or advice for the benefit of any purchaser or holder of the Notes. The Notes have not been designed and will not be administered in a manner intended to reflect the individualized needs and objectives of any purchaser or holder of the Notes.

 

Each purchaser and holder of the Notes has exclusive responsibility for ensuring that its purchase, holding and subsequent disposition of the Notes does not violate the fiduciary or prohibited transaction rules of ERISA, the Code or any applicable Similar Laws. The sale of any Notes to any Plan is in no respect a representation by us or any of our affiliates or representatives that such an investment meets all relevant legal requirements with respect to investments by Plans or Non-ERISA Arrangements generally or any particular Plan or Non-ERISA Arrangement, or that such an investment is appropriate for Plans or Non-ERISA Arrangements generally or any particular Plan or Non-ERISA Arrangement.

 

However, individual retirement accounts, individual retirement annuities and Keogh plans, as well as employee benefit plans that permit participants to direct the investment of their accounts, will not be permitted to purchase or hold the Notes if the account, plan or annuity is for the benefit of an employee of CGMI or a family member and the employee receives any compensation (such as, for example, an addition to bonus) based on the purchase of Notes by the account, plan or annuity.

 

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UNITED STATES FEDERAL TAX CONSIDERATIONS

 

The following is a discussion of the material U.S. federal income and certain estate tax consequences of the ownership and disposition of the Notes. It applies to you only if you purchase a Note for cash in the initial offering at the “issue price,” which is the first price at which a substantial amount of the Notes is sold to the public, and hold the Note as a capital asset within the meaning of Section 1221 of the Code. This discussion does not address all of the tax consequences that may be relevant to you in light of your particular circumstances or if you are a holder subject to special rules, such as:

 

·a financial institution;

 

·a “regulated investment company”;

 

·a tax-exempt entity, including an “individual retirement account” or “Roth IRA”;

 

·a dealer or trader subject to a mark-to-market method of tax accounting with respect to the Notes;

 

·a person holding a Note as part of a “straddle” or conversion transaction or one who enters into a “constructive sale” with respect to a Note;

 

·a person subject to the alternative minimum tax;

 

·a U.S. Holder (as defined below) whose functional currency is not the U.S. dollar; or

 

·an entity classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes.

 

If an entity that is classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes holds the Notes, the U.S. federal income tax treatment of a partner will generally depend on the status of the partner and the activities of the partnership. If you are a partnership holding the Notes or a partner in such a partnership, you should consult your tax adviser as to the particular U.S. federal tax consequences of holding and disposing of the Notes to you.

 

We will not attempt to ascertain whether any issuer of any Underlying Shares, or shares that underlie an Underlying Index, to which the Notes relate (collectively, the “Underlying Equity”) should be treated as a “U.S. real property holding corporation” (“USRPHC”) within the meaning of Section 897 of the Code. If any issuer of the Underlying Equity were so treated, certain adverse U.S. federal income tax consequences might apply to you if you are a Non-U.S. Holder (as defined below) upon a sale, exchange or other disposition of the Notes. You should refer to information filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission or another governmental authority by the issuers of the Underlying Equity and consult your tax adviser regarding the possible consequences to you if any issuer of Underlying Equity is or becomes a USRPHC.

 

This discussion is based on the Code, administrative pronouncements, judicial decisions and final, temporary and proposed Treasury regulations, all as of the date of this index supplement, changes to any of which subsequent to the date of this index supplement may affect the tax consequences described herein, possibly with retroactive effect. This discussion does not address the effects of any applicable state, local or non-U.S. tax laws or the potential application of the Medicare contribution tax. You should consult your tax adviser about the application of the U.S. federal income and estate tax laws (including the possibility of alternative treatments of the Notes) to your particular situation, as well as any tax consequences arising under the laws of any state, local or non-U.S. jurisdiction.

 

This discussion may be supplemented, modified or superseded by disclosure regarding U.S. federal tax consequences set out in an applicable pricing supplement, which you should read before making a decision to invest in the relevant Notes.

 

Tax Treatment of the Notes

 

Unless otherwise indicated in the applicable pricing supplement, we intend to treat the Notes as debt instruments for U.S. federal income tax purposes, and the discussion herein is based on this treatment. With respect to Notes with a term of longer than one year (calculated as described below), the applicable pricing supplement will specify whether we intend to treat such Notes as “variable rate debt instruments” or as “contingent payment debt instruments,” each as discussed below.

 

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The discussion below is subject to the discussion under “—Assumption by Citigroup Inc.” and should be read in conjunction therewith.

 

Tax Consequences to U.S. Holders

 

This section applies only to U.S. Holders. You are a “U.S. Holder” if for U.S. federal income tax purposes you are a beneficial owner of a Note that is:

 

·a citizen or individual resident of the United States;

 

·a corporation created or organized in or under the laws of the United States, any state thereof or the District of Columbia; or

 

·an estate or trust the income of which is subject to U.S. federal income taxation regardless of its source.

 

Legislation enacted in 2017 modified the rules regarding the timing of income to be recognized by accrual method taxpayers. Under this legislation, if you are an accrual method taxpayer, notwithstanding the discussion below, you may be required to include income on a Note no later than when the relevant item is taken into account as revenue in an applicable financial statement. You should consult your tax adviser concerning the application of these rules in your particular situation.

 

Short-Term Notes

 

The following discussion applies only to Notes with a term of one year or less (from but excluding the issue date to and including the last possible date that the Notes could be outstanding pursuant to their terms) (“Short-Term Notes”). Generally, a Short-Term Note is treated as issued at a discount equal to the sum of all payments required on the Note minus its issue price.

 

If you are a cash-method U.S. Holder, you generally will not be required to recognize income with respect to a Short-Term Note prior to maturity, other than with respect to the receipt of interest payments, if any, or pursuant to a sale or other taxable disposition of the Note. If you are an accrual-method U.S. Holder (or a cash-method U.S. Holder who elects to accrue income on the Note currently), you will be subject to rules that generally require accrual of discount on Short-Term Notes on a straight-line basis, unless you elect a constant-yield method of accrual based on daily compounding. It is not clear whether or how any accrual should be determined prior to the relevant Valuation Date(s) in respect of a payment. You should consult your tax adviser regarding the amount and timing of any accruals on such Notes.

 

Upon a sale, exchange or retirement (each, a “taxable disposition”) of a Short-Term Note, you will generally recognize gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount realized on the sale or other taxable disposition and your tax basis in the Note. Your tax basis in the Note should equal the amount paid to acquire the Note increased, if you accrue income on the Notes currently, by any previously accrued but unpaid discount. The amount of any resulting loss generally will be treated as a short-term capital loss, the deductibility of which is subject to limitations. The excess of the amount received at maturity over your tax basis in the Note generally should be treated as ordinary income. If you sell a Short-Term Note providing for a contingent return at maturity prior to the time the contingent return has been fixed, it is not clear whether any gain you recognize should be treated as ordinary income, short-term capital gain, or a combination of ordinary income and short-term capital gain. You should consult your tax adviser regarding the treatment of Short-Term Notes providing for contingent payments.

 

If you are a cash-method U.S. Holder, unless you make the election to accrue income currently on a Short-Term Note, you will generally be required to defer deductions for interest paid on indebtedness incurred to purchase or carry the Note in an amount not exceeding the accrued discount that you have not included in income. As discussed above, it is unclear whether or how accrual of discount should be determined prior to the relevant Valuation Date(s) in respect of a payment. If you make the election to accrue income currently, that election will apply to all Short-Term Notes acquired by you on or after the first day of the first taxable year to which that election applies. You should consult your tax adviser regarding these rules.

 

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Notes Treated as Variable Rate Debt Instruments

 

The following discussion applies only to Notes that are properly treated as variable rate debt instruments for U.S. federal income tax purposes (“VRDIs”) and that provide for stated interest at a single variable rate. The treatment of other VRDIs will be addressed in the applicable pricing supplement.

 

Stated interest on a VRDI will be treated as “qualified stated interest” (“QSI”) and will be taxable to you as ordinary interest income at the time it accrues or is received, in accordance with your method of tax accounting. If the stated principal amount of a VRDI exceeds its issue price by at least a specified de minimis amount, this excess will be treated as “original issue discount” (“OID”) that you must include in income as it accrues in accordance with a constant-yield method based on compounding of interest before the receipt of cash payments attributable to this income.

 

Upon the sale or other taxable disposition of a VRDI, you generally will recognize capital gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount realized (other than amounts attributable to accrued QSI, which will be treated as described above) and your tax basis in the VRDI. Your tax basis in a VRDI will equal the amount you paid to purchase the VRDI, increased by the amounts of OID (if any) you previously included in income with respect to the VRDI and reduced by any payments other than QSI you received. Such gain or loss generally will be long-term capital gain or loss if you held the VRDI for more than one year at the time of disposition. The deductibility of capital losses is subject to limitations.

 

Notes Treated as Contingent Payment Debt Instruments

 

The following discussion applies only to Notes that are properly treated as contingent payment debt instruments for U.S. federal income tax purposes (“CPDIs”).

 

We are required to determine a “comparable yield” for each issuance of CPDIs. The comparable yield is the yield at which we could issue a fixed-rate debt instrument with terms similar to those of the CPDIs, including the level of subordination, term, timing of payments and general market conditions, but excluding any adjustments for the riskiness of the contingencies or the liquidity of the CPDIs. Solely for purposes of determining the amount of interest income that you will be required to accrue, we are also required to construct a “projected payment schedule” in respect of the CPDIs representing a payment or a series of payments the amount and timing of which would produce a yield to maturity on the CPDIs equal to the comparable yield.

 

Neither the comparable yield nor the projected payment schedule constitutes a representation by us regarding the actual amounts that we will pay on the CPDIs.

 

For U.S. federal income tax purposes, you are required to use our determination of the comparable yield and projected payment schedule in determining interest accruals and adjustments in respect of the CPDIs, unless you timely disclose and justify the use of other estimates to the IRS. Regardless of your method of tax accounting for U.S. federal income tax purposes, you will be required to accrue, as interest income, OID on the CPDIs at the comparable yield, adjusted upward or downward to reflect the difference, if any, between the actual and the projected payments on the CPDIs during the year (as described below).

 

You will be required for U.S. federal income tax purposes to accrue an amount of OID, for each accrual period prior to and including the maturity (or earlier sale or other taxable disposition) of a CPDI, that equals the product of (i) the “adjusted issue price” of the CPDI (as defined below) as of the beginning of the accrual period, (ii) the comparable yield of the CPDI, adjusted for the length of the accrual period and (iii) the number of days during the accrual period that you held the CPDI divided by the number of days in the accrual period. The adjusted issue price of a CPDI is its issue price increased by any interest income you have previously accrued (determined without regard to adjustments due to differences between projected and actual payments) and decreased by the projected amounts of any payments previously made on the CPDI (without regard to actual amounts paid).

 

In addition to interest accrued based upon the comparable yield as described above, you will be required to recognize interest income equal to the amount of any net positive adjustment (i.e., the excess of actual payments over projected payments) in respect of a CPDI for a taxable year. A net negative adjustment (i.e., the excess of projected payments over actual payments) in respect of a CPDI for a taxable year:

 

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·will first reduce the amount of interest in respect of the CPDI that you would otherwise be required to include in income in the taxable year; and

 

·to the extent of any excess, will give rise to an ordinary loss, but only to the extent that the amount of all previous interest inclusions under the CPDI exceeds the total amount of the net negative adjustments treated as ordinary loss on the CPDI in prior taxable years.

 

A net negative adjustment is not treated as a miscellaneous itemized deduction (for which deductions would be unavailable or, beginning in 2026, available only to a limited extent). Any net negative adjustment in excess of the amounts described above may be carried forward to offset future interest income in respect of the CPDI or to reduce the amount realized on a sale or other taxable disposition of the CPDI.

 

Upon a sale or other taxable disposition of a CPDI, you generally will recognize taxable income or loss equal to the difference between the amount received and your tax basis in the CPDI. Your tax basis in the CPDI will equal your purchase price for the CPDI increased by any interest income you have previously accrued (determined without regard to adjustments due to differences between projected and actual payments) and decreased by the projected amounts of any payments previously made on the CPDI (without regard to actual amounts paid). At maturity, you will be treated as receiving the projected amount for that date, and any difference between the amount actually received and that projected amount will be treated as a positive or negative adjustment governed by the rules described above. As described above, the amount you are treated as receiving upon a disposition of a CPDI, whether at or prior to maturity, will be reduced by any carryforward of a net negative adjustment. You generally must treat any income as interest income and any loss as ordinary loss to the extent of previous interest inclusions (reduced by the total amount of net negative adjustments previously taken into account as ordinary losses), and the balance as capital loss. These losses are not treated as miscellaneous itemized deductions. The deductibility of capital losses, however, is subject to limitations. Additionally, if you recognize a loss above certain thresholds, you may be required to file a disclosure statement with the IRS. You should consult your tax adviser regarding this reporting obligation.

 

Special rules may apply if all the remaining payments on a CPDI become fixed substantially contemporaneously. For this purpose, payments will be treated as fixed if the remaining contingencies with respect to them are remote or incidental. Under these rules, you would be required to account for the difference between the originally projected payments and the fixed payments in a reasonable manner over the period to which the difference relates. In addition, you would be required to make adjustments to, among other things, your accrual periods and your tax basis in the CPDI. The character of any gain or loss on a sale or other taxable disposition of your CPDI also might be affected. If one or more (but not all) contingent payments on a CPDI became fixed more than six months prior to the relevant payment date(s), you would be required to account for the difference between the originally projected payment(s) and the fixed payment(s) on a present value basis. You should consult your tax adviser regarding the application of these rules.

 

Tax Consequences to Non-U.S. Holders

 

This section applies only to Non-U.S. Holders. You are a “Non-U.S. Holder” if for U.S. federal income tax purposes you are a beneficial owner of a Note that is:

 

·an individual who is classified as a nonresident alien;

 

·a foreign corporation; or

 

· a foreign trust or estate.

 

You are not a Non-U.S. Holder for purposes of this discussion if you are (i) an individual who is present in the United States for 183 days or more in the taxable year of disposition or (ii) a former citizen or resident of the United States and certain conditions apply. If you are or may become such a person during the period in which you hold a Note, you should consult your tax adviser regarding the U.S. federal tax consequences of an investment in the Notes.

 

Subject to the possible application of Section 897 of the Code and the discussions below under “—Possible Withholding Under Section 871(m) of the Code” and “FATCA,” you generally will not be subject to U.S. federal withholding or income tax in respect of payments on or amounts received on a sale or other taxable disposition of a Note, provided that (i) income in respect of the Notes is not effectively connected with your conduct of a trade or

 

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business in the United States, and (ii) you provide an appropriate IRS Form W-8 certifying under penalties of perjury that you are not a United States person.

 

If you are engaged in a U.S. trade or business, and if income from the Notes is effectively connected with your conduct of that trade or business, you generally will be subject to regular U.S. federal income tax with respect to that income in the same manner as if you were a U.S. Holder, subject to the provisions of an applicable income tax treaty. In this event, if you are a corporation, you should also consider the potential application of a 30% (or lower treaty rate) branch profits tax.

 

Possible Withholding Under Section 871(m) of the Code

 

Section 871(m) of the Code and the Treasury regulations thereunder (“Section 871(m)”) impose a 30% (or lower treaty rate) withholding tax on “dividend equivalents” paid or deemed paid to Non-U.S. Holders with respect to certain financial instruments linked to U.S. equities (“Underlying Securities”), as defined under the applicable Treasury regulations, or indices that include Underlying Securities. Section 871(m) generally applies to "specified equity-linked instruments" ("Specified ELIs"), which are financial instruments that substantially replicate the economic performance of one or more Underlying Securities, as determined based on tests set forth in the applicable Treasury regulations and discussed further below. Section 871(m) provides certain exceptions to this withholding regime, in particular for instruments linked to certain broad-based indices that meet requirements set forth in the applicable Treasury regulations (“Qualified Indices”) as well as securities that track such indices (“Qualified Index Securities”).

 

Although the Section 871(m) regime became effective in 2017, Treasury regulations, as modified by an IRS notice, phase in the application of Section 871(m) as follows:

 

·For financial instruments issued prior to 2021, Section 871(m) will generally apply only to financial instruments that have a “delta” of one.

 

·For financial instruments issued in 2021 and thereafter, Section 871(m) will apply if either (i) the “delta” of the relevant financial instrument is at least 0.80, if it is a “simple” contract, or (ii) the financial instrument meets a “substantial equivalence” test, if it is a “complex” contract.

 

Delta is generally defined as the ratio of the change in the fair market value of a financial instrument to a small change in the fair market value of the number of shares of the Underlying Security. The “substantial equivalence” test measures whether a complex contract tracks its “initial hedge” (shares of the Underlying Security that would fully hedge the contract) more closely than would a “benchmark” simple contract with a delta of 0.80.

 

The calculations are generally made at the “calculation date,” which is the earlier of (i) the time of pricing of the Note, i.e., when all material terms have been agreed on, and (ii) the issuance of the Note. However, if the time of pricing is more than 14 calendar days before the issuance of the Note, the calculation date is the date of the issuance of the Note. In those circumstances, information regarding our final determinations for purposes of Section 871(m) may be available only after the time of pricing of the Note. As a result, you should acquire such a Note only if you are willing to accept the risk that the Note is treated as a Specified ELI subject to withholding under Section 871(m).

 

If the terms of a Note are subject to a “significant modification,” (for example, upon an event discussed below under “Assumption by Citigroup Inc.”), the Note generally will be treated as reissued for this purpose at the time of the significant modification, in which case the Notes could become Specified ELIs at that time.

 

If a Note is a Specified ELI, withholding in respect of dividend equivalents will, depending on the applicable withholding agent’s circumstances, generally be required either (i) on the underlying dividend payment date or (ii) when cash payments are made on the Note or upon the date of maturity, lapse or other disposition of the Note by you, or possibly upon certain other events. Depending on the circumstances, the applicable withholding agent may withhold the required amounts from coupon or other payments on the Note, from proceeds of the retirement or other disposition of the Note, or from your other cash or property held by the withholding agent.

 

The dividend equivalent amount will include the amount of any actual or, under certain circumstances, estimated dividend. If the dividend equivalent amount is based on the actual dividend, it will be equal to the product of: (i) in the case of a “simple” contract, the per-share dividend amount, the number of shares of an Underlying Security and the delta; or (ii) in the case of a “complex” contract, the per-share dividend amount and the initial

 

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hedge. The dividend equivalent amount for Specified ELIs issued prior to 2021 that have a “delta” of one will be calculated in the same manner as (i) above, using a “delta” of one. The per-share dividend amount will be the actual dividend (including any special dividends) paid with respect to a share of the Underlying Security. If the dividend equivalent amount is based on an estimated dividend, the pricing supplement will generally state the estimated amounts.

 

Depending on the terms of a Note and whether or not it is issued prior to 2021, the pricing supplement may contain additional information relevant to Section 871(m), such as whether the Note references a Qualified Index or Qualified Index Security; whether it is a “simple” contract; the “delta” and the number of shares multiplied by delta (for a simple contract); and whether the “substantial equivalence test” is met and the initial hedge (for a complex contract).

 

Prospective purchasers of the Notes should consult their tax advisers regarding the potential application of Section 871(m) to a particular Note. Our determination is binding on Non-U.S. Holders, but it is not binding on the IRS. The Section 871(m) regulations require complex calculations to be made with respect to Notes linked to U.S. equities and their application to a specific issue of Notes may be uncertain. Accordingly, even if we determine that certain Notes are not Specified ELIs, the IRS could challenge our determination and assert that withholding is required in respect of those Notes. Moreover, your consequences under Section 871(m) may depend on your particular circumstances. For example, if you enter into other transactions relating to an Underlying Security, you could be subject to withholding tax or income tax liability under Section 871(m) even if the Notes are not Specified ELIs subject to Section 871(m) as a general matter. Non-U.S. Holders should consult their tax advisers regarding the application of Section 871(m) in their particular circumstances.

 

U.S. Federal Estate Tax

 

If you are an individual Non-U.S. Holder or an entity the property of which is potentially includible in such an individual’s gross estate for U.S. federal estate tax purposes (for example, a trust funded by such an individual and with respect to which the individual has retained certain interests or powers), you should note that, absent an applicable treaty exemption, a Note that is treated as a debt obligation for U.S. federal estate tax purposes generally will be treated as U.S.-situs property subject to U.S. federal estate tax if payments on the Note, if received by the decedent at the time of death, would have been subject to U.S. federal withholding or income tax (even if the IRS Form W-8 certification requirement described above were satisfied and not taking into account the elimination of such U.S. federal withholding tax due to the application of an income tax treaty). If you are such an individual or entity, you should consult your tax adviser regarding the U.S. federal estate tax consequences of an investment in the Notes.

 

Information Reporting and Backup Withholding

 

Payments on the Notes, and the proceeds of a sale, exchange or other disposition of the Notes, may be subject to information reporting and, if you fail to provide certain identifying information (such as an accurate taxpayer identification number if you are a U.S. Holder) or meet certain other conditions, may also be subject to backup withholding at the rate specified in the Code. If you are a Non-U.S. Holder that provides an appropriate IRS Form W-8, you will generally establish an exemption from backup withholding. Amounts withheld under the backup withholding rules are not additional taxes and may be refunded or credited against your U.S. federal income tax liability, provided the relevant information is timely furnished to the IRS.

 

Assumption by Citigroup Inc.

 

As provided in the accompanying prospectus, our obligations under the Notes may be assumed by Citigroup Inc. We intend that Citigroup Inc. will assume our obligations under the Notes pursuant to this provision only in circumstances in which we expect to treat such an assumption as not giving rise to a “significant modification” of the Notes and have been advised by our counsel that such treatment is reasonable under the circumstances and the law in effect at the time of such assumption. However, in light of the lack of clear authority regarding the treatment of such an assumption, there may be uncertainty regarding the correctness of this treatment. As a result, it is possible that the IRS may treat an assumption of the Notes as a significant modification, in which case the timing and character of income recognized with respect to the Notes, including the withholding tax consequences to a Non-U.S. Holder, after the assumption could be affected significantly, depending on circumstances at the time of the assumption. Moreover, a U.S. Holder would generally be required to recognize gain (if any) with respect to the

 

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Notes at the time of the assumption in the same manner as described above in respect of a sale or other taxable disposition of the Notes. You should consult your tax adviser regarding the consequences of an assumption of the Notes.

 

FATCA

 

Legislation commonly referred to as “FATCA” generally imposes a withholding tax of 30% on payments to certain non-U.S. entities (including financial intermediaries) with respect to certain financial instruments, unless various U.S. information reporting and due diligence requirements (that are in addition to, and potentially significantly more onerous than, the requirement to deliver an IRS Form W-8) have been satisfied. An intergovernmental agreement between the United States and the non-U.S. entity’s jurisdiction may modify these requirements. This legislation generally applies to interest on the Notes and certain dividend equivalents (as defined above) under Section 871(m). While existing Treasury regulations would also require withholding on payments of gross proceeds of the disposition (including upon retirement) of the Notes, the U.S. Treasury Department has indicated in subsequent proposed regulations its intent to eliminate this requirement. The U.S. Treasury Department has stated that taxpayers may rely on these proposed regulations pending their finalization. If withholding applies to the Notes, we will not be required to pay any additional amounts with respect to amounts withheld. If you are a Non-U.S. Holder, or a U.S. Holder holding Notes through a non-U.S. intermediary, you should consult your tax adviser regarding the potential application of FATCA to the Notes, including the availability of certain refunds or credits.

 

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DESCRIPTIONS OF THE ELIGIBLE CONSTITUENTS

 

THE ISHARES® CORE S&P 500 ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the iShares® Core S&P 500 ETF (the “S&P 500 Fund”), including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, iShares® Trust, BlackRock Institutional Trust Company, N.A. (“BTC”) and BlackRock Fund Advisors (“BFA”). The S&P 500 Fund is an investment portfolio maintained and managed by iShares® Trust. BFA is currently the investment adviser to the S&P 500 Fund. The S&P 500 Fund is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “IVV.”

 

iShares® Trust. is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the S&P 500 Fund. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by iShares® Trust. pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940 can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 333-92935 and 811-09729, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding iShares® Trust, BFA and the S&P 500 Fund, please see the S&P 500 Fund’s prospectus. In addition, information about iShares® Trust and the S&P 500 Fund may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the iShares® website at www.ishares.com. We make no representation or warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of information contained on the iShares® website. Information contained on the iShares® website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The S&P 500 Fund seeks investment results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of the S&P 500® Index. The fund’s investment objective and the underlying index may be changed without shareholder approval.

 

The investment adviser to the S&P 500 Fund uses a representative sampling indexing strategy (as described below under “Representative Sampling”) to manage the fund. This means that the investment adviser invests in a representative sample of securities that, in the view of the investment adviser, has an investment profile similar to the S&P 500® Index. Thus, at any time, the S&P 500 Fund may not hold all of the securities in the S&P 500® Index. Funds that employ a representative sampling strategy may incur tracking error to a greater extent than a fund that seeks to replicate an index by holding all of the securities in the index. The S&P 500 Fund generally invests at least 90% of its assets in the securities included in the S&P 500® Index and in depositary receipts representing such securities. The S&P 500 Fund may invest the remainder of its assets in securities not included in the S&P 500® Index, derivative contracts and cash and cash equivalents.

 

Representative Sampling

 

BFA uses a “representative sampling” indexing strategy to manage the S&P 500 Fund. “Representative sampling” is an indexing strategy that involves investing in a representative sample of securities that collectively has an investment profile similar to the S&P 500® Index. Securities selected are expected to have, in the aggregate, investment characteristics (based on factors such as market capitalization and industry weightings), fundamental characteristics (such as return variability and yield) and liquidity measures similar to those of the S&P 500® Index. The S&P 500 Fund may or may not hold all of the securities in the S&P 500® Index.

 

Correlation

 

The S&P 500® Index is a theoretical financial calculation, while the S&P 500 Fund is an actual investment portfolio. The performance of the S&P 500 Fund and the S&P 500® Index may vary due to transaction costs, non-U.S. currency valuation, asset valuations, corporate actions (such as mergers and spin-offs), timing variances and differences between the S&P 500 Fund’s portfolio and the S&P 500® Index resulting from legal restrictions (such as diversification requirements) that apply to the S&P 500 Fund but not to the S&P 500® Index or the use of representative sampling. “Tracking error” is the difference between the performance (return) of a fund’s portfolio and that of its underlying index. BFA expects that, over time, the S&P 500 Fund’s tracking error will not exceed

 

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5%. The S&P 500 Fund, using a representative sampling strategy, can be expected to have a greater tracking error than a fund using a replication strategy. Replication is a strategy in which a fund invests in substantially all of the securities in its underlying index in approximately the same proportions as in the underlying index.

 

Industry Concentration Policy

 

The S&P 500 Fund will concentrate its investments (i.e., hold 25% or more of its total assets) in a particular industry or group of industries to approximately the same extent that the S&P 500® Index is concentrated. For purposes of this limitation, securities of the U.S. government (including its agencies and instrumentalities) and repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government securities are not considered to be issued by members of any industry.

 

Disclaimer

 

The Notes are not sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by BTC. BTC makes no representations or warranties to the owners of the Notes or any member of the public regarding the advisability of investing in the Notes. BTC has no obligation or liability in connection with the operation, marketing, trading or sale of the Notes.

 

The S&P 500® Index

 

The following information regarding the S&P 500® Index, including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC (“S&P Dow Jones”), a joint venture company owned by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., CME Group Inc. and Dow Jones & Company, Inc. The S&P 500® Index was developed by Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC (“S&P”) and is calculated, maintained and published by S&P Dow Jones. S&P Dow Jones has no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue the publication of, the S&P 500® Index.

 

The S&P 500® Index is reported by Bloomberg L.P. under the ticker symbol “SPX.”

 

The S&P 500® Index is intended to provide a performance benchmark for the large capitalization segment of the U.S. equity markets. The calculation of the level of the S&P 500® Index (discussed below in further detail) is based on the relative value of the aggregate Market Value (as defined below) of the common stocks of 500 companies (the “S&P Component Stocks”) as of a particular time as compared to the aggregate average Market Value of the common stocks of 500 similar companies during the base period of the years 1941 through 1943. Historically, the “Market Value” of any S&P Component Stock was calculated as the product of the market price per share and the number of the then-outstanding shares of such S&P Component Stock. As discussed below, on March 21, 2005, S&P began to use a new methodology to calculate the Market Value of the S&P Component Stocks and on September 16, 2005, S&P completed its transition to the new calculation methodology. The 500 companies are not the 500 largest companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange (the “NYSE”) and not all 500 companies are listed on such exchange. S&P Dow Jones chooses companies for inclusion in the S&P 500® Index with the objective of achieving a distribution by broad industry groupings that approximates the distribution of these groupings in the common stock population of the U.S. equity market. S&P Dow Jones may from time to time, in its sole discretion, add companies to, or delete companies from, the S&P 500® Index to achieve the objectives stated above. Relevant criteria employed by S&P Dow Jones include the viability of the particular company, the extent to which that company represents the industry group to which it is assigned, the extent to which the company’s common stock is widely-held and the Market Value and trading activity of the common stock of that company.

 

On March 21, 2005, S&P began to calculate the S&P 500® Index based on a half float-adjusted formula, and on September 16, 2005, the S&P 500® Index became fully float-adjusted. S&P’s criteria for selecting stocks for the S&P 500® Index was not changed by the shift to float adjustment. However, the adjustment affects each company’s weight in the S&P 500® Index (i.e., its Market Value).

 

Under float adjustment, the share counts used in calculating the S&P 500® Index reflect only those shares that are available to investors, not all of a company’s outstanding shares. S&P Dow Jones defines three groups of shareholders whose holdings are subject to float adjustment:

 

·holdings by other publicly traded corporations, venture capital firms, private equity firms, strategic partners, or leveraged buyout groups;

 

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·holdings by government entities, including all levels of government in the United States or foreign countries; and

 

·holdings by current or former officers and directors of the company, founders of the company or family trusts of officers, directors or founders, as well as holdings of trusts, foundations, pension funds, employee stock ownership plans, or other investment vehicles associated with and controlled by the company.

 

However, treasury stock, stock options, equity participation units, warrants, preferred stock, convertible stock and rights are not part of the float. In cases where holdings in a group exceed 10% of the outstanding shares of a company, the holdings of that group will be excluded from the float-adjusted count of shares to be used in the S&P 500® Index calculation. Mutual funds, investment advisory firms, pension funds or foundations not associated with the company and investment funds in insurance companies, shares that trust beneficiaries may buy or sell without difficulty or significant additional expense beyond typical brokerage fees, and, if a company has multiple classes of stock outstanding, shares in an unlisted or non-traded class if such shares are convertible by shareholders without undue delay and cost, are also part of the float. Shares held in a trust to allow investors in countries outside the country of domicile (e.g., ADRs, CDIs and Canadian exchangeable shares) are normally part of the float.

 

For each stock, an investable weight factor (“IWF”) is calculated by dividing the available float shares, defined as the total shares outstanding less shares held in one or more of the three groups listed above where the group holdings exceed 10% of the outstanding shares, by the total shares outstanding. (On March 21, 2005, the S&P 500® Index moved halfway to float adjustment, meaning that if a stock has an IWF of 0.80, the IWF used to calculate the S&P 500® Index between March 21, 2005 and September 16, 2005 was 0.90. On September 16, 2005, S&P began to calculate the S&P 500® Index on a fully float-adjusted basis, meaning that if a stock has an IWF of 0.80, the IWF used to calculate the S&P 500® Index on and after September 16, 2005 is 0.80.) The float-adjusted Index is calculated by dividing the sum of the IWF multiplied by both the price and the total shares outstanding for each stock by the Index Divisor. For companies with multiple classes of stock, S&P Dow Jones calculates the weighted average IWF for each stock using the proportion of the total company market capitalization of each share class as weights.

 

The S&P 500® Index is calculated using a base-weighted aggregate methodology: the level of the S&P 500® Index reflects the total Market Value of all 500 S&P Component Stocks relative to the S&P 500® Index’s base period of 1941–43 (the “Base Period”).

 

An indexed number is used to represent the results of this calculation in order to make the value easier to work with and track over time.

 

The actual total Market Value of the S&P Component Stocks during the Base Period has been set equal to an indexed value of 10. This is often indicated by the notation 1941–43=10. In practice, the daily calculation of the S&P 500® Index is computed by dividing the total Market Value of the S&P Component Stocks by a number called the Index Divisor. By itself, the Index Divisor is an arbitrary number. However, in the context of the calculation of the S&P 500® Index, it is the only link to the original Base Period level of the S&P 500® Index. The Index Divisor keeps the S&P 500® Index comparable over time and is the manipulation point for all adjustments to the S&P 500® Index (“Index Maintenance”).

 

Index Maintenance includes monitoring and completing the adjustments for company additions and deletions, share changes, stock splits, stock dividends and stock price adjustments due to company restructurings or spin-offs.

 

To prevent the level of the S&P 500® Index from changing due to corporate actions, all corporate actions which affect the total Market Value of the S&P 500® Index require an Index Divisor adjustment. By adjusting the Index Divisor for the change in total Market Value, the level of the S&P 500® Index remains constant. This helps maintain the level of the S&P 500® Index as an accurate barometer of stock market performance and ensures that the movement of the S&P 500® Index does not reflect the corporate actions of individual companies in the S&P 500® Index. All Index Divisor adjustments are made after the close of trading and after the calculation of the closing level of the S&P 500® Index. Some corporate actions, such as stock splits and stock dividends, require simple changes in the common shares outstanding and the stock prices of the companies in the S&P 500® Index and do not require Index Divisor adjustments.

 

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The table below summarizes the types of Index Maintenance adjustments and indicates whether or not an Index Divisor adjustment is required.

 

Type of Corporate Action 

Comment 

Divisor Adjustment Required 

Company Added/Deleted Net change in market value determines the divisor adjustment Yes
Change in Shares Outstanding Any combination of secondary issuance, share repurchase or buy back – share counts revised to reflect change. Yes
Stock Split Share count revised to reflect new count. Divisor adjustment is not required since the share count and price changes are offsetting. No
Spin-off If the spun-off company is not being added to the index, the divisor adjustment reflects the decline in index market value (i.e., the value of the spun-off unit). Yes
Spin-off Spun-off company added to the index, no company removed from the index. No
Spin-off Spun-off company added to the index, another company removed to keep number of names fixed. Divisor adjustment reflects deletion. Yes
Change in Investable Weight Factor (IWF) Increasing (decreasing) the IWF increases (decreases) the total market value of the index. The divisor change reflects the change in market value caused by the change to an IWF. Yes
Special Dividends When a company pays a special dividend the share price is assumed to drop by the amount of the dividend; the divisor adjustment reflects this drop in index market value. Yes
Rights Offering Each shareholder receives the right to buy a proportional number of additional shares at a set (often discounted) price. The calculation assumes that the offering is fully subscribed. Divisor adjustment reflects increase in market cap measured as the shares issued multiplied by the price paid. Yes

 

Stock splits and stock dividends do not affect the Index Divisor, because following a split or dividend, both the stock price and number of shares outstanding are adjusted by S&P Dow Jones so that there is no change in the Market Value of the S&P Component Stock. All stock split and dividend adjustments are made after the close of trading on the day before the ex-date.

 

Each of the corporate events exemplified in the table requiring an adjustment to the Index Divisor has the effect of altering the Market Value of the S&P Component Stock and consequently of altering the aggregate Market Value of the S&P Component Stocks (the “Post-Event Aggregate Market Value”). In order that the level of the S&P 500® Index (the “Pre-Event Index Value”) not be affected by the altered Market Value (whether increase or decrease) of the affected Component Stock, a new Index Divisor (“New Divisor”) is derived as follows:

 

Post-Event Aggregate Market Value 

= Pre-Event Index Value
New Divisor
 
New Divisor =

Post-Event Aggregate Market Value 

Pre-Event Index Value

 

A large part of the Index Maintenance process involves tracking the changes in the number of shares outstanding of each of the S&P 500® Index companies. Four times a year, on a Friday close to the end of each calendar quarter, the share totals of companies in the S&P 500® Index are updated as required by any changes in the

 

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number of shares outstanding. After the totals are updated, the Index Divisor is adjusted to compensate for the net change in the total Market Value of the S&P 500® Index. In addition, any changes over 5% in the current common shares outstanding for the S&P 500® Index companies are carefully reviewed on a weekly basis, and when appropriate, an immediate adjustment is made to the Index Divisor.

 

License Agreement

 

The S&P 500® Index (for the purposes of this disclaimer only, the “index”) is a product of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC (“SPDJI”), and has been licensed for use by Citigroup Global Markets Limited (“CGML”). Standard & Poor’s® and S&P® are registered trademarks of Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC (“S&P”); Dow Jones® is a registered trademark of Dow Jones Trademark Holdings LLC (“Dow Jones”); S&P 500® Index is a trademark of the SPDJI; and this trademark has been licensed for use by SPDJI and sublicensed for certain purposes by CGML. Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index is not sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by SPDJI, Dow Jones, S&P, any of their respective affiliates (collectively, “S&P Dow Jones Indices”). S&P Dow Jones Indices makes no representation or warranty, express or implied, to the owners of the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index or any member of the public regarding the advisability of investing in securities generally or in products linked to the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index particularly or the ability of the index to track general market performance. S&P Dow Jones Indices’ only relationship to CGML with respect to the index is the licensing of the index and certain trademarks, service marks and/or trade names of S&P Dow Jones Indices and/or its licensors. The index is determined, composed and calculated by S&P Dow Jones Indices without regard to CGML or the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index. S&P Dow Jones Indices have no obligation to take the needs of CGML or the owners of products linked to the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index into consideration in determining, composing or calculating the index. S&P Dow Jones Indices are not responsible for and have not participated in the determination of the prices, and amounts products linked to the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index or the timing of the issuance or sale of products linked to the Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index or in the determination or calculation of the equation by which Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index is to be converted into cash, surrendered or redeemed, as the case may be. S&P Dow Jones Indices have no obligation or liability in connection with the administration, marketing or trading of Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index. There is no assurance that investment products based on the index will accurately track index performance or provide positive investment returns. S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC is not an investment advisor. Inclusion of a security within an index is not a recommendation by S&P Dow Jones Indices to buy, sell, or hold such security, nor is it considered to be investment advice.

 

S&P DOW JONES INDICES DOES NOT GUARANTEE THE ADEQUACY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS AND/OR THE COMPLETENESS OF THE INDEX OR ANY DATA RELATED THERETO OR ANY COMMUNICATION, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, ORAL OR WRITTEN COMMUNICATION (INCLUDING ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS) WITH RESPECT THERETO. S&P DOW JONES INDICES SHALL NOT BE SUBJECT TO ANY DAMAGES OR LIABILITY FOR ANY ERRORS, OMISSIONS, OR DELAYS THEREIN. S&P DOW JONES INDICES MAKE NO EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, AND EXPRESSLY DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR USE OR AS TO RESULTS TO BE OBTAINED BY CGML, OWNERS OF ANY PRODUCTS LINKED TO THE CITI ETF MARKET PILOT 5 EXCESS RETURN INDEX, OR ANY OTHER PERSON OR ENTITY FROM THE USE OF THE INDEX OR WITH RESPECT TO ANY DATA RELATED THERETO. WITHOUT LIMITING ANY OF THE FOREGOING, IN NO EVENT WHATSOEVER SHALL S&P DOW JONES INDICES BE LIABLE FOR ANY INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, PUNITIVE, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, LOSS OF PROFITS, TRADING LOSSES, LOST TIME OR GOODWILL, EVEN IF THEY HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR OTHERWISE. THERE ARE NO THIRD PARTY BENEFICIARIES OF ANY AGREEMENTS OR ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN S&P DOW JONES INDICES AND CGML, OTHER THAN THE LICENSORS OF S&P DOW JONES INDICES.

 

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THE VANGUARD FTSE EUROPE ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by Vanguard Index Funds (the “Vanguard Trust”) and The Vanguard Group, Inc. (“Vanguard”). The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF is an investment portfolio of the Vanguard Trust. Vanguard is the investment adviser to the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF. The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca, Inc. (“NYSE Arca”) under the ticker symbol “VGK.”

 

The Vanguard Trust is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by Vanguard pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 033-32548 and 811-05972, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding the Vanguard Trust, Vanguard and the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF, please see the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF’s prospectus. In addition, information about Vanguard and the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the Vanguard website at www.vanguard.com. Information contained in the Vanguard website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF seeks to track the performance of a benchmark index that measures the investment return of stocks issued by companies located in major markets of Europe, which is currently the FTSE Developed Europe Index. For more information about the FTSE Developed Europe Index, please see “Descriptions of the Eligible Constituents – The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF – The FTSE GEIS Indices” below.

 

On June 2, 2015, Vanguard announced that the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF will soon transition to track a new underlying index. According to Vanguard, the transition to the new underlying index will take place over a period of several months beginning in the third or fourth quarter of 2015, with the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF ceasing to track the FTSE Developed Europe Index and beginning to track the FTSE Developed Europe All Cap Index. The FTSE Developed Europe All Cap Index is a market-capitalization weighted index representing the performance of large-, mid- and small-cap companies in developed European markets, including the United Kingdom. The FTSE Developed Europe All Cap Index is comprised of approximately 1,250 securities from 16 countries, and is derived from the FTSE Global Equity Index Series. The principal difference between the FTSE Developed Europe Index and the FTSE Developed Europe All Cap Index is that the former represents the performance of large- and mid-cap companies in developed European markets, whereas the latter also represents the performance of small-cap companies in developed European markets. As a result of this transition, the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF will be exposed to risks associated with investing in small-capitalization stocks.

 

Indexing Investment Approach

 

The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF employs an indexing investment approach by investing substantially all (approximately 95%) of its assets in the common stocks included in the FTSE Developed Europe Index, while employing a form of sampling to reduce risk. The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF is subject to index sampling risk, which is the chance that the securities selected for the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF, in the aggregate, will not provide investment performance matching that of the FTSE Developed Europe Index.

 

To track the FTSE Developed Europe Index as closely as possible, the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF attempts to remain fully invested in stocks. To help stay fully invested and to reduce transaction costs, the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF may invest, to a limited extent, in derivatives, including stock futures. The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF may also use derivatives, such as total return swaps, to obtain exposure to a stock, a basket of stocks or an index. The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF will not use derivatives for speculation or for the purpose of leveraging (magnifying) investment returns. The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF’s daily cash balance may be invested in one or more money-market funds sponsored by Vanguard. The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF may temporarily depart from

 

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its normal investment policies and strategies when the advisor believes that doing so is in the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF’s best interest, so long as the alternative is consistent with the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF’s investment objective. The Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF may substitute a different index for the index it currently tracks if the current index is discontinued, if the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF’s agreement with the sponsor of its target index is terminated, or for any other reason determined in good faith by the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF’s board of trustees. In any such instance, the substitute index would measure the same market segment as the current index.

 

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THE VANGUARD FTSE EMERGING MARKETS ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by the Vanguard Trust and Vanguard. The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF is an investment portfolio of the Vanguard Trust. Vanguard is the investment adviser to the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF. The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “VWO.”

 

The Vanguard Trust is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by Vanguard pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 033-32548 and 811-05972, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding the Vanguard Trust, Vanguard and the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF, please see the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF’s prospectus. In addition, information about Vanguard and the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the Vanguard website at www.vanguard.com. Information contained in the Vanguard website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF seeks to track the performance of a benchmark index that measures the investment return of stocks issued by companies located in emerging market countries, which is currently the FTSE Emerging Index. For more information about the FTSE Emerging Index, please see “— The FTSE GEIS Indices” below.

 

Prior to January 2013, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF tracked the MSCI Emerging Markets Index. In January 2013, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF began to transition from tracking the MSCI Emerging Markets Index to tracking the FTSE Emerging Index. In order to accomplish that transition, from January 10, 2013 to June 28, 2013 the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF employed an indexing investment approach by investing substantially all of its assets (approximately 95%) in the common stocks included in the FTSE Emerging Transition Index. The FTSE Emerging Transition Index differed from FTSE’s Emerging Index prior to March 18, 2013, in that it contained “P Chip” and South Korean companies, used actual free float in the calculation of the FTSE Emerging Index, and incorporated the indicative additions and deletions that were projected to be applied at the March 2013 index review. A “P Chip” company is one that is controlled by mainland China individuals, with the establishment and origin of the company in mainland China. The company must be incorporated outside of the People’s Republic of China and traded on the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong, with a majority of its revenue or assets derived from mainland China.

 

At the March 2013 FTSE Emerging Index review, the majority of these differences were removed, and the primary difference was that the FTSE Emerging Transition Index contained South Korean companies. FTSE, the publisher of the FTSE Emerging Index and the FTSE Emerging Transition Index, classified South Korea as a Developed Market in September 2009 and since then it has not been a member of FTSE’s emerging indices. As the MSCI Emerging Markets Index included South Korea in its portfolio, constituents of the FTSE Korea Index were initially included in the transition index universe and then over a 25-week time horizon weight of South Korea within the index was gradually reduced. The FTSE Emerging Transition Index was a “dynamic” index that represented the components of the FTSE Emerging Index plus South Korean equity exposure. The FTSE Emerging Transition Index was designed to gradually reduce South Korean equity exposure by approximately 4% each week over a period of 25 weeks while proportionately adding exposure to stocks of companies located in other countries based on their weightings in the FTSE Emerging Index. As of June 28, 2013, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF completed its transition and began tracking the performance of the FTSE Emerging Index.

 

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Additionally, on June 2, 2015, The Vanguard Group, Inc. announced that the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF will soon transition to track a new underlying index. According to The Vanguard Group, Inc., the transition to the new underlying index will take place over a period of approximately 12 months starting in the third or fourth quarter of 2015, with the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF ceasing to track the FTSE Emerging Index and beginning to temporarily track the FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Transition Index. By using this transition index, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF will gradually move from tracking the FTSE Emerging Index to tracking the FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index. As part of the transition, China A-shares and small capitalization companies will gradually increase in weight by an equal amount after the third Friday of each month over the 12-month period, while the weights of the stocks already in the index will be proportionately reduced. The FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index is a market-capitalization weighted index representing the performance of large-, mid- and small-capitalization stocks in emerging markets, with market-capitalization adjustments in the case of China A-Shares to take into account the quota amount allocated to foreign investors by the Chinese regulator. The FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index is comprised of approximately 3,350 securities from 21 countries, and is part of the FTSE China A Inclusion Indexes. The principal differences between the FTSE Emerging Index and the FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index are that the former represents the performance of large- and mid-cap companies in emerging markets, excluding China A-Shares, whereas the latter also represents the performance of small-cap stocks in emerging markets and includes China A-Shares. As a result of this transition, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF will be exposed to risks associated with investing both in mainland China and in small-capitalization stocks.

 

Indexing Investment Approach

 

The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF employs an indexing investment approach by investing substantially all of its assets (approximately 95 %) in the common stocks included in the FTSE Emerging Index, while employing a form of sampling to reduce risk. The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF is subject to index sampling risk, which is the chance that the securities selected for the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF, in the aggregate, will not provide investment performance matching that of the FTSE Emerging Index.

 

To track the FTSE Emerging Index as closely as possible, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF attempts to remain fully invested in stocks. To help stay fully invested and to reduce transaction costs, the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF may invest, to a limited extent, in derivatives, including stock futures. The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF may also use derivatives, such as total return swaps, to obtain exposure to a stock, a basket of stocks or an index. The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF will not use derivatives for speculation or for the purpose of leveraging (magnifying) investment returns. The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF’s daily cash balance may be invested in one or more money-market funds sponsored by Vanguard. The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF may temporarily depart from its normal investment policies and strategies when the adviser believes that doing so is in the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF’s best interest, so long as the alternative is consistent with the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF’s investment objective. The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF may substitute a different index for the index it currently tracks if the current index is discontinued, if the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF’s agreement with the sponsor of its target index is terminated, or for any other reason determined in good faith by the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF’s board of trustees. In any such instance, the substitute index would measure the same market segment as the current index.

 

The FTSE GEIS Indices

 

The following information regarding the FTSE Emerging Index and the FTSE Developed Europe Index (each, a “FTSE GEIS Index” and together, the “FTSE GEIS Indices”) including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by FTSE International Limited (“FTSE”). FTSE has no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue publication of, the FTSE GEIS Indices.

 

The FTSE Global Equity Index Series draws from a universe of over 7,400 securities in 47 different countries. It attempts to represent every equity and sector relevant to international investors’ needs and has a modular structure. The universe is divided into Developed, Advanced Emerging and Secondary Emerging segments, with indexes calculated at regional, national and sector level.

 

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The FTSE Emerging Index

 

The FTSE Emerging Index is included in the FTSE Global Equity Index Series. The FTSE Emerging Index is the aggregate of the Advanced Emerging and Secondary Emerging segments of the FTSE Global Equity Index Series universe.

 

The FTSE Developed Europe Index

 

The FTSE Developed Europe Index is derived from the FTSE Global Equity Index Series. The FTSE Developed Europe Index is a market-capitalization weighted index representing the performance of around 500 large and mid cap companies in 16 Developed European markets, including the UK. It is made up of approximately 500 common stocks of companies located in 16 European countries—mostly companies in the United Kingdom, Switzerland, France and Germany. Other countries represented in the FTSE Developed Europe Index include Austria, Belgium and Luxembourg, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, and Sweden.

 

Country Selection Criteria

 

The following criteria must be met before a country can be included:

 

·Permission for direct equity investment by non-nationals

 

·Availability of accurate and timely data

 

·Non-existence of any significant exchange controls which would prevent the timely repatriation of capital or dividends

 

·The demonstration of significant international investor interest in the local equity market

 

·Existence of adequate liquidity in the market

 

A country’s classification as Developed, Advanced Emerging or Secondary Emerging is largely dependent on the following factors:

 

·Wealth (Gross National Income per capita)

 

·Total stock market capitalization

 

·Breadth and depth of market

 

·Any restrictions on foreign investment

 

·Free flow of foreign exchange

 

·Reliable and transparent price discovery

 

·Efficient market infrastructure (trading, reporting and settlement systems, derivatives market etc.)

 

·Oversight by independent regulator

 

The FTSE Regional Committees will review the classification of countries between Developed, Advanced Emerging and Secondary Emerging on a regular basis. The FTSE Policy Group will publish a watch list of countries being monitored for promotion or demotion and will normally give at least six months’ notice before changing the classification of any country.

 

New countries, which in the view of the FTSE Policy Group and FTSE Regional Committees comply with these rules, may be added at any time after a prior announcement. Once a country has met the criteria, it will be eligible for inclusion in the FTSE Global Equity Index Series. However, for the country index to be constructed and included in the FTSE Global Equity Index Series, it must have a minimum of 3 companies which pass all the

 

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eligibility criteria. An existing country index will remain in the FTSE Global Equity Index Series while any eligible constituents representing the country remain within the index. On the deletion of the last eligible constituent, the country will continue to be eligible, but the country index will be immediately removed from the FTSE Global Equity Index Series and will only be reconsidered for inclusion if it meets the minimum requirement of 3 eligible companies.

 

Determining Nationality

 

A company will be allocated to a single country. If a company is incorporated in one country and has its sole listing in the same country, FTSE will allocate the company to that country. In all other circumstances, FTSE will refer the company to the FTSE Nationality Committee who will decide the appropriate nationality for the company. The FTSE Nationality Committee will base its decision according to its assessment of various factors including, but not necessarily limited to, the following:

 

·The investor protection regulations present in the country of incorporation;

 

·The country in which the company is domiciled for tax purposes;

 

·The location of its factors of production;

 

·The location of its headquarters;

 

·The location of company meetings;

 

·The composition of its shareholder base;

 

·The membership of its board of directors;

 

·The currency denomination of the company’s shares;

 

·The perception of investors.

 

If a company is incorporated in a country, has a listing in that country and listings in other countries, the FTSE Nationality Committee will normally assign the company to the country of incorporation. If the company fails FTSE’s liquidity test in the country of incorporation, the FTSE Nationality Committee may assign the company to the country which exhibits the greatest liquidity. However, save for certain exceptions, a company incorporated in a country other than a developed country (as classified in the FTSE Global Equity Index Series) may not be assigned to a developed country. If a company is incorporated in a country, and is listed only in countries other than the country of incorporation, the FTSE Nationality Committee will normally allocate the company to the country with the greatest liquidity. If a company is incorporated in a country other than a developed country, has no listing in that country and is listed only in one or more developed countries, that company will only be eligible for FTSE Global Equity Index Series inclusion if the country of incorporation is internationally recognised as having a low taxation status that has been approved by the FTSE Nationality Committee. For companies incorporated in approved low taxation countries, the FTSE Nationality Committee will normally assign the company to the developed country with the greatest liquidity. The country allocation of any FTSE index constituents may be reassessed at any time at the FTSE Nationality Committee’s discretion.

 

Eligible Securities

 

Most equities are eligible for inclusion in the FTSE GEIS Indices. Ineligible securities include those whose business is that of holding equity and other investments, those of Limited Liability Partnerships and Limited Liability Companies, and where a unit comprises equity and non-equity, convertible preference shares and loan stocks until converted, and where a company does not list all its shares in an eligible class, or does not list an entire class, such unlisted shares (but they may be included in the Review Universe for the purpose of ranking companies by their full market capitalization).

 

Algorithm and Calculation Method

 

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The FTSE Global Equity Index Series uses actual closing mid-market or last trade prices, where available, for securities with local bourse quotations. Reuters real time exchange rates are used in the index calculations which are disseminated in real-time. Exchange rates used in the End of Day calculations are WM/Reuters Closing Spot Rates™, collected at 16:00 hrs London time.

 

For the purposes of computing the FTSE Global Equity Index Series, the number of outstanding shares for each constituent security is expressed to the nearest share and, to prevent a large number of insignificant weighting changes, the number of outstanding shares for each constituent security is amended only when the total outstanding shares held within the index system changes by more than 1% on a cumulative basis. Changes will be made quarterly after the close of business on the third Friday of March, June, September and December. If a corporate action is applied to an index constituent which involves a change in the number of outstanding shares, the change in shares will be applied simultaneously with the corporate action. If accumulated changes in the number of outstanding shares add up to 10% or more, or when an accumulated share change represents USD 2 billion of a company’s total market capitalization, they are implemented between quarters. WM/Reuters Spot Rates will be used to convert the market capitalization into USD. The USD 2 billion threshold may be adjusted annually in December, by the FTSE Policy Group. If an adjustment is made, it will be applied for the first time at the next review in March of the following year.

 

The FTSE GEIS Indices are calculated using the chained Paasche methodology. The performance of a FTSE GEIS Index on a given day is determined by calculating the percentage difference between:

 

·the FTSE GEIS Index’s market capitalization as at the close of that day and

 

·the market capitalization at the start of that day

 

‘Start of the day’ is defined as the previous day's close adjusted for capital changes, investability weight changes, additions and deletions.

 

Adjustments are applied whenever capital changes take place, so that the performance of the FTSE Global Equity Index Series reflects the experience of investors. Eligible companies may be subject to adjustment for free float and multiple lines.

 

Free Float and Multiple Lines Adjustments

 

Free Float: The FTSE Global Equity Index Series is adjusted for free float and foreign ownership limits. Free float restrictions include:

 

·Shares directly owned by State, Regional, Municipal and Local governments (excluding shares held by independently managed pension schemes for governments).

 

·Shares held by Sovereign Wealth Funds where each holding is 10% or greater. If the holding subsequently decreases below 10%, the shares will remain restricted until the holding falls below 7%.

 

·Shares held by directors, senior executives and managers of the company, and by their family and direct relations, and by companies with which they are affiliated.

 

·Shares held within employee share plans.

 

·Shares held by public companies or by non-listed subsidiaries of public companies.

 

·Shares held by founders, promoters, former directors, founding venture capital and private equity firms, private companies and individuals (including employees) where the holding is 10% or greater. If the holding subsequently decreases below 10%, the shares will remain restricted until the holding falls below 7%.

 

·All shares where the holder is subject to a lock-in clause (for the duration of that clause)*.

 

·Shares held for publicly announced strategic reasons, including shares held by several holders acting in concert.

 

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·Shares that are subject to on-going contractual agreements (such as swaps) where they would ordinarily be treated as restricted.

 

* Free Float changes resulting from the expiry of a lock-in will be implemented at the next quarterly review subsequent to there being a minimum of 20 business days between the lockin expiry date and the FTSE GEIS Index review date.

 

Holdings that are not considered as restricted free float include portfolio holdings, nominee holdings, holdings by investment companies and ETFs. If in addition to the above restricted holdings, the company’s shareholders are subject to legal restrictions, including foreign ownership restrictions, that are more restrictive, the legal restriction will be considered a free float restriction.

 

Free float restrictions will be calculated using available published information. For Equity Shares of companies which have been admitted to the FTSE GEIS Index that have a free float greater than 5%, the actual free float will be rounded up to the next highest whole percentage number. Companies with a free float of 5% or below are not eligible for inclusion in the FTSE GEIS Index.

 

The FTSE Global Equity Index Series will be periodically reviewed for changes in free float.

 

Market Lines:

 

Where there are multiple lines of equity capital in a company, all are included and priced separately, provided that:

 

·The secondary line’s full market capitalization (i.e. before the application of any investability weightings) is greater than 25% of the full market capitalization of the company’s principal line and the secondary line is eligible in its own right in all respects. Should the full market capitalization of a secondary line that is already a constituent of the FTSE All-World Index or the FTSE Global Small Cap Index fall below 20% of the full market capitalization of the company’s principal line at an annual review, the secondary line will be deleted from the FTSE All-World Index or the FTSE Global Small Cap Index unless its full market capitalization remains above the qualification level for continued inclusion as a constituent in the relevant regional index at that review.

 

·All partly-paid classes of equity are priced on a fully-paid basis if the calls are fixed and are payable at known future dates. Those where future calls are uncertain in either respect are priced on a partly-paid basis.

 

Liquidity

 

Each security will be tested for liquidity by calculation of its median daily trading per month. The median trade is calculated by ranking each daily trade total and selecting the middle ranking day. Daily totals with zero trades are included in the ranking, therefore a security that fails to trade for more than half of the days in a month will have a zero median trade.

 

·A non-constituent which does not turnover at least 0.05% of its outstanding shares (after the application of any free float weightings) based on its median daily trade per month for at least ten of the twelve months prior to a full market review will not be eligible for inclusion in the FTSE Global Equity Index Series.

 

·An existing constituent which does not turnover at least 0.04% of its outstanding shares (after the application of any free float weightings) based on its median daily trade per month for at least eight of the twelve months prior to a full market review will be removed.

 

·New issues which do not have a twelve month trading record must have a minimum three month trading record when reviewed. They must turnover at least 0.05% of their outstanding shares (after the application of any free float weightings) based on their median daily trade per month in each month since their listing, unless added under fast entry rule provisions.

 

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·In the event that the a company fails the liquidly test based on its underlying shares, the Depositary Receipt (DR) may be considered for inclusion in the FTSE GEIS Index if it passes the liquidity test in its own right and is traded on an exchange within the same regional timezone to where the underlying shares are listed. Where a company has both DR and underlying shares listed, both lines will be tested separately for liquidity. The underlying share will be included as long as it passes the liquidity test in its own right. The DR will only be eligible for inclusion if the underlying share fails the liquidity test and the DR passes in its own right. Where the DR has been included it will remain in the FTSE GEIS Index until it either fails the liquidity test or the underlying share passes a future liquidity test with greater liquidity than the DR. In the event that the underlying share fails the liquidity test and the DR trades in a different time-zone, but passes the test in its own right, the underlying share will be included as long as the DR is fully fungible (i.e. the DR can be converted into underlying shares and the underlying shares can be converted into DRs).

 

·At the sole discretion of a FTSE Regional Committee, the above percentage figures may be adjusted by up to 0.01% at a market review so that, in the Committee’s opinion, the FTSE GEIS Index better reflects the liquid investable market of the region. This discretion may only be exercised across the whole of a region and may not be applied to individual securities or countries.

 

Periodic Review of Index Constituents

 

In order to determine which companies are included in a FTSE GEIS Index, first the 100% regional universe is defined, and companies are valued by full market capitalization. Companies are then ranked by full market capitalization in descending order, and the top 98% of the regional universe is selected as the Index Universe. Investability weights are assigned to all companies in accordance with the free float rules, the multiple lines rule is applied, all secondary lines which fail are eliminated, and the liquidity rule is applied to all remaining eligible lines of stock. From there, each company is evaluated for inclusion in a FTSE GEIS Index:

 

For companies not currently in the FTSE All-World Index Series or the FTSE Global Small Cap Index Series:

 

·Companies at or above 68% of the Index Universe by full market capitalization with a weight greater than 0.04% of the current respective regional All-World Index by full market capitalization, and with a weight greater than the inclusion percentage for the respective region by investable market capitalization, will be included in the Large Cap Index for the region under review.

 

·Companies ranked below 68%, but within the top 86% of the Index Universe by full market capitalization with a weight greater than 0.04% of the current respective regional All-World Index by full market capitalization, and with a weight greater than the inclusion percentage levels for the respective region by investable market capitalization, will be included in the Mid Cap Index for the region under review.

 

·Companies ranked below the top 86%, but within the top 98% of the Index Universe by full market capitalization or have a weight less than 0.04% of the current respective regional All-World Index by full market capitalization, and with a weight greater than the inclusion percentage levels for the respective region by investable market capitalization will be included in the Small Cap Index for the region under review.

 

For existing FTSE All-World Index Series or the FTSE Global Small Cap Index Series constituents:

 

·Existing Large Cap constituents will remain in the Large Cap Index if they fall within the top 72% of the ranking described above. If they are ranked between 72% and 92% of the Index Universe they will move to the Mid Cap. If they are ranked below 92% of the Index Universe but within the top 101% of the Index Universe, they will move to the Small Cap. If they are ranked below 101% of the Index Universe by full market capitalization or have a weight less than the exclusion percentage levels for the respective region by investable market capitalization, they will be excluded from the FTSE GEIS Index.

 

·Existing Mid Cap constituents will move to the Large Cap if they fall within the top 68% of the ranking described above. If they are ranked between 68% and 92% of the Index Universe they will

 

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remain in the Mid Cap. If they are ranked below 92% of the Index Universe but within the top 101% of the Index Universe, they will move to the Small Cap. If they are ranked below 101% of the Index Universe by full market capitalization or have a weight less than the exclusion percentage levels for the respective region by investable market capitalization, they will be excluded from the FTSE GEIS Index.

 

·Existing Small Cap constituents will move to the Large Cap if they fall within the top 68% of the ranking described above. If they are ranked between 68% and 86% of the Index Universe by full market capitalization and have a weight greater than 0.04% of the current respective regional All-World Index by full market capitalization they will move to the Mid Cap. If they are ranked below 86% of the Index Universe or have a weight less than 0.04% of the current respective regional All-World Index by full market capitalization, but within the top 101% of the Index Universe, they will remain in the Small Cap. If they are ranked below 101% of the Index Universe by full market capitalization or have a weight less than the exclusion percentage levels for the respective region by investable market capitalization, they will be excluded from the FTSE GEIS Index.

 

Inclusion and exclusion percentage levels by investable market capitalization for all the regions in the FTSE Global Equity Index Series to determine additions and deletions and other changes in the FTSE GEIS Index are shown below. These percentages are based from the respective regional Small Cap Index. Companies will be tested as a whole by taking the aggregate of each eligible line.

 

Region For Inclusion (New Stocks) For Inclusion (Current Stocks)

Developed Europe

North America

0.02% 0.005%

Asia Pacific ex Japan

Japan

0.05% 0.01%
Latin America 0.50% 0.20%

Emerging Europe

Middle East & Africa

1.00% 0.20%

 

Fast Exit Rule

 

Existing constituents of all regions not undergoing a full review will be tested on a quarterly basis to identify any constituent meeting either of the following:

 

·The constituent has fallen below 101% of the Index Universe by full market capitalization for two consecutive quarters. This level is set at the time of the last review of the relevant region and is index adjusted using data as at February 11, May 11, August 11 or November 11, as appropriate, to reflect the change in performance of the regional index since its previous review. The previous trading day’s data will be taken if any of the dates above are on a non trading day.

 

·The constituent is valued at less than the relevant exclusion percentage levels for the respective Small Cap Index by investable market capitalization for two consecutive quarters. This is assessed using data as at February 11, May 11, August 11 or November 11. The previous trading day data will be taken if any of the dates above are on a non trading day.

 

Constituents whose market capitalization falls below either of the parameters will be considered to be ineligible and will be removed from the FTSE GEIS Index. The deletion will be applied on the next trading day following the third Friday in March, June, September and December.

 

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Changes to Constituent Companies

 

Under certain circumstances, companies can be added to the list of constituent stocks outside of a review when meeting certain market capitalization thresholds. Stocks can be deleted from the list of constituents if their market capitalization or weight falls below certain levels, there exists evidence of a change in circumstance regarding investability, or the constituent stock becomes delisted or becomes bankrupt, insolvent or is liquidated. Constituents can also be deleted under certain circumstances involving delisting, suspension, or relisting.

 

If an existing constituent is acquired for eligible shares (or a combination of eligible shares and cash) by another constituent in its own or another country, then the existing constituent is deleted on the effective date of the acquisition. The enlarged company remains a constituent of the same benchmarks within the FTSE Global Equity Index Series as the acquired company.

 

Mergers between a constituent and non-constituent:

 

·Within one country: If an existing constituent is acquired for eligible shares (or a combination of eligible shares and cash) by a quoted non-constituent in the same country, then the purchasing company is added to the same benchmarks within the FTSE Global Equity Index Series as the acquired company on the effective date of the acquisition, if eligible in all other respects. The existing constituent is deleted on the same date.

 

·Cross border: If an existing constituent is acquired for eligible shares (or a combination of eligible shares and cash) by a quoted non-constituent in another country, the acquiring company will be included in its own country index on the effective date of acquisition, providing it is eligible in all other respects. The existing constituent will be deleted on the same date.

 

FTSE

 

FTSE is a company owned equally by the London Stock Exchange Plc (the “LSE”) and the Financial Times Limited (the “FT”), in association with the Institute and the Faculty of Actuaries. These Notes are not in any way sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by FTSE or by LSE or by FT and neither FTSE or LSE or FT makes any warranty or representation whatsoever, expressly or impliedly, either as to the results to be obtained from the use of the FTSE GEIS Indices and/or the figure at which the FTSE GEIS Indices stand at any particular time on any particular day or otherwise. The FTSE GEIS Indices are compiled and calculated solely by FTSE. However, neither FTSE or LSE or FT shall be liable (whether in negligence or otherwise) to any person for any error in the FTSE GEIS Indices and neither FTSE or LSE or FT shall be under any obligation to advise any person of any error therein.

 

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THE ISHARES® MSCI JAPAN ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the iShares® MSCI Japan ETF (the “EWJ Fund”), including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, iShares® Trust, BTC and BFA. The EWJ Fund is an investment portfolio maintained and managed by iShares® Trust. BFA is currently the investment adviser to the EWJ Fund. The EWJ Fund is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “EWJ.”

 

iShares® Trust. is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the EWJ Fund. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by iShares® Trust. pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940 can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 333-92935 and 811-09729, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding iShares® Trust, BFA and the EWJ Fund, please see the EWJ Fund’s prospectus. In addition, information about iShares® Trust and the EWJ Fund may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the iShares® website at www.ishares.com. We make no representation or warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of information contained on the iShares® website. Information contained on the iShares® website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The EWJ Fund seeks to provide investment results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of publicly traded securities in the Japanese market, as measured by the MSCI Japan Index. The EWJ Fund holds equity securities traded primarily in Japan. The MSCI Japan Index was developed by MSCI Inc. (“MSCI”) as an equity benchmark for Japanese stock performance, and is designed to measure equity market performance in Japan.

 

The EWJ Fund uses a representative sampling indexing strategy (as described below under “Representative Sampling”) to try to track the MSCI Japan Index. The EWJ Fund will at all times invest at least 90% of its assets in the securities of the MSCI Japan Index or in depositary receipts representing securities included in the MSCI Japan Index. The EWJ Fund may invest the remainder of its assets in other securities, including securities not in the MSCI Japan Index, but which BFA believes will help the EWJ Fund track the MSCI Japan Index, futures contracts, options on futures contracts, other types of options and swaps related to the MSCI Japan Index, as well as cash and cash equivalents, including shares of money market funds affiliated with BFA or its affiliates.

 

Representative Sampling

 

BFA uses a “representative sampling” indexing strategy to manage the EWJ Fund. “Representative sampling” is an indexing strategy that involves investing in a representative sample of securities that collectively has an investment profile similar to the MSCI Japan Index. Securities selected are expected to have, in the aggregate, investment characteristics (based on factors such as market capitalization and industry weightings), fundamental characteristics (such as return variability and yield) and liquidity measures similar to those of the MSCI Japan Index. The EWJ Fund may or may not hold all of the securities in the MSCI Japan Index.

 

Correlation

 

The MSCI Japan Index is a theoretical financial calculation, while the EWJ Fund is an actual investment portfolio. The performance of the EWJ Fund and the MSCI Japan Index may vary due to transaction costs, non-U.S. currency valuation, asset valuations, corporate actions (such as mergers and spin-offs), timing variances and differences between the EWJ Fund’s portfolio and the MSCI Japan Index resulting from legal restrictions (such as diversification requirements) that apply to the EWJ Fund but not to the MSCI Japan Index or the use of representative sampling. “Tracking error” is the difference between the performance (return) of a fund’s portfolio and that of its underlying index. BFA expects that, over time, the EWJ Fund’s tracking error will not exceed 5%. The EWJ Fund, using a representative sampling strategy, can be expected to have a greater tracking error than a

 

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fund using a replication strategy. Replication is a strategy in which a fund invests in substantially all of the securities in its underlying index in approximately the same proportions as in the underlying index.

 

Industry Concentration Policy

 

The EWJ Fund will concentrate its investments (i.e., hold 25% or more of its total assets) in a particular industry or group of industries to approximately the same extent that the MSCI Japan Index is concentrated. For purposes of this limitation, securities of the U.S. government (including its agencies and instrumentalities) and repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government securities are not considered to be issued by members of any industry.

 

Disclaimer

 

The Notes are not sponsored, endorsed, sold, or promoted by BTC. BTC makes no representations or warranties to the owners of the Notes or any member of the public regarding the advisability of investing in the Notes. BTC has no obligation or liability in connection with the operation, marketing, trading or sale of the Notes.

 

The MSCI Japan Index

 

The following information regarding the MSCI Japan Index, including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, MSCI. The MSCI Japan Index is calculated, maintained and published by MSCI. MSCI has no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue publication of, the MSCI Japan Index.

 

The MSCI Japan Index is a free-float adjusted market capitalization weighted index that is designed to track the equity market performance of Japanese securities listed on Tokyo Stock Exchange, Osaka Stock Exchange, JASDAQ and Nagoya Stock Exchange. The MSCI Japan Index is constructed based on the MSCI Global Investable Market Indices Methodology, targeting a free-float market capitalization coverage of 85%. The index has a base date of December 31, 1987. The MSCI Japan Index is calculated in Japanese yen on a real time basis and disseminated every 60 seconds during market trading hours. The MSCI Japan Index is reported by Bloomberg Financial Markets under ticker symbol “MXJP.”

 

Constructing the MSCI Global Investable Market Indices

 

MSCI undertakes an index construction process that involves: (i) defining the Equity Universe; (ii) determining the Market Investable Equity Universe for each market; (iii) determining market capitalization size segments for each market; (iv) applying Index Continuity Rules for the MSCI Standard Index; (v) creating style segments within each size segment within each market; and (vi) classifying securities under the Global Industry Classification Standard (“GICS®”).

 

The “relevant market” with respect to a single country index is equivalent to the single country, except in DM-classified countries in Europe (as described below), where all such countries are first aggregated into a single market for index construction purposes. Subsequently, individual DM Europe country indices within the MSCI Europe Index are derived from the constituents of the MSCI Europe Index under the MSCI Global Investable Market Indices Methodology.

 

The “relevant market” with respect to a composite index includes each of the single countries which comprise the composite index.

 

The “Global Investable Equity Universe” is the aggregation of all Market Investable Equity Universes. The “DM Investable Equity Universe” is the aggregation of all the Market Investable Equity Universes for Developed Markets.

 

Defining the Equity Universe

 

(i)       Identifying Eligible Equity Securities: The Equity Universe initially looks at securities listed in any of the countries in the MSCI Global Index Series, which will be classified as Developed Markets (“DM”), Emerging Markets (“EM”) or Frontier Markets (“FM”). All listed equity securities, or listed securities that exhibit

 

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characteristics of equity securities, except mutual funds, exchange traded funds, equity derivatives, limited partnerships, and most investment trusts, are eligible for inclusion in the Equity Universe. Real Estate Investment Trusts (“REITs”) in some countries and certain income trusts in Canada are also eligible for inclusion.

 

(ii)       Country Classification of Eligible Securities: Each company and its securities (i.e., share classes) are classified in one and only one country, which allows for a distinctive sorting of each company by its respective country.

 

Determining the Market Investable Equity Universes

 

A Market Investable Equity Universe for a market is derived by applying investability screens to individual companies and securities in the Equity Universe that are classified in that market. A market is equivalent to a single country, except in DM Europe, where all DM countries in Europe are aggregated into a single market for index construction purposes. Subsequently, individual DM Europe country indices within the MSCI Europe Index are derived from the constituents of the MSCI Europe Index under the Global Investable Market Indices methodology.

 

The investability screens used to determine the Investable Equity Universe in each market are as follows:

 

(i)       Equity Universe Minimum Size Requirement: This investability screen is applied at the company level. In order to be included in a Market Investable Equity Universe, a company must have the required minimum full market capitalization. A company will meet this requirement if its cumulative free float-adjusted market capitalization is within the top 99% of the Equity Universe sorted in descending order by full market capitalization.

 

(ii)       Equity Universe Minimum Float-Adjusted Market Capitalization Requirement: This investability screen is applied at the individual security level. To be eligible for inclusion in a Market Investable Equity Universe, a security must have a free float-adjusted market capitalization equal to or higher than 50% of the Equity Universe Minimum Size Requirement.

 

(iii)       DM and EM Minimum Liquidity Requirement: This investability screen is applied at the individual security level. To be eligible for inclusion in a Market Investable Equity Universe, a security must have adequate liquidity as measured by the Annualized Traded Value Ratio (“ATVR”) and the Frequency of Trading. The ATVR screens out extreme daily trading volumes, taking into account the free float-adjusted market capitalization size of securities. The aim of the 12-month and 3-month ATVR together with 3-month Frequency of Trading is to select securities with a sound long and short-term liquidity. A minimum liquidity level of 20% of 3-month ATVR and 90% of 3-month Frequency of Trading over the last 4 consecutive quarters, as well as 20% of 12-month ATVR are required for the inclusion of a security in a Market Investable Equity Universe of a Developed Market. A minimum liquidity level of 15% of 3-month ATVR and 80% of 3-month Frequency of Trading over the last 4 consecutive quarters, as well as 15% of 12-month ATVR are required for the inclusion of a security in a Market Investable Equity Universe of an Emerging Market.

 

In instances when a security does not meet the above criteria, the security will be represented by a relevant liquid eligible Depository Receipt if it is trading in the same geographical region. Depository Receipts are deemed liquid if they meet all the above mentioned criteria for 12-month ATVR, 3-month ATVR and 3-month Frequency of Trading.

 

(iv)       Global Minimum Foreign Inclusion Factor Requirement: This investability screen is applied at the individual security level. To be eligible for inclusion in a Market Investable Equity Universe, a security’s Foreign Inclusion Factor (“FIF”) must reach a certain threshold. The FIF of a security is defined as the proportion of shares outstanding that is available for purchase in the public equity markets by international investors. This proportion accounts for the available free float of and/or the foreign ownership limits applicable to a specific security (or company). In general, a security must have an FIF equal to or larger than 0.15 to be eligible for inclusion in a Market Investable Equity Universe.

 

(v)        The Minimum Length of Trading Requirement: This investability screen is applied at the individual security level. For an initial public offering (“IPO”) to be eligible for inclusion in a Market Investable Equity Universe, the new issue must have started trading at least four months before the implementation of the initial construction of the index or at least three months before the implementation of a semi-annual index review. This requirement is applicable to small new issues in all markets. Large IPOs are not subject to the Minimum Length of

 

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Trading Requirement and may be included in a Market Investable Equity Universe and the Standard Index outside of a quarterly or semi-annual index review.

 

Defining Market Capitalization Size Segments for Each Market

 

Once a Market Investable Equity Universe is defined, it is segmented into the following size-based indices:

 

·Investable Market Index (Large + Mid + Small)

 

·Standard Index (Large + Mid)

 

·Large Cap Index

 

·Mid Cap Index

 

·Small Cap Index

 

Creating the Size Segment Indices in each market involves the following steps: (i) defining the Market Coverage Target Range for each size segment; (ii) determining the Global Minimum Size Range for each size segment; (iii) determining the Market Size-Segment Cutoffs and associated Segment Number of Companies; (iv) assigning companies to the size segments; and (v) applying final size-segment investability requirements and index continuity rules.

 

Index Continuity Rules for the Standard Indices

 

In order to achieve index continuity, as well as provide some basic level of diversification within a market index, notwithstanding the effect of other index construction rules, a minimum number of five constituents will be maintained for a DM Standard Index and a minimum number of three constituents will be maintained for an EM Standard Index.

 

If after the application of the index construction methodology, a Standard Index contains fewer than five securities in a Developed Market or three securities in an Emerging Market, then the largest securities by free float-adjusted market capitalization are added to the Standard Index in order to reach five constituents in that Developed Market or three in that Emerging Market. At subsequent index reviews, if the free float-adjusted market capitalization of a non-index constituent is at least 1.50 times the free float-adjusted market capitalization of the smallest existing constituent after rebalancing, the larger free float-adjusted market capitalization security replaces the smaller one.

 

Creating Style Indices within Each Size Segment

 

All securities in the investable equity universe are classified into Value or Growth segments using the MSCI Global Value and Growth methodology.

 

Classifying Securities under the Global Industry Classification Standard

 

All securities in the Global Investable Equity Universe are assigned to the industry that best describes their business activities. To this end, MSCI has designed, in conjunction with Standard & Poor’s, the GICS®. The GICS® entails four levels of classification: (1) sector; (2) industry groups; (3) industries; (4) sub-industries. Under the GICS®, each company is assigned uniquely to one sub-industry according to its principal business activity. Therefore, a company can belong to only one industry grouping at each of the four levels of the GICS®.

 

Maintenance of the MSCI Global Investable Market Indices

 

The MSCI Global Investable Market Indices are maintained with the objective of reflecting the evolution of the underlying equity markets and segments on a timely basis, while seeking to achieve index continuity, continuous investability of constituents and replicability of the indices, and index stability and low index turnover.

 

In particular, index maintenance involves:

 

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(i)       semi-annual index reviews (“SAIRs”) in May and November of the Size Segment and Global Value and Growth Indices, which include:

 

·updating the indices on the basis of a fully refreshed Equity Universe;

 

·taking buffer rules into consideration for migration of securities across size and style segments; and

 

·updating FIFs and Number of Shares (“NOS”).

 

The objective of the SAIRs is to systematically reassess the various dimensions of the Equity Universe for all markets on a fixed semi-annual timetable. A SAIR involves a comprehensive review of the Size Segment and Global Value and Growth Indices.

 

(ii)        quarterly index reviews (“QIRs”) in February and August of the Size Segment Indices aimed at:

 

·including significant new eligible securities (such as IPOs that were not eligible for earlier inclusion) in the index;

 

·allowing for significant moves of companies within the Size Segment Indices, using wider buffers than in the SAIR; and

 

·reflecting the impact of significant market events on FIFs and updating NOS.

 

QIRs are designed to ensure that the indices continue to be an accurate reflection of the evolving equity marketplace. This is achieved by a timely reflection of significant market driven changes that were not captured in the index at the time of their actual occurrence but are significant enough to be reflected before the next SAIR. QIRs may result in additions or deletions due to migration to another Size Segment Index, and changes in FIFs and in NOS. Only additions of significant new investable companies are considered, and only for the Standard Index. The buffer zones used to manage the migration of companies from one segment to another are wider than those used in the SAIR. The style classification is reviewed only for companies that are reassigned to a different size segment.

 

(iii)       Ongoing event-related changes. Ongoing event-related changes to the indices are the result of mergers, acquisitions, spin-offs, bankruptcies, reorganizations and other similar corporate events. They can also result from capital reorganizations in the form of rights issues, bonus issues, public placements and other similar corporate actions that take place on a continuing basis. These changes generally are reflected in the indices at the time of the event. Significantly large IPOs are included in the indices after the close of the company’s tenth day of trading.

 

Announcement Policy

 

The results of the SAIRs are announced at least two weeks in advance of their effective implementation dates as of the close of the last business day of May and November. The results of the QIRs are announced at least two weeks in advance of their effective implementation dates as of the close of the last business day of February and August. All changes resulting from corporate events are announced prior to their implementation.

 

The changes are typically announced at least ten business days prior to the changes becoming effective in the indices as an “expected” announcement, or as an “undetermined” announcement, when the effective dates are not known yet or when aspects of the event are uncertain. MSCI sends “confirmed” announcements at least two business days prior to events becoming effective in the indices, provided that all necessary public information concerning the event is available. The full list of all new and pending changes is delivered to clients on a daily basis, between 5:30 p.m. and 6 p.m., US Eastern Time through the Advance Corporate Events (ACE) File.

 

In exceptional cases, events are announced during market hours for same or next day implementation. Announcements made by MSCI during market hours are usually linked to late company disclosure of corporate events or unexpected changes to previously announced corporate events.

 

In the case of secondary offerings representing more than 5% of a security’s number of shares for existing constituents, these changes will be announced prior to the end of the subscription period when possible and a subsequent announcement confirming the details of the event (including the date of implementation) will be made as soon as the results are available.

 

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Both primary equity offerings and secondary offerings for U.S. securities, representing at least 5% of the security’s number of shares, will be confirmed through an announcement during market hours for next day or shortly after implementation, as the completion of the events cannot be confirmed prior to the notification of the pricing.

 

Early deletions of constituents due to bankruptcy or other significant cases are announced as soon as practicable prior to their implementation.

 

Index Calculation

 

Price Index Level

 

The MSCI Indices are calculated using the Laspeyres’ concept of a weighted arithmetic average together with the concept of chain-linking. As a general principle, today’s index level is obtained by applying the change in the market performance to the previous period index level.

 

PriceIndexLevelUSDt = PriceIndexLevelUSDt-1 × IndexAdjustedMarketCapUSDt
IndexInitialMarketCapUSDt

 

PriceIndexLevelLocalt = PriceIndexLevelLocalt-1 × IndexAdjustedMarketCapForLocalt
IndexInitialMarketCapUSDt

Where:

 

·PriceIndexLevelUSDt-1 is the Price Index level in USD at time t-1.

 

·IndexAdjustedMarketCapUSDt is the Adjusted Market Capitalization of the index in USD at time t.

 

·IndexInitialMarketCapUSDt is the Initial Market Capitalization of the index in USD at time t.

 

·PriceIndexLevelLocalt-1 is the Price Index level in local currency at time t-1.

 

·IndexAdjustedMarketCapForLocalt is the Adjusted Market Capitalization of the index in USD converted using FX rate as of t-1 and used for local currency index at time t.

 

Note: IndexInitialMarketCapUSD was previously called IndexUnadjustedMarketCapPreviousUSD

 

Security Price Index Level

 

 

Where:

 

·SecurityPriceIndexLevelt-1 is Security Price Index level at time t-1.

 

·SecurityAdjustedMarketCapForLocalt is the Adjusted Market Capitalization of security s in USD converted using FX rate as of t-1.

 

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·SecurityInitialMarketCapUSDt is the Initial Market Capitalization of security s in USD at time t.

 

·EndOfDayNumberOfSharest-1 is the number of shares of security s at the end of day t-1.

 

·PricePerSharet is the price per share of security s at time t.

 

·PricePerSharet-1 is the price per share of security s at time t-1.

 

·InclusionFactort is the inclusion factor of security s at time t. The inclusion factor can be one or the combination of the following factors: Foreign Inclusion Factor, Domestic Inclusion Factor Growth Inclusion Factor, Value Inclusion Factor, Index Inclusion Factor.

 

·PAFt is the Price Adjustment Factor of security s at time t.

 

·FXratet -1 is the FX rate of the price currency of security s vs USD at time t-1. It is the value of 1 USD in foreign currency.

 

·ICIt is the Internal Currency Index of price currency at time t. The ICI is different than 1 when a country changes the internal value of its currency (e.g., from Turkish Lira to New Turkish Lira – ICI = 1,000,000).

 

·ICIt-1 is the Internal Currency Index of price currency at time t-1.

 

Index Market Capitalization 

  

 

    

Where:

 

·EndOfDayNumberOfSharest-1 is the number of shares of security s at the end of day t-1.

 

·PricePerSharet is the price per share of security s at time t.

 

·PricePerSharet-1 is the price per share of security s at time t-1.

 

·InclusionFactort is the inclusion factor of security s at time t. The inclusion factor can be one or the combination of the following factors: Foreign Inclusion Factor, Domestic Inclusion Factor Growth Inclusion Factor, Value Inclusion Factor, Index Inclusion Factor.

 

·PAFt is the Price Adjustment Factor of security s at time t.

 

·FXratet is the FX rate of the price currency of security s vs USD at time t. It is the value of 1 USD in foreign currency.

 

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·FXratet -1 is the FX rate of the price currency of security s vs USD at time t-1. It is the value of 1 USD in foreign currency.

 

·ICIt is the Internal Currency Index of price currency at time t. The ICI is different than 1 when a country changes the internal value of its currency (e.g., from Turkish Lira to New Turkish Lira – ICI = 1,000,000).

 

·ICIt-1 is the Internal Currency Index of price currency at time t-1.

 

Corporate Events

 

Mergers and Acquisitions

 

As a general principle, MSCI implements M&As as of the close of the last trading day of the acquired entity or merging entities (last offer day for tender offers), regardless of the status of the securities (index constituents or non-index constituents) involved in the event. MSCI uses market prices for implementation. This principle applies if all necessary information is available prior to the completion of the event and if the liquidity of the relevant constituent(s) is not expected to be significantly diminished on the day of implementation. Otherwise, MSCI will determine the most appropriate implementation method and announce it prior to the changes becoming effective in the indices.

 

Tender Offers

 

In tender offers, the acquired or merging security is generally deleted from an index at the end of the initial offer period, when the offer is likely to be successful and / or if the free float of the security is likely to be substantially reduced (this rule is applicable even if the offer is extended), or once the results of the offer have been officially communicated and the offer has been successful and the security’s free float has been substantially reduced, if all required information is not available in advance or if the offer’s outcome is uncertain. The main factors considered by MSCI when assessing the outcome of a tender offer (not in order of importance) are: the announcement of the offer as friendly or hostile, a comparison of the offer price to the acquired security’s market price, the recommendation by the acquired company’s board of directors, the major shareholders’ stated intention whether to tender their shares, the required level of acceptance, the existence of pending regulatory approvals, market perception of the transaction, official preliminary results if any, and other additional conditions for the offer.

 

In certain cases, securities may be deleted earlier than the last offer day. For example, in the case of tender offers in the United Kingdom, a security is typically deleted two business days after the offer is declared unconditional in all respects.

 

Increases in a security’s number of shares resulting from acquisition of non-listed companies and conversion of unlisted shares are implemented at the next regularly scheduled index review following completion of the event.

 

Increases in a security’s number of shares resulting from acquisition of listed non-index constituent securities representing at least 5% of the security’s number of shares are generally implemented as of the close of the last trading day of the acquired entity if all necessary information is available prior to the completion of the event or if such information is not available prior to the completion of the event, as soon as practicable following the completion of the event. Changes representing less than 5% of the security’s number of shares are implemented at the next regularly scheduled index review following the completion of the event.

 

If a security is deleted from an index, the security will not be reinstated immediately after its deletion even when the tender offer is subsequently declared unsuccessful and/or the free float of the security is not substantially reduced. It may be reconsidered for index inclusion at the following regularly scheduled index review.

 

Late Announcements of Completion of Mergers and Acquisitions

 

When the completion of an event is announced too late to be reflected as of the close of the last trading day of the acquired or merging entities, implementation occurs as of the close of the following day or as soon as practicable thereafter. In these cases, MSCI uses a calculated price for the acquired or merging entities. The calculated price is determined using the terms of the transaction and the price of the acquiring or merged entity, or, if not appropriate, using the last trading day’s market price of the acquired or merging entities.

 

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Conversions of Share Classes

 

Conversions of a share class into another share class resulting in the deletion and/or addition of one or more classes of shares are implemented as of the close of the last trading day of the share class to be converted.

 

Spin-Offs

 

On the ex-date of a spin-off, a PAF is applied to the price of the security of the parent company. The PAF is calculated based on the terms of the transaction and the market price of the spun-off security. If the spun-off entity qualifies for inclusion, it is included as of the close of its first trading day. In cases of spin-offs of partially owned companies, the post-event free float of the spun-off entity is calculated using a weighted average of the existing shares and the spun-off shares, each at their corresponding free float. Any resulting changes to FIFs and/or DIFs are implemented as of the close of the ex-date.

 

In cases of spin-offs of partially-owned companies, the post-event free float of the spun-off entity is calculated using a weighted average of the existing shares and the spun-off shares, each at their corresponding free float. Any resulting changes to FIFs and/or DIFs are implemented as of the close of the ex-date.

 

When the spun-off security does not trade on the ex-date, a “detached” security is created to avoid a drop in the free float-adjusted market capitalization of the parent entity, regardless of whether the spun-off security is added or not. The detached security is included until the spun-off security begins trading, and is deleted thereafter. Generally, the value of the detached security is equal to the difference between the cum price and the ex price of the parent security.

 

Corporate Actions

 

Corporate actions such as splits, stock dividends and rights issues, which affect the price of a security, require a price adjustment. In general, the PAF is applied on the ex-date of the event to ensure that security prices are comparable between the ex-date and the cum date. To do so, MSCI adjusts for the value of the right and/or the value of the special assets that are distributed and the changes in number of shares and FIF, if any, are reflected as of the close of the ex-date. In general, corporate actions do not impact the free float of the securities because the distribution of new shares is carried out on a pro rata basis to all existing shareholders. Therefore, MSCI will generally not implement any pending number of shares and/or free float updates simultaneously with the event.

 

If a security does not trade for any reason on the ex-date of the corporate action, the event will be generally implemented on the day the security resumes trading.

 

Share Placements and Offerings

 

Changes in number of shares and FIF resulting from primary equity offerings representing at least 5% of the security’s number of shares are generally implemented as of the close of the first trading day of the new shares, if all necessary information is available at that time. Otherwise, the event is implemented as soon as practicable after the relevant information is made available. A primary equity offering involves the issuance of new shares by a company. Changes in number of shares and FIF resulting from primary equity offerings representing less than 5% of the security’s number of shares are deferred to the next regularly scheduled index review following the completion of the event. For public secondary offerings of existing constituents representing at least 5% of the security’s number of shares, where possible, MSCI will announce these changes and reflect them shortly after the results of the subscription are known. Secondary public offerings that, given lack of sufficient notice, were not reflected immediately will be reflected at the next regularly scheduled index review. Secondary offerings involve the distribution of existing shares of current shareholders’ in a listed company and are usually pre-announced by a company or by a company’s shareholders and open for public subscription during a pre-determined period.

 

Debt-to-Equity Swaps

 

In general, large debt-to-equity swaps involve the conversion of debt into equity originally not convertible at the time of issue. In this case, changes in numbers of shares and subsequent FIF and/or DIF changes are implemented as of the close of the first trading day of the newly issued shares, or shortly thereafter if all necessary information is available at the time of the swap. In general, shares issued in debt-to-equity swaps are assumed to be issued to strategic investors. As such, the post event free float is calculated on a pro forma basis assuming that all these shares

 

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are non-free float. Changes in numbers of shares and subsequent FIF and/or DIF changes due to conversions of convertible bonds or other convertible instruments, including periodical conversions of preferred stocks and small debt-to-equity swaps are implemented at a following regularly scheduled index review.

 

Suspensions and Bankruptcies

 

MSCI will remove from an index as soon as practicable companies that file for bankruptcy, companies that file for protection from their creditors. MSCI will delete from an index after 40 business days of suspension securities of companies facing financial difficulties (e.g., liquidity issues, debt repayment issues, companies under legal investigation, etc.) with at least two business days advance notice. Subsequently, if and when these securities resume normal trading, they may be considered as a potential addition to an index at the next scheduled semi-annual index review. Securities of companies suspended due to pending corporate events (e.g., merger, acquisition, etc.), will continue to be maintained in an index until they resume trading regardless of the duration of the suspension period. When the primary exchange price is not available, MSCI will delete securities at an over the counter or equivalent market price when such a price is available and deemed relevant. If no over the counter or equivalent price is available, the security will be deleted at the smallest price (unit or fraction of the currency) at which a security can trade on a given exchange. For securities that are suspended, MSCI will carry forward the market price prior to the suspension during the suspension period.

 

License Agreement with MSCI

 

MSCI and Citigroup Global Markets Inc. have entered into a non-exclusive license agreement providing for the license to Citigroup Global Markets Inc. and certain of its affiliates, in exchange for a fee, of the right to use the MSCI Japan Index in connection with certain securities, including the Notes.

 

The MSCI Japan Index is the exclusive property of MSCI. MSCI and the MSCI Japan Index name are service mark(s) of MSCI or its affiliates and have been licensed for use for certain purposes by Citigroup Global Markets Inc. and certain of its affiliates. The Notes referred to herein are not sponsored, endorsed, or promoted by MSCI, and MSCI bears no liability with respect to any such Notes.

 

THIS FINANCIAL PRODUCT IS NOT SPONSORED, ENDORSED, SOLD OR PROMOTED BY MSCI INC. (“MSCI”), ANY AFFILIATE OF MSCI OR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO, MAKING OR COMPILING MSCI JAPAN INDEX. THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX IS THE EXCLUSIVE PROPERTY OF MSCI. MSCI AND THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX NAMES ARE SERVICE MARK(S) OF MSCI OR ITS AFFILIATES AND HAVE BEEN LICENSED FOR USE FOR CERTAIN PURPOSES BY CITIGROUP GLOBAL MARKETS INC. AND ITS AFFILIATES (THE “LICENSEE”). NEITHER MSCI, ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES NOR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO, MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX MAKES ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, TO THE OWNERS OF THIS FINANCIAL PRODUCT OR ANY MEMBER OF THE PUBLIC REGARDING THE ADVISABILITY OF INVESTING IN FINANCIAL SECURITIES GENERALLY OR IN THIS FINANCIAL PRODUCT PARTICULARLY OR THE ABILITY OF THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX TO TRACK CORRESPONDING STOCK MARKET PERFORMANCE. MSCI OR ITS AFFILIATES ARE THE LICENSORS OF CERTAIN TRADEMARKS, SERVICE MARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND OF THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX WHICH ARE DETERMINED, COMPOSED AND CALCULATED BY MSCI WITHOUT REGARD TO THIS FINANCIAL PRODUCT OR THE ISSUER OR OWNER OF THIS FINANCIAL PRODUCT. NEITHER MSCI, ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES NOR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO, MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX HAS ANY OBLIGATION TO TAKE THE NEEDS OF THE ISSUERS OR OWNERS OF THIS FINANCIAL PRODUCT INTO CONSIDERATION IN DETERMINING, COMPOSING OR CALCULATING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX. NEITHER MSCI, ITS AFFILIATES NOR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO, MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX IS RESPONSIBLE FOR OR HAS PARTICIPATED IN THE DETERMINATION OF THE TIMING OF, PRICES AT, OR QUANTITIES OF THIS FINANCIAL PRODUCT TO BE ISSUED OR IN THE DETERMINATION OR CALCULATION OF THE EQUATION BY WHICH THIS FINANCIAL PRODUCT IS REDEEMABLE FOR CASH. NEITHER MSCI, ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES NOR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO, THE MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX HAS ANY OBLIGATION OR LIABILITY TO THE OWNERS OF THIS FINANCIAL

 

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PRODUCT IN CONNECTION WITH THE ADMINISTRATION, MARKETING OR OFFERING OF THIS FINANCIAL PRODUCT.

 

ALTHOUGH MSCI SHALL OBTAIN INFORMATION FOR INCLUSION IN OR FOR USE IN THE CALCULATION OF THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX FROM SOURCES WHICH MSCI CONSIDERS RELIABLE, NEITHER MSCI, ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES NOR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX WARRANTS OR GUARANTEES THE ORIGINALITY, ACCURACY AND/OR THE COMPLETENESS OF THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX OR ANY DATA INCLUDED THEREIN. NEITHER MSCI, ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES NOR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO, MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX MAKES ANY WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AS TO RESULTS TO BE OBTAINED BY LICENSEE, LICENSEE’S CUSTOMERS OR COUNTERPARTIES, ISSUERS OF THE FINANCIAL SECURITIES, OWNERS OF THE FINANCIAL SECURITIES, OR ANY OTHER PERSON OR ENTITY, FROM THE USE OF THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX OR ANY DATA INCLUDED THEREIN IN CONNECTION WITH THE RIGHTS LICENSED HEREUNDER OR FOR ANY OTHER USE. NEITHER MSCI, ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES NOR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO, MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX SHALL HAVE ANY LIABILITY FOR ANY ERRORS, OMISSIONS OR INTERRUPTIONS OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX OR ANY DATA INCLUDED THEREIN. FURTHER, NEITHER MSCI, ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES NOR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO, MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX MAKES ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, AND MSCI, ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES AND ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX HEREBY EXPRESSLY DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, WITH RESPECT TO THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX AND ANY DATA INCLUDED THEREIN. WITHOUT LIMITING ANY OF THE FOREGOING, IN NO EVENT SHALL MSCI, ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES OR ANY OTHER PARTY INVOLVED IN, OR RELATED TO, MAKING OR COMPILING THE MSCI JAPAN INDEX HAVE ANY LIABILITY FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, PUNITIVE, CONSEQUENTIAL OR ANY OTHER DAMAGES (INCLUDING LOST PROFITS) EVEN IF NOTIFIED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.

 

No purchaser, seller or holder of these Notes, or any other person or entity, should use or refer to any MSCI trade name, trademark or service mark to sponsor, endorse, market or promote this product without first contacting MSCI to determine whether MSCI’s permission is required. Under no circumstances may any person or entity claim any affiliation with MSCI without the prior written permission of MSCI.

 

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THE ISHARES® 20+ YEAR TREASURY BOND ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the iShares® 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (the “20+ Treasury Fund”) from publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, iShares® Trust, BTC and BFA. The 20+ Treasury Fund is an investment portfolio maintained and managed by iShares® Trust. BFA is currently the investment adviser to the 20+ Treasury Fund. The 20+ Treasury Fund is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “TLT.”

 

iShares® Trust is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the 20+ Treasury Fund. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by iShares® Trust pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 333-92935 and 811-09729, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding iShares® Trust , BFA and the 20+ Treasury Fund, please see the 20+ Treasury Fund’s prospectus. In addition, information about iShares® Trust and the 20+ Treasury Fund may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the iShares® website at www.ishares.com. Information contained in the iShares® website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement. We make no representation or warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of information contained on the iShares® website.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The 20+ Treasury Fund seeks to track the investment results of an index composed of U.S. Treasury bonds with remaining maturities greater than twenty years, which is currently the Barclays U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index (the “20+ Treasury Index”).

 

The 20+ Treasury Fund may or may not hold all of the securities in the 20+ Treasury Index. The 20+ Treasury Fund generally invests at least 90% of its assets in the bonds included in the 20+ Treasury Index and at least 95% of its assets in U.S. government bonds. The 20+ Treasury Fund may invest up to 10% of its assets in U.S. government bonds not included in the 20+ Treasury Index, but which BFA believes will help the 20+ Treasury Fund track the 20+ Treasury Index. The 20+ Treasury Fund also may invest up to 5% of its assets in repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government obligations and in cash and cash equivalents, including shares of money market funds advised by BFA or its affiliates. The 20+ Treasury Fund may lend securities representing up to one-third of the value of the 20+ Treasury Fund’s total assets (including the value of the collateral received).

 

Representative Sampling

 

The 20+ Treasury Fund pursues a “representative sampling” indexing strategy in attempting to track the performance of the 20+ Treasury Index. The 20+ Treasury Fund invests in a representative sample of securities that collectively has an investment profile similar to that of the 20+ Treasury Index. The securities selected are expected to have, in the aggregate, investment characteristics (based on factors such as market capitalization and industry weightings), fundamental characteristics (such as return variability, duration, maturity or credit ratings and yield) and liquidity measures similar to those of the 20+ Treasury Index.

 

Correlation

 

The 20+ Treasury Index is a theoretical financial calculation while the 20+ Treasury Fund is an actual investment portfolio. The performance of the 20+ Treasury Fund and the 20+ Treasury Index may vary due to transaction costs, non-U.S. currency valuation, asset valuations, corporate actions (such as mergers and spin-offs), timing variances and differences between the 20+ Treasury Fund’s portfolio and the 20+ Treasury Index resulting from legal restrictions (such as diversification requirements) that apply to the 20+ Treasury Fund but not to the 20+ Treasury Index or to the use of representative sampling. “Tracking error” is the difference between the performance (return) of the portfolio of the 20+ Treasury Fund and that of the 20+ Treasury Index. BFA expects that, over time, the 20+ Treasury Fund’s tracking error will not exceed 5%. Because the 20+ Treasury Fund uses a representative

 

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sampling indexing strategy, it can be expected to have a greater tracking error than if it used a replication indexing strategy. “Replication” is an indexing strategy in which a fund invests in substantially all of the securities in its underlying index in approximately the same proportions as in the underlying index.

 

Industry Concentration Policy

 

The 20+ Treasury Fund will concentrate its investments (i.e., hold 25% or more of its total assets) in a particular industry or group of industries to approximately the same extent that the 20+ Treasury Index is concentrated. For purposes of this limitation, securities of the U.S. government (including its agencies and instrumentalities), repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government securities and securities of state or municipal governments and their political subdivisions are not considered to be issued by members of any industry.

 

Disclaimer

 

The Notes are not sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by BTC. BTC makes no representations or warranties to the owners of the Notes or any member of the public regarding the advisability of investing in the Notes. BTC has no obligation or liability in connection with the operation, marketing, trading or sale of the Notes.

 

The Barclays U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index

 

The following information regarding the Barclays U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index, including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. This information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, Barclays Capital Inc. (“BCI”). The Barclays U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index is calculated, maintained and published by BCI. BCI is under no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue publication of, the Barclays U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index.

 

The Barclays U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index measures the performance of public obligations of the U.S. Treasury. The Barclays U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index is market capitalization weighted, includes all publicly issued U.S. Treasury securities that meet the criteria for inclusion and is rebalanced once a month on the last business day of the month. The U.S. Treasury securities included in the Barclays U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index must have a remaining maturity of greater than 20 years, are rated investment grade (Baa3/BBB-/BBB- or higher, using the middle rating of Moody’s Investor Service, Inc., Standard and Poor’s Financial Services, LLC and Fitch Ratings Inc. when all three ratings are available, the lower rating when only two ratings are available, and that rating when only one rating is available) and have $250 million or more of outstanding face value. In addition, the securities must be denominated in U.S. dollars and must be fixed-rate and non-convertible. Certain special issuances, such as state and local government series bonds and coupon issues that have been stripped from assets already included, are excluded from the Barclays U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index.

 

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THE ISHARES® TIPS BOND ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the iShares® TIPS Bond ETF (the “TIPS Fund”), including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, iShares® Trust, BTC and BFA. The TIPS Fund is an investment portfolio maintained and managed by iShares® Trust. BFA is currently the investment adviser to the TIPS Fund. The TIPS Fund is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “TIP.”

 

On July 1, 2013, the name of the TIPS Fund was changed from the iShares® Barclays TIPS Bond Fund to the current name.

 

iShares® Trust. is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the TIPS Fund. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by iShares® Trust pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940 can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 333-92935 and 811-09729, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding iShares® Trust, BFA and the TIPS Fund, please see the TIPS Fund’s prospectus. In addition, information about iShares® Trust and the TIPS Fund may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the iShares® website at www.ishares.com. We make no representation or warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of information contained on the iShares® website. Information contained on the iShares® website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The TIPS Fund seeks to track investment results, before fees and expenses, of an index composed of inflation-protected U.S. Treasury bonds, which is currently the Barclays U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) Index (Series-L) (the “Barclays TIPS Index”). Inflation-protected public obligations of the U.S. Treasury, commonly known as “TIPS,” are securities issued by the U.S. Treasury that are designed to provide inflation protection to investors. TIPS are income-generating instruments the interest and principal payments of which are adjusted for inflation — a sustained increase in prices that erodes the purchasing power of money. The inflation adjustment, which is typically applied monthly to the principal of the bond, follows a designated inflation index, such as the consumer price index. A fixed coupon rate is applied to the inflation-adjusted principal so that as inflation rises, both the principal value and the interest payments increase. This can provide investors with a hedge against inflation, as it helps preserve the purchasing power of an investment. Because of this inflation adjustment feature, inflation-protected bonds typically have lower yields than conventional fixed-rate bonds.

 

The TIPS Fund uses a representative sampling indexing strategy (as described below under “Representative Sampling”) to try to track the Barclays TIPS Index.

 

The TIPS Fund generally invests at least 90% of its assets in the bonds included in the Barclays TIPS Index and at least 95% of its assets in U.S. government bonds. The TIPS Fund may invest up to 10% of its assets in U.S. government bonds not included in the Barclays TIPS Index, but which BFA believes will help the TIPS Fund track the Barclays TIPS Index. The TIPS Fund also may invest up to 5% of its assets in repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government obligations and in cash and cash equivalents, including shares of money market funds advised by BFA or its affiliates.

 

Representative Sampling

 

BFA uses a “representative sampling” indexing strategy to manage the fund. “Representative sampling” is an indexing strategy that involves investing in a representative sample of securities that collectively has an investment profile similar to the Barclays TIPS Index. The securities selected are expected to have, in the aggregate, investment characteristics (based on factors such as market capitalization and industry weightings), fundamental characteristics (such as return variability, duration, maturity or credit ratings and yield) and liquidity measures similar to those of the Barclays TIPS Index. The TIPS Fund may or may not hold all of the securities in the Barclays TIPS Index.

 

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Correlation

 

The Barclays TIPS Index is a theoretical financial calculation, while the TIPS Fund is an actual investment portfolio. The performance of the TIPS Fund and the Barclays TIPS Index may vary due to transaction costs, non-U.S. currency valuations, asset valuations, corporate actions (such as mergers and spin-offs), timing variances and differences between the TIPS Fund’s portfolio and the Barclays TIPS Index resulting from legal restrictions (such as diversification requirements) that apply to the TIPS Fund but not to the Barclays TIPS Index or to the use of representative sampling. “Tracking error” is the divergence of the performance (return) of a fund’s portfolio from that of its underlying index. BFA expects that, over time, the TIPS Fund’s tracking error will not exceed 5%. Because the TIPS Fund uses a representative sampling indexing strategy, it can be expected to have a greater tracking error than if it used a replication indexing strategy. “Replication” is an indexing strategy in which a fund invests in substantially all of the securities in its underlying index in approximately the same proportions as in the underlying index.

 

Industry Concentration Policy

 

The TIPS Fund will concentrate its investments (i.e., hold 25% or more of its total assets) in a particular industry or group of industries to approximately the same extent that the Barclays TIPS Index is concentrated. For purposes of this limitation, securities of the U.S. government (including its agencies and instrumentalities), repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government securities and securities of state or municipal governments and their political subdivisions are not considered to be issued by members of any industry.

 

The Barclays U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) Index (Series-L)

 

The following information regarding the Barclays TIPS Index, including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information, without independent verification. This information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, BCI. The Barclays TIPS Index is a bond index calculated, published and disseminated by BCI. BCI is under no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue publication of, the Barclays TIPS Index.

 

The Barclays TIPS Index measures the performance of inflation-protected securities issued by the U.S. Treasury known as “TIPS.” The Barclays TIPS Index is market capitalization weighted, includes all publicly issued U.S. inflation-protected securities that meet the criteria for inclusion and is rebalanced once a month on the last calendar day of the month. TIPS are indexed to the non-seasonally adjusted Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, or the CPI-U.

 

Eligibility Criteria

 

In order to be eligible for inclusion in the Barclays TIPS Index, securities must have $250 million or more of outstanding face value. U.S. Treasuries held in the Federal Reserve SOMA account (both purchases at issuance and net secondary market transactions) are deducted from the total amount outstanding. Any issuance bought at auction by the Federal Reserve does not enter the Barclays TIPS Index. Net secondary market purchases and sales are adjusted at each month-end with a one-month lag.

 

The U.S. inflation-protected securities included in the Barclays TIPS Index must be rated investment grade (Baa3/BBB-/BBB-) or higher using the middle rating of Moody’s, S&P and Fitch after dropping the highest and lowest available ratings. When a rating from only two agencies is available, the lower is used. When a rating from only one agency is available, that is used to determine index eligibility.

 

Securities must have a remaining maturity of at least one year, regardless of optionality. Securities with a coupon that converts from fixed to floating rate must have at least one year until the conversion date.

 

Principal and coupons must be denominated in U.S. dollars. Coupons must be fixed rate, step-up coupons or coupons that change according to a predetermined schedule.

 

The securities must be SEC-registered securities, bonds exempt from registration at the time of issuance or Rule 144A securities with registration rights. Public obligations of the U.S. Treasury and inflation-protected securities are eligible for inclusion in the Barclays TIPS Index. State and local government series bonds, STRIPS, T-bills and bellwethers are excluded from the Barclays TIPS Index.

 

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Rebalancing

 

The compositions of the “returns universe” is rebalanced at each month-end and represents the fixed set of bonds on which index returns are calculated for the ensuing month. The “statistics universe” is a forward-looking version that changes daily to reflect issues dropping out and entering the index, but is not used for return calculation. On the last business day of the month (the “rebalancing date”), the composition of the latest statistics universe becomes the returns universe for the following month.

 

During the month, indicative changes to securities (e.g., credit rating changes, sector reclassification, amount outstanding changes, corporate actions, ticker changes) are reflected in both the statistic universe and returns universe of the index on a daily basis. These changes may cause bonds to enter or fall out of the statistics universe of the index on a daily basis, but will affect the composition of the returns universe only at month-end, when the index is rebalanced.

 

Intra-month cash flows from interest and principal payments contribute to monthly index returns, but are not reinvested at any short-term reinvestment rate in between rebalance dates to earn an incremental return. However, after the rebalancing, cash is effectively reinvested into the returns universe for the following month, so that index results over two or more months reflect monthly compounding.

 

Eligible securities issued but not necessarily settled on or before the month-end rebalancing date qualify for inclusion in the following month’s index if required security reference information and pricing are readily available.

 

Index Calculation

 

The Barclays TIPS Index is priced by Barclays Capital market makers on a daily basis on 3:00 p.m. New York time. Bonds in the index are priced on the mid side. The primary price for each security is analyzed and compared with other third-party pricing sources through statistical routines and scrutiny by the research staff. Significant discrepancies are researched and corrected, as necessary.

 

The amount outstanding reported for TIPS is equal to the notional par value of each TIP security available for purchase by the public as reported by the U.S. Treasury in the Quarterly Treasury Bulletin. This number is then adjusted (divided) by the compounded rate of inflation since the date of issue. The number is updated quarterly, at the end of a month that the Quarterly Treasury Bulletin is released.

 

When a new TIPS is issued or an existing issue is reopened, the full uninflated par amount outstanding enters the index for returns purposes on the first day of the following month. Only when the next published Quarterly Treasury Bulletin includes the new issuance or reopening will this amount be adjusted to reflect the amount outstanding net of holds by the U.S. Treasury.

 

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THE ISHARES® IBOXX $ INVESTMENT GRADE CORPORATE BOND ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the iShares® iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF (the “Investment Grade Bond Fund”), including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, iShares® Trust, BTC and BFA. The Investment Grade Bond Fund is an investment portfolio maintained and managed by iShares® Trust. BFA is currently the investment adviser to the Investment Grade Bond Fund. The Investment Grade Bond Fund is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “LQD.”

 

iShares® Trust. is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the Investment Grade Bond Fund. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by iShares® Trust. pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment Company Act of 1940 can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 333-92935 and 811-09729, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding iShares® Trust, BFA and the Investment Grade Bond Fund, please see the Investment Grade Bond Fund’s prospectus. In addition, information about iShares® Trust and the Investment Grade Bond Fund may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the iShares® website at www.ishares.com. We make no representation or warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of information contained on the iShares® website. Information contained on the iShares® website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The Investment Grade Bond Fund seeks to track the investment results, before fees and expenses, of an index consisting of liquid, U.S. dollar-denominated, investment-grade corporate bonds, which is currently the Markit iBoxx® $ Liquid Investment Grade Index (the “IG Index”).

 

The Investment Grade Bond Fund uses a representative sampling indexing strategy (as described below under “Representative Sampling”) to try to track the IG Index.

 

The Investment Grade Bond Fund generally invests at least 90% of its assets in securities of the IG Index and at least 95% of its assets in investment-grade corporate bonds. The Investment Grade Bond Fund also may invest in bonds not included in the IG Index, but which BFA believes will help the Investment Grade Bond Fund track the IG Index. The Investment Grade Bond Fund may invest up to 5% of its assets in repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government obligations and in cash and cash equivalents, including shares of money market funds advised by BFA or its affiliates.

 

Representative Sampling

 

BFA uses a “representative sampling” indexing strategy to manage the Investment Grade Bond Fund. “Representative sampling” is an indexing strategy that involves investing in a representative sample of securities that collectively has an investment profile similar to the IG Index. The securities selected are expected to have, in the aggregate, investment characteristics (based on factors such as market capitalization and industry weightings), fundamental characteristics (such as return variability, duration, maturity or credit ratings and yield) and liquidity measures similar to those of the IG Index. The Investment Grade Bond Fund may or may not hold all of the securities in the IG Index.

 

Correlation

 

The IG Index is a theoretical financial calculation while the Investment Grade Bond Fund is an actual investment portfolio. The performance of the Investment Grade Bond Fund and the IG Index may vary due to transaction costs, non-U.S. currency valuations, asset valuations, corporate actions (such as mergers and spin-offs), timing variances and differences between the Investment Grade Bond Fund’s portfolio and the IG Index resulting from legal restrictions (such as diversification requirements) that apply to the Investment Grade Bond Fund but not

 

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to the IG Index or to the use of representative sampling. “Tracking error” is the divergence of the performance (return) of a fund’s portfolio from that of its underlying index. BFA expects that, over time, the Investment Grade Bond Fund’s tracking error will not exceed 5%. Because the Investment Grade Bond Fund uses a representative sampling indexing strategy, it can be expected to have a greater tracking error than if it used a replication indexing strategy. “Replication” is an indexing strategy in which a fund invests in substantially all of the securities in its underlying index in approximately the same proportions as in the underlying index.

 

Industry Concentration Policy

 

The Investment Grade Bond Fund will concentrate its investments (i.e., hold 25% or more of its total assets) in a particular industry or group of industries to approximately the same extent that the IG Index is concentrated. For purposes of this limitation, securities of the U.S. government (including its agencies and instrumentalities), repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government securities and securities of state or municipal governments and their political subdivisions are not considered to be issued by members of any industry.

 

The Markit iBoxx® $ Liquid Investment Grade Index

 

The following information regarding the IG Index, including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information, without independent verification. This information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, Markit Group Limited (“Markit”). The IG Index is calculated, maintained and published by Markit. Markit has no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue publication of, the IG Index.

 

The IG Index is reported by Bloomberg L.P. under the ticker symbol “IBOXIG.”

 

The IG Index is designed to reflect the performance of the U.S. dollar-denominated investment-grade corporate bond market. The IG Index is market-value weighted with an issuer cap of 3%.

 

The IG Index consists of investment grade U.S. dollar-denominated bonds issued by corporate issuers from developed countries and rated by at least one of three rating services: Fitch Ratings, Moody’s Investors Service or Standard & Poor’s Rating Services (each a “Ratings Agency” and collectively, the “Ratings Agencies”). The IG Index composition is rebalanced once a month, after the close of business on the last business day of the rebalancing month (the “rebalancing date”). The new IG Index composition becomes effective on the first business day of the next month (the “composition month”).

 

The IG Index uses multi-source prices as described under “Pricing Methodology” below.

 

Additionally, Markit will seek the advice from the following committees:

 

·Technical Committee: composed of representatives of market makers and banks. The Technical Committee meets once a month in order to arbitrate monthly rebalancing, and to monitor market developments. It also provides assistance in the identification of eligible constituents, especially in the instance where the eligibility or the classification of a bond is unclear or contentious. Additionally, the Technical Committee discusses any market developments which may warrant index rule changes and provides recommendations on changes to the rules.

 

·Oversight Committee: composed of representatives from a broad range of asset managers. The purpose of the Oversight Committee is to review the recommendations of the Technical Committee and also to provide consultation on any market developments which may warrant rule changes.

 

Selection Criteria for the iBoxx® $ Liquid Investment Grade Index

 

The following selection criteria are applied to select the constituents for the IG Index: bond type, credit rating, time to maturity, amount outstanding, classification, lockout period and minimum run.

 

Bond Type. Only fixed-rate bonds whose cash flow can be determined in advance are eligible for the IG Index. The IG Index is comprised solely of bonds. Treasury Bills and other money market instruments are not eligible. The IG Index includes only U.S. dollar-denominated bonds.

 

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In particular, bonds with the following characteristics are included: fixed coupon bonds, step-up bonds with coupon schedules known at issuance (or as functions of the issuer’s rating), sinking funds and amortizing bonds, medium-term notes, Rule 144A offerings with a registration right (only 144A bonds where the Registration S version of the bond is eligible for the Markit iBoxx USD Benchmark Index are eligible), callable bonds and putable bonds.

 

The following instrument types are specifically excluded from the IG Index: preferred shares, optionally and mandatorily convertible bonds, subordinated bank or insurance debt with mandatory contingent conversion features or with any conversion options before the first call date, bonds with other equity features attached (e.g., options or warrants), private placements, perpetual bonds, fixed-to-floater bonds, floating rate notes, pay-in-kind bonds (during the pay-in-kind period), zero coupon bonds, zero step-ups (GAINS) and bonds with differences between accrual and coupon payment periods and monthly-paying bonds.

 

Any bond subject to a firm call or tender offer, with the exception of exchange offers, in the month immediately following the rebalancing date will be excluded from the IG Index, provided that Markit is aware of that tender offer or call as of the Bond Selection Cut-off Date.

 

Credit Rating. All bonds in the IG Index must have a Markit iBoxx Rating of investment grade, which is defined as BBB- or above by Fitch or S&P or Baa3 or above by Moody’s. If a bond is rated by more than one of the Ratings Agencies, then the Markit iBoxx Rating is the average of the provided ratings. The rating is consolidated to the nearest rating grade in accordance with Appendix 4.3 to the Markit iBoxx Rules. Rating notches are not used. In case of an ID change or exchange of a Rule 144A/Regulation S offering into a registered bond the ratings from the Rule 144A/Regulation S offering are also used for the registered bond.

 

Time to Maturity. To qualify for entry in the IG Index, bonds must have at least three years and six months remaining time to maturity. Bonds in the IG Index must have maturities of at least three years at the rebalancing date.

 

Amount Outstanding. The outstanding face value of all bonds denominated in U.S. dollars from the issuer (excluding fixed-to-floater and perpetual bonds) must be greater than or equal to $2 billion as of the Bond Selection Cut-off Date. The outstanding face value of a bond must be greater than or equal to $750 million as of the Bond Selection Cut-off Date. Partial buybacks or increases will affect the outstanding face value of a prospective bond. Markit considers changes to the outstanding face value of a candidate bond as a result of partial or full buybacks or increases, provided that Markit is aware of such changes as of the Bond Selection Cut-off Date.

 

Bond Classification. The bond must be corporate credit, i.e., debt instruments backed by corporate issuers that are not secured by specific assets. Debt issued by governments, sovereigns, quasi-sovereigns and government-backed or guaranteed entities is excluded.

 

Bonds must be denominated in U.S. dollars, publicly registered in the United States with the SEC and clear and settle through The Depository Trust Company. Eurobonds are excluded.

 

Bonds from countries classified as developed markets based on the “Markit Global Economic Development Classification” are eligible for the IG Index. As of August 2012, the issuer or, in the case of a finance subsidiary, the issuer’s guarantor, must be domiciled and incorporated and the country of risk must be in Andorra, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bermuda, Canada, Cayman Islands, Cyprus, Denmark, Faeroe Islands, Finland, France, Germany, Gibraltar, Greece, Hong Kong, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Jersey, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United States or the United Kingdom in order to be eligible for inclusion in the IG Index. A new country is added to the IG Index if it is classified as a developed market based on the “Markit Global Economic Development Classification.” A country is no longer eligible for the IG Index if it is classified as an emerging market based on the “Markit Global Economic Development Classification.” The “Markit Global Economic Development Classification” is updated once per year. The results are published at the end of July. The inclusion or exclusion of a country becomes effective at the end of the October following that publication.

 

Lockout Period. A bond that drops out of the IG Index at the rebalancing day is excluded from re-entering the IG Index for a three-month period. The rule for the lockout period takes precedence over the other rules for the IG Index selection. A locked out bond will not be selected, even if it qualifies for the IG Index.

 

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Minimum Run. Any bond that enters the IG Index must remain in the IG Index for a minimum of six months, provided it is not downgraded to sub-investment grade, defaulted or fully redeemed in that period.

 

Annual Index Review

 

The rules for the IG Index are reviewed once per year during the annual index review process to ensure that the IG Index provides a balanced representation of the U.S. dollar-denominated liquid investment grade corporate debt market. The results of the annual index review become available at the end of October.

 

Index Rebalancing

 

The IG Index is rebalanced every month, on the last business day of the month after the close of business, i.e., the rebalancing date. Changes to amounts outstanding are taken into account only if they are publicly known four business days before the end of the month. Changes in ratings are taken into account only if they are publicly known three business days before the end of the month. New bonds issued are taken into account if they are publicly known to settle until the last calendar day of the month, inclusive, and if their rating has become known at least four business days before the end of the month.

 

Three business days before the end of each month, the rating information for the constituents is updated and the list is adjusted for all rating changes which are known to have taken place three trading days before the end of the month. Bonds that are known to have been upgraded to investment grade after the bond selection cut-off date are not included in the membership, but bonds which are known to have been downgraded to high yielded three trading days before the end of the month do get excluded from the membership.

 

In a first step, the selection criteria set out above are applied to the universe of U.S. dollar-denominated bonds. Bond ratings and amount outstanding are used as of the Bond Selection Cut-off Date. Maturity dates remain fixed for the life of the bond. Only bonds with a first settlement date on or before the rebalancing date are included in the selection process. Once the eligible bond universe has been defined, the weight for each bond is determined and if necessary capped, applying an issuer cap of 3%. The weights and capping factors are determined on the last business day of each month using the end-of-month market values.

 

Pricing Methodology

 

Index calculations are based on multi-sourced pricing that takes into account a variety of data inputs, including market quotes received from sell-side/buy-side market participants, end-of-day book of records prices, institutional size transaction data and, where observable prices are not available, a curve-based pricing model. The curve-based pricing model is based on the yield curve of the calculation day. Yield curves for determining the price must be entity specific, be currency specific, be seniority specific (including guarantees), be cash flow type specific, contain bonds of similar issue size, be single coupon frequency specific (each bucket will have constituents with a common coupon frequency), separate legacy issues within an entity (merger-related legacy issues generally require a separate curve) and trade consistently as fungible issues (i.e., at same spread vs. reference bond consistently).

 

Calculation of the iBoxx® $ Liquid Investment Grade Index

 

Calculations are performed daily, using iBoxx bid prices at approximately 3:00 p.m. Eastern Time.

 

The total return of the IG Index is calculated using the price changes, accrued interest, interest payments and reinvestment income on cash flows received during the composition month.

 

Treatment of Special Intra-Month Events

 

If a bond is fully redeemed intra-month, the bond effectively ceases to exist. In all calculations, the redeemed bond is treated as cash based on the last iBoxx price, the call price or the repurchase price, as applicable. A redemption factor and redemption price are used to treat these events in the IG Index and in calculations relating thereto. In addition, the clean price of the bond is set to the redemption price, and the interest accrued until the redemption date is treated as an irregular coupon payment.

 

If a bond is identified as trading flat of accrued, the accrued interest on the bond is set to zero in the total return index calculation and the bond is excluded from the calculation of all bond and index analytical values.

 

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Some bonds have predefined coupon changes that lead to a change in the annual coupon over the life of the bond. In all instances, the coupon change must be a fixed amount on top of a fixed coupon, i.e. floating coupon bonds are not eligible for the IG Index. The two main categories of bonds with coupon changes of this nature are step-up bonds and event-driven bonds. Step-up bonds have a pre-defined coupon schedule that cannot change during the life of the bond. That coupon schedule is used in all bond calculations. Event-driven bonds’ coupons may change upon the occurrence (or non-occurrence) of specified events, such as ratings changes, failure to register a bond or failure to complete a merger. In the calculation of the IG Index and the analytics, the coupon schedule as of the calculation date is used. Any events occurring after the calculation date are ignored in the determination of the applicable coupon schedule.

 

 

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THE SPDR® BARCLAYS HIGH YIELD BOND ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the SPDR® Barclays High Yield Bond ETF (the “High Yield Bond ETF”), including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, from publicly available information, without independent verification. This information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, the SPDR® Series Trust and SSgA Funds Management Inc. (“SSgA”). The High Yield Bond ETF is an investment portfolio managed by SSgA, the investment adviser to the High Yield Bond ETF. The High Yield Bond ETF is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “JNK.”

 

The SPDR® Series Trust is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the High Yield Bond ETF. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by the SPDR® Series Trust pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 333-57793 and 811-08839, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding the SPDR® Series Trust, SSgA and the High Yield Bond ETF, please see the High Yield Bond ETF’s prospectus. In addition, information about the High Yield Bond ETF and SSgA may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the High Yield Bond ETF’s website at https://www.spdrs.com/product/fund.seam?ticker=JNK. Information contained in the High Yield Bond ETF’s website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The High Yield Bond ETF seeks to provide investment results that, before fees and expenses, correspond generally to the price and yield performance of an index that tracks the U.S. high yield corporate bond market, which is currently the Barclays High Yield Very Liquid Index (the “High Yield Index”). The High Yield Index is designed to measure the performance of publicly issued, U.S. dollar-denominated high yield corporate bonds with above-average liquidity.

 

In seeking to track the performance of the High Yield Index, the High Yield Bond ETF employs a sampling strategy, which means that the High Yield Bond ETF is not required to purchase all of the securities represented in the High Yield Bond Index. Instead, the High Yield Bond ETF may purchase a subset of the securities in the High Yield Index in an effort to hold a portfolio of securities with generally the same risk and return characteristics of the High Yield Index. The quantity of holdings in the High Yield Bond ETF will be based on a number of factors, including asset size of the High Yield Bond ETF. Based on its analysis of these factors, SSgA may invest the High Yield Bond ETF’s assets in a subset of securities in the High Yield Bond Index or may invest the High Yield Bond ETF’s assets in substantially all of the securities represented in the High Yield Bond Index in approximately the same proportions as the High Yield Bond Index.

 

Under normal market conditions, the High Yield Bond ETF generally invests substantially all, but at least 80%, of its total assets in the securities comprising the High Yield Index or in securities that SSgA determines have economic characteristics that are substantially identical to the economic characteristics of the securities that comprise the High Yield Index. In addition, the High Yield Bond ETF may invest in debt securities that are not included in the High Yield Index, cash and cash equivalents or money market instruments, such as repurchase agreements and money market funds (including money market funds advised by SSgA).

 

While SSgA seeks to track the performance of the High Yield Index as closely as possible (i.e., achieve a high degree of correlation with the High Yield Index), the return of the High Yield Bond ETF may not match or achieve a high degree of correlation with the return of the High Yield Index due to operating expenses, transaction costs, cash flows, regulatory requirements and operational inefficiencies. For example, SSgA anticipates that it may take several business days for additions and deletions to the High Yield Index to be reflected in the portfolio composition of the High Yield Bond ETF.

 

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The Barclays High Yield Very Liquid Index

 

The following information regarding the High Yield Index, including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, from publicly available information, without independent verification. This information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, BCI. The High Yield Index is calculated, maintained and published by BCI. BCI is under no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue publication of, the High Yield Index.

 

The High Yield Index is reported by Bloomberg L.P. under the ticker symbol “LHVLTRUU.”

 

The High Yield Index measures the market of U.S. dollar-denominated, non-investment grade, fixed-rate, taxable corporate bonds of above-average liquidity.

 

Rules for Inclusion

 

To qualify for membership in the High Yield Index, a bond issuance must have a minimum issue still outstanding of US$500 million.

 

In order to be included in the High Yield Index, a bond must be rated high yield, using the middle rating of Moody’s, S&P and Fitch after dropping the highest and lowest available ratings. When a rating from only two agencies is available, the lower rating is used. When a rating is available from only one agency, that rating is used to determine index eligibility. With respect to Moody’s, a rating of Ba1 or lower is considered a high yield rating, and with respect to both S&P and Fitch, a rating of BB+ or lower is considered a high-yield rating. Expected ratings at issuance may be used when there are other index-eligible bonds from the same issuer that hold the same actual rating as the expected rating.

 

In order to be included in the High Yield Index, a bond must have at least one year time to maturity, regardless of optionality. Securities with a coupon that converts from fixed- to floating-rate must have at least one year left before the conversion date. Fixed-to-floating perpetual securities are included in the High Yield Index. They are included until one year before their first call date, provided that they meet all other index criteria.

 

Both senior and subordinated issues may be included. Capital securities (hybrid capital) are eligible during their fixed-rate term and exit the High Yield Index one year prior to their conversion to floating-coupon securities.

 

To qualify for membership, a bond’s coupon must be either fixed-rate or else a step-up coupon, or changes according to a pre-determined schedule. Capital securities with coupons that convert from fixed- to floating-rate are eligible for inclusion, so long as they are currently fixed rate; the maturity date then equals the conversion date. Fixed-to-floating rate perpetual capital securities that do not have coupon rate step-ups on their first call date will remain index eligible for their fixed-rate term, provided that they meet all other inclusion rules and exit the High Yield Index one year prior to their conversion to floating-coupon securities.

 

Both the principal and coupon of the bond must be denominated in U.S. dollars.

 

SEC-registered securities and SEC Rule 144A securities, with or without registration rights, are index eligible. Bonds from issuers that have later de-registered remain index eligible if they were either previously registered with the SEC, or if they were Rule 144A securities with registration rights.

 

The following types of bonds are eligible for inclusion: corporate bonds, fixed-rate bullet, putable and callable bonds, SEC Rule 144A securities, original issue zeroes, pay-in-kind bonds and fixed-rate and fixed-to-floating capital securities.

 

The following types of bonds are specifically excluded: non-corporate bonds, bonds with equity features (e.g. warrants, convertibles or contingent capital securities), Eurobonds, defaulted bonds, private placements, floating-rate issues, emerging market bonds (sovereign rating Baa1/BBB+/BBB+ and below using the middle of Moody’s, S&P and Fitch).

 

If an issuer has multiple issues outstanding, BCI will apply a rules-based methodology to select only the largest issue, based on amount outstanding, for each issuer.

 

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In order to be included, a bond must have been issued within the past five years.

 

Rebalancing Rules

 

The composition of the Returns Universe is rebalanced at each month-end; the Returns Universe is the fixed set of bonds on which High Yield Index returns are calculated for the ensuing month. The Statistics Universe is a forward-looking version that changes daily to reflect issues dropping out of and entering the High Yield Index, but is not used for return calculation. On the last business day of the month (the “rebalancing date”), the composition of the latest Statistics Universe becomes the Returns Universe for the following month.

 

During the month, indicative changes to securities (e.g. credit rating change, sector reclassification, amount outstanding changes, corporate actions, ticker changes) are reflected in both the Statistics and Returns Universe on a daily basis. These changes may cause bonds to enter or fall out of the Statistics Universe of the High Yield Index on a daily basis, but will affect the composition of the Returns Universe only at month-end, when the High Yield Index is rebalanced.

 

Intra-month cash flows from interest and principal payments contribute to monthly index returns, but are not reinvested at any short-term reinvestment rate in between rebalancing dates for an incremental return. However, after rebalancing, cash is effectively reinvested into the Returns Universe for the following month so that the High Yield Index results over two or more months reflect monthly compounding.

 

Qualifying securities issued, but not necessarily settled on or before the rebalancing date, qualify for inclusion in the following month if required security reference information and pricing are readily available.

 

Pricing and Related Issues

 

All index-eligible bonds are priced on a daily basis by either Barclays Capital traders or Interactive Data Corp.

 

Bonds can be quoted in a variety of ways, including nominal spreads over benchmark securities or Treasuries, spreads over swap curves, or direct price quotes as a percentage of par. In most instances, the quote type used is a spread measure that results in daily security price changes from the movement of the underlying curve (swap or Treasury) and/or change in the quoted spread.

 

Prices are observed at 3:00 p.m. (New York time) each day. On early market closes, prices will be taken as of 1:00 p.m., unless otherwise noted. If the last business day of the month is a public holiday in the United States, prices from the previous business day will be used.

 

Bonds in the High Yield Index are priced on the bid side. The initial price for new corporate issues entering the High Yield Index is the offer side; afterwards, however, the bid side price is used.

 

A settlement basis of T+1 calendar day is assumed for all bonds.

 

The price for each security is subject to multi-contributor verification. The primary price for reach security is analyzed and compared with other third-party pricing sources through statistical routines and scrutiny by the research staff. Significant discrepancies are researched and corrected, as necessary.

 

The High Yield Index follows the U.S. bond market holiday schedule.

 

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THE POWERSHARES DB COMMODITY INDEX TRACKING FUND

 

General

 

The following information regarding the PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund (the “PowerShares Commodity Fund”), including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information, without independent verification. This information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, Invesco PowerShares Capital Management LLC (“Invesco” or the “Managing Owner”), a Delaware limited liability company, as commodity pool operator and commodity trading advisor of the PowerShares Commodity Fund. The PowerShares Commodity Fund is a Delaware statutory trust that issues common units of beneficial interest (“Shares”) representing fractional undivided beneficial interests in and ownership of the PowerShares Commodity Fund. The trustee of the PowerShares Commodity Fund, Wilmington Trust Company, has delegated to Invesco certain of the power and authority to manage the business affairs of the PowerShares Commodity Fund and has only nominal duties and liabilities to the PowerShares Commodity Fund. The PowerShares Commodity Fund is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “DBC.”

 

The PowerShares Commodity Fund is a commodity pool as defined in the Commodity Exchange Act and the regulations of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the “CFTC”). Invesco is a commodity pool operator and commodity trading advisor registered with the CFTC. The PowerShares Commodity Fund is not an investment company registered under the Investment Company Act. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by the PowerShares Commodity Fund pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, can be located by reference to SEC file number 001-32726, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding Invesco and the PowerShares Commodity Fund, please see the PowerShares Commodity Fund’s prospectus. In addition, information about the Managing Owner and the PowerShares Commodity Fund may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the Invesco website at www.invescopowershares.com. Information contained in the Invesco website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Structure of the PowerShares Commodity Fund

 

The PowerShares Commodity Fund was formed as Delaware statutory trust on May 23, 2005. Each Share represents a unit of fractional undivided beneficial interest in the net assets of the PowerShares Commodity Fund.

 

Prior to the close of business on December 31, 2010, the PowerShares Commodity Fund invested substantially all of its assets in the DB Commodity Index Tracking Master Fund (the “Master Fund”). After the determination of the net asset value of the Master Fund on December 31, 2010, the Master Fund transferred and distributed all of its assets and liabilities and terminated. Effective January 1, 2011, the reorganized PowerShares Commodity Fund began performing all of the necessary functions in order to continue normal PowerShares Commodity Fund operations.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The PowerShares Commodity Fund’s investment objective is to track changes, whether positive or negative, in the level of the DBIQ Optimum Yield Diversified Commodity Index Excess Return™ (the “DBIQ Commodity Index”) over time, plus the excess, if any, of the PowerShares Commodity Fund’s interest income from its holdings of United States Treasury and other high credit quality short-term fixed income securities over the expenses of the PowerShares Commodity Fund.

 

The PowerShares Commodity Fund pursues its investment objective by investing in a portfolio of exchange-traded futures on the commodities composing the DBIQ Commodity Index (the “Index Commodities”). The Index Commodities are Light Sweet Crude Oil (WTI), Heating Oil, RBOB Gasoline, Natural Gas, Brent Crude, Gold, Silver, Aluminum, Zinc, Copper Grade A, Corn, Wheat, Soybeans and Sugar. The DBIQ Commodity Index is composed of notional amounts of each of the Index Commodities. The notional amounts of each Index Commodity included in the DBIQ Commodity Index are broadly in proportion to historical levels of the world’s production and supplies of the Index Commodities. The sponsor of the DBIQ Commodity Index is Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc.

 

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For more information about the DBIQ Commodity Index, see “— The DBIQ Optimum Yield Diversified Commodity Index Excess Return™” below.

 

If the Managing Owner determines in its commercially reasonable judgment that it has become impracticable or inefficient for any reason for the PowerShares Commodity Fund to gain full or partial exposure to any Index Commodity by investing in a specific futures contract that is a part of the DBIQ Commodity Index, the PowerShares Commodity Fund may invest in a futures contract referencing the particular Index Commodity other than the specific contract that is a part of the DBIQ Commodity Index or, in the alternative, invest in other futures contracts not based on the particular Index Commodity if, in the commercially reasonable judgment of the Managing Owner, such futures contracts tend to exhibit trading prices that correlate with a futures contract that is a part of the DBIQ Commodity Index. The PowerShares Commodity Fund does not employ leverage.

 

The DBIQ Optimum Yield Diversified Commodity Index Excess Return™

 

The following information regarding the DBIQ Commodity Index, including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. (“Deutsche Bank”). We make no representation or warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of such information. The DBIQ Commodity Index is calculated, maintained and published by Deutsche Bank. Deutsche Bank has no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue the publication of, the DBIQ Commodity Index.

 

The DBIQ Commodity Index is intended to reflect the changes in market value, positive or negative, of certain commodities. The DBIQ Commodity Index is (i) calculated on an excess return, or unfunded basis and (ii) rolled in a manner which is aimed at potentially maximizing the roll benefits in backwardated markets and minimizing the losses from rolling in contangoed markets. Futures contracts on the following commodities are included in the DBIQ Commodity Index: Light Sweet Crude Oil (WTI), Heating Oil, Reformulated Blendstock for Oxygenate Blending (“RBOB”) Gasoline, Natural Gas, Brent Crude, Gold, Silver, Aluminum, Zinc, Copper Grade A, Corn, Wheat, Soybeans, and Sugar. We refer to each of these commodities as an Index Commodity.

 

Index Composition

 

The DBIQ Commodity Index is composed of notional amounts of each of the Index Commodity futures contracts. The notional amounts of each Index Commodity futures contract included in the DBIQ Commodity Index are broadly in proportion to historical levels of the world’s production and supplies of the Index Commodities.

 

The DBIQ Commodity Index is rebalanced annually in November to ensure that each of the Index Commodities is weighted in the same proportion that such Index Commodities were weighted on September 3, 1997, which was the base date. The following table reflects the index base weights, or DBIQ Commodity Index Base Weights, of each Index Commodity on the base date:

 

Index Commodity DBIQ Commodity Index Base Weight
Brent Crude 12.375%
Heating Oil 12.375%
Light Crude 12.375%
RBOB Gasoline 12.375%
Gold 8.000%
Corn 5.625%
Soybeans 5.625%
Sugar #11 5.625%

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Index Commodity DBIQ Commodity Index Base Weight
Wheat 5.625%
Natural Gas 5.500%
Aluminum 4.167%
Copper – Grade A 4.167%
Zinc 4.167%
Silver 2.000%

 

Futures contracts on the Index Commodities are traded on the following futures exchanges: Light Sweet Crude Oil (WTI), Heating Oil, RBOB Gasoline and Natural Gas: New York Mercantile Exchange; Brent Crude: ICE-Futures Europe; Gold and Silver: Commodity Exchange Inc., New York; Aluminum, Zinc and Copper Grade A: The London Metal Exchange Limited; Corn, Wheat and Soybeans: Board of Trade of the City of Chicago Inc.; and Sugar: ICE Futures U.S., Inc.

 

The composition of the DBIQ Commodity Index may be adjusted in the event that Deutsche Bank is not able to calculate the closing prices of the futures contracts on the Index Commodities.

 

The DBIQ Commodity Index includes provisions for the replacement of futures contracts as they approach maturity. This replacement takes place over a period of time in order to lessen the impact on the market for the futures contracts being replaced. With respect to each Index Commodity, the DBIQ Commodity Index employs a rule-based approach when it “rolls” from one futures contract to another. Rather than selecting a new futures contract based on a predetermined schedule (e.g., monthly), each Index Commodity rolls to the futures contract which generates the best possible “implied roll yield.” The futures contract with a delivery month within the next thirteen months which generates the best possible implied roll yield will be included in the DBIQ Commodity Index. As a result, the DBIQ Commodity Index is able to potentially maximize the roll benefits from an Index Commodity in backwardated markets and minimize the losses from rolling in contangoed markets.

 

In general, as a futures contract approaches its expiration date, its price will move towards the spot price in a contangoed market. Assuming the spot price does not change, this would result in the futures contract price decreasing and a negative implied roll yield. The opposite is true in a backwardated market. Rolling in a contangoed market will tend to cause a drag on an Index Commodity’s contribution to the index closing level while rolling in a backwardated market will tend to cause a push on an Index Commodity’s contribution to the index closing level.

 

On the first index business day (defined as a day on which the New York Mercantile Exchange is open for business) of each month (the “Verification Date”), each Index Commodity futures contract will be tested for continued inclusion in the DBIQ Commodity Index. If the Index Commodity futures contract requires delivery of the underlying commodity in the next month (the “Delivery Month”), a new Index Commodity futures contract will be selected for inclusion in the DBIQ Commodity Index. For example, if the first New York business day is May 1, 2015, and the Delivery Month of the Index Commodity futures contract currently in the DBIQ Commodity Index is June 2015, a new Index Commodity futures contract with a later Delivery Month will be selected.

 

For each underlying Index Commodity in the DBIQ Commodity Index, the new Index Commodity futures contract selected will be the Index Commodity futures contract with the best possible “implied roll yield” based on the closing price for each eligible Index Commodity futures contract. Eligible Index Commodity futures contracts are any Index Commodity futures contracts having a Delivery Month (i) no sooner than the month after the Delivery Month of the Index Commodity futures contract currently in the DBIQ Commodity Index, and (ii) no later than the 13th month after the Verification Date. For example, if the first New York business day is May 1, 2015 and the Delivery Month of an Index Commodity futures contract currently in the DBIQ Commodity Index is June 2015, the Delivery Month of an eligible new Index Commodity futures contract must be between July 2015 and July 2016. The implied roll yield is then calculated and the futures contract on the Index Commodity with the best possible

 

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implied roll yield is selected. If two futures contracts have the same implied roll yield, the futures contract with the minimum number of months prior to the exchange expiry month is selected.

 

After the futures contract selection, the monthly roll for each Index Commodity subject to a roll in that particular month unwinds the old futures contract and enters a position in the new futures contract. This takes place between the 2nd and 6th index business day of the month.

 

On each day during the roll period, new notional holdings are calculated. The calculations for the old Index Commodity futures contracts that are leaving the DBIQ Commodity Index and the new Index Commodity futures contracts are then calculated. On all days that are not monthly index roll days, the notional holding of each Index Commodity futures contract remains constant.

 

Calculation of the Index Level

 

The DBIQ Commodity Index is re-weighted on an annual basis on the 6th index business day of each November. The DBIQ Commodity Index level is expressed as the weighted average return of the Index Commodity futures contracts. The closing level of the DBIQ Commodity Index is calculated by Deutsche Bank based on the closing prices of the futures contracts for each of the Index Commodities and the notional amount of such Index Commodity futures contracts.

 

The futures contract price for each Index Commodity will be the exchange closing price for such Index Commodity on each index business day. If a weekday is not an exchange business day but is an index business day, the exchange closing price from the previous index business day will be used for each Index Commodity.

 

The DBIQ Commodity Index has been calculated back to the base date. On the base date, the closing level was 100.

 

The DBIQ Commodity Index is calculated in USD.

 

An index business day is a day on which banks in New York, New York are open. An exchange business day is, with respect to an Index Commodity, a day that is a trading day for such Index Commodity on the relevant exchange (unless an index disruption event or force majeure event has occurred).

 

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THE SPDR® GOLD TRUST

 

General

 

The SPDR® Gold Trust (the “Gold Trust”) is an investment trust, formed on November 12, 2004 that seeks to mirror as closely as possible the price of gold bullion, before fees and expenses. BNY Mellon Asset Servicing, a division of The Bank of New York Mellon, is the trustee of the Gold Trust, World Gold Trust Services, LLC is the sponsor of the Gold Trust, HSBC Bank plc is the custodian of the Gold Trust, and State Street Global Markets, LLC is the marketing agent of the Gold Trust. The following information regarding the Gold Trust is based on publicly available information. We have not participated in the preparation of, or independently verified, the information derived from these public sources. The Gold Trust trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “GLD”.

 

Information provided to or filed with the SEC by the Gold Trust pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 333-153150 and 001-32356, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding the Gold Trust, please see the Gold Trust’s Prospectus, dated April 23, 2015. In addition, information about the Gold Trust may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the public website of the Gold Trust maintained by the sponsor at http://www.spdrgoldshares.com. We have not participated in the preparation of, or independently verified, such information. Information contained in the Gold Trust’s website is not incorporated by reference herein.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The investment objective of the Gold Trust is to reflect the performance of the price of gold bullion, less the Gold Trust’s expenses. The Gold Trust seeks to mirror as closely as possible the price of gold bullion, before fees and expenses. The Gold Trust holds gold bars and issues shares in exchange for deposits of gold and distributes gold in connection with the redemption of shares. The shares of the Gold Trust are intended to offer investors an opportunity to participate in the gold market through an investment in securities. The ownership of the shares of the Gold Trust is intended to overcome certain barriers to entry in the gold market, such as the logistics of buying, storing and insuring gold.

 

The shares of the Gold Trust represent units of fractional undivided beneficial interest in and ownership of the Gold Trust and have no par value. The Gold Trust is not managed like a corporation or an active investment vehicle. The gold held by the Gold Trust will only be sold: (1) on an as-needed basis to pay the Gold Trust’s expenses, (2) in the event the Gold Trust terminates and liquidates its assets, or (3) as otherwise required by law or regulation.

 

The Gold Trust holds gold bars and from time to time issues baskets in exchange for deposits of gold and distributes gold in connection with redemptions of baskets (for purposes of the Gold Trust, a “basket” equals a block of 100,000 shares).

 

Creation and Redemption

 

The Gold Trust creates and redeems the shares of the Gold Trust (for purposes of the Gold Trust, the “shares”) from time to time, but only in one or more baskets. The creation and redemption of baskets requires the delivery to the Gold Trust or the distribution by the Gold Trust of the amount of gold and any cash represented by the baskets being created or redeemed, the amount of which is based on the combined net asset value of the number of shares included in the baskets being created or redeemed. The initial amount of gold required for deposit with the Gold Trust to create shares for the period from the formation of the Gold Trust to the first day of trading of the shares on the NYSE was 10,000 ounces per basket. The number of ounces of gold required to create a basket or to be delivered upon the redemption of a basket gradually decreases over time, due to the accrual of the Gold Trust’s expenses and the sale of the Gold Trust’s gold to pay the Gold Trust’s expenses. Baskets may be created or redeemed only by authorized participants, who pay a transaction fee for each order to create or redeem baskets and may sell the shares included in the baskets they create to other investors.

 

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Valuation of Gold; Computation of Net Asset Value

 

The Net Asset Value (“NAV”) of the Gold Trust is the aggregate value of the Gold Trust’s assets less its liabilities (which include estimated accrued but unpaid fees and expenses). In determining the NAV of the Gold Trust, the trustee values the gold held by the Gold Trust on the basis of the price of an ounce of gold as set by the afternoon session of the twice daily fix of the price of an ounce of gold which starts at 3:00 PM London, England time and is performed by the five members of the London gold fix. Because the value of the gold held by the Gold Trust is determined using the London PM Fix, potential discrepancies in the calculation of the London PM Fix could impact the value of the gold held by the Gold Trust and could have an adverse effect on the value of an investment in the shares.

 

The London Gold Fix is determined twice each business day (10:30 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. London time) by the member banks of The London Gold Market Fixing Ltd. using a bidding process that sets or “fixes” the price of gold by matching buy and sell orders submitted to the member banks for the applicable fixing time. The NAV of the Gold Trust is determined each day the Gold Trust’s principal market, the NYSE Arca, is open for regular trading, using the 3:00 p.m. London Gold Fix, which is commonly referred to as the “London PM Fix.” If the London PM Fix has not been announced by 12:00 PM New York time on a particular evaluation day, the next most recent London gold price fix (AM or PM) is used in the determination of the NAV of the Gold Trust. The trust, the sponsor, and the trustee do not participate in establishing the London PM Fix. Other trusts backed by physical gold also use the London Gold Fix to determine their asset value.

 

After Determination of the Value of the Gold

 

Once the value of the gold has been determined, the trustee subtracts all estimated accrued but unpaid fees (other than the fees to be computed by reference to the value of the ANAV of the Gold Trust or the custody fees computed by reference to the value of gold held in the Gold Trust), expenses and other liabilities of the Gold Trust from the total value of the gold and all other assets of the Gold Trust (other than any amounts credited to the Gold Trust’s reserve account, if established). The resulting figure is the “ANAV” of the Gold Trust. The ANAV of the Gold Trust is used to compute the fees of the sponsor, the trustee and the marketing agent. To determine the Gold Trust’s NAV, the trustee subtracts the amount of estimated accrued but unpaid fees computed by reference to the value of the ANAV of the Gold Trust and computed by reference to the value of the gold held in the Gold Trust (i.e., the fees of the trustee, the sponsor, the marketing agent and the custodian) from the ANAV of the Gold Trust. The resulting figure is the NAV of the Gold Trust. The trustee also determines the NAV per Share by dividing the NAV of the Gold Trust by the number of the shares outstanding as of the close of trading on NYSE Arca. The trustee determines the NAV of the Gold Trust on each day the NYSE Arca is open for regular trading, at the earlier of the London PM Fix for the day or 12:00 PM (New York time). If no London PM Fix is made on a particular evaluation day or if the London PM Fix has not been announced by 12:00 PM (New York time) on a particular evaluation day, the next most recent London gold price fix (AM or PM) is used in the determination of the NAV of the Gold Trust, unless the trustee, in consultation with the sponsor, determines that such price is inappropriate to use as the basis for such determination. The trustee also determines the NAV per Share, which equals the NAV of the Gold Trust, divided by the number of outstanding shares.

 

Termination of the Gold Trust

 

The sponsor may, and it is anticipated that the sponsor will, direct the trustee to terminate and liquidate the Gold Trust at any time after the first anniversary of the Gold Trust’s formation when the NAV of the Gold Trust is less than $350 million (as adjusted for inflation). The sponsor may also direct the trustee to terminate the Gold Trust if the CFTC determines that the Gold Trust is a commodity pool under the Commodity Exchange Act of 1936, as amended. The trustee may also terminate the Gold Trust upon the agreement of shareholders owning at least 66 2⁄3% of the outstanding shares.

 

The trustee will terminate and liquidate the Gold Trust if any of the following events occur:

 

·Depository Trust Company, the securities depository for the shares, is unwilling or unable to perform its functions under the Gold Trust Indenture and no suitable replacement is available;

 

·The shares are de-listed from the NYSE Arca and are not listed for trading on another US national securities exchange or through the NASDAQ Stock Market within five business days from the date the

 

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shares are de-listed;

 

·The NAV of the Gold Trust remains less than $50 million for a period of 50 consecutive business days;

 

·The sponsor resigns or is unable to perform its duties or becomes bankrupt or insolvent and the trustee has not appointed a successor and has not itself agreed to act as sponsor;

 

·The trustee resigns or is removed and no successor trustee is appointed within 60 days;

 

·The custodian resigns and no successor custodian is appointed within 60 days;

 

·The sale of all of the Gold Trust’s assets;

 

·The Gold Trust fails to qualify for treatment, or ceases to be treated, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, as a grantor trust; or

 

·The maximum period for which the Gold Trust is allowed to exist under New York law ends.

 

Upon the termination of the Gold Trust, the trustee will, within a reasonable time after the termination of the Gold Trust, sell the Gold Trust’s gold bars and, after paying or making provision for the Gold Trust’s liabilities, distribute the proceeds to the shareholders.

 

Disclaimer

 

The shares of the Gold Trust are neither interests in nor obligations of the sponsor, the trustee or State Street Global Markets, LLC, as the marketing agent. The Notes are not sponsored, endorsed, sold, or promoted by the sponsor, the trustee or the marketing agent. The sponsor, the trustee or the marketing agent makes no representations or warranties to the owners of the Notes or any member of the public regarding the advisability of investing in the Notes. Neither the sponsor, the trustee nor the marketing agent has any obligation or liability in connection with the operation, marketing, trading or sale of the Notes.

 

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THE ISHARES® U.S. REAL ESTATE ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the iShares® U.S. Real Estate ETF (the “Real Estate Fund”) is based on publicly available information. The Index Sponsor has not independently verified such information. Such information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by iShares® Trust, BTC and BFA. The Real Estate Fund is an investment portfolio maintained and managed by iShares® Trust. BFA is currently the investment adviser to the Real Estate Fund. The Real Estate Fund is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “IYR.”

 

iShares® Trust is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the Real Estate Fund. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by iShares® Trust pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 333-92935 and 811-09729, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding iShares® Trust, BFA and the Real Estate Fund, please see the Real Estate Fund’s prospectus. In addition, information about iShares® Trust and the Real Estate Fund may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the iShares® website at www.ishares.com. Information contained in the iShares® website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The Real Estate Fund seeks to track the investment results, before fees and expenses, of an index composed of U.S. equities in the real estate sector, which is currently the Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index (the “Real Estate Index”).

 

The Real Estate Fund may or may not hold all of the securities in the Real Estate Index. The Real Estate Fund generally invests at least 90% of its assets in the securities of the Real Estate Index and in depositary receipts representing securities of the Real Estate Index. The Real Estate Fund may invest the remainder of its assets in securities not included in the Real Estate Index, but which BFA believes will help the Real Estate Fund track the Real Estate Index, and in futures contracts, options on futures contracts, other types of options and swaps related to the Real Estate Index, including shares of money market funds advised by BFA or its affiliates.

 

Representative Sampling

 

The Real Estate Fund pursues a “representative sampling” indexing strategy in attempting to track the performance of the Real Estate Index. The Real Estate Fund invests in a representative sample of securities that collectively has an investment profile similar to the Real Estate Index. The securities selected are expected to have, in the aggregate, investment characteristics (based on factors such as market capitalization and industry weightings), fundamental characteristics (such as return variability and yield) and liquidity measures similar to those of the Real Estate Index. The Real Estate Fund may or may not hold all of the securities that are included in the Real Estate Index.

 

Correlation

 

The Real Estate Index is a theoretical financial calculation, while the Real Estate Fund is an actual investment portfolio. The performance of the Real Estate Fund and the Real Estate Index may vary due to transaction costs, non-U.S. currency valuation, asset valuations, corporate actions (such as mergers and spin-offs), timing variances and differences between the Real Estate Fund’s portfolio and the Real Estate Index resulting from legal restrictions (such as diversification requirements) that apply to the Real Estate Fund but not to the Real Estate Index or the use of representative sampling. “Tracking error” is the divergence of the performance (return) of a fund’s portfolio from that of its underlying index. BFA expects that, over time, the Real Estate Fund’s tracking error will not exceed 5%. Because the Real Estate Fund uses a representative sampling indexing strategy, it can be expected to have a greater tracking error than if it used a replication indexing strategy. “Replication” is an indexing strategy in which a fund invests in substantially all of the securities in its underlying index in approximately the same proportions as in the underlying index.

 

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Industry Concentration Policy

 

The Real Estate Fund will concentrate its investments (i.e., hold 25% or more of its total assets) in a particular industry or group of industries to approximately the same extent that the Real Estate Index is concentrated. For purposes of this limitation, securities of the U.S. government (including its agencies and instrumentalities) and repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government securities are not considered to be issued by members of any industry.

 

Disclaimer

 

The Notes are not sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by BTC. BTC makes no representations or warranties to the owners of the Notes or any member of the public regarding the advisability of investing in the Notes. BTC has no obligation or liability in connection with the operation, marketing, trading or sale of the Notes.

 

The Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index

 

The following information regarding the Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index, including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information, without independent verification. This information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC (“Dow Jones”). The Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index is calculated, maintained and published by Dow Jones. Dow Jones is under no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue publication of, the Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index.

 

Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index Composition and Maintenance

 

The Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index measures the performance of the real estate sector of the United States equity market. Component companies include those that invest directly or indirectly in real estate through development, investment or ownership; companies that provide services to real estate companies but do not own the properties themselves (agencies, brokers, leasing companies, management companies and advisory services); and real estate investment trusts or corporations (“REITs”) or listed property trusts (“LPTs”) that invest in office, industrial, retail, residential, specialty (e.g., health care), hotel, lodging and other properties or that are directly involved in lending money to real estate owners and operators or indirectly through the purchase or mortgages or mortgage-backed securities. REITs are passive investment vehicles that invest primarily in income producing real estate or real estate-related loans and interests.

 

The Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index is one of the 19 supersector indices that make up the Dow Jones U.S. Index. The Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index is a subset of the Dow Jones U.S. Index. The Dow Jones U.S. Index is part of the Dow Jones Global IndexSM family, which is a benchmark family that represents approximately 95% of the float-adjusted market capitalization of countries that are open to foreign investors. The Dow Jones Global IndexSM family represents 46 countries. The Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index is weighted by float-adjusted market capitalization, rather than full market capitalization, to reflect the actual number of shares available to investors.

 

To establish the investable universe, index component candidates are filtered through screens for share class and liquidity. For share class, index component candidates must be common shares or other securities that have the characteristics of common equities. All classes of common shares, both fully and partially paid, are eligible. Fixed-dividend shares and securities such as convertible securities, warrants, rights, mutual funds, unit investment trusts, closed-end fund shares, shares in limited partnerships and business development companies are not eligible. Temporary issues arising from corporate actions, such as “when-issued shares,” are considered on a case-by-case basis when necessary to maintain continuity in a company’s index membership. REITs, LPTs and similar real-property-owning pass-through structures taxed as REITs by their domiciles are also eligible. Multiple classes of shares are included if each issue, on its own merit, meets the other eligibility criteria. For liquidity, securities that have had more than ten non-trading days during the past quarter are excluded.

 

Stocks in the investable universe are sorted by float-adjusted market capitalization. Stocks in the top 95% of the index universe by float-adjusted market capitalization are selected as components of the Dow Jones U.S. Index, excluding stocks that fall within the bottom 1% of the universe by float-adjusted market capitalization (as currently measured) and within the bottom 0.01% of the universe by turnover (as currently measured).

 

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Stocks selected as components of the Dow Jones U.S. Index are then classified into Subsectors based on their primary source of revenue. The Subsectors are rolled up into Sectors, which in turn are rolled up into Supersectors and finally into Industries. Subsectors, Sectors, Supersectors and Industries are defined by a proprietary classification system used by Dow Jones. The Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index is a Supersector that is a subset of the Dow Jones U.S. Index.

 

The Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index is reviewed by Dow Jones on a quarterly basis. Shares outstanding totals for component stocks are updated during the quarterly review. However, if the number of float-adjusted shares outstanding for an index component changes by more than 5% due to a corporate action, the shares total will be adjusted immediately after the close of trading on the date of the event. Whenever possible, Dow Jones will announce the change at least two business days prior to its implementation. Changes in shares outstanding due to stock dividends, splits and other corporate actions also are adjusted immediately after the close of trading on the day they become effective. Quarterly reviews are implemented during March, June, September and December. Both component changes and share changes become effective at the opening on the first Monday after the third Friday of the review month. Changes to the Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index are implemented after the official closing values have been established. All adjustments are made before the start of the next trading day. Constituent changes that result from the periodic review will be announced on the second Friday of the third month of each quarter (e.g., March, June, September and December).

 

In addition to the scheduled quarterly review, the Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index is reviewed on an ongoing basis. Changes in index composition and related weight adjustments are necessary whenever there are extraordinary events such as delistings, bankruptcies, mergers or takeovers involving index components. In these cases, each event will be taken into account as soon as it is effective. Whenever possible, the changes in the index components will be announced at least two business days prior to their implementation date. In the event that a component no longer meets the eligibility requirements, it will be removed from the Dow Jones U.S. Real Estate Index.

 

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THE ISHARES® U.S. PREFERRED STOCK ETF

 

General

 

The following information regarding the iShares® U.S. Preferred Stock ETF (the “Preferred Stock Fund”), including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation, and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information, without independent verification. This information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by, iShares® Trust, BTC and BFA. The Preferred Stock Fund is an investment portfolio maintained and managed by iShares® Trust. BFA is currently the investment adviser to the Preferred Stock Fund. The Preferred Stock Fund is an exchange-traded fund that trades on the NYSE Arca under the ticker symbol “PFF.”

 

iShares® Trust is a registered investment company that consists of numerous separate investment portfolios, including the Preferred Stock Fund. Information provided to or filed with the SEC by iShares® Trust pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, can be located by reference to SEC file numbers 333-92935 and 811-09729, respectively, through the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. For additional information regarding iShares® Trust, BFA and the Preferred Stock Fund, please see the Preferred Stock Fund’s prospectus. In addition, information about iShares® Trust and the Preferred Stock Fund may be obtained from other sources including, but not limited to, press releases, newspaper articles and other publicly disseminated documents and the iShares® website at www.ishares.com. Information contained in the iShares® website is not incorporated by reference in, and should not be considered a part of, this Index Supplement.

 

Investment Objective and Strategy

 

The Preferred Stock Fund seeks to track investment results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance, before fees and expenses, of an index composed of U.S. preferred stocks, which is currently the S&P U.S. Preferred Stock IndexTM (the “Preferred Stock Index”). The Preferred Stock Index measures the performance of select group of preferred stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange, NYSE Arca, NYSE Amex, NASDAQ Global Select Market, NASDAQ Select Market or NASDAQ Capital Market.

 

BFA uses a “passive” or indexing approach to try to achieve the investment objective of the Preferred Stock Fund. The Preferred Stock Fund does not try to “beat” the Preferred Stock Index and does not seek temporary defensive positions when markets decline or appear overvalued. The Preferred Stock Fund uses a representative sampling indexing strategy (as described below under “Representative Sampling”) to try to track the Preferred Stock Index.

 

The Preferred Stock Fund generally invests at least 90% of its assets in securities of the Preferred Stock Index and in depositary receipts representing securities of the Preferred Stock Index. The Preferred Stock Fund may invest the remainder of its assets in certain futures, options and swap contracts, cash and cash equivalents, including shares of money market funds advised by BFA or its affiliates, as well as in securities not included in the Preferred Stock Index, but which BFA believes will help the Preferred Stock Fund track the Preferred Stock Index.

 

Representative Sampling

 

BFA uses a “representative sampling” indexing strategy to manage the Preferred Stock Fund. “Representative sampling” is an indexing strategy that involves investing in a representative sample of securities that collectively has an investment profile similar to the Preferred Stock Index. The securities selected are expected to have, in the aggregate, investment characteristics (based on factors such as market capitalization and industry weightings), fundamental characteristics (such as return variability and yield) and liquidity measures similar to those of the Preferred Stock Index. The Preferred Stock Fund may or may not hold all of the securities in the Preferred Stock Index.

 

Correlation

 

The Preferred Stock Index is a theoretical financial calculation, while the Preferred Stock Fund is an actual investment portfolio. The performance of the Preferred Stock Fund and the Preferred Stock Index may vary due to transaction costs, non-U.S. currency valuations, asset valuations, corporate actions (such as mergers and spin-offs), timing variances and differences between the Preferred Stock Fund’s portfolio and that of the Preferred Stock Index

 

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resulting from legal restrictions (such as diversification requirements) that apply to the Preferred Stock Fund but not to the Preferred Stock Index or to the use of representative sampling. “Tracking error” is the divergence of the performance (return) of an ETF’s portfolio from that of its underlying index. BFA expects that, over time, the Preferred Stock Fund’s tracking error will not exceed 5%. Because the Preferred Stock Fund uses a representative sampling indexing strategy, it can be expected to have a larger tracking error than if it used a replication indexing strategy. “Replication” is an indexing strategy in which a fund invests in substantially all of the securities in its underlying index in approximately the same proportions as in the underlying index.

 

Industry Concentration Policy

 

The Preferred Stock Fund will concentrate its investments (i.e., hold 25% or more of its total assets) in a particular industry or group of industries to approximately the same extent that the Preferred Stock Index is concentrated. For purposes of this limitation, securities of the U.S. government (including its agencies and instrumentalities) and repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. government securities are not considered to be issued by members of any industry.

 

The S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index

 

The following information regarding the Preferred Stock Index, including, without limitation, its make-up, method of calculation and changes in its components, is based on publicly available information prepared by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, a subsidiary of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., without independent verification. This information reflects the policies of, and is subject to change by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC. The Preferred Stock Index is an index calculated, published and disseminated by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC. S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC has no obligation to continue to publish, and may discontinue publication of, the Preferred Stock Index.

 

In July 2012, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., the owner of the S&P Indices business, and CME Group Inc. (“CME Group”), the 90% owner of the CME Group and Dow Jones & Company, Inc. joint venture that owns the Dow Jones Indexes business, formed a new joint venture, S&P Dow Jones Indices, which owns the S&P Indices business and the Dow Jones Indexes business, including the S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index.

 

Generally

 

The Preferred Stock Index is composed of U.S.-traded preferred stocks (the “Preferred Stock Index Constituents”) that meet criteria relating to size, liquidity, issuance type, exchange listing and time to maturity. In general, preferred stock is a class of equity security that pays a specified dividend that must be paid before any dividends can be paid to common stockholders, and which takes precedence over common stock in the event of the company’s liquidation. Although preferred stocks represent a partial ownership interest in a company, preferred stocks generally do not carry voting rights and have economic characteristics similar to fixed-income securities. Preferred stocks generally are issued with a fixed par value and pay dividends based on a percentage of that par value at a fixed or variable rate. Additionally, preferred stocks often have a liquidation value that generally equals the original purchase price of the preferred stock at the date of issuance.

 

Index Eligibility

 

Preferred stocks trading on the New York Stock Exchange (including NYSE Arca and NYSE Amex), NASDAQ Global Select Market, NASDAQ Select Market or the NASDAQ Capital Market are eligible. Over-the-counter, bulletin board and unregistered securities are excluded.

 

Preferred stocks issued by a company to meet its capital or financing requirements are eligible. These include floating- and fixed-rate preferreds, cumulative and non-cumulative preferreds, preferred stocks with a callable or conversion feature and trust preferreds. Some trust preferreds issued by a company to meet its capital requirements carry a brand name or moniker—these are included. However, structured products and brand name products issued by financial institutions that are packaged securities linked to indices, baskets of stocks or another company’s stock are excluded. Special ventures such as toll roads or dam operators may issue preferred-like securities; these are also excluded.

 

Inclusion Criteria

 

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Preferred stocks that do not have a mandatory conversion or scheduled maturity within the next 12 months are eligible. Preferred stocks with market capitalization of more than $100 million are eligible. Preferred stocks that have traded more than 250,000 shares per month in each of the previous six months are eligible for inclusion. Issues with fewer than six months of trading history will be evaluated over the available period and may be included should size and available trading history infer the issue will satisfy this requirement. Preferred stocks for which S&P Dow Jones Indices cannot determine an indicated dividend yield are not eligible. There is no limit to the number of preferred stocks issued by a single company; however, a maximum weight of 10% is set per issuer. All eligible securities for an issuer are included in the Preferred Stock Index, with the aggregate weight capped on a pro rata basis to a maximum of 10% of the Preferred Stock Index market capitalization. At least 15 trust preferred issuers are targeted for inclusion in the Preferred Stock Index. In the event that fewer than 15 trust preferred issuers qualify based on the criteria above, the liquidity constraint is relaxed and the largest stocks are included until the count reaches 15.

 

Exclusion Criteria

 

Preferred stocks with market capitalization of less than $75 million as of the rebalancing reference date (as defined below) are excluded from the Preferred Stock Index. Preferred stocks that have not traded more than 125,000 shares per month over the previous six months as of the rebalancing reference date are excluded from the Preferred Stock Index. No issue is removed from the Preferred Stock Index for violating this requirement for the first 12 months following its addition effective date. Preferred stocks for which S&P Dow Jones Indices cannot determine an indicated dividend yield as of the rebalancing reference date will be excluded from the Preferred Stock Index.

 

Timing of Changes and Rebalancing

 

Rebalancing of the Preferred Stock Index occurs quarterly after the close of the third Friday in January, April, July, and October. The “reference date” for additions and deletions is five business days prior to the first Friday of the rebalancing month. Share changes for existing index constituents occur semi-annually in January and July after the close of the third Friday.

 

Additions occur only at the quarterly rebalancing. There are no intra-quarter additions.

 

A Preferred Stock Index Constituent is deleted intra-quarter if it is called or undergoes mandatory conversion. Subject to market conditions, S&P Dow Jones Indices will provide five days’ advance notice of a deletion. Should an existing Preferred Stock Index Constituent delist during the five-day notification period, it is removed at the closing price from its last day of trading. The quarterly rebalancing also results in deletions, if one or more Preferred Stock Index Constituents no longer meets continued eligibility requirements.

 

Index Calculations

 

The Preferred Stock Index is calculated by means of the divisor method. The initial divisor (“Index Divisor”) is set to have a base index value of 1000 on September 19, 2003, and has been adjusted from time to time, as described below, to minimize distortions introduced by the addition and removal of Preferred Stock Index Constituents. The “Preferred Stock Index Value” is calculated as follows:

 

Preferred Stock Index Value = Preferred Stock Index Market Value / Preferred Stock Index Divisor

 

Where the Preferred Stock Index Market Value is equal to the sum of the products, for each Preferred Stock Index Constituent, of the price of one share of that Preferred Stock Index Constituent times the “Preferred Index Shares,” which, for each Preferred Index Constituent, is set equal to the number of that Preferred Index Constituent’s shares outstanding as of the applicable reference date.

 

After each rebalancing, the Preferred Index Shares number for each Preferred Stock Index Constituent is adjusted to equal the “Modified Outstanding Preferred Shares” for each such Preferred Index Constituent. The Modified Outstanding Preferred Shares are all outstanding shares of the Preferred Stock Index Constituent except for certain large issuers where the combined weight of all issues by that issuer in the Preferred Stock Index exceeds 10%. The combined weight in the Preferred Stock Index of the issues by each such issuer is reduced so that, on a combined basis, issues by that issuer account for only 10%, resulting in a proportionate increase in the weights for all other issuers.

 

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In order to maintain index series continuity, the Index Divisor is adjusted after each rebalancing so that the Preferred Stock Index Value before rebalancing is equal to the Preferred Stock Index Value after rebalancing. Therefore, after each rebalancing the value of the Index Divisor is set equal to the quotient of the Preferred Stock Index Market Value after that rebalancing divided by the Preferred Stock Index Value before that rebalancing.

 

Corporate Actions

 

Corporate Action   Adjustment Made to the Preferred Stock Index   Divisor Adjustment?
Shares called for cash or par value   If the issuer calls a Preferred Stock Index Constituent, it is removed from the Preferred Stock Index with five-day notice at the closing price of the date at which it is dropped.  Note that the issuer may choose not to call, in which case no change is necessary.   Yes
Shares called for conversion or automatically converted   The Preferred Stock Index Constituent is removed from the Preferred Stock Index with five-days’ notice at the closing price of the date at which it is dropped If the issuer chooses not to invoke the right to convert and conversion is not automatic, no change is necessary.   Yes
Delisting from primary exchange   The Preferred Stock Index Constituent is removed at the closing price of the delisting date.  (Occasionally, a Preferred Stock Index Constituent may be removed at zero price.)   Yes
Special cash distribution   The price of the stock making the special payment is reduced by the per share special payment amount after the close of trading on the day before the ex-date.   Yes
Rights offering on preferred share class   The price is adjusted to the Price of Parent shares minus (Price of Rights shares/Rights Ratio).   Yes
Preferred Stock Split   Index Shares are multiplied by and the price is divided by the split factor.   No
Issuance of additional shares for the preferred share class in the index   None.  Shares are revised semiannually.   No
Partial call for cash or par value   On the redemption date, the Preferred Stock Index Constituent shares outstanding are reduced by the number of shares called and the Preferred Stock Index Constituent is adjusted to the call prices plus accrued interest.   Yes

 

 

 

Index Governance

 

The Preferred Stock Index is maintained by the Americas Thematic and Strategy Index Committee (the “Index Committee”). All committee members are full-time professional members of S&P Dow Jones Indices staff. The Index Committee meets monthly. At each meeting, the Index Committee reviews pending corporate actions that may affect Preferred Stock Index Constituents, statistics comparing the composition of the Preferred Stock Index to the market, companies that are being considered as candidates for addition to the Preferred Stock Index, and any significant market events. In addition, the Index Committee may revise index policy covering rules for selecting companies, treatment of dividends, share counts or other matters.

 

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CASH CONSTITUENT

 

The Cash Constituent is calculated by the Index Calculation Agent and is a hypothetical money market instrument with a return equal to 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR. The Index Constituent Level of the Cash Constituent on any Index Business Day is equal to the Index Constituent Level of the Cash Constituent on the immediately preceding Rate Reset Day plus accrued interest on that Index Constituent Level to the current Index Business Day at the 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR rate, as determined on the immediately preceding Rate Reset Day.

 

On any Rate Reset Day, 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR will be the rate displayed on Bloomberg page “US0003M <Index>” (or any successor page or any substitute page that is widely recognized by participants in the relevant market and that the Index Calculation Agent may determine appropriate) on that Rate Reset Day; provided that if 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR is unavailable for any reason, 3-month U.S. dollar LIBOR will be the most recently available rate for an Index Business Day preceding the applicable Rate Reset Day.

 

Three-month U.S. dollar LIBOR reflects the rate at which banks lend U.S. dollars to each other for a term of 3 months in the London interbank market.

 

© 2019 Citigroup Global Markets Inc. All rights reserved. Citi and Citi and Arc Design are trademarks and service marks of Citigroup Inc. or its affiliates and are used and registered throughout the world.

 

 

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ANNEX A

 

INDEX RULES

 

 

 

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Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index
Index Methodology 

Citi Investment Strategies

 

5 August 2015 Citi 

 

 

 

 

 

  Citi Investment Strategies
Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index
Index Methodology

 

 

Table of Contents 

 

Part A:   Introduction 3
Part B:   Key Information 5
Part C:   Overview of the Index 8
Part D:   Calculation of the Index Level 11
Part E:   Data 31
Part F:   Specific Risks 37
Index General Conditions  
Section A:   Introduction 50
Section B:   Valuations and Adjustments 53
Section C:   General Risks 57
Section D:   Definitions 64
Section E:   Miscellaneous 68
Section F:   Constituent Schedules 72

 

 

 

 

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Index General Conditions

 

 

 

Part A: Introduction 

 

 

 

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Index General Conditions

 

 

Introduction 

 

 

This document constitutes the “Index Methodology” in respect of the Index (as defined below) and is made available by Citigroup Global Markets Limited in its capacity as the Index Sponsor.

 

This Index Methodology dated 5 August 2015 and the Index General Conditions dated 5 August 2015 (as amended from time to time, the “Index General Conditions”) together comprise the Index Conditions applicable to the Index and must be read together. In the case of any inconsistency between this Index Methodology and the Index General Conditions, this Index Methodology shall prevail in respect of the Index.

 

Full information in respect of the Index is only available on the basis of the combination of this Index Methodology and the Index General Conditions.

 

Full information in respect of any Index Linked Product (as defined in Section D (Definitions) of the Index General Conditions) is only available on the basis of the combination of this Index Methodology and the Index General Conditions and the confirmation, prospectus or offering document (however described) in respect of such Index Linked Product.

 

This Index Methodology may be amended in the circumstances described in Section E (Miscellaneous) of the Index General Conditions, and will be available from the Index Sponsor. See Section E (Miscellaneous) of the Index General Conditions for a description of the circumstances in which a change to this Index Methodology may be required.

 

Terms used in this Index Methodology but not defined in this Index Methodology shall have the meanings given to them in the Index General Conditions.

 

 

 

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Part B: Key Information 

 

 

 

 

 

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Key Information  

   
Index: Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index (the "Index")
   
Summary of strategy:

The Index tracks the performance of the hypothetical, rules-based investment methodology.

 

The Index applies a portfolio selection methodology on a monthly basis to select a hypothetical investment portfolio to track for the next month. In general, if that hypothetical investment portfolio appreciates over the next month, the level of the Index will increase, and if that hypothetical investment portfolio depreciates over the next month, the level of the Index will decrease, subject to the excess return deduction, index fee and other features of the Index.

 

The Index selects the hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked each month using certain concepts drawn from the “modern portfolio theory” approach to asset allocation. These are: (i) the construction of the hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked from a universe of eligible assets that represent a number of different asset classes and market sectors and (ii) the selection of the optimised hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked each month from this universe of eligible assets that (a) have the highest expected return without exceeding the Index’s target volatility of 5% and (b) meet certain prescribed conditions.

 

If for any given month there is no hypothetical investment portfolio with a historical volatility that is less than or equal to 5%, the hypothetical investment portfolio that is selected as the portfolio to be tracked by the Index for that month would be the hypothetical investment portfolio with the lowest historical volatility, regardless of historical performance. Consequently, the percentage weights of the constituents in that hypothetical investment portfolio would be reduced on a pro rata basis and reallocated into a cash component to reduce the expected volatility of the hypothetical investment portfolio to 5%.

 

If a defined hurdle rate of return is not achieved by the level of the expected return of the optimised hypothetical investment portfolio within the prescribed 5% volatility target, the full hypothetical investment portfolio shall be fully allocated into the cash constituent.

 

In addition, if the hypothetical investment portfolio has declined by more than 8% over any 21 Index Business Day period, the hypothetical investment portfolio will be reallocated 100% into the cash constituent over an extraordinary rebalancing period and will remain allocated to the cash constituent until the beginning of the next regular monthly rebalancing period.

 

The Index is an “excess return” index, which means that, in calculating the performance of the Index, the daily performance of the Selected Portfolio will be reduced by a notional funding rate equal to ICE London - Interbank Offered Rate USD 3 Month, as in effect on the immediately preceding Index Business Day.

 

The Index is also a “volatility target” index, which means that it adjusts its exposure to the excess return performance of the hypothetical investment portfolio on a daily basis in an attempt to maintain a target volatility for the Index of approximately 5%, subject to a maximum exposure of 120% and a minimum exposure of 0%.

 

An Index fee is deducted from the daily performance of the Index at a rate of 0.75% per annum.

 

Index Sponsor: Citigroup Global Markets Limited
   
Index Calculation Agent: Citigroup Global Markets Limited
   

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Index General Conditions
 
Index Base Currency: United States dollars (“USD”)
Index Launch Date: 30 June 2015
Index Start Date: 3 February 2005
Index Start Level: USD 1000
Gross Index Start Level USD 1000
Index Fee: 0.75% per annum
Excess Return Start Date: 3 January 2005
Excess Return Start Level: USD 1000
Core Index Start Date: 3 January 2005
Core Index Start Level: USD 1000

Index Constituent Start Date:

 

Frequency of calculation of the Index Level:

 

22 September 2003

 

Daily, as of each Index Business Day.

 

Frequency of rebalancing: Monthly, as of each Rebalancing Date (subject to the occurrence of an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event).
Index Electronic Page: CIISMP5N Index

 

The Index was launched by the Index Sponsor on the Index Launch Date and has been calculated by the Index Calculation Agent for the period from the Index Start Date. Any back-testing or similar performance analysis undertaken by any person in respect of the Index for any reason must be considered illustrative only and may be based on assumptions or estimates not used by the Index Calculation Agent when determining the Index Level.

 

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Index General Conditions

 

 

 

Part C: Overview of the Index 

 

 

 

 

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Index General Conditions

Overview of the Index 

 

1.       GENERAL OVERVIEW

 

The Index Conditions as a whole govern the calculation of the Index and the Index Level (as defined in Section D (Definitions) of the Index General Conditions), and the determinations made in connection with the maintenance of the Index. In the case of any inconsistency between this Part C and the remainder of the Index Conditions, the remainder of the Index Conditions shall prevail.

 

The Index Level is calculated in the Index Base Currency by the Index Calculation Agent in respect of every Index Business Day (as defined in Part E (Data) and is generally published on the following Index Business Day. The Index has been calculated on a live basis since the Index Launch Date and has been back-tested for the period from and including the Index Start Date.

 

The Index is a notional rules-based proprietary index developed by the Index Sponsor that derives its performance from a hypothetical investment portfolio selected on a monthly basis, reduced by a notional funding rate equal to ICE London - Interbank Offered Rate USD 3 Month and net of the Index Fee.

 

Once each month, the Index applies a portfolio selection methodology to select a hypothetical investment portfolio to track for the next month. In general, if that hypothetical investment portfolio appreciates over the next month, the level of the Index will increase, and if that hypothetical investment portfolio depreciates over the next month, the level of the Index will decrease, subject to the excess return deduction, index fee and other features of the Index.

 

The Index selects the hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked each month using certain concepts drawn from the “modern portfolio theory” approach to asset allocation. Generally, modern portfolio theory holds that an optimal or efficient investment portfolio is one that maximises expected return for any given level of risk, where “risk” is measured by the expected volatility of the portfolio. Further, modern portfolio theory suggests that the investment portfolio that achieves this result is likely to be a diversified portfolio of relatively uncorrelated assets. The Index seeks to implement these ideas in two ways:

 

(i)First, the Index will construct the hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked each month from a universe of eligible assets that represent a number of different asset classes and market sectors.

 

(ii)Second, the Index will seek to select as the hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked each month (out of all possible hypothetical investment portfolios that could be constructed from this universe of eligible assets):

 

(a)the hypothetical investment portfolio that has the highest expected return without exceeding the Index’s target volatility of 5%; and

 

(b)that meets the prescribed conditions (see paragraph 5 (Selection of Constituents) of Part D (Calculation of the Index Level) below).

 

If for any given month there is no hypothetical investment portfolio with a historical volatility that is less than or equal to 5%, the hypothetical investment portfolio that is selected as the portfolio to be tracked by the Index for that month (the “Selected Portfolio”) would not be the hypothetical investment portfolio that maximises historical performance for its level of risk, but rather would be the hypothetical investment portfolio with the lowest historical volatility, regardless of historical performance, resulting in the percentage weights of the constituents in that hypothetical investment portfolio reducing on a pro rata basis and being reallocated into a cash component to the extent necessary to reduce the expected volatility of the hypothetical investment portfolio to 5%.

 

An additional return constraint is imposed if a defined hurdle rate of return is not achieved by the level of the expected return of the optimised portfolio, within the prescribed volatility target, which may lead to the full hypothetical investment portfolio being invested into cash constituent (the 3-month ICE London – Interbank Offered Rate).

 

The Index also contains an “extraordinary rebalancing” feature that will replace the constituents in that hypothetical investment portfolio with a cash constituent if the hypothetical investment portfolio has declined by more than 8% over any 21 Index Business Day period. In that event, the hypothetical investment portfolio will be

 

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Index General Conditions

 

reallocated out of the constituents in that hypothetical investment portfolio and into the cash constituent over an extraordinary rebalancing period and will then remain 100% allocated to the cash constituent until the beginning of the next regular monthly rebalancing period.

 

The Index is an “excess return” index, which means that, in calculating the performance of the Index, the daily performance of the Selected Portfolio will be reduced by a notional funding rate equal to ICE London - Interbank Offered Rate USD 3 Month, as in effect on the immediately preceding Index Business Day.

 

The Index is also a “volatility target” index, which means that it adjusts its exposure to the excess return performance of the hypothetical investment portfolio on a daily basis in an attempt to maintain a target volatility for the Index of approximately 5%, subject to a maximum exposure of 120% and a minimum exposure of 0%.

 

An Index fee is deducted from the daily performance of the Index at a rate of 0.75% per annum.

 

The Index is described as replicating notional positions in the Constituents because there is no actual portfolio of assets to which any person is entitled or in which any person has any ownership interest. The Index simply references certain investment positions the performance of which is used as a reference point for the purpose of calculating the Index Level.

 

The Citi ETF Market Pilot 5 Excess Return Index uses a trend-following methodology to determine weights for the Eligible Constituents on a monthly basis, such that the Index will be exposed to different Eligible Constituents from time to time depending on the asset class performance trends identified by the Methodology. The Index is subject to a variety of market risks. The Methodology on which the Index is based may not be successful and may not outperform any alternative strategy that might be employed in respect of the Eligible Universe.

 

2.       INDEX SPONSOR AND INDEX CALCULATION AGENT

 

The Index Sponsor is Citigroup Global Markets Limited. As at the date of this Index Methodology, Citigroup Global Markets Limited also acts as Index Calculation Agent, calculating and publishing the Index in accordance with these Index Conditions. The Index Sponsor may, in its sole discretion and without notice, appoint an alternative Index Calculation Agent at any time which may be the Index Sponsor or one of its Affiliates.

 

The determinations of the Index Sponsor and the Index Calculation Agent in respect of the Index shall be final in the absence of manifest error. Please refer to Section E (Miscellaneous) of the Index General Conditions for further information.

 

3.       INDEX LEVEL CALCULATION

 

Subject to the occurrence or existence of a Disrupted Day (as defined in Section D (Definitions) of the Index General Conditions), the Index Level is calculated by the Index Calculation Agent as of the Index Valuation Time on each Index Business Day (as defined in Part E (Data). The Index Level as of each Index Business Day is published on the Index Electronic Page, generally on the following Index Business Day. This should be considered the official source for the Index Level and a level obtained from any other source (electronic or otherwise) must be considered unofficial. The Index Level is the closing level of the Index for that Index Business Day. The Index Calculation Agent may also, but is not obliged to, calculate the level of the Index in respect of any other valuation time on any Index Business Day or any other day with the consent of the Index Sponsor. The detailed procedures for the calculation of the Index Level in respect of each Index Business Day are set out in Part D (Calculation of the Index Level) below.

 

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Part D: Calculation of the Index Level 

 

 

 

 

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Calculation of the Index Level 

 

1.       INTRODUCTIon

 

The Index Sponsor is Citigroup Global Markets Limited. As at the date of this Index Methodology, the Index Sponsor also acts in the capacity of Index Calculation Agent to calculate and publish the Index in accordance with the Index Conditions. The Index Sponsor may, in its sole discretion and without notice, appoint an alternative Index Calculation Agent at any time, which may be the Index Sponsor or one of its Affiliates.

 

The Index Calculation Agent’s calculations of the Index Level shall be final in the absence of manifest error. Please refer to Section E (Miscellaneous) of the Index General Conditions for further information.

 

The Index Level is calculated by the Index Calculation Agent as of the Index Valuation Time on each Index Business Day (each as defined in Part E (Data) below). The Index Level for each Index Business Day is published on the Index Electronic Page, generally on the following Index Business Day. This should be considered the official source for the Index Level and a level obtained from any other source (electronic or otherwise) must be considered unofficial. The Index Level is the closing level of the Index for the relevant Index Business Day. The Index Calculation Agent may also, but is not obliged to, calculate the level of the Index in respect of any other valuation time on any Index Business Day or any other day with the consent of the Index Sponsor.

 

Unless otherwise provided to the contrary, all of the calculations and determinations described in this Part D are the responsibility of the Index Calculation Agent. The calculations and determinations in this Part D are subject to the occurrence of, and adjustments made as a consequence of, Additional Adjustment Events as set out below in this Part D, Disrupted Days and Adjustment Events (as described in Section B (Valuations and Adjustments) and Section F (Constituent Schedules) of the Index General Conditions).

 

2.       Daily index calculation

 

2.1        Index Level

 

The “Index Level” as of the Index Start Date shall be the Index Start Level.

 

The “Index Level” as of each Index Business Day t (“ILt”) following the Index Start Date shall be an amount determined by the Index Calculation Agent as of the Index Valuation Time on such Index Business Day t in accordance with the following formula.

 

 

where:

 

ILt =

Index Level in respect of Index Business Day t

 

ILt-1 =

Index Level on the immediately preceding Index Business Day t-1

 

GILt =

Gross Index Level on Index Business Day t

 

GILt-1 =

Gross Index Level on the immediately preceding Index Business Day t-1

 

Index Fee =

0.75% per annum

 

dc(t,t-1) = The number of calendar days in the period from, and including, the

 

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    Index Business Day t, to but excluding, the immediately preceding Index Business Day t-1

2.2        Gross Index Level

 

The “Gross Index Level” as of the Index Start Date shall be the Gross Index Start Level.

 

The “Gross Index Level” in respect of each Index Business Day t following the Index Start Date is a function of the Exposure of the Gross Index Level to the Excess Return Index Level on such Index Business Day and the Excess Return Index Level on such Index Business Day. The “Excess Return Index Level” is calculated in respect of each Index Business Day in accordance with the formula set out in paragraph 3 (Excess Return Index Level) below, and the Exposure is calculated in respect of each Index Business Day in accordance with the formula set out in paragraph 2.3 (Exposure) below.

 

The Gross Index Level in respect of each Index Business day t (“GILt”) following the Index Start Date shall be an amount determined by the Index Calculation Agent as of the Index Valuation Time on such Index Business Day t in accordance with the following formula:

 

 

where:

 

GILt = Gross Index Level as of Index Business Day t
GILt-1 = Gross Index Level as of the Index Business Day immediately preceding Index Business Day t-1
ERILt = Excess Return Index Level on Index Business Day t
ERILt-1 = Excess Return Index Level on the immediately preceding Index Business Day t-1
expt-1 = Exposure of the Gross Index Level to the Excess Return Index Level in respect of the Index Business Day immediately preceding Index Business day t. For the avoidance of doubt, expt-1 on the Index Start Date shall be equal to 100%

 

2.3       Exposure

 

The “Exposure” of the Gross Index Level to the Excess Return Index Level is determined by reference to short-term realised volatility of the Excess Return Index Level over the 20 Index Business Day period ending on, and including, two Index Business Days prior to Index Business Day t. The Exposure of the Gross Index Level to the Excess Return Index Level will never be more than 120%.

 

The Exposure in respect of each Index Business Day t is determined in accordance with the following formula:

 

 

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where:

 

expt = Exposure of the Gross Index Level to the Excess Return Index Level in respect of Index Business Day t
expt-1 = Exposure of the Gross Index Level to the Excess Return Index Level on the Index Business Day t immediately preceding Index Business Day t. For the avoidance of doubt, expt-1 on the Index Start Date shall be equal to 100%
exp_max = Maximum Exposure (being 120%)
exp_min = Minimum Exposure (being 0%)
abs = the absolute value of the amounts within the set of brackets immediately following the “abs” symbol
max = the higher of the amounts separated by a comma within the set of brackets immediately following the "max" symbol
min = the lower of the amounts separated by a comma within the set of brackets immediately following the "min" symbol
VT = the Volatility Target (as specified in Part E (Data) below)
Volt-2 = the Realised Volatility of the Excess Return Index Level in respect of the second Index Business Day prior to Index Business Day t, as determined in accordance with paragraph 2.4 (Realised Volatility) below
VT Buffer = the Volatility Buffer (as specified in Part E (Data) below)

 

2.4       Realised Volatility

 

The “Realised Volatility” of the Excess Return Index Level as of any Index Business Day t for the purposes of calculating Exposure is determined according to the following formula:

 

 

where:

 

Volt = Realised Volatility in respect of the Index Business Day t
= in respect of an Index Business Day, the sum of the series of values achieved by calculating the formula following such symbol for each Index Business Day i from and including the Index Business Day falling 19 Index Business Days prior to such Index Business Day to and including such Index Business Day
ERILi = Excess Return Index Level as of Index Business Day i
ERILi-1 = Excess Return Index Level as of Index Business Day i-1
dc(i, i-1) = The number of calendar days from, and including, Index Business Day i to, but excluding, Index Business Day i-1

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Index Business Day i = in respect of each Index Business Day t, each Index Business Day in the 20 Index Business Day period ending on, and including, Index Business Day t
Index Business Day i-1 = the Index Business Day immediately preceding Index Business Day i
ln = the natural logarithmic function

 

3.       EXCESS RETURN INDEX LEVEL

 

3.1       Excess Return Index Level

 

The “Excess Return Index Level” in respect of an Index Business Day t represents the excess return of the Core Index Level over a specified funding rate.

 

The Excess Return Index Level in respect of the Excess Return Start Date shall be equal to the Excess Return Start Level. The Excess Return Level in respect of each Index Business Day t following the Excess Return Start Date shall be an amount in USD determined by the Index Calculation Agent as of the Index Valuation Time on such Index Business Day t in accordance with the formula set out below:

 

 

where:

 

ERILt = Excess Return Index Level as of Index Business Day t
ERILt-1 = Excess Return Index Level on the immediately preceding Index Business Day t-1
CILt = Core Index Level as of Index Business Day t
CILt-1 = Core Index Level on the immediately preceding Index Business Day t-1
Citi 3M Cash Constituentt = Citi 3M Cash Constituent on Index Business Day t
Citi 3M Cash Constituentt-1 = Citi 3M Cash Constituent on the immediately preceding Index Business Day t-1

 

3.2       Citi 3M Cash Constituent

 

The “Citi 3M Cash Constituent” on the Core Index Start Date shall be 1000.

 

The “Citi 3M Cash Constituent” on each Index Business Day t (following the Core Index Start Date) shall be an amount determined by the Index Calculation Agent in accordance with the formula set out below:

 

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where:

 

Citi 3M Cash Constituentt = Citi 3M Cash Constituent on Index Business Day t
Citi 3M Cash Constituentrs = Citi 3M Cash Constituent on the immediately preceding Rate Reset Day rs
CashRaters = The ICE London – Interbank Offered Rate USD 3 Month (the “ICE London – Interbank Offered Rate”) as displayed on Bloomberg page “US0003M <Index>” (or such other Electronic Page as the Index Calculation Agent may determine appropriate), on the immediately preceding Rate Reset Day rs, provided that if such reference rate is unavailable for any reason, the applicable rate shall be the most recently available rate for an Index Business Day preceding Rate Reset Day rs
dc(t,trs)    = The number of calendar days from, and including, Index Business Day t to, but excluding, the immediately preceding Rate Reset Day rs
Rate Reset Day = In respect of each Index Business Day, the latest Index Business Day which is the last day in each Rebalancing Period

 

4.       CORE INDEX LEVEL

 

4.1       Core Index Level

 

The “Core Index Level” on the Core Index Start Date shall be Core Index Start Level.

 

The “Core Index Level” on each Index Business Day t (following the Core Index Start Date) shall be an amount determined by the Index Calculation Agent in accordance with the formula set out below:

 

 

where:

 

CILt = Core Index Level on Index Business Day t
ICLi,t = Index Constituent Level of Selected Constituent i on Index Business Day t (as determined in accordance with paragraph 4.5 (Index Constituent Level and Cash Constituent) below)
UWi,r = Unit Weight of Selected Constituent i on the immediately preceding Rebalancing Date r or the Core Index Start Date, as applicable

 

On Rebalancing Date r, the Core Index Level is calculated using the respective Unit Weights (as determined on Rebalancing Date r-1) of each Selected Constituent. From and including the first Index Business Day following Rebalancing Date r, up to and including Rebalancing Date r+1, the Core Index Level is calculated using the Index Constituent Levels t (as determined in accordance with paragraph 4.5 (Index Constituent Level and Cash

 

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Constituent) below) and their respective Unit Weights r (as determined in accordance with paragraph 4.2 (Unit Weight) below) for Rebalancing Date r.

 

4.2       Unit Weight

 

The Index Calculation Agent shall first determine the Unit Weight of each of Selected Constituent i on the Index Start Date, on each Rebalancing Date and on each Extraordinary Rebalancing Date (as the case may be). Unit Weights determined on each Rebalancing Date shall remain in effect until after the Index Valuation Time on the following Rebalancing Date, subject to the occurrence of any Extraordinary Rebalancing Date.

 

For the avoidance of doubt, the calculation of the Index Level as of an Index Business Day which falls on a Rebalancing Date utilises the Unit Weights determined on the previous Rebalancing Date; the Unit Weights determined on the current Rebalancing Date shall only be used in the calculation of the Index Level as of the following Index Business Day.

 

In relation to a Selected Constituent i on Rebalancing Date r, the Unit Weight of such Selected Constituent i shall be calculated in accordance with the following formula:

 

 

where:

 

UWi,r = Unit Weight of Selected Constituent i as of Rebalancing Date r
PWi,r = Percentage Weight of Selected Constituent i on Rebalancing Date r. For the avoidance of doubt, where Selected Constituent i is not included in the Index on Rebalancing Date r, PWi,r shall be deemed to be zero
CILr = Core Index Level as of Rebalancing Date r
ICLi,r = Index Constituent Level of Selected Constituent i as of Rebalancing Date r

 

4.3       Percentage Weight

 

On each Rebalancing Date r, the Percentage Weight with regards to a Selected Constituent i is calculated according to the formula:

 

 

where:

 

PWi,r =

the Percentage Weight of the Selected Constituent i on Rebalancing Date r

 

CPWi,r =

the Current Percentage Weight of Selected Constituent i on Rebalancing Date r

 

TPWi,r =

the Theoretical Percentage Weight of Selected Constituent i on Rebalancing Date r as determined in accordance with paragraph 5.1 (Determination of Theoretical Percentage Weights) below

 

N =

the length of the Rebalancing Period, being 5 consecutive Index Business Days in total, except for the initial Rebalancing Period for which it was 1 Index Business Day.

 

 

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k =

the nth day of the Rebalancing Period

 

n = 1, …, N

 

4.4       Current Percentage Weight

 

On each Index Business Day t, the Current Percentage Weight with regards to an Selected Constituent i is calculated according to the formula:

 

 

CPWi,t =

the Current Percentage Weight of Selected Constituent i on Index Business Day t

 

UWi,r =

the Unit Weight of Selected Constituent i on the immediately preceding Rebalancing Date r

 

ICLi,t =

the Index Constituent Level of Selected Constituent i as of Index Business Day t

 

CILt = the Core Index Level as of Index Business Day t

 

4.5       Index Constituent Level and Cash Constituent

 

Index Constituent Level

 

The “Index Constituent Level” of the Eligible Market Constituent i as of the Index Constituent Start Date shall be 100.

 

The “Index Constituent Level” of each Eligible Market Constituent i on each Index Business Day (following the Index Constituent Start Date) shall be an amount calculated by the Index Calculation Agent in accordance with the following formula:

 

 

where:

 

ICLi,t =

Index Constituent Level of Eligible Market Constituent i as of Index Business Day t

 

ICLi,t-1

 

=

Index Constituent Level of Eligible Market Constituent i on the Index Business Day immediately preceding Index Business Day t.

 

TotalReturni,t =

Total Return Level of Eligible Market Constituent i as of Index Business Day t

 

TotalReturni,t-1 = Total Return Level of Eligible Market Constituent i on the Index Business Day immediately preceding Index Business Day t

 

Cash Constituent

 

In respect of the Cash Constituent which may be comprised in the Selected Portfolio, the Index Constituent Level on any Index Business Day t shall be determined in accordance with paragraph 3.2 (Citi 3M Cash Constituent) above.

 

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4.6       Total Return Level

 

As of each Total Return Business Day t, the Calculation Agent shall calculate the “Total Return Level” for each Eligible Market Constituent i in accordance with the following formula:

 

 

where:

 

TotalReturni,t = Total Return Level of Eligible Market Constituent i on Total Return Business Day t
TotalReturni,t-1 = Total Return Level of Eligible Market Constituent i on the Total Return Business Day immediately preceding Total Return Business Day t
t0 = ETF  Start Date (as set out in Part E (Data) below in respect of each Eligible Market Constituent i)
ClosingPricei,t = Constituent Closing Level of Eligible Market Constituent on Total Return Business Day t (or, if not published on such day, as published on the first preceding Total Return Business Day on which such rate was published)
ClosingPricei,t-1 = Constituent Closing Level of Eligible Market Constituent on the Total Return Business Day immediately preceding Total Return Business Day t (or, if not published on the Total Return Business Day immediately preceding Total Return Business Day t, as published on the first preceding Total Return Business Day on which such rate was published)
ClosingPricei,t0 = Constituent Closing Level of Eligible Market Constituent i on the  ETF Start Date
ΠAdjFactori,t = The product of all the Adjustment Factors in respect of each Eligible Market Constituent i on the Total Return Business Day t if there is a dividend, special dividend, split or any other corporate event (as described in Section 4.7 (Adjustment Factors) below) on such Total Return Business Day, otherwise 1

 

4.7        Adjustment Factors

 

4.7.1        Dividend Adjustments

 

Following the declaration by the issuer of any Eligible Market Constituent of a Cash Dividend (as defined below) (a “Dividend Adjustment Event”), the Index Calculation Agent shall calculate the adjustment factor in respect of such Cash Dividend and apply the outcome of the below formula to the product of all Adjustment Factors in accordance with paragraph 4.6 (Total Return Level) above.

 

An Adjustment Factor in respect of any Cash Dividend paid in relation to the Eligible Market Constituent shall be determined by the Index Calculation Agent in accordance with the following formula:

 

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where:

 

AdjFactori,ex =

Adjustment Factor in respect of any dividend paid in relation to Eligible Market Constituent i on the applicable Ex-Dividend Date

 

Dividend Percentagei =

As of the date of these Index Conditions, the Dividend Percentage in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent is 100%, with the applicable withholding tax rate being 0%.

 

The Dividend Percentage seeks to represent the percentage re-investment rate taking into account the maximum rate of withholding tax on a dividend payment in respect of the Eligible Market Constituent, imposed by the jurisdiction in which the Eligible Market Constituent is organised or is a resident, that applies to U.S. corporations that are non-residents of such jurisdiction, without regard to the effect of any relevant treaty between authorities in any relevant jurisdiction and the Index Sponsor will determine such rate by reference to widely-used and publicly-available third party information sources.  If such rate is not available from such information sources, the Index Sponsor may determine, in a commercially reasonable manner that is consistent with the primary objective of the Index, such rate by reference to other external information sources as the Index Sponsor deems appropriate.

 

The applicable Dividend Percentage shall be published from time to time on the following website:

 

https://www.citibank.com/icg/data/documents/srp/eu/Citi_Index_Dividend_Percentage_Re_Investment_Rates.pdf

 

Dividendi =

Dividend paid in respect of Eligible Market Constituent i

 

ClosingPricei,ex-1 = Constituent Closing Level on the Total Return Business Day immediately preceding the applicable Ex-Dividend Date for Eligible Market Constituent i

 

Cash Dividend” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, any regular dividend (in the form of a cash dividend only) declared by the issuer of such Eligible Market Constituent for which the Ex-Dividend Date falls on any day after the Index Start Date (excluding any Extraordinary Dividend).

 

Ex-Dividend Date” means, in respect of a share and a dividend payment which has been announced by the issuer of such share, the first day on which a purchaser of such share will not be entitled to receive the relevant dividend payment, as fixed by the issuer of such share and/or the primary exchange on which such share is traded.

 

4.7.2       Share Split or Stock Dividend Adjustments

 

Following the declaration by the issuer of an Eligible Market Constituent of a Share Split (a “Share Split Adjustment Event”) or a Stock Dividend (a “Stock Dividend Adjustment Event”), the Index Calculation Agent shall calculate the adjustment factor in respect of such Share Split or Stock Dividend (as the case may be) in respect of the Ex-Date and apply the outcome of the below formula to the product of all Adjustment Factors in accordance with paragraph 4.6 (Total Return Level) above.

 

An Adjustment Factor in respect of a Share Split Event or Stock Dividend Adjustment Event (as the case may be) in relation to the Eligible Market Constituent shall be determined by the Index Calculation Agent in accordance with the following formula:

 

 

where:

 

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AdjFactori,ex =

Adjustment Factor in respect of a Share Split Adjustment Event or Stock Dividend Adjustment Event(as the case may be) in relation to the Eligible Market Constituent i on the applicable Ex-Date

 

B =

The total number of issued shares of the Eligible Market Constituent i immediately following the Share Split or Stock Dividend (as the case may be)

 

A =

The total number of issued shares of the Eligible Market Constituent i immediately preceding the Share Split or Stock Dividend (as the case may be)

 

Ex- Date” means, in respect of a Share Split or a Stock Dividend (as the case may be) in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, the effective date of such Share Split, as fixed by the issuer of such Eligible Market Constituent and/or the primary exchange on which such Eligible Market Constituent is traded.

 

Share Split” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, a share split, subdivision, reverse share split, consolidation or similar reclassification of the share of such Eligible Market Constituent, for which the Ex-Date falls on any day after the Index Start Date.

 

Stock Dividend” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, a dividend (in the form of a stock dividend) of such Eligible Market Constituent declared by the issuer of such Eligible Market Constituent, for which the Ex-Date falls on any day after the Index Start Date (excluding any Extraordinary Dividend) .

 

4.7.3       Extraordinary Dividend Adjustment

 

Following the declaration by the issuer of an Eligible Market Constituent of an Extraordinary Dividend (as defined below) (an “Extraordinary Dividend Adjustment Event”), the Index Calculation Agent shall calculate the adjustment factor in respect of such Extraordinary Dividend in accordance with the formula set out below and apply the outcome of the below formula to the product of all Adjustment Factors in accordance with paragraph 4.6 (Total Return Level) above. If such Ex-Dividend Date is not an Index Business Day, the adjustment shall be made on the next following Index Business Day.

 

An Adjustment Factor in respect of any Extraordinary Dividend paid in relation to the Eligible Market Constituent shall be determined by the Index Calculation Agent in accordance with the following formula:

 

(a) If an Extraordinary Dividend Adjustment Event has occurred, but no Dividend Adjustment Event (in accordance with paragraph 4.7.1 (Dividend Adjustments) above) has occurred for which the Ex-Dividend Date would fall on the same day, the following formula will be used to calculate the Adjustment Factor in respect of any Extraordinary Dividend:


 

(b) If an Extraordinary Dividend Adjustment Event and a Dividend Adjustment Event (in accordance with paragraph 4.7.1 (Dividend Adjustments) above) has occurred for which the Ex-Dividend Date shall fall on the same day, the following formula will be used to calculate the Adjustment Factor in respect of any Extraordinary Dividend:

 

 

where:

 

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AdjFactori,ex = Adjustment Factor in respect of any Extraordinary Dividend Amount paid in relation to the Eligible Market Constituent i on the applicable Ex-Dividend Date
ClosingPriceex-1 = Constituent Closing Level on the Total Return Business Day immediately preceding the applicable Ex-Dividend Date for Eligible Market Constituent i
Dividendi = has the meaning given to such term in paragraph 4.7.1(Dividend Adjustments) above
Ex-Dividend Date = has the meaning given to such term in paragraph 4.7.1(Dividend Adjustments) above
SpecialCashi = Extraordinary Dividend Amount paid in respect of the Eligible Market Constituent i

 

“Extraordinary Dividend Amount” means in respect of an Extraordinary Dividend:

 

(a)if such Extraordinary Dividend is a cash dividend, 100% of the gross cash dividend per one share as declared by the issuer of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent, with the applicable withholding tax rate being 0% as of the date of these Index Conditions. The applicable withholding tax rate seeks to represent the maximum rate of withholding tax on a dividend payment in respect of the Eligible Market Constituent, imposed by the jurisdiction in which the Eligible Market Constituent is organised or is a resident, that applies to U.S. corporations that are non-residents of such jurisdiction, without regard to the effect of any relevant treaty between authorities in any relevant jurisdiction and the Index Sponsor will determine such rate by reference to widely-used and publicly-available third party information sources.  If such rate is not available from such information sources, the Index Sponsor may determine, in a commercially reasonable manner that is consistent with the primary objective of the Index, such rate by reference to other external information sources as the Index Sponsor deems appropriate;

 

(b)if such Extraordinary Dividend is a non-cash dividend, an amount per one share equal to the cash value declared by the issuer of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent (whether or not such non-cash dividend includes share that are the Eligible Market Constituent) or, if no cash value is declared by the issuer of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent, the cash value of such non-cash dividend as determined by the Index Calculation Agent, calculated by reference, where available, to the closing price of any shares or the Constituent Closing Level (as the case may be) comprising such non-cash dividend on the last trading day immediately preceding the relevant Ex-Dividend Date. The cash value of a non-cash dividend shall be converted, if necessary, at the applicable FX Rate for the conversion of the currency in which the relevant Extraordinary Dividend Amount is denominated into the currency in which the Constituent Closing Level of the relevant Eligible Market Constituent is published.

 

“Extraordinary Dividend” means a dividend or a distribution or portion thereof which is determined by the Index Calculation Agent to be an extraordinary dividend relating to such Eligible Market Constituent having regard to general market consensus and will generally include any dividend (in the form of a cash dividend) which is described as “special”, “extra”, “irregular” or a “return of capital”, for which the applicable Ex-Dividend Date falls on any day after the Index Start Date.

 

Ex-Dividend Date” means, in respect of a share and an Extraordinary Dividend, the first day on which a purchaser of such share will not be entitled to receive the relevant Extraordinary Dividend Amount, as fixed by the issuer of such share and/or the primary exchange on which such share is traded.

 

FX Rate” means, in respect of the notional exchange of one currency to another currency, the applicable WM/Reuters “Closing Spot Rate” as published by The World Markets Company plc in conjunction with Reuters at approximately 4.00 p.m. (London time) on the Ex-Dividend Date or, if such rate is discontinued or unavailable on the relevant day for any reason, such other exchange rate for the relevant currency conversion as the Index Calculation Agent shall determine appropriate by reference to an alternative widely-used and publicly available third party foreign exchange rate service.

 

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4.7.4       Rights Issue Adjustment

 

Following the declaration by the issuer of an Eligible Market Constituent of a Rights Issue (as defined below) (a “Rights Issue Adjustment Event”), the Index Calculation Agent shall calculate the adjustment factor in respect of such Rights Issue on the Ex-Rights Date in accordance with the formula set out below and apply the outcome of the below formula to the product of all Adjustment Factors in accordance with paragraph 4.6 (Total Return Level) above. If such Ex-Rights Date is not an Index Business Day, the adjustment shall be made on the following Index Business Day.

 

An Adjustment Factor in respect of a Rights Issue in relation to the Eligible Market Constituent shall be determined by the Index Calculation Agent in accordance with the following formula:

 

 

where:

 

AdjFactori,ex = Adjustment Factor in respect of a Rights Issue paid in relation to Eligible Market Constituent i on the applicable Ex-Rights Date
Ni = In respect of the applicable Rights Issue, the rights ratio in respect of the new shares entitlement (B) for the existing number of shares (A) in respect of the Eligible Market Constituent i (i.e., the rights ratio is B divided by A)
S = In respect of the applicable Rights Issue, the subscription price per share in the Eligible Market Constituent i
ClosingPriceex-1 = Constituent Closing Level on the Total Return Business Day immediately preceding the applicable Ex-Rights Date

 

Ex-Rights Date” means, in respect of a Rights Issue in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, the first day on which a purchaser of such share would not be entitled to participate in such Rights Issue, as fixed by the issuer of such Eligible Market Constituent and/or the primary exchange on which such Eligible Market Constituent is traded.

 

Rights Issue” means, in respect of an Eligible Market Constituent, a distribution to existing holders of such Eligible Constituent of any share, rights or warrants to purchase shares of such Eligible Market Constituent, in any case for payment (whether in cash or otherwise) at less than the prevailing market price or any other substantially similar event as determined by the Index Calculation Agent and for which the Ex-Rights Date falls on any day after the Index Start Date.

 

5       SELECTION OF CONSTITUENTS

 

The Theoretical Percentage Weight (“TPW”) of each Eligible Constituent i is determined by the Index Calculation Agent on each Selection Day and the optimisation model (as further described under paragraph 5.1(2) below) applied to Theoretical Percentage Weight seeks to find the combination of Theoretical Percentage Weights for each Eligible Market Constituent that results in such portfolio having the maximum return without exceeding the Volatility Target. The Eligible Market Constituents and, where applicable the Cash Constituent, which are selected in accordance with this paragraph 5, shall become the "Selected Constituents" comprised within the Selected Portfolio for the purposes of calculating the level of the Index.

 

5.1        Determination of Theoretical Percentage Weights

 

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In order to determine the applicable Theoretical Percentage Weights, the Index Calculation Agent follows a three-step process. The first step calculates a trend-following vector of expected returns and an expected covariance matrix. In the second step, an optimisation model is used to find an optimum percentage weight for each Eligible Market Constituent, subject to a pre-established level of portfolio volatility and a minimum expected return. The third step implements an additional return constraint, which may lead to the full notional portfolio being invested into the Cash Constituent if a defined hurdle rate of return is not achieved by the level of the expected return of the optimised portfolio, within the prescribed volatility target.

 

This determination process, including the relevant formulae used by the Index Calculation Agent to determine the “Theoretical Percentage Weight” of each Eligible Market Constituent, is set out in detail below:

 

(1)Constructing the Trend-following Vector of Expected Returns and Covariance Matrix

 

In this step, a historic exponential moving average return vector for each Eligible Market Constituent is calculated and a covariance matrix is established to represent all of the Eligible Market Constituents.

 

In order to compute the trend-following vector of exponential moving average returns and the trend-following covariance matrix, each Eligible Market Constituent is measured with respect to its approximately one year exponential moving average return. The exponential moving average return for each Eligible Market Constituent is determined using the iterative equation set out below over the previous 252 Index Business Days ending on the relevant scheduled Selection Day.

 

The exponential moving average (“EMA”) is a type of moving average in which greater emphasis is given to the more recent history. Moving average itself is a concept in which an average value is obtained for a value observed at a specific frequency during a specific period (in this case the daily return of the Index Constituent Levels of an Eligible Market Constituent over the preceding 252 Index Business Days), and this average “moves” every day to record the average daily return of the Index Constituent Levels of an Eligible Market Constituent for the most recent 252 Index Business Days. In the calculations below, the “Decay Factor” is applied to the moving average, which results in the daily returns of the Index Constituent Levels from more recent Index Business Days affecting the EMA to a progressively greater extent than the daily returns of the Index Constituent Levels from earlier Index Business Days (i.e. recent data is given more weight than older data). The EMA for an Eligible Market Constituent will react more quickly to recent changes in daily returns of the Index Constituent Levels than a simple moving average.

 

a.The “Vector of Expected Returns” is calculated as follows:

 

On each Selection Day k, the Index Calculation Agent determines for each Eligible Market Constituent i an historic exponential moving average return (“Exponential Moving Average Return”) for each of the 252 Index Business Days ending on Selection Day k, in accordance with the following formula:

 

 

i = 1, …M

 

s = t-H+1, …t; where t = Selection Day k

 

where:

 

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EMAi, t-H+1 = The first Exponential Moving Average Return in the series for Eligible Market Constituent i (i.e., EMAi, t-H+1) shall be equal to the 63 Index Business days arithmetic average of the daily returns immediately preceding Index Business Day  t-H+1
EMAi, s-1 = The Exponential Moving Average Return of Eligible Market Constituent i on the Index Business Day immediately preceding Index Business Day s
α = 1 - 0.05^(1/K)
K = 126 Index Business Days (the “Decay Factor”)
Xi, s =
Index Constituent Level i, t = Index Constituent Level of Eligible Market Constituent i as of Index Business Day t, provided that if Index Business Day t is a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent i, then Index Constituent Leveli,t shall be deemed to be equal to the Index Constituent Level of the Selected Constituent i on the preceding Scheduled Trading Day for the Selected Constituent i that was not a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent i
Index Constituent Level i, t-1 = Index Constituent Level of Eligible Market Constituent i on the preceding Index Business Day t-1, provided that if Index Business Day t-1 is a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent i, then Index Constituent Leveli,t-1 shall be deemed to be equal to the Index Constituent Level of the Selected Constituent i on the preceding Scheduled Trading Day for the Selected Constituent i that was not a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent i)
H = 252
M =

Number of Eligible Market Constituents

 

 

Having created a matrix of such data, the Vector of Expected Returns is then equal to the product of (i) the last value in the matrix (in the row corresponding with “t”) of the Exponential Moving Average Return for each of Eligible Market Constituent i; and (ii) the annual factor 252.

 

b.Calculate each element of the “Expected Covariance Matrix” Cov(n, m), as follows:

 

On each Selection Day k, the Index Calculation Agent determines for each Eligible Market Constituent “i" an historic exponential moving average covariance (“Exponential Moving Average Covariance”) between the Eligible Market Constituent “n” and “m” for each of the 252 Index Business Days ending on Selection Day k, in accordance with the following formula:

 

 

s = t-H+1, …t; where t = Selection Day k and α has the same value as in the previous paragraph (a) immediately above.

 

Where:

 

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EMA_Covs-1(n,m) = The Exponential Moving Average Covariance between the Eligible Market Constituent “n” and “m” on the Index Business Day immediately preceding Index Business Day s
EMA_Cov t-H+1(n,m) = The first Exponential Moving Average Covariance in the series between the Index Constituent Level “n” and “m” shall be equal to the 63 calendar days Covariance(n,m) of the daily returns of the Index Constituent Level “n” and “m” immediately preceding Index Business Day t-H+1
n, m   = Each possible combination of two Index Constituent Level (i.e. n = 1, …, M; m = 1, …, M; including combinations where n=m)
dxs =

The difference between the daily return of Index Constituent Level “n” on day “s” and its respective Exponential Moving Average Return on day “s” :

 

Xn,s - EMAn, s

 

dys =

The difference between the daily return of Index Constituent Level “m” on day “s” and its respective Exponential Moving Average Return on day “s” :

 

Xm,s - EMAm, s

 

EMAm, s     The Exponential Moving Average Return of Eligible Market Constituent m on the Index Business Day s
EMAn, s     The Exponential Moving Average Return of Eligible Market Constituent n on the Index Business Day s
Xm,s    
Index Constituent  Level m,s = Index Constituent Level of Eligible Market Constituent m as of Index Business Day s, provided that if Index Business Day s is a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent m, then Index Constituent  Levelm,s shall be deemed to be equal to the Index Constituent Level of the Selected Constituent m on the preceding Scheduled Trading Day for the Selected Constituent m that was not a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent m
Index Constituent  Level m, s-1 = Index Constituent Level of Eligible Market Constituent m on the preceding Index Business Day s–1, provided that if Index Business Day s-1 is a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent m, then Index Constituent Levelm,s-1 shall be deemed to be equal to the Index Constituent Level of the Selected Constituent m on the preceding Scheduled Trading Day for the Selected Constituent m that was not a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent m

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Xn,s    
Index Constituent  Level n,s = Index Constituent  Level of Eligible Market Constituent n as of Index Business Day s, provided that if Index Business Day s is a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent n, then Index Constituent  Leveln,s shall be deemed to be equal to the Index Constituent Level of the Selected Constituent n on the preceding Scheduled Trading Day for the Selected Constituent m that was not a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent n
Index Constituent  Level n, s-1 = Index Constituent Level of Eligible Market Constituent n on the preceding Index Business Day s–1, provided that if Index Business Day s-1 is a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent n, then Index Constituent Leveln,s-1 shall be deemed to be equal to the Index Constituent Level of the Selected Constituent n on the preceding Scheduled Trading Day for the Selected Constituent n that was not a Disrupted Day for the Selected Constituent n

 

The elements of the Expected Covariance Matrix are given by the products of (i) each of the Exponential Moving Average Covariance (n, m) and (ii) the annual factor 252.

 

(2)Portfolio optimisation routine to find the Theoretical Percentage Weights of the Constituents

 

The optimisation model is used to find the combination of Theoretical Percentage Weights for each Eligible Market Constituent that results in such portfolio having the maximum return (calculated using the Vector of Expected Returns) and having its volatility (calculated using the Expected Covariance Matrix) be as close as possible to, but equal to or less than, the Volatility Target.

 

Mathematically, an optimisation model aims at solving the following non-linear optimisation problem:

 

 

where:

 

TPWOPT, i.r” means the optimal Theoretical Percentage Weights for each Eligible Market Constituent; and

 

argmax” is the set of of Theoretical Percentage Weights for each Eligible Market Constituent for which attains its largest value,

 

subject to the following constraints (each a “Constraint” and together the “Constraints”):

 

(A) Theoretical Percentage Weights of Selected Constituents in Selected Portfolio must be an amount equal to 1:

 

 

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(B) Theoretical Percentage Weights of each Selected Constituent is equal to or greater than zero and is equal to or less than the relevant “cap” in respect of such Selected Constituent as expressed according to the following formula:

 

 

where:

 

“capi” is the Maximum Percentage Weight in respect of each applicable Selected Constituent of (as set out in Part E (Data) below).

 

(C) broadly, the variance of the notional Selected Portfolio (determined using the variance of the Eligible Market Constituents, the covariance between Eligible Market Constituents (to measure interdependency) and their respective weightings within the Selected Portfolio (to measure impact of variance and covariance) should be equal to or less than the Volatility Target, as expressed according to the following formula:

 

 

where:

 

“EMA_Covs(i,k)” represent the elements (i,k) in the Expected Covariance Matrix; and

 

VT” represents the Volatility Target on the relevant scheduled Selection Day.

 

In the event that no solution to the non-linear optimisation problem is found that satisfies also this constraint (C), then the Index will seek to identify a Selected Portfolio that would have had the lowest historical volatility of all possible Eligible Market Portfolios, regardless of historical performance by calculating “Optimised Weights” according to the following formula:

 

 

The weight of the Cash Constituent is determined as 1 minus the sum of the Optimised Weights.

 

Where σMIN is the minimum portfolio volatility which is computed as follows:

 

 

and TPW(b)OPT,i are the optimal weights of the portfolio corresponding to such minimum portfolio volatility, which are computed solving the following quadratic optimisation problem:

 

 

subject to the same constraints (A) and (B) above.

 

(3)Return constraint

 

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The final Theoretical Percentage Weight for each Eligible Market Constituent within a Selected Portfolio is determined by testing whether the Expected Portfolio Return is greater than the Hurdle Rate.

 

The Expected Portfolio Return (“EPR”) is calculated using the Optimised Weights of the Eligible Market Constituents as follows:

 

 

The “Hurdle Rate” is equal to the ICE London – Interbank Offered Rate USD 3 Month as published on Bloomberg page “US0003M <Index>” (or any successor or substitute page) on the Selection Day (or, if not published on such day, as published on the first preceding Index Business Day on which such rate was published). If EPR is greater than the Hurdle Rate, then the Theoretical Percentage Weights of the Eligible Market Constituents are set to be equal to the Optimised Weights, otherwise all Theoretical Percentage Weights of the Eligible Market Constituents shall be set to zero and the Theoretical Percentage Weight shall be set to one hundred per cent of the Cash Constituent.

 

6.       ADDITIONAL REBALANCING EVENTS

 

6.1       Extraordinary Rebalancing Event

 

On each Index Business Day t which is not in a Rebalancing Period and is not between a scheduled Selection Day and Rebalancing Date, the Calculation Agent shall monitor the rolling 21 Index Business Days percentage return of the Core Index Level ending on the current Index Business Day. If the percentage return of the Core Index Level is below minus 8% (an “Extraordinary Rebalancing Event”) then a new rebalancing is triggered on the immediately following Index Business Day (an “Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day”).

 

As of the Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day the Theoretical Percentage Weights of the Eligible Market Constituents comprised in the Selected Portfolio shall be set to zero per cent (0%) and the Theoretical Percentage Weight of the Cash Constituent shall be set to one hundred per cent (100%), and the Eligible Market Constituents will be replaced with the Cash Constituent over an Extraordinary Rebalancing Period beginning on the Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day. The “Extraordinary Rebalancing Period” is the period starting on, and including, the Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day and ending on, and including, the fourth Index Business Day following an Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day or, if earlier, the immediately following Selection Day.

 

If an Extraordinary Rebalancing Period consists of fewer than five Index Business Days because a Selection Day occurs prior to the day that would otherwise be the fifth Index Business Day in the Extraordinary Rebalancing Period, the rebalancing will nevertheless take effect at a rate of 20% each day until, and including, the Selection Day, after which the unit weights will remain unchanged until the beginning of the immediately following monthly Rebalancing Period.

 

If an Extraordinary Rebalancing Period ends on or before the Selection Day then the weights of the Eligible Market Constituents will remain zero until the next scheduled Rebalancing Date.

 

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7.       ADDITIONAL ADJUSTMENT EVENTS

 

7.1       General

 

The Exchange Traded Product Constituent Schedule is expressed to be applicable to this Index Methodology as indicated in Table 2 (Particulars in respect of each Eligible Market Constituent) of Part E (Data) below and should be read and construed in conjunction with this Index Methodology. Without derogating from the provisions of Section B (Valuations and Adjustments) of the Index General Conditions, the Index Calculation Agent shall apply, where necessary, the adjustments contained therein upon the occurrence of certain Adjustment Events as described in the applicable Constituent Schedules.

 

7.2       Regulatory Events

 

If either:

 

(a)(i) the Index Sponsor or any of its Affiliates is required (or there is a reasonable likelihood that, within the next 30 Index Business Days, it will be required) by any applicable law or regulation to dispose of any Hedge Position, or it is not permitted (or there is a reasonable likelihood that, within the next 30 Index Business Days, it will not be permitted) to hold, acquire, increase, decrease or dispose of any Hedge Position; and/or

 

due to any applicable law or regulation, the Index Sponsor or the Index Calculation Agent is not permitted (or there is a reasonable likelihood that, within the next 30 Index Business Days, it will not be permitted) to continue to sponsor or calculate, as applicable, an index comprising an asset which is an Eligible Market Constituent of the Index,

 

then, in such case, a regulatory event (a “Regulatory Event”) will be deemed to have occurred.

 

Hedge Position” means, in respect of Eligible Market Constituents, any one or more of: (i) positions or contracts in, or relating to, securities, options, futures, other derivative contracts or foreign exchange, or (ii) other instruments, contracts, transactions or arrangements (howsoever described) that would be appropriate to hedge, individually or on a portfolio basis, any Index Linked Product.

 

7.2        Consequences of a Regulatory Event

 

The occurrence of a Regulatory Event which affects the relevant Eligible Market Constituent will, as a result, cause such Eligible Market Constituent to be deemed a removed Eligible Market Constituent (a "Removed Constituent") by the Index Calculation Agent or the Index Sponsor. Such Removed Constituent shall be removed from the Index on the date (an "Additional Rebalancing Date") designated by the Index Calculation Agent or the Index Sponsor.

 

Upon the designation of an Additional Rebalancing Date:

 

(a)the Index Calculation Agent may suspend the calculation, publication and dissemination of the Index and the Index Level until the first succeeding Index Business Day on which such event does not occur or continue to occur; and/or

 

(b)the Index Calculation Agent may select a replacement Eligible Market Constituent that has substantially similar characteristics to the Eligible Market Constituent that is being replaced, having regard to the Replacement Criteria in Table 2 (Particulars in respect of each Eligible Market Constituent) of Part E (Data), the primary objective of the Index and the manner in which such Eligible Market Constituent is used in the calculation of the Index, in which case the Index Calculation Agent will (a) determine the effective date of such replacement, and (b) make such adjustment(s) to the Index Conditions as it determines appropriate to account for the effect on the Index of such replacement; and/or

 

(c)       the Index Sponsor may discontinue and cancel the Index.

 

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Index General Conditions

 

 

 

 

Part E: Data 

 

 

 

 

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Index General Conditions

Data 

 

(As at the Index Start Date)

 

The Index shall operate with reference to an Eligible Universe. This Part E sets out the particulars of each Eligible Market Constituent and certain elections and inputs relating to the calculation of the Index. The rules for adding Eligible Market Constituents to the Index as Selected Constituents and for removing Eligible Market Constituents from a Selected Portfolio are set out in Part D (Calculation of the Index Level) above.

 

1.Eligible Universe

 

Asset Class Eligible Market Constituent Bloomberg Ticker Maximum Percentage Weight
Eligible Market Constituents Per Eligible Constituent
Equities iShares Core S&P 500 ETF IVV Equity 50%
Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF VGK Equity 25%
iShares MSCI Japan ETF EWJ Equity 25%
Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF VWO Equity 50%
Fixed Income iShares 20+ Yr Treasury Bond TLT Equity 50%
iShares Treasury Inflation Protected Securities TIP Equity 10%
iShares iBoxx $ Inv Grade Corporate Bond LQD Equity 25%
SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF JNK Equity 25%
Real Estate

iShares US Real Estate ETF

 

IYR Equity

 

10%
Preferred Stock iShares US Preferred Stock ETF PFF Equity 10%
Commodities Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund DBC Equity 10%
SPDR Gold Shares GLD Equity 50%
Cash Constituent
Money Market Citi 3M Cash Constituent Not applicable 100%

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2.Particulars in respect of each Eligible Market Constituent

 

i Eligible Market Constituent ETF Start Date Exchange Related Exchange

Constituent Schedule

 

Proxy1
1 iShares Core S&P 500 ETF 19 May 2000 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

Not applicable
2 Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF 10 March 2005 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

TGPVAN31 Index
3

iShares MSCI Japan ETF

 

18 March 1996 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

Not applicable
4 Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF 10 March 2005 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

TGPVAN30 Index
5 iShares 20+ Yr Treasury Bond 26 July 2002 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

Not applicable
6 iShares Treasury Inflation Protected Securities 5 December 2003 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

SPBDU1ST Index
7 iShares iBoxx $ Inv Grade Corporate Bond 26 July 2002 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

Not applicable
8 SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF 4 December 2007 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

LHVLTRUU Index
9 iShares US Real Estate ETF 19 June 2000 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

Not applicable
10

iShares US Preferred Stock ETF

 

30 March 2007 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

SPTREFTR Index
11 Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund 3 February 2006 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

DBLCIX Index
12 SPDR Gold Shares 18 November 2004 NYSE Arca All Exchanges

Exchange Traded Product

 

GOLDLNPM Index
13 Citi 3M Cash Constituent Not applicable Not applicable Not applicable

Not applicable

 

Not applicable

 

_________________

1 Prior to 4 December 2007 due to the unavailability of certain Eligible Market Constituents, the back-tested performance of the Index has been calculated using the proxies for the corresponding Eligible Market Constituents that are unavailable prior to such date (as specified above). These proxies differed from the corresponding Eligible Market Constituents in certain respects, and as a result the back-tested Index performance information prior to 4 December 2007 may not reflect how the Index would have performed had the relevant Eligible Constituents been available during that time period. Please see risk factor headed “Hypothetical back-tested performance information is subject to significant limitations” in Part F (Specific Risks).

 

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Index General Conditions

 

 

i Eligible Market Constituent

Replacement Criteria

 

1

iShares Core S&P 500 ETF

 

Exposure to large cap US equities
2 Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF

Exposure to equities from Europe

 

3

iShares MSCI Japan ETF

 

Exposure to equities from Japan
4

Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF

 

Exposure to emerging market equities
5

iShares 20+ Yr Treasury Bond

 

Exposure to long term U.S. Treasury bonds
6

iShares Treasury Inflation Protected Securities

 

Exposure to U.S. TIPS
7

iShares iBoxx $ Inv Grade Corporate Bond

 

Exposure to U.S. dollar denominated, investment-grade corporate bonds
8

SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond ETF

 

Exposure to U.S. dollar denominated, high yield corporate bonds

 

9

iShares US Real Estate ETF

 

Exposure to U.S. real estate equities

 

10

iShares US Preferred Stock ETF

 

Exposure to the U.S. preferred stock market
11

Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund

 

Exposure to a basket of commodities that excludes livestock exposure
12

SPDR Gold Shares

 

Exposure to gold
13

Citi 3M Cash Constituent

 

Not applicable

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3.       Additional data in respect of each Eligible Market Constituent

 

Eligible Constituenti Classification
1 to 12 (inclusive) Exchange Traded Product
13 Money Market

 

4.       Adjustment Elections

 

    Scheduled Valuation Date
Rebalancing Date Extraordinary Rebalancing Date Selection Day Other

Adjustments

(Scheduled Trading Days: "holidays"):

Move In Block Move In Block Look Back Look Back

Adjustments

(Disrupted Days):

Value What You Can Value What You Can Look Back Value What You Can

Valuation Roll

(Disrupted Days):

5 5 Not Applicable 5

 

5.       Defined Terms

 

Eligible Market Portfolios Means all possible hypothetical investment portfolios that could be constructed from the Eligible Market Constituents, and that meet the weighting constraints indicated in paragraph 1 (Eligible Universe) above.
Extraordinary Rebalancing Date Each Index Business Day in an Extraordinary Rebalancing Period, subject to adjustment in accordance with paragraph 4 (Adjustment Elections) above.
Extraordinary Rebalancing Period Means, in respect of any Extraordinary Rebalancing Event, a period of five consecutive Index Business Days starting on, and including, an Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day and ending on, and including, the sixth Index Business Day following such Extraordinary Rebalancing Event, in each case, subject to adjustment in accordance with paragraph 4 (Adjustment Elections) above.
Extraordinary Rebalancing Start Day The Index Business Day immediately following the day on which an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event is deemed to have occurred.
Index Business Day Each day which is a day on which commercial banks and foreign exchange markets are open for general business

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Index General Conditions
  (including dealings in foreign exchange and foreign exchange currency deposits) in New York.
Index Valuation Time In respect of an Index Business Day, as of 11.00 p.m. (London time) on such Index Business Day
Rebalancing Date Each Index Business Day within a Rebalancing Period or Extraordinary Rebalancing Period, subject to adjustment in accordance with paragraph 4 (Adjustment Elections) above.
Rebalancing Period

Means:

 

a) in respect of the scheduled Selection Day immediately preceding the Index Start Date, the Index Start Date; or

 

b) in respect of any scheduled Selection Day following the Index Start Date, a period of five consecutive Index Business Days starting on, and including, the second Index Business Day following that scheduled Selection Day and ending on, and including, the seventh Index Business Day following that Scheduled Selection Day,

 

in each case, subject to adjustment in accordance with paragraph 4 (Adjustment Elections) above.

 

Selected Constituent The Eligible Market Constituents selected as of a Selection Day in accordance with paragraph 5 (Selection of Constituents) of Part D (Calculation of the Index Level) above to be comprised within a Selected Portfolio for the purpose of determining the level of the Index.
Selection Day: The day falling two scheduled Index Business Days prior to each Rebalancing Date.
Selected Portfolio The hypothetical investment portfolio to be tracked by the Index for that month (subject to the occurrence of an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event) comprising Selected Constituents.
Scheduled Valuation Date Each Index Business Day.  
Total Return Business Day

Means any weekday from Monday to Friday.

 

Volatility Buffer 5%
Volatility Target 5%

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Part F: Specific Risks 

 

 

 

 

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Specific Risks 

 

This list of risk factors is not intended to be exhaustive. All persons should seek such advice as they consider necessary from their professional advisors, investment, legal, tax or otherwise, without reliance on the Index Sponsor, the Index Calculation Agent, any of their respective Affiliates or any of their respective directors, officers, employees, representatives, delegates and agents.

 

Please also refer to Section C (General Risks) of the Index General Conditions for a discussion of further risks arising in respect of the Index and the terms and conditions of such Index Linked Product. In the case of a prospectus or offering document which contains provisions under the heading “Risk Factors”, “Investment Considerations” or the equivalent, please refer to these provisions for a discussion of these consequences.

 

THE INDEX MAY NOT BE SUCCESSFUL AND MAY UNDERPERFORM ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT STRATEGIES

 

There can be no assurance that the Index will achieve positive performance. The Index tracks the performance of a hypothetical, rules-based investment methodology that, once each month, selects a hypothetical investment portfolio (the Selected Portfolio) to track for the next month. The performance of the Index over that next month will depend on the performance of the Selected Portfolio over that time period, minus an excess return deduction and an index fee and subject to a volatility targeting feature that may adjust the Index’s exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio on a daily basis in an attempt to maintain a 20-day Realised Volatility of 5%. If the Selected Portfolio declines in value, the Index level will also decline. Even if the Selected Portfolio increases in value, the Index level will nevertheless decline if the excess return deduction and index fee are greater than the increase in value of the Selected Portfolio. The performance of the Index may be less favorable than alternative investment strategies that could have been implemented, including an investment in a passive index fund, for example.

 

THE HYPOTHETICAL INVESTMENT METHODOLOGY TRACKED BY THE INDEX MAY NOT PRODUCE FAVOURABLE PERFORMANCE

 

Once each month, the Index selects as the Selected Portfolio to track for the next month the Eligible Market Portfolio that, out of all possible Eligible Market Portfolios, had the greatest historical performance without exceeding the Index’s target volatility of 5% (except as otherwise described below). The performance of the Index over the next month will then be based on the performance of that Selected Portfolio, minus an excess return deduction and an index fee and subject to a volatility targeting feature that may adjust the Index’s exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio on a daily basis in an attempt to maintain a 20-day Realised Volatility of 5%. This hypothetical investment methodology may not produce favorable performance for a number of reasons, including the following:

 

Historical performance may be a poor indicator of future performance. A fundamental assumption of the Index is that the historical performance of the Eligible Market Portfolios, as measured by the Index, may be an accurate predictor of their future performance. Accordingly, each month, the Index seeks to select as the Selected Portfolio to track for the next month the Eligible Market Portfolio that had the greatest exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns over the relevant look-back period, while having an exponentially weighted moving average volatility over the look-back period not in excess of 5%. The look-back period for each monthly Selection Day is the historical period of 252 Index Business Days (approximately one year) ending on that Selection Day.

 

However, the fact that the Selected Portfolio performed favorably over the relevant look-back period does not mean that it will necessarily continue to perform favorably over the next month. Future market conditions may differ from past market conditions, and the conditions that may have caused the favorable performance over the look-back period may no longer exist. Moreover, past appreciation may not necessarily be an indicator of future appreciation even if future market conditions do not differ materially from past market conditions. The efficient market hypothesis, a well-known theory in academic financial literature, states that the market is efficient and that current asset prices reflect all available relevant information. If true, the efficient market hypothesis implies that any perceived historical trend in the performance of any Eligible Market Portfolio should not be an accurate predictor of its future performance. If the past performance of the Selected Portfolio proves not to be an accurate

 

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indicator of its actual performance over the next month, then the Selected Portfolio followed by the Index for any given month may, in hindsight, turn out to have been far from the optimal hypothetical investment portfolio for that month, and the Index may perform poorly.

 

By continually seeking to track the last year’s optimal portfolio, the Index may perpetually “buy high”. By the time the Index hypothetically invests in a Selected Portfolio each month, the Selected Portfolio may already have experienced significant appreciation, and the Index may therefore perpetually make hypothetical investments in portfolios when they are expensive, which may lead to poor performance of the Index.

 

Historical volatility may be a poor indicator of future volatility and risk. The Index seeks to take on a defined and limited degree of expected risk by selecting as the Selected Portfolio an Eligible Market Portfolio with an expected risk that does not exceed a pre-defined level. The Index measures the expected risk of an Eligible Market Portfolio based on its historical volatility. However, there can be no assurance that the historical volatility of the Selected Portfolio will be indicative of its future volatility. As circumstances change, a Selected Portfolio that had a relatively low volatility over the look-back period may have significant volatility over the next month. The volatility of a Selected Portfolio may increase as a result of an increase in the volatilities of its Eligible Market Constituents or, even if the volatilities of the Eligible Market Constituents remain the same, as a result of the Eligible Market Constituents becoming more highly correlated with each other than they were in the look-back period. Other potential measures of volatility might be more predictive of future volatility than historical volatility. For example, “implied volatility” derived from the prices of listed options on the Eligible Market Constituents would reflect current market expectations about future volatility and might prove to be a more accurate indicator of future volatility than historical volatility. As a result, the measure of expected risk used by the Index may be less accurate than other measures that could have been used.

 

Moreover, it is important to understand that, although the Index uses historical volatility as a measure of expected risk, historical volatility is not an indication of how likely it is that any Eligible Market Portfolio will decline over the next month. The fact that the Selected Portfolio may have had a historical volatility of 5% over the look-back period does not mean that there is a 5% chance that the Selected Portfolio will decline over the next month. Volatility is simply a statistical measure of the degree of variability in daily returns over a given historical period. It is not possible to predict the likelihood of a future decline in the value of the Selected Portfolio. Even a Selected Portfolio with a low historical volatility may experience significant declines in the future.

 

The particular ways in which the Index measures historical performance and volatility may not accurately capture any trend in the performance and volatility of the Eligible Market Portfolios. The Index uses a look-back period of 252 Index Business Days, which is approximately one year, to measure the historical performance and volatility of the Eligible Market Portfolios. That time period may be too long, and performance earlier in the look-back period may mask more recent trends in performance and volatility. Although the Index uses an exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns to determine the historical performance and volatility of the Eligible Market Porfolio, which gives more weight to more recent performance, in an attempt to capture more recent trends, there can be no assurance that this will be successful.

 

Furthermore, it is important to understand what the exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns does, and does not, measure. The exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns of an Eligible Market Portfolio is simply the average of daily returns of the Eligible Market Portfolio over the relevant look-back period, where more recent daily returns have exponentially greater weight than daily returns earlier in the look-back period. This measure is not a measure of total performance over the relevant look-back period or any other period. The exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns could show positive historical performance even if the relevant Eligible Market Portfolio has declined overall from the beginning to the end of the look-back period, or over any more recent period, and vice versa. Therefore, the exponentially weighted moving average of daily returns could indicate that an Eligible Market Portfolio is in a positive trend even if other measures would indicate a negative trend. If the Index fails to correctly identify the trend in the performance of the Eligible Market Portfolios, then the Selected Portfolio followed by the Index for any given month may, in hindsight, turn out to have been far from the optimal hypothetical investment portfolio for that month, and the Index may perform poorly.

 

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In addition, the exponentially weighted moving average volatility used by the Index differs from other measures of historical volatility. Other ways of measuring the historical volatility of the Eligible Market Portfolios (for example, using the standard deviation of daily returns or using a different time period) might have yielded a historical volatility that is more predictive of future volatility than the measure used by the Index.

 

The Index may be subject to “whipsaws” in “choppy” markets. Past performance is particularly likely to be a poor indicator of future performance in “choppy” (i.e. volatile) markets, which are characterised by short-term volatility and the absence of consistent long-term performance trends. In such markets, strategies that use past performance as an indicator of future performance, such as that followed by the Index, are subject to “whipsaws,” which occur when the market reverses and does the opposite of what is indicated by past performance. In these market conditions, the Index will select a Selected Portfolio assuming a trend in one direction, only to have the trend reverse and move in the other direction. The Index may experience significant declines in such market conditions.

 

The excess return deduction and index fee will adversely affect Index performance. The Index is an “excess return” index, which means that, in calculating the performance of the Index, the daily performance of the Selected Portfolio tracked by the Index will be reduced by a notional funding rate equal to the ICE London – Interbank Offered Rate (previously published by the British Bankers Association). The ICE London – Interbank Offered Rate is the volume-weighted average of rate (expressed as an annual rate) at which LIBOR contributor banks can obtain unsecured funding in the London interbank market for a specified duration (in the case of this Index, 3 months) in USD. If such rates are raised, the ICE London – Interbank Offered Rate will increase and the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio (and, therefore, the performance of the Index) will be adversely affected.

 

In addition to the excess return deduction, an index fee of 0.75% per annum is deducted in the calculation of the Index. The excess return deduction and the index fee will place a drag on the performance of the Index, offsetting any appreciation of the Selected Portfolio, exacerbating any depreciation of the Selected Portfolio and causing the level of the Index to decline steadily if the value of the Selected Portfolio remains relatively constant. The Index will not appreciate unless the performance of the Selected Portfolio is sufficiently great to offset the negative effects of the excess return deduction and the index fee, and then only to the extent that the favorable performance of the Selected Portfolio is greater than the deducted amounts. As a result of these deductions, the level of the Index may decline even if the Selected Portfolio appreciates.

 

In certain circumstances, the Index will select as the Selected Portfolio for a given month the Eligible Market Portfolio with the lowest historical volatility, without regard to historical performance. For any given month, if there is no Eligible Market Portfolio with a historical volatility that is less than or equal to 5%, the Selected Portfolio for that month will not be the Eligible Market Portfolio that maximises historical performance for its level of risk, but rather will be the Eligible Market Portfolio with the lowest historical volatility, regardless of historical performance (and with a pro rata allocation to the Cash Constituent to reduce its historical volatility to 5%). In this circumstance, the Selected Portfolio would not be determined in a way that seeks to maximise expected returns given the volatility target, but instead would be determined in a manner designed to minimise historical volatility. The Selected Portfolio so chosen may have had poor historical performance and may continue to have poor performance in the future.

 

Any portion of the Selected Portfolio that is allocated to the Cash Constituent in order to reduce its historical volatility to 5% will experience a net decline after giving effect to the excess return deduction and the index fee. The excess return deduction will completely offset the positive accrual on the Cash Constituent, and the deduction of the index fee will then result in a net decline.

 

In certain circumstances, the Selected Portfolio will consist 100% of the Cash Constituent, and in these circumstances the Index will decline. If the Eligible Portfolio Return, using the Optimised Weights of the Eligible Market Constituents for any given month, is less than or equal to the ICE London – Interbank Offered Rate on the relevant monthly Selection Day, the weights of the Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio will be set to zero and instead the Selected Portfolio will consist of a 100% allocation to the Cash Constituent. In addition, if an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event occurs as a result of a decline of more than 8% in the value of the Selected Portfolio over any 21 Index Business Day period, the Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio will be replaced with a 100%

 

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allocation to the Cash Constituent. Because the Selected Portfolio during the earlier part of any 21 Index Business Day period may have been different from the current Selected Portfolio, an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event may occur even when the current Selected Portfolio has not experienced so significant a decline over that period.

 

In addition, the index fee will be deducted, further reducing the Index performance. Therefore, at any time when the Index has 100% exposure to the Cash Constituent, the Index is nearly certain to decline.

 

One consequence of this is that the reallocation to the Cash Constituent as a result of an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event is nearly certain to lead to continuing declines in the level of the Index. The Index will continue to decline following an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event even in circumstances in which the original Selected Portfolio would have rebounded and recovered from earlier losses, so that the Index would have performed better had the reallocation into the Cash Constituent not occurred.

 

The Index’s target volatility of 5% may result in Selected Portfolios with significant allocations to the fixed income asset class, which may underperform alternative portfolios more heavily weighted toward equities, commodities, real estate and/or preferred stock. Each month, the Index will select as the Selected Portfolio an Eligible Market Portfolio with a historical volatility that does not exceed 5% (unless there is no such Eligible Market Portfolio, in which case the Index will select the Eligible Market Portfolio with the lowest historical volatility). You should understand that, by recent historical standards, a 5% volatility would be relatively low for a portfolio of equities, commodities, real estate and/or preferred stock, which means that a significant allocation to the fixed income asset class, which is typically less volatile than equities, commodities, real estate and preferred stock, may frequently be needed in order for a hypothetical investment portfolio to achieve a historical volatility that does not exceed 5%. Therefore, the 5% target volatility may tend to cause the Selected Portfolio to have a greater allocation to the fixed income asset class than it would if there were a higher target volatility. The Selected Portfolio may allocate up to 100% of its exposure to the fixed income asset class, and as much as 60% of its exposure to Eligible Market Constituents holding U.S. Treasury bonds alone. Although fixed income instruments are typically less volatile than equities, commodities, real estate and preferred stock, they may also have lower return potential. As a result, in bull markets for equities, commodities, real estate and/or preferred stock, a Selected Portfolio with a significant allocation to the fixed income asset class may significantly underperform an alternative portfolio with a greater allocation to equities, commodities, real estate and/or preferred stock.

 

In addition, if the Selected Portfolio has a relatively high allocation to the fixed income asset class, it will be particularly sensitive to factors that adversely affect the value of fixed income instruments, such as an increase in interest rates or inflation or declining perceptions of credit quality of the U.S. government or the underlying corporate issuers. It is important to understand that a relatively low target volatility does not mean that the Index is less likely to decline than it would be if it had a higher target volatility. In fact, a low-volatility portfolio may decline in value even while a high-volatility portfolio appreciates. For example, in a bull market in equities that is accompanied by rising interest rates, a portfolio heavily weighted toward the fixed income asset class might decline in value as a result of the rising interest rates, while a portfolio heavily weighted toward equities would appreciate.

 

The Selected Portfolio may not be a diversified portfolio, and the Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio may become correlated in decline, especially in times of financial stress. Although the Eligible Market Constituents cover a number of different asset classes and market sectors, there is no requirement that the Selected Portfolio be a diversified portfolio. The Selected Portfolio may allocate as much as 100% of its exposure to a single asset class at any time, and may consist of as few as only two Eligible Market Constituents. At any time when the Selected Portfolio is concentrated in any one asset class, it will be subject to the risks affecting that asset class on a concentrated basis. Moreover, even when the Selected Portfolio is allocated among a number of different asset classes, these asset classes may prove to be correlated with each other in decline, which means that they may all decline at the same time. In that case, you would not receive any benefits from diversification. Especially in times of financial stress, previously uncorrelated asset classes may suddenly become correlated in decline, which may result in significant declines in the level of the Index.

 

The Selected Portfolio may be composed of Eligible Market Constituents in a number of different asset classes and market sectors, and they may offset each other. Over any given period of time, some of the Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio may appreciate and others may depreciate. The performance of the depreciating Eligible Market Constituents will offset the performance

 

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of any appreciating Eligible Market Constituents. In this circumstance, the performance of the Selected Portfolio overall will be lower than it would have been had the Selected Portfolio only consisted of the appreciating Eligible Market Constituents. The target volatility of 5% is likely to favor Selected Portfolios with a relatively low degree of historical correlation among its Eligible Market Constituents, because lower correlation among Eligible Market Constituents results in lower volatility overall for an Eligible Market Portfolio. If that historical relationship for the Eligible Market Constituents holds in the future, that may increase the likelihood that some Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio will have less favorable performance that will significantly dampen more favorable performance by other Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio.

 

The Index’s volatility targeting feature may adversely affect Index performance. In addition to selecting a Selected Portfolio with a historical volatility that does not exceed 5%, the Index seeks to maintain a 5% volatility by adjusting its exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio on a daily basis. At any time when the 20-day Realised Volatility of the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio is greater than 5%, the Index will reduce its exposure to that performance (i.e., its Exposure) below 100%. The difference between the Exposure and 100% will be effectively uninvested and will not accrue any interest or other return. After giving effect to the deduction of the index fee, that effectively uninvested portion of the Index will experience a net decline. In addition, at any time when the Exposure is less than 100%, the Index will not fully participate in any appreciation in the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio. Alternatively, at any time when 20-day Realised Volatility is less than 5%, the Index will increase the Exposure to an amount greater than 100%, subject to a maximum Exposure of 120%. At any time when the Exposure is greater than 100%, the Index will participate on a leveraged basis in any decline in the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio. Moreover, the Selected Portfolio during the earlier part of the relevant 20 Index Business Day period may be different than the current Selected Portfolio, and if the earlier Selected Portfolio was significantly more volatile than the current Selected Portfolio, the Index may calculate a high 20-day Realised Volatility, resulting in low Exposure, even though the current Selected Portfolio may have much lower volatility.

 

The Index may fail to maintain a 5% volatility. Although the Index aims to maintain a 20-day Realised Volatility of 5%, there is no guarantee that it will successfully do so. There is a time lag associated with the Index’s Exposure adjustments. Because Realised Volatility is measured over the period of 20 Index Business Days ending on the second Index Business Day prior to the current day, it may be some period of time before a recent increase in the volatility of the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio is sufficiently reflected in the calculation of 20-day Realised Volatility to cause a compensating adjustment in the Exposure. During the intervening period, if the increased volatility is associated with a significant decline in the value of the Selected Portfolio, the Index may in turn experience a significant decline without the reduction in exposure to the Selected Portfolio that the volatility targeting feature is intended to trigger. Moreover, the Selected Portfolio during the earlier part of the relevant 20 Index Business Day period may be different than the current Selected Portfolio, and if the earlier Selected Portfolio was significantly less volatile than the current Selected Portfolio, the Index may be slow to adjust to significant volatility in the current Selected Portfolio.

 

The Selected Portfolio may be composed of risky assets. The Selected Portfolio may include Market Eligible Constituents in the equity, commodity, real estate, preferred stock and fixed income asset classes. Set forth below are some of the risks associated with the asset classes and market sectors represented by the Eligible Market Constituents.

 

oRisks associated with equities. The Eligible Market Constituents in the equity asset class may track indices of large-capitalisation U.S. stocks, large- and mid-capitalisation Japanese stocks and large-, mid- and small-capitalisation European and emerging market stocks. Eligible Market Constituents holding equities may make up as much as 100% of the Selected Portfolio. Equities are risky assets and may be subject to significant declines.

 

The Selected Portfolio may have as much as a 100% allocation solely to equities, and as much as a 50% allocation solely to emerging market equities. Equities, and especially emerging market equities, may be subject to greater volatility and heightened other asset classes. In addition to the risk of declines in stock prices, equities are subject to risks associated with currency exchange rate fluctuations. In general, if the U.S. dollar appreciates against the currencies in which non-U.S. equities trade, the prices of the Eligible Market Constituents that hold non-U.S. equities would be expected to decline for that reason alone.

 

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oRisks associated with commodities. The Selected Portfolio may have up to a 10% exposure to the Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund, an ETF that tracks an index of comprised of commodity futures contracts. Commodity futures prices tend to be highly volatile and difficult to predict and may be significantly influenced by actions of governments or speculators and unexpected macroeconomic events. As a result of that volatility and unpredictability, the past performance of the Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund may be a particularly unreliable indicator of its future performance. The Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund is also subject to a phenomenon known as “negative roll yield”, which refers to the tendency of commodity futures prices to decline solely as a result of the passage of time in certain market conditions. Accordingly, even if spot prices for the underlying commodities remain stable, futures contracts referencing the underlying commodities may tend to decline over time, and in this circumstance the spot prices of the underlying commodities would need to increase significantly in order for the Powershares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund to avoid a decline and appreciate at all. Like equities, commodity futures are risky assets and may be subject to significant declines.

 

The Selected Portfolio may also have up to a 50% allocation to the SPDR Gold Shares. This Eligible Market Constituent tracks the price of gold and is therefore subject to risks associated with a single asset, gold. The price of gold may be highly volatile and subject to large and rapid declines. The price of gold has at times been inversely correlated with the strength or weakness of the U.S. dollar relative to other currencies. If the U.S. dollar generally strengthens relative to other currencies and all other conditions remain constant, the price of gold may be expected to decline. However, because many factors other than the value of the U.S. dollar affect the price of gold, the price of gold may decline even at a time when the value of the U.S. dollar is declining.

 

oRisks associated with real estate. The Selected Portfolio may have up to 10% exposure to the iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF, an ETF that tracks an index of U.S. equities in the real estate sector, primarily real estate investment trusts (known as REITs). REITs are subject to the risks of owning real estate directly. In addition, some REITs have relatively small market capitalisations, which can increase the volatility of the market price of securities issued by those REITs. Furthermore, REITs are often dependent upon specialised management skills, have limited diversification and are, as a result, subject to risks inherent in operating and financing a limited number of projects. The real estate industry is cyclical, highly sensitive to general and local economic conditions and developments, and characterised by intense competition and periodic overbuilding. Accordingly, the iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF may be subject to significant volatility and risk.

 

oRisks associated with preferred stock. The Selected Portfolio may have up to 10% exposure to the iShares U.S. Preferred Stock ETF, an ETF that tracks the performance of an index of preferred stocks that are publicly traded in the United States. Preferred stocks combine certain risks of fixed income instruments and equities. Because many preferred stocks pay dividends at a fixed rate, their market price can be sensitive to changes in interest rates in a manner similar to bonds — that is, as interest rates rise, the value of preferred stocks is likely to decline. In addition, because many preferred stocks allow holders to convert the preferred stock into common stock of the issuer, the market price of preferred stocks can also be sensitive to changes in the value of the issuer’s common stock.

 

oRisks associated with fixed income assets. As discussed above, although fixed income assets tend to be less volatile than equities, commodities, real estate and preferred stock, it is also subject to risks and may decline in value. If general interest rates rise, if inflation increases or if the perceived credit quality of the issuers of such fixed income assets, such fixed incomes assets are likely to decline in value, perhaps significantly.

 

There is a time lag between the selection of a Selected Portfolio and its inclusion in the Index. The Index identifies the allocation of Eligible Market Constituents in the Selected Portfolio and rebalances the Index to match that allocation on different days. The Selected Portfolio for a given month is selected two Index Business Days prior to the first Index Business Day of that month and then included in the Index gradually over a Rebalancing Period of five Index Business Days beginning on the first Index Business Day of that month. Sudden market movements may occur in the gap between a monthly Selection Day and the completion of the rebalancing and, while it might be desirable to select a

 

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different Selected Portfolio as a result of those market movements, this will not be done because it would involve a departure from the Index Methodology.

 

·The performance of the Index will be highly sensitive to the specific parameters by which it is calculated. The Index is calculated pursuant to a rules-based methodology that contains a number of specific parameters. These parameters will be significant determinants of the performance of the Index. For example, the Index measures the historical returns, volatility and correlation of the Eligible Market Constituents over a look-back period of 252 Index Business Days, and using the particular exponential weighting factor set forth in this Index Methodology. The Index also has a volatility target of 5% and applies specific weighting caps to each Eligible Market Constituent. If the Index used a different Look-Back Period or a different exponential weighting factor (or no exponential weighting at all), or if the Index used a different volatility target or different weighting caps (or no weighting caps at all), the Index would select different Selected Portfolios. Furthermore, the Index seeks to maintain a realised volatility of 5% by observing realised volatility over a prior period of 20 Index Business Days, and the Index rebalances the Selected Portfolio monthly over a period of five Index Business Days. There is nothing inherent in any of these parameters that necessarily makes them the right specific parameters to use for the Index. If the Index had used different parameters, the Index might have performed significantly better.

 

THE INDEX MAY NOT BE AN EFFECTIVE WAY TO IMPLEMENT “MODERN PORTFOLIO THEORY”.

 

The Index selects a hypothetical investment portfolio to track for each month using certain concepts drawn from the “modern portfolio theory” approach to asset allocation. However, it is important to understand that the Index contains a number of features that are not found in modern portfolio theory or that are inconsistent with modern portfolio theory, and that the Index may not be an effective way to implement modern portfolio theory. For example:

 

Modern portfolio theory does not prescribe the manner in which expected return, risk or correlation should be measured, nor does it specify whether 5% is an appropriate level of expected volatility to target. Therefore, although the historical measures of returns, volatility and correlation used by the Index and the 5% volatility target are key features of the Index, they cannot be said to be drawn from modern portfolio theory. Other investment methodologies using the same modern portfolio theory concepts, but that determine expected returns, risk and correlation in different ways or that accept a greater or lesser level of expected risk, may perform significantly better than the Index.

 

There is no single way to implement the concepts of modern portfolio theory, and the approach reflected in the Index may not be as successful as other approaches to implementing modern portfolio theory. For example, modern portfolio theory does not necessarily suggest the Index’s approach of maximising expected returns without exceeding a pre-defined level of expected risk. One alternative approach would be to maximise the ratio of expected returns to expected risk within a defined range of expected risk. For example, if there are two portfolios, one with a 10% expected return and a 5% expected risk (Portfolio A) and one with a 9.8% expected return and a 2.5% expected risk (Portfolio B), the Index would select Portfolio A, because Portfolio A has a higher expected return than Portfolio B and its volatility did not exceed 5%. However, Portfolio B might be viewed as a more optimal portfolio, because although it had a slightly lower expected return than Portfolio A, it had a significantly lower volatility, and therefore a significantly higher ratio of expected return to expected risk. Therefore, the Selected Portfolio that the Index selects may not be the optimal portfolio under alternative approaches to implementing modern portfolio theory.

 

Under modern portfolio theory, if the assumption is made that investors can lend or borrow at a risk-free rate, there is a single optimal investment portfolio of risky assets that all rational investors would select, regardless of risk tolerance (assuming identical views about expected return, volatility and correlation). All investors would hold the same risky portfolio and would differ only in the amount they would allocate between that risky portfolio and the risk-free asset, or in the amount that they would borrow at the risk-free rate in order to invest in the risky portfolio. An approach designed to implement this feature of modern portfolio theory would identify the optimal portfolio as the one that lies at the point of tangency between the efficient frontier and a line that meets the expected return axis at the risk-free rate, without a target volatility requirement and without seeking to maximise expected returns below a target volatility level. This approach would seek to achieve the target volatility only after the optimal portfolio is identified and would do so by adding either a lending or a borrowing component at the risk-free rate. The approach reflected in the Index, which imposes a target volatility requirement in the selection of the Selected Portfolio and does not reflect either lending or borrowing at the risk-free rate, is entirely different from this approach and will select an entirely different Selected Portfolio. Therefore, the Index

 

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does not reflect modern portfolio theory where the assumption is made that investors can lend or borrow at a risk-free rate. Although it may not be possible for most investors to borrow at a risk-free rate, there may be practical approaches that use concepts drawn from this approach to modern portfolio theory, and these approaches may be more successful, and more faithful to modern portfolio theory, than the approach reflected in the Index.

 

The Index does not construct hypothetical investment portfolios from all assets that would be available to an investor, but only from the limited universe of Eligible Market Constituents. Although the Eligible Market Constituents cover a number of different asset classes, they include only a limited number of market sectors within those asset classes. Moreover, the Eligible Market Constituents exclude a number of major asset classes altogether, such as currencies. The Index might have achieved a better return if the universe of Eligible Market Constituents were more representative of the universe of assets available to an investor.

 

The Index applies weighting constraints to the percentage weights that may be assigned to Eligible Market Constituents, which may result in the selection of a Selected Portfolio that is different from the hypothetical investment portfolio that would be selected in the absence of those constraints.

 

If no Eligible Market Portfolio has a historical volatility that is less than or equal to 5%, the Selected Portfolio for any given month will not be selected pursuant to concepts drawn from modern portfolio theory, but instead will be the Selected Portfolio with the lowest historical volatility. In addition, if the Eligible Portfolio Return, using the Optimised Weights of the Eligible Market Constituents for any given month is less than or equal to the ICE London – Interbank Offered Rate, or if an Extraordinary Rebalancing Event occurs, the Selected Portfolio of the Eligible Market Constituents will be set to zero and instead the Selected Portfolio will be allocated 100% into the Cash Constituent.

 

The Index’s excess return deduction and the index fee will exert a drag on Index performance. Even if the Selected Portfolio proves to be the optimal portfolio under modern portfolio theory, the Index will always underperform the Selected Portfolio, perhaps significantly.

 

Modern portfolio theory does not suggest monthly rebalancing or daily Exposure adjustments to maintain a constant volatility. In addition, the Index’s daily adjustment of Exposure may cause the Index to have more or less than 100% exposure to the excess return performance of the Selected Portfolio at any given time.

 

For these reasons, the Index may not be an effective way to implement modern portfolio theory and may underperform alternative strategies that could have implemented based on modern portfolio theory.

 

INDEX METHODOLOGY LIMITATIONS

 

The performance of the Index is dependent on the pre-defined rules-based methodology set out in the Index Conditions. There is no assurance that other selection and weighting methodologies for the Constituents would not result in better performance than the methodology set out in the Index Conditions.

 

MODEL PRECISION

 

The Index Methodology is a complex calculation model which is sensitive to the precision of both the original inputs and the interim calculations. Each of these are in turn dependent on the rounding conventions used in the financial market for the primary data and the rounding conventions determined appropriate by the Index Calculation Agent at each stage of the calculation process.

 

THE INDEX WILL BE CALCULATED PURSUANT TO A SET OF FIXED RULES AND WILL NOT BE ACTIVELY MANAGED. IF THE INDEX PERFORMS POORLY, THE INDEX SPONSOR WILL NOT CHANGE THE RULES IN AN ATTEMPT TO IMPROVE PERFORMANCE.

 

The Index tracks the performance of the hypothetical, rules-based investment methodology described in these Index Conditions. The Index will not be actively managed. If the hypothetical, rules-based investment methodology tracked by the Index performs poorly, the Index Sponsor will not change the rules in an attempt to improve performance. Accordingly, an investment in a financial instrument linked to the Index is not like an investment in a mutual fund, for example. Unlike a mutual fund, which could be actively managed by the fund manager in an attempt to maximise returns in changing market conditions, the Index rules will remain unchanged

 

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(save in limited prescribed circumstances set out in these Index Conditions), even if those rules might prove to be ill-suited to future market conditions.

 

THE INDEX HAS LIMITED ACTUAL PERFORMANCE INFORMATION.

 

The Index launched on 30 June 2015. Accordingly, the Index has limited actual performance data. Because the Index is of recent origin with limited performance history, an investment linked to the Index may involve a greater risk than an investment linked to one or more indices with an established record of performance. A longer history of actual performance may have provided more reliable information on which to assess the validity of the Index’s hypothetical investment methodology. However, any historical performance of the Index is not an indication of how the Index will perform in the future.

 

HYPOTHETICAL BACK-TESTED PERFORMANCE INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO SIGNIFICANT LIMITATIONS.

 

All information regarding the performance of the Index prior to 30 June 2015 is hypothetical and back-tested, as the Index did not exist prior to that time. It is important to understand that hypothetical back-tested Index performance information is subject to significant limitations, in addition to the fact that past performance is never a guarantee of future performance. In particular:

 

The Index Sponsor developed the rules of the Index with the benefit of hindsight - that is, with the benefit of being able to evaluate how the Index rules would have caused the Index to perform had it existed during the hypothetical back-tested period. The fact that the Index generally appreciated over the hypothetical back-tested period may not therefore be an accurate or reliable indication of any fundamental aspect of the Index Methodology.

 

The hypothetical back-tested performance of the Index might look different if it covered a different historical period. The market conditions that existed during the historical period covered by the hypothetical back-tested Index performance information is not necessarily representative of the market conditions that will exist in the future.

 

Prior to 4 December 2007, due to the unavailability of certain Eligible Market Constituents prior to that time, the back-tested performance of the Index has been calculated using proxies for certain of the Eligible Market Constituents (as set out in Table 2 (Particulars in respect of each Eligible Constituent) of Part E (Data). These proxies differed from the corresponding Eligible Market Constituents in certain respects, and as a result the back-tested Index performance information prior to 4 December 2007 may not reflect how the Index would have performed had the relevant Eligible Constituents been available during that time period.

 

It is impossible to predict whether the Index will rise or fall. The actual future performance of the Index may bear no relation to the historical or hypothetical back-tested levels of the Index.

 

THERE ARE DRAWBACKS ASSOCIATED WITH TRACKING THE VALUE OF ETFS RATHER THAN THE UNDERLYING INDICES THAT THE ETFS SEEK TO TRACK

 

The Eligible Market Constituents are ETFs. Each ETF seeks to track the performance of its underlying index before giving effect to fees and expenses of the ETF. After giving effect to these fees and expenses, the performance of each ETF is likely to be less favorable than the performance of the underlying index that it tracks. In addition, each ETF may not perfectly track its underlying index. An ETF may not hold all of the assets that constitute its underlying index or may hold assets and/or derivative contracts not included in that underlying index. Moreover, the trading price of an ETF is determined by market supply and demand and can deviate from the value of the ETF’s assets. As a result, in certain circumstances, the performance of an ETF may diverge significantly from, and may be less favorable than, the performance of its underlying index.

 

INVESTORS IN ANY FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT LINKED TO THE INDEX WILL NOT HAVE ANY OWNERSHIP OR OTHER INTEREST IN THE ELIGIBLE CONSTITUENTS UNDERLYING THE INDEX.

 

The Selected Portfolio is described as a hypothetical investment portfolio because there is no actual portfolio of assets to which any investor is entitled or in which any investor has any ownership or other interest. The Index is merely a mathematical calculation that is performed by reference to hypothetical positions in the Eligible Market Constituents included in the Selected Portfolio and the other Index Rules.

 

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THE INDEX CALCULATION AGENT IS OUR AFFILIATE, WHICH MAY GIVE RISE TO CONFLICTS OF INTEREST.

 

The Index Calculation Agent, which is also the Index Sponsor, is our affiliate. Although the Index is rules-based, there are certain circumstances in which the Index Calculation Agent may be required to exercise judgment in calculating the Index, including the following:

 

If a Market Disruption Event occurs on a Rebalancing Date and the Rebalancing Date is postponed to the last day to which it may be postponed, and if the Market Disruption Event is still not resolved by that day, the Index Calculation Agent will be required to exercise discretion in calculating the level of each affected Eligible Market Constituent on that day.

 

If an Eligible Market Constituent is removed from the Index as a result of the occurrence of a specified event, the Index Calculation Agent will be required to exercise discretion in determining what action to take in response to that removal, which may include selecting a replacement Eligible Market Constituent and determining any adjustments to the Index Rules that may be appropriate to account for the effect on the Index of that replacement.

 

In exercising these judgments, the Index Calculation Agent’s status as our affiliate may cause its interests to be adverse to yours. The Index Calculation Agent is not your fiduciary and is not obligated to take your interests into account in calculating the Index. Any actions taken by the Index Calculation Agent in calculating the level of the Index could adversely affect the performance of the Index.

 

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Index General Conditions 

 

 

5 August 2015

 

 

 

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Table of Contents 

 

 

Section A:

 

Introduction 50

Section B:

 

Valuation and Adjustments 53

Section C:

 

General Risks 57

Section D:

 

Definitions 64

Section E:

 

Miscellaneous 68

Section F:

 

Constituent Schedules 72

 

 

 

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Section A: Introduction 

 

 

 

 

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Introduction 

 

This document constitutes the Index General Conditions applicable to each index (each, an “Index”) for which the applicable Index Methodology states that these Index General Conditions are to be applicable to it.

 

These Index General Conditions are made available by Citigroup Global Markets Limited in its capacity as the Index Sponsor.

 

These Index General Conditions may be amended in the circumstances described in Section E (Miscellaneous), and will be available from the Index Sponsor. See Section E (Miscellaneous) for a description of the circumstances in which a change to these Index General Conditions may be required.

 

Risks

 

Any investment exposure to an Index created by an Index Linked Product gives rise to a number of risks. Please refer to Section C (General Risks) and to the applicable Index Methodology for a discussion of some of the risks to which such an investment exposure to the Index gives rise. The Index Conditions in respect of such Index do not describe all of the risks to which an investment in such Index Linked Product gives rise; please refer to the associated prospectus or offering document (however described) in respect of such Index Linked Product for a discussion of these risks.

 

Publication

 

The Index and the Index Level shall be announced and published as specified in the Index Methodology.

 

Basic scheme of the Index Conditions of an Index

 

The Index Conditions of an Index comprise these Index General Conditions and the applicable Index Methodology, which must be read together. Full information in respect of an Index is only available on the basis of the combination of these Index General Conditions and the applicable Index Methodology (each as amended from time to time).

 

In the case of any inconsistency between the applicable Index Methodology and these Index General Conditions, such applicable Index Methodology shall prevail.

 

The following paragraphs of this Section A are provided for information only, and in the case of any discrepancy between any such paragraph and any other provision of the Index Conditions, such other provision shall prevail.

 

The Index is a notional rules-based proprietary index which is made up of two or more Constituents. These Constituents are specified in the applicable Index Methodology. The Constituents comprising the Index from time to time may also be selected from an Eligible Universe, if an Eligible Universe is specified for the Index, in accordance with the rules set out in the applicable Index Methodology. The classification of each Constituent is also specified in the applicable Index Methodology, together with any other data necessary to calculate the Index Level of the Index from time to time.

 

The Index Level of the Index from time to time is calculated by the Index Calculation Agent with reference to the formulae and rules set out in the applicable Index Methodology. The applicable Index Methodology also contains a description of the strategy to which the Index is intended to give effect. The Index Level of the Index is calculated with reference to either the closing levels, prices, rates or values (as applicable) of each Constituent (i.e. Constituent Closing Levels), or intraday levels, prices, rates or values (as applicable) of each Constituent (i.e. Constituent Levels).

 

Standard detailed rules govern “valuation”, that is, how the Constituent Closing Level and the Constituent Level of each classification of Constituent are determined, broadly with reference to the levels, prices, rates or values (as applicable) in the relevant markets for that Constituent or for futures contracts and options contracts relating to such Constituent (such markets together, the “relevant Markets”). Other standard rules apply to Constituents which are themselves indices. These standard rules are set out in the various Constituent Schedules which are included in these Index General Conditions as necessary.

 

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Although the Index Level of the Index on a particular day for which a valuation is required (i.e. a Scheduled Valuation Date) should reflect the Constituent Closing Level or the Constituent Level (as applicable) on that day of each Constituent contained in the Index, the relevant markets on that day may not be open or may be disrupted (or other difficulties may arise in respect of Constituents which are themselves indices, affecting the publication of the levels of these indices). The Constituent Schedule applicable to a Constituent defines the circumstances when the relevant markets for that Constituent are closed or disrupted.

 

Therefore it may not be possible to determine the Index Level of the Index on a Scheduled Valuation Date using Constituent Closing Levels or Constituent Levels (as applicable) for that day. Section B (Valuations and Adjustments) contains detailed rules which govern which particular Constituent Closing Levels or Constituent Levels (as applicable) are instead used, whether those for a preceding day or a succeeding day. Different rules require either looking back to the Constituent Closing Level or Constituent Level (as applicable) of a previous day, or postponing valuation to a day when the relevant markets are open or not disrupted. The applicable Index Methodology specifies which particular rules apply to the Index.

 

Certain events and circumstances may affect a Constituent, resulting in a change in that Constituent or the disappearance of that Constituent (i.e. Adjustment Events). The Constituent Schedule applicable to a Constituent defines these events and circumstances. Section B (Valuations and Adjustments) contains detailed rules which govern the adjustment of the Index to account for the effect on the Index of the occurrence of an Adjustment Event, or (if such an adjustment would not produce a commercially reasonable result) the replacement of the affected Constituent in the Index. Although any such adjustment or replacement is intended to account for the effect on the Index of the occurrence of the relevant Adjustment Event, any such adjustment or replacement may have an unforeseen effect on the Index and may have an adverse effect on the value of an Index Linked Product. Please see Section C (General Risks) for a discussion of the effect of these rules.

 

The terms and conditions of any Index Linked Product may contain provisions as to the consequences of certain events and circumstances. These events and circumstances may include any adjustment made to the Index or any replacement effected of any Constituent. These consequences may include the early termination of such Index Linked Product and the payment of an amount to reflect the valuation of such Index Linked Product at the time of such early termination. Depending on the terms and conditions of such Index Linked Product, an investor may receive back on such early termination less than the amount of the original investment. The Index Conditions do not include any such terms and conditions of such Index Linked Product. Please refer to the terms and conditions of such Index Linked Product.

 

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Section B: Valuations and Adjustments

 

 

 

 

 

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Valuations and Adjustments 

   
1.Constituent closing level or Constituent level

 

The Constituent Closing Level or the Constituent Level (as applicable) of a Constituent on a Valuation Date shall be determined as specified in the Constituent Schedule applicable to such Constituent.

 

2.adjustments to valuation dates (scheduled trading days: “holidays”)

 

(i)“Look Back”

 

If “Look Back” is specified in the applicable Index Methodology and a Scheduled Valuation Date is not a Scheduled Trading Day for any Constituent, then:

 

(i)the Valuation Date for each Constituent for which such Scheduled Valuation Date is a Scheduled Trading Day shall be such Scheduled Valuation Date; and

 

(ii)the Valuation Date for each Constituent for which such Scheduled Valuation Date is not a Scheduled Trading Day shall be the first day immediately preceding such Scheduled Valuation Date which is a Scheduled Trading Day and not a Disrupted Day for such Constituent.

 

(ii)“Move In Block”

 

If “Move In Block” is specified in the applicable Index Methodology and a Scheduled Valuation Date is not a Scheduled Trading Day for any Constituent, then such Valuation Date shall be the first day immediately following such Scheduled Valuation Date which is a Scheduled Trading Day for all Constituents.

 

(iii)“Value What You Can”

 

If “Value What You Can” is specified in the applicable Index Methodology and a Scheduled Valuation Date is not a Scheduled Trading Day for any Constituent, then:

 

(i)the Valuation Date for each Constituent for which such Scheduled Valuation Date is a Scheduled Trading Day shall be such Scheduled Valuation Date; and

 

(ii)the Valuation Date for each Constituent for which such Scheduled Valuation Date is not a Scheduled Trading Day shall be the first day immediately following such Scheduled Valuation Date which is a Scheduled Trading Day for such Constituent.

 

(iv)Not postponing to a Disrupted Day

 

If any day to which a Scheduled Valuation Date is postponed under paragraph 2(b) or 2(c) above is a Disrupted Day for the relevant Constituent, then paragraph 3 below shall apply.

 

3.Adjustments to Valuation Dates (Disrupted Days)

 

(a)“Look Back”

 

If “Look Back” is specified in the applicable Index Methodology and a Scheduled Valuation Date is a Disrupted Day for any Constituent, then:

 

(i)the Valuation Date for each Constituent for which such Scheduled Valuation Date is not a Disrupted Day shall be such Scheduled Valuation Date; and

 

(ii)the Valuation Date for each Constituent for which such Scheduled Valuation Date is a Disrupted Day shall be the first day immediately preceding such Scheduled Valuation Date which is a Scheduled Trading Day and not a Disrupted Day for such Constituent.

 

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(b)“Move In Block”

 

If “Move in Block” is specified in the applicable Index Methodology and a Scheduled Valuation Date is a Disrupted Day for any Constituent, then such Valuation Date shall be the earlier of (A) the first day immediately following such Scheduled Valuation Date which is a Scheduled Trading Day for all Constituents and not a Disrupted Day for any Constituent; and (B) the Scheduled Trading Day for all Constituents which is the Valuation Roll number of Scheduled Trading Days for all Constituents immediately following such Scheduled Valuation Date.

 

(c)“Value What You Can”

 

If “Value What You Can” is specified in the applicable Index Methodology and a Scheduled Valuation Date is a Disrupted Day for any Constituent, then:

 

(i)the Valuation Date for each Constituent for which such Scheduled Valuation Date is not a Disrupted Day shall be such Scheduled Valuation Date; and

 

(ii)the Valuation Date for each Constituent for which such Scheduled Valuation Date is a Disrupted Day shall be the earlier of (A) the first day immediately following such Scheduled Valuation Date which is a Scheduled Trading Day and not a Disrupted Day for such Constituent; and (B) the Scheduled Trading Day for such Constituent which is the Valuation Roll number of Scheduled Trading Days for such Constituent immediately following such Scheduled Valuation Date.

 

(d)Postponing to a Disrupted Day

 

If any day to which a Scheduled Valuation Date is postponed under paragraph 3(b) or 3(c) above is a Disrupted Day for the relevant Constituent, then (unless otherwise specified in the Constituent Schedule applicable to such Constituent) the Index Calculation Agent shall determine the Constituent Closing Level of such Constituent on such Valuation Date using its good faith estimate of the Constituent Closing Level of such Constituent at the Valuation Time (where relevant) on or for such day.

 

4.corrections of published or announced levels, prices, rates or values

 

If a Correction Period is specified in respect of a Constituent, and in the event that the level, price, rate or value (as applicable) of such Constituent for any time on any day which is announced by or on behalf of the person or entity responsible for such publication or announcement and which is used for any calculation or determination in respect of the Index is subsequently corrected, and such correction (the “Corrected Level”) is published by or on behalf of such person or entity within such Correction Period for such Constituent after the original publication, then such Corrected Level shall be deemed to be the level, price, rate or value (as applicable) for such Constituent for the relevant time on the relevant day. If the Correction Period does not include a Rebalancing Date, the Index Calculation Agent shall revise the Index Level for such relevant day. If the Correction Period includes a Rebalancing Date, the Index Calculation Agent may, but shall not be obliged to, revise the Index Level for such relevant day and, in exercising such discretion, the Index Calculation Agent will act in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner that is consistent with the primary objective of the Index.

 

Corrections published after the Correction Period after the original publication shall be disregarded.

 

For the avoidance of doubt, if a Correction Period is not specified in respect of a Constituent, then the preceding two paragraphs shall not apply in respect of such Constituent.

 

5.adjustment events

 

Subject as provided in the applicable Index Methodology, if an Adjustment Event occurs in respect of any Constituent (the “Affected Constituent”), then the consequences of such Adjustment Event shall be as follows.

 

(i)The Index Calculation Agent will effect as soon as reasonably practicable a Reweighting in respect of such Affected Constituent.

 

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(ii)If the Index Calculation Agent determines that no such Reweighting it can make will produce a commercially reasonable result, then the Index Calculation Agent will effect as soon as reasonably practicable a Replacement of such Affected Constituent.

 

Replacement” shall mean that the Index Calculation Agent will remove the Affected Constituent from the Index and either:

 

(a)(if the Index is specified in the applicable Index Methodology to operate with reference to an Eligible Universe) replace the Affected Constituent with an Eligible Constituent that has substantially similar characteristics to the Affected Constituent and selected in accordance with the relevant rules set out in the applicable Index Methodology and/or the Replacement Criteria (if specified); or

 

(b)(if the Index is not specified in the applicable Index Methodology to operate with reference to an Eligible Universe) replace the Affected Constituent with a replacement Constituent that has substantially similar characteristics to the Affected Constituent and selected in accordance with the Replacement Criteria specified in respect of such Constituent in the Constituent Schedule applicable to the Affected Constituent; or

 

(c)(if either (i) the Index is not specified in the applicable Index Methodology to operate with reference to an Eligible Universe; or (ii) no Replacement Criteria are specified; or (iii) no such replacement can be made under sub-paragraph (a) or sub-paragraph (b) above; or (iv) the Index Calculation Agent determines that no such replacement it can make will produce a commercially reasonable result) replace the Affected Constituent with either (1) a notional exposure in accordance with the relevant rules specified in the applicable Index Methodology; or (2) (if no such rules are so specified) a replacement constituent (which shall be deemed to be a Constituent) which shall confer no investment exposure.

 

Reweighting” shall mean that the Index Calculation Agent will revise the Weight attributed to the Affected Constituent to account for the economic effect on the Index of the relevant Adjustment Event. For the avoidance of doubt, the Weight attributed to the Affected Constituent may be zero.

 

In the case of either a Replacement or a Reweighting, the Index Calculation Agent will, in a manner that is consistent with the primary objective of the Index, (a) make such adjustment to the calculation of the Index and the Index Level as it determines appropriate to account for the effect on the Index of any such Replacement or Reweighting (as applicable) that is made (including without limitation rebalancing the Index); and (b) determine the effective date of any such Replacement or Reweighting that is made.

 

6.suspension and cancellation

 

(a)If any Index Business Day is a Disrupted Day for any Constituent, the Index Calculation Agent may suspend the calculation, publication and dissemination of the Index and the Index Level until the first succeeding Index Business Day which is not a Disrupted Day for any Constituent.

 

(b)The Index Sponsor may discontinue and cancel the Index at any time and is under no obligation to continue, or procure the continuation of, the calculation, publication and dissemination of the Index Level.

 

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Section C: General Risks

 

 

 

 

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General Risks 

   
1.introduction

 

The Index Level may go down as well as up, depending on the performance of the Constituents and their effect on the strategy that the Index has been developed to reflect. There can be no assurance as to the future performance of the Index, and the Index Level on any day may not reflect either its past performance or its future performance. The strategy that the Index has been developed to reflect may not be successful, and other strategies using the Constituents or the Eligible Universe (as relevant) may perform better than the Index.

 

The Index represents the weighted value of its Constituents. The Index has been developed to be “investable”, but the methodology set out in the Index Conditions is quantitative, which means that the Index Level is determined according to the rules and the processes set out in the Index Conditions on a purely notional basis, without reference to any actual investment in the Index or any of its Constituents. The result of any such actual investment may be different to the performance of the Index. In particular, any notional fees or costs deducted in the calculation of the Index Level, and any proportionate amount included in the Index Level of any dividend, distribution or payment in respect of any Constituent, may be different from those arising in respect of any actual investment in any Constituent or any combination of Constituents.

 

Prospective investors in any Index Linked Product should be familiar with investments in the global financial and commodity markets, financial instruments and indices generally.

 

2.risks in respect of the Constituents (including market risk)

 

The performance of the Index is dependent on the performance of all of the Constituents contained in the Index.

 

Fluctuations in the level, price, rate or value (as applicable) of the Constituents contained in the Index from time to time will directly affect the Index Level. The extent to which fluctuations in the Constituent Closing Level or Constituent Level (as applicable) of a particular Constituent will affect the Index Level will, amongst other things, depend on the Weight attributed to that Constituent at the relevant time. Please refer to the applicable Index Methodology for a discussion of the strategy that the Index has been developed to reflect.

 

Please refer to the following paragraphs for a discussion of the particular general market risks arising in respect of each classification of Constituent.

 

Certain events and circumstances may affect a Constituent, resulting in a change in that Constituent or the disappearance of that Constituent (i.e. Adjustment Events). The Constituent Schedule applicable to a Constituent sets out the Adjustment Events which apply to such Constituent.

 

Please refer to paragraph (j) below for a discussion of the process that is followed following the occurrence of an Adjustment Event.

 

(i)Commodity

 

Prospective investors in an Index Linked Product linked to an Index containing a Commodity should be familiar with commodities generally. Movements in the price of a Commodity (which may consist of a commodity futures contract or a commodity option contract) may be subject to significant fluctuations which may not correlate with changes in interest rates, currencies or other indices.

 

Commodity markets (both spot and future) are highly volatile. Commodity markets are influenced by, among other things, (i) changing supply and demand; (ii) weather; (iii) governmental, agricultural, commercial and trade programs and policies introduced to influence commodity prices; (iv) global political and economic events; and (v) changes in interest rates. Moreover, investments in futures contracts and option contracts involve additional risks

 

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including, without limitation, leverage (margin is usually a percentage of the face value of the contract and exposure can be nearly unlimited).

 

A holder of a commodity futures contract may find the position becomes illiquid because certain commodity exchanges limit fluctuations in the price of certain commodity futures contracts during a single day by regulations referred to as “daily price fluctuation limits” or “daily limits”. Under such daily limits, during a single trading day no trades may be executed at prices beyond the daily limits. Once the price of a commodity futures contract has increased or decreased by an amount equal to the daily limit, positions can be neither taken nor liquidated unless traders are willing to effect trades at or within the limit. This could prevent the holder from promptly liquidating unfavorable positions and subject the holder to substantial losses. The prices of various commodity futures contracts have occasionally exceeded the daily limit for several consecutive days with little or no trading. Similar occurrences could affect the Index Level of an Index containing a Commodity.

 

The trend in the Index Level of an Index containing a Commodity may not perfectly correlate with the trend in the price of the Commodity, as the use of futures contracts generally involves a rolling mechanism. This means that commodity futures contracts approaching delivery at a particular time are replaced with other commodity futures contracts which have a later delivery date, and the Index Level may not therefore fully reflect any rise or fall in the price of the Commodity.

 

In addition, commodity futures markets may exhibit a trend which differs significantly from that of the underlying commodity spot markets. The trend in the price of a commodity futures contract relative to the trend in the price of the underlying commodity is closely linked to the present and future level of production of the commodity or to the level of estimated natural reserves, particularly in the case of energy commodities. Moreover, the price of a commodity futures contract should not be considered an accurate prediction of a market price, since it also includes the so-called “carrying costs” (which are the costs of, for example, warehousing, insurance, transportation, etc.), which also contribute toward the determination of the price of commodity futures contracts. These factors, which directly influence commodity prices, substantially explain the imperfect correlation between commodity futures markets and underlying commodity spot markets.

 

(ii)Commodity Index

 

Prospective investors in an Index Linked Product linked to an Index containing a Commodity Index should be familiar with commodity indices generally. The level of a Commodity Index is generally based on the value of commodities and/or other securities contained in the Commodity Index, and therefore the risks discussed in paragraph (a) above are also relevant. Global, financial and political developments, among other things, may have a material effect on the value and performance of the commodities and/or commodity futures contracts contained in a Commodity Index.

 

(iii)Depositary Receipt

 

Prospective investors in an Index Linked Product linked to an Index containing a Depositary Receipt should be familiar with depositary receipts generally. The value and price volatility of the Depositary Receipts contained in an Index and of the stocks underlying such Depositary Receipts must be considered. The value of the Depositary Receipts and the underlying stocks may go down as well as up, and the value of the Depositary Receipts and the underlying stocks on any date may not, respectively, reflect their performance in any prior period. There can be no assurance as to the future value of the Depositary Receipts or the underlying stocks, or as to the continued existence of the Depositary Receipts, the underlying stocks, the issuer of the Depositary Receipts or the issuer of the underlying stocks.

 

(iv)ETF Share (exchange-traded fund)

 

Prospective investors in an Index Linked Product linked to an Index containing an ETF Share should be familiar with exchange traded funds generally. The value and price volatility of ETF Shares contained in an Index must be considered. The value of ETF Shares may go down as well as up, and the value of the ETF Shares on any date may not reflect their performance in

 

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any prior period. There can be no assurance as to the future value of the ETF Shares, or as to the continued existence of the ETF Shares.

 

Although ETF Shares are traded on an exchange and are therefore valued in a similar manner as a stock traded on an exchange, the Adjustment Events defined with respect to an ETF Share include certain events and circumstances which would be applicable to a fund.

 

(v)FX Rate

 

Prospective investors in an Index Linked Product linked to an Index containing an FX Rate should be familiar with currency exchange markets generally.

 

Movements in currency exchange rates may be subject to significant fluctuations which may not correlate with changes in interest rates or other indices.

 

Emerging market currencies may exhibit greater volatility and less certainty as to future levels than other currencies. Emerging market currencies are highly exposed to the risk of a currency crisis.

 

Currency exchange markets may be affected by complex economic and political factors, including government action to fix or support the value of a currency, or to impose exchange controls. These economic and political factors are independent of other market forces of supply and demand.

 

(vi)Inflation Index

 

Prospective investors in an Index Linked Product linked to an Index containing an Inflation Index should be familiar with inflation indices generally.

 

Many economic and market factors may influence an Inflation Index (and therefore the Index Level of an Index containing an Inflation Index), including: (i) general economic, financial, political or regulatory conditions and/or events; (ii) fluctuations in the prices of various assets, goods, services and energy resources (including in response to the supply of any of them and the demand for any of them); and (iii) the level of inflation in the economy of the relevant country and expectations of inflation.

 

In particular, the level of an Inflation Index may be affected by factors unconnected with the financial markets.

 

(vii)Mutual Fund Interest

 

Prospective investors in an Index Linked Product linked to an Index containing a Mutual Fund Interest should be familiar with mutual funds generally. The value and price volatility of a Mutual Fund Interest contained in an Index must be considered. The value of a Mutual Fund Interest may go down as well as up, and the value of a Mutual Fund Interest on any date may not reflect its performance in any prior period.

 

A mutual fund may trade and invest in a broad range of investments such as debt and equity securities, commodities and foreign exchange, and may enter into derivative transactions, including without limitation futures contracts and options contracts. The trading strategies of a mutual fund can be opaque. The trend in the Index Level of an Index containing a Mutual Fund Interest may not correlate with the trend in any market to which the relevant mutual fund creates an investment exposure.

 

The value of a Mutual Fund Interest may be affected by the performance of persons providing services to the relevant mutual fund, including the investment manager or the investment adviser to the mutual fund.

 

(viii)Share

 

Prospective investors in an Index Linked Product linked to an Index containing a Share should be familiar with stocks generally. The value and price volatility of the Shares contained in an

 

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Index must be considered. The value of the Shares may go down as well as up, and the value of the Shares on any date may not reflect their performance in any prior period. There can be no assurance as to the future value of the Shares, or as to the continued existence of the Shares or the issuer of the Shares.

 

(ix)Share Index

 

Prospective investors in an Index Linked Product linked to an Index containing a Share Index should be familiar with stock indices generally. The level of a Share Index is based on the value of the shares contained in that Share Index, although prospective investors should note that the level of a Share Index at any time may not reflect the reinvestment yield on the shares included in that Share Index. Global economic, financial and political developments, among other things, may have a material effect on the value of the shares included in a Share Index and/or the performance of the Share Index.

 

Market volatility reflects the degree of instability and expected instability of the performance of a Share Index and the shares contained in that Share Index. The level of market volatility is largely determined by the prices for financial instruments supposed to protect investors against such market volatility. The prices of these financial instruments are determined by forces of supply and demand in the futures contracts, option contracts and derivative markets generally. These forces of supply and demand are themselves affected by factors such as actual market volatility, expected volatility, economic factors and speculation.

 

(x)Process following the occurrence of an Adjustment Event

 

Following the occurrence of an Adjustment Event in respect of a Constituent, the Index Calculation Agent will attempt to revise the Weight in the Index of the affected Constituent as it determines appropriate to account for the economic effect on the Index of such Adjustment Event.

 

If the Index Calculation Agent determines that no reweighting it can make under the preceding paragraph will produce a commercially reasonable result, then it will attempt to replace the affected Constituent with a suitable replacement which satisfies the relevant criteria (if any) specified in the applicable Constituent Schedule. If the Index is specified in the applicable Index Methodology to operate with reference to an Eligible Universe, then the replacement Constituent will be selected from the Constituents contained in such Eligible Universe. A commercially reasonable result will only be obtained if a reweighting preserves the ability of the Index to reflect the strategy that it is intended to reflect.

 

If either no replacement can be made under the preceding paragraph or if the Index Calculation Agent determines that no replacement it can make under the preceding paragraph will produce a commercially reasonable result, then the Index Calculation Agent will remove the affected Constituent from the Index and replace the affected Constituent with either a notional exposure in accordance with the relevant rules (if any) specified in the applicable Index Methodology or (if no such rules are specified) a Constituent which confers no investment exposure. A commercially reasonable result will only be obtained if a replacement preserves the ability of the Index to reflect the strategy that it is intended to reflect.

 

At any time, either a reweighting or a replacement, as discussed in the preceding paragraphs, may have an unforeseen effect on the Index. Assumptions as to the inclusion in the Index of a particular Constituent will no longer be valid if that Constituent is removed from the Index, whether temporarily or permanently.

 

The terms and conditions of any Index Linked Product may contain provisions as to the consequences of any such replacement or reweighting of a Constituent or discontinuation of the Index.

 

Any such reweighting, replacement or discontinuation of the Index may have an adverse effect on the value of such Index Linked Product.

 

Any such reweighting, replacement or discontinuation of the Index may (depending on the terms and conditions of such Index Linked Product) result in the early termination of such Index Linked

 

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Product and the payment of an amount to reflect the valuation of such Index Linked Product at the time of such early termination. Depending on the terms and conditions of such Index Linked Product, an investor may receive back on such early termination less than the amount of the original investment.

 

Please refer to the terms and conditions of such Index Linked Product. In the case of a prospectus or offering document which contains provisions under the heading “Risk Factors”, “Investment Considerations” or the equivalent, please refer to these provisions for a discussion of these consequences.

 

3.notional exposure

 

The Index creates a notional exposure to the Constituents and such notional exposure will only exist in the books and records of the Index Sponsor and the Index Calculation Agent.

 

(i)No rights

 

Investors in Index Linked Products (i) have no legal or beneficial ownership interest in any Constituent and therefore have no recourse to any Constituent; (ii) have no right to take delivery of any Constituent; (iii) have no voting rights with respect to any Constituent; (iv) have no right to receive dividends, distributions or other payments with respect to any Constituent.

 

(ii)No offer

 

Nothing in these Index General Conditions constitutes an offer to buy or to sell any Constituent or any other asset, commodity, contract or security (including without limitation any asset, contract, commodity or security included in any Constituent).

 

(iii)Reinvestment

 

Whether or not the Index is a “total return index” and includes the notional reinvestment of amounts calculated by reference to any dividend, distribution or payment that would be received by a holder of a Constituent is specified in the applicable Index Methodology. If the Index is not a “total return index”, it will not include any such notional reinvestment.

 

4.no involvement of persons connected with any Constituent

 

The Index does not create any obligation of any person connected with any Constituent (each such person, for the purposes of this paragraph 4, a “Relevant Person”), including without limitation the issuer of any Constituent which is a security, the sponsor or calculation agent of any Constituent which is itself an index, and the provider of any service (such as an investment adviser or an investment manager) to any Constituent which is a fund.

 

No Relevant Person has participated in the preparation of the Index Conditions or in the arrangement and offer of any Index Linked Product.

 

5.no investigation

 

Neither the Index Sponsor nor the Index Calculation Agent has made or will make any investigation or enquiry with respect to any Constituent, including with respect to any publicly-available information that is disclosed in the applicable Index Methodology with respect to any Constituent. Consequently there can be no assurance that all events have been disclosed which would affect the performance of the Index or the value of any Index Linked Product.

 

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6.effect of fees

 

The Index Level may include a deduction of notional fees, as described in the applicable Index Methodology. Any such deduction of notional fees will result in the Index underperforming a hypothetical investment portfolio from which no such deduction is made.

 

7.effect of Notional costs

 

The Index Level may include a deduction of notional costs (which may be referred to as a notional cost, charge, spread or similar term), as described in the applicable Index Methodology. Any such deduction of notional costs will result in the Index underperforming a hypothetical investment portfolio from which no such deduction is made.

 

8.disruption to the index

 

Certain events may affect the calculation of the Index and the Index Level. These events, which are described elsewhere in the Index Conditions, may have consequences including:

 

(a)the Index Calculation Agent following the relevant process described in Section B (Valuations and Adjustments) above;

 

(b)the Index Calculation Agent exercising certain discretions conferred by the Index Conditions;

 

(c)the Index Calculation Agent suspending the calculation, publication and dissemination of the Index and the Index Level;

 

(d)the Index Sponsor making a modification or change to the Index Conditions; and

 

(e)the Index Sponsor discontinuing and cancelling the Index.

 

Unless otherwise stated, the Index Sponsor has no obligation to inform any person of the result of any action taken on the occurrence of such events.

 

The occurrence or existence of Disrupted Days may also result in the calculation, publication and dissemination of the Index being postponed to a later time than as provided in the Index Conditions or as is customary of the Index.

 

9.index sponsor and index calculation agent

 

These Index General Conditions confer on the Index Sponsor and the Index Calculation Agent a degree of discretion in making certain determinations and calculations, for example in connection with the occurrence of disruptions and adjustments. Although each of the Index Sponsor and the Index Calculation Agent will act in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner, the exercise of any such discretion may have an adverse effect on the Index Level and therefore may have an adverse effect on the value of any Index Linked Product.

 

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Section D: Definitions

 

 

 

 

 

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Definitions 

 

References to the “applicable Index Methodology” are references to the Index Methodology relating to the relevant Index which together with these Index General Conditions completes the Index Conditions for such Index.

 

References to a “Section” shall be references to a section of these Index General Conditions.

 

References to a “Part” shall be references to a part of the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Adjustment Event” shall, in respect of a Constituent, have the meaning given to it in the Constituent Schedule applicable to such Constituent.

 

Affected Constituent” shall have the meaning given to it in Section B (Valuations and Adjustments).

 

Affiliate” shall mean, in respect of a person, any entity controlled (directly or indirectly) by such person, any entity which controls (directly or indirectly) such person or any entity (directly or indirectly) under common control with such person. For this purpose, “control” of any person or entity shall mean the ownership or a majority of the voting power of such person or entity.

 

Amount” shall have the meaning given to it in Section E (Miscellaneous).

 

Calculations” shall have the meaning given to it in Section E (Miscellaneous).

 

Citi” shall mean Citigroup Inc. and its Affiliates.

 

Classification” shall mean, in respect of a Constituent, the classification assigned to it in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Constituent” shall mean each Constituent of the Index specified as such in, or determined in accordance with, the applicable Index Methodology and the Index General Conditions. Each Constituent is assigned an identifying number denoted as “i” (and the total number of Constituents shall be denoted as “n”), unless specified otherwise.

 

Constituent Closing Level” shall, in respect of a Constituent, have the meaning given to it in the Constituent Schedule applicable to such Constituent.

 

Constituent Inclusion Date” shall mean, in respect of a Constituent, the date with effect from which such Constituent is included in the Index.

 

Constituent Level” shall, in respect of a Constituent, have the meaning given to it in the Constituent Schedule applicable to such Constituent.

 

Constituent Schedule” shall mean, in respect of a Constituent, the schedule that is specified to be applicable to such Constituent as a result of the classification of such Constituent in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Corrected Level” shall have the meaning given to it in Section B (Valuations and Adjustments).

 

Correction Period” shall mean, in respect of a Constituent, the period specified as such in the Constituent Schedule applicable to such Constituent.

 

Current Percentage Weight” shall have the meaning given to it in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Disrupted Day” shall, in respect of a Constituent, have the meaning given to it in the Constituent Schedule applicable to such Constituent.

 

Electronic Page” shall mean, in respect of a Constituent, (1) the electronic page or source specified for such Constituent in the applicable Index Methodology, or (2) if no such electronic page or source is so specified for such Constituent, such Bloomberg or Reuters page or other widely recognised source of financial data as the

 

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Index Calculation Agent may determine appropriate, or (3) in any such case, any successor electronic page or source that has been designated by either (a) the sponsor of the original electronic page or source; or (b) the relevant information vendor or provider of the original electronic page or source; or (4) any alternative electronic page or source of financial data that may be designated by the Index Calculation Agent, provided that such page or source is widely recognised by participants in the relevant market.

 

Eligible Constituent” shall mean (if the Index is specified in the applicable Index Methodology to operate with reference to an Eligible Universe) each constituent eligible for inclusion as a Constituent in the Index, specified as such and classified in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Eligible Universe” shall mean (if the Index is specified in the applicable Index Methodology to operate with reference to an Eligible Universe) all of the Eligible Constituents. The rules for adding Eligible Constituents to the Index as Constituents and for removing Constituents from the Index are set out in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Index Base Currency” shall mean the currency specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Index Business Day” shall have the meaning given to it in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Index Calculation Agent” shall mean the person specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology and appointed by the Index Sponsor, any successor to such person, or any alternative calculation agent appointed by the Index Sponsor.

 

Index Conditions” shall mean, in respect of the Index, these Index General Conditions together with the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Index Electronic Page” shall mean (1) the electronic page or source specified as such in Part B (Key Information) of the applicable Index Methodology, or (2) any successor electronic page or source that has been designated by either (a) the sponsor of the original electronic page or source; or (b) the relevant information vendor or provider of the original electronic page or source; or (3) any alternative electronic page or source designated by the Index Sponsor.

 

Index Launch Date” shall mean the date specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Index Level” shall mean, in respect of an Index Business Day, the closing level of the Index as of the Index Valuation Time on such Index Business Day. ..

 

Index Linked Product” shall mean any security, contract or other financial product the return on which is linked to the performance of the Index.

 

Index Sponsor” shall mean the person specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology or any successor to or assignee of such person.

 

Index Start Date” shall mean the date specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Index Start Level” shall mean the Index Level on the Index Start Date, as specified in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Index Valuation Time” shall have the meaning given to it in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Information” shall have the meaning given to it in Section E (Miscellaneous).

 

Percentage Weight” shall have the meaning given to it in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Rebalancing Date” shall mean each date specified as such in, or determined in accordance with, the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Rebalancing Period” means the period specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Replacement” shall have the meaning given to it in Section B (Valuations and Adjustments).

 

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Replacement Criteria” shall, in respect of a Constituent, have the meaning given to it in the Constituent Schedule applicable to such Constituent.

 

Reweighting” shall have the meaning given to it in Section B (Valuations and Adjustments).

 

Scheduled Valuation Date” shall mean each date specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Selection Day” shall mean each date specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Theoretical Percentage Weight” shall have the meaning given to it in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Valuation Date” shall mean each Scheduled Valuation Date as adjusted in accordance with Section B (Valuations and Adjustments).

 

Unit Weight” shall have the meaning given to it in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Valuation Roll” shall mean the number specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Weight” shall mean Current Percentage Weight, Percentage Weight, Theoretical Percentage Weight and Unit Weight (as the case may be).

 

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Section E: Miscellaneous

 

 

 

 

 

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Miscellaneous 

 
1.calculations and determinations

 

(i)General

 

The Index Calculation Agent will perform all calculations, determinations, rebalancings and adjustments (together, “Calculations”) in respect of the Index. Neither the Index Calculation Agent nor the Index Sponsor will have any responsibility for errors made in good faith or omissions in Calculations or other actions as provided in the Index Conditions.

 

The Calculations of the Index Calculation Agent shall be performed by it in accordance with the Index Conditions, acting in its sole, absolute and unfettered discretion, but in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner (having regard in each case to the criteria stipulated in the Index Conditions and, where relevant, on the basis of information provided to or obtained by employees or officers of the Index Calculation Agent responsible for making relevant Calculations). All Calculations shall, in the absence of manifest error, be final, conclusive and binding on any user of the Index, including any holder of, or counterparty to, an Index Linked Product.

 

Although the Index Conditions are intended to be comprehensive, it is possible that ambiguities, errors and omissions may arise in certain circumstances. The Index Sponsor will resolve, acting in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner, any such ambiguity, error or omission, and may amend the Index Conditions to reflect the resolution of such ambiguity, error or omission in a manner which is consistent with the commercial objective of the Index.

 

(ii)Rounding

 

Subject as provided in the applicable Index Methodology, any amount, currency amount, level, percentage, price, rate or value (“Amount”) calculated by the Index Calculation Agent shall be rounded to such number of decimal points and in such manner as the Index Calculation Agent determines is appropriate, acting in a commercially reasonable manner.

 

(iii)Use of estimates

 

The Index Calculation Agent will perform the Calculations described in the Index Conditions using the information, data sources or factors specified in these Index Conditions and any Amount (together, “Information”) and may perform any Calculation and any action required in respect of the Index Conditions in any sequence. However, in the event that the Index Calculation Agent is not able to obtain or use any necessary Information, then (after using reasonable endeavors and after applying any fallback provision specified in the Index Conditions in respect of the relevant Calculation) the Index Calculation Agent may, but shall not be obliged to, use its estimate (made in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner) of the relevant Information in performing such Calculation, should the Index Calculation Agent determine that such estimate is reasonably necessary in order to give effect to any provision or to perform any Calculation necessary under the Index Conditions.

 

(iv)No verification of Information

 

Although the Index Calculation Agent will obtain Information for inclusion in the Index or for use in performing any Calculation under the Index Conditions from sources that the Index Calculation Agent considers reliable (including databases maintained by the Index Calculation Agent or its Affiliates, and public sources such as Bloomberg and Reuters), the Index Calculation Agent will not publish or independently verify such Information.

 

(v)Corrections

 

Subject as provided in the applicable Index Methodology and any Correction Period specified, if the Index Calculation Agent becomes aware that any Information used by it in connection with

 

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any Calculation under the Index Conditions has subsequently been corrected or adjusted, then the Index Calculation Agent shall, if the Correction Period does not include a Rebalancing Date, use such corrected or adjusted Information and as a consequence make any further Calculation that it determines necessary or desirable in order to give effect to or to reflect such corrected or adjusted Information, including without limitation any redenomination, exchange or conversion of any currency into a successor currency. If the Correction Period includes a Rebalancing Date, the Index Calculation Agent may, but shall not be obliged to, use such corrected or adjusted Information and, in exercising such discretion, the Index Calculation Agent will act in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner that is consistent with the primary objective of the Index.

 

(vi)Reliance

 

In performing any Calculation under the Index Conditions, the Index Calculation Agent may rely upon the opinion of any person who appears to it as being competent to value any asset or instrument of any class, or to perform any other calculation or determination, by reason of any appropriate relevant professional qualification or experience.

 

(vii)Not acting as fiduciary or agent

 

In performing any Calculation or other action in connection with the Index Conditions, each of the Index Calculation Agent and the Index Sponsor will act as principal and not as agent of any other person. Neither the Index Calculation Agent nor the Index Sponsor owes any duty of care or any fiduciary duty to any investor in any Index Linked Product or to any other person. Each Calculation and other action performed in connection with the Index Conditions by the Index Calculation Agent or the Index Sponsor is performed in reliance on this provision and is subject to this provision.

 

If through performing any such Calculation or other action the Index Calculation Agent or the Index Sponsor is rendered an agent or fiduciary of another person under applicable law, then (at the option of the Index Calculation Agent or the Index Sponsor, as relevant) the rights and obligations of the Index Calculation Agent or the Index Sponsor to perform such Calculation or other action may be suspended (or, if already performed, the application of such Calculation or other action may be suspended) until such time when such Calculation or other action can be performed either by the Index Calculation Agent or the Index Sponsor as principal and not as an agent or fiduciary or by an appropriate third party who is both willing and able to perform such Calculation or other action.

 

(viii)Dates and times of calculations

 

Notwithstanding that certain Calculations under the Index Conditions may be expressed to be “on” or “as at” a certain date or time, the Index Calculation Agent may in its discretion perform such Calculation in respect of such date or time after such date or time.

 

2.conflicts of interest

 

Citi entities perform various roles in connection with the Index and Index Linked Products, and conflicts of interest may arise for any such entity as a consequence of any role it performs in connection with the Index or any Index Linked Product or as a consequence of its activities more generally.

 

During the normal course of their business, the Index Sponsor, the Index Calculation Agent, any of their respective Affiliates, directors, officers, employees, representatives, delegates and agents (each, for the purposes of this Section E, a “Relevant Person”) may enter into, promote, offer or sell securities or contracts (whether or not structured) linked to the Index and/or any Constituent. Any Relevant Person may at any time (a) have long or short principal positions or actively trade (whether or not through making markets to its clients) positions in or relating to the Index or any Constituent; (b) invest in or engage in transactions with or on behalf of other persons relating to the Index and/or any Constituent; (c) undertake hedging transactions (for the purposes of any security or contract) which may adversely affect the level, price or rate or other factor underlying the Index and/or any Constituent; (d) have an investment banking or commercial relationship with the issuer of any Constituent and have access to information from any such issuer; or (e) publish research in respect of any Constituent or the issuer of any Constituent. Such activity may or may not affect the Index Level, but potential investors and

 

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counterparties should be aware that a conflict of interest may arise when a person acts in more than one capacity, and such conflict of interest may affect (whether in a positive manner or a negative manner) the Index Level.

 

3.disclaimer

 

No Relevant Person makes any express or implied representation or warranty as to (a) the advisability of purchasing or entering into any Index Linked Product; (b) the levels of the Index at any particular date or time; (c) the results to be obtained from the use of the Index or any datum included in the Index Conditions for any purpose; or (d) any other matter. Each Relevant Person hereby expressly disclaims, to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, all warranties of accuracy, completeness, merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose with respect to the Index and any information contained in the Index Conditions. No Relevant Person will have any liability (direct or indirect, special, punitive, consequential or otherwise) to any person even if notified of the possibility of damages.

 

The Index Conditions have been prepared solely for the purposes of information and nothing in the Index Conditions constitutes (a) an offer to buy or to sell any security or contract, to participate in any transaction or to adopt any investment strategy; or (b) legal, tax, regulatory, financial or accounting advice. Any decision to purchase any Index Linked Product should be based on the information contained in the associated prospectus or offering document (however described). In the case of a prospectus or offering document which contains provisions under the heading “Risk Factors”, “Investment Considerations” or the equivalent, please refer to these provisions for a discussion of the factors that must be considered in connection with an investment in the security or contract described therein.

 

Neither the Index Calculation Agent nor the Index Sponsor is under any obligation to continue to calculate, publish or disseminate the Index or the Index Level.

 

4.intellectual property

 

The Index and the Index Conditions (including for the avoidance of doubt these Index General Conditions) are the Index Sponsor’s proprietary and confidential material. No person may reproduce or disseminate the information contained in the Index Conditions, the Index or the Index Level without the prior written consent of the Index Sponsor. These Index General Conditions and each Index Methodology are not intended for distribution to or use by any person in a jurisdiction where such distribution is prohibited by applicable law or regulation.

 

The Index is not in any way sponsored or promoted by any sponsor or issuer, as relevant, of any Constituent.

 

© 2015 Citigroup Global Markets Limited. All rights reserved. Citi and Arc Design are trademarks and service marks of Citigroup Inc. or its Affiliates and are used and registered throughout the world. Citigroup Global Markets Limited is authorised in the United Kingdom by the Prudential Regulatory Authority and regulated in the United Kingdom by the Financial Conduct Authority and the Prudential Regulatory Authority.

 

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Section F: Constituent Schedules

 

 

 

 

 

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Constituent Schedule 

 

Exchange Traded Product

 

This Constituent Schedule shall apply to each Constituent classified in the applicable Index Methodology as an “Exchange Traded Product”.

 

For the avoidance of doubt, defined terms used in this Constituent Schedule shall only apply in respect of an Index containing one or more Exchange Traded Products.

 

References to a “Paragraph” shall be references to a paragraph of this Constituent Schedule and references to a “Sub-paragraph” shall be references to a sub-paragraph of this Constituent Schedule.

 

1.valuation

 

(a)Closing valuations

 

Constituent Closing Level” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and a Valuation Date for such Exchange Traded Product and unless otherwise specified in the applicable Index Methodology, the official closing price of such Exchange Traded Product on such Valuation Date, as displayed on the applicable Electronic Page.

 

Valuation Time” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and a Scheduled Trading Day for such Exchange Traded Product, the Scheduled Closing Time on the relevant Exchange on such Scheduled Trading Day.

 

(b)Intraday valuations

 

Constituent Level” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and a Valuation Time on a Valuation Date for such Exchange Traded Product, the price of such Exchange Traded Product at such Valuation Time on such Valuation Date, as displayed on the applicable Electronic Page.

 

Valuation Time” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and a Scheduled Trading Day for such Exchange Traded Product, the time when the price of such Exchange Traded Product is being determined during such Scheduled Trading Day.

 

2.disruption to valuation

 

Disrupted Day” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, any Scheduled Trading Day for such Exchange Traded Product on which any of the events set out below occurs:

 

(a)any relevant Exchange or any relevant Related Exchange fails to open for trading during its regular trading session; or

 

(b)the occurrence or existence at any time during the one hour period which ends at the relevant Valuation Time of any material suspension of or limitation imposed (whether by reason of movements in price exceeding permitted limits or otherwise) on the trading on (i) any relevant Exchange of such Exchange Traded Product; or (ii) any relevant Related Exchange of futures contracts or options contracts relating to such Exchange Traded Product; or

 

(c)the occurrence or existence at any time during the one hour period which ends at the relevant Valuation Time of any other event (other than an event described in Sub-paragraph (d) or Sub-paragraph (e) of this definition) which materially disrupts or impairs the ability of market participants in general (i) (on any relevant Exchange) to effect transactions in or to obtain market values for such Exchange Traded Product; or (ii) (on any relevant Related Exchange) to effect transactions in or to obtain market values for any futures contracts or options contracts relating to such Exchange Traded Product; or

 

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(d)the closure on any Exchange Business Day of any relevant Exchange prior to its Scheduled Closing Time (unless such earlier closing time is announced by such Exchange at least one hour prior to the earlier of (i) the actual closing time for the regular trading session on such Exchange on such Exchange Business Day; and (ii) the deadline for the submission of orders to be entered into such Exchange system for execution at the relevant Valuation Time on such Exchange Business Day); or

 

(e)the closure on any Exchange Business Day of any relevant Related Exchange in respect of futures contracts or options contracts relating to such Exchange Traded Product prior to its Scheduled Closing Time (unless such earlier closing time is announced by such Related Exchange at least one hour prior to the earlier of (i) the actual closing time for the regular trading session on such Related Exchange on such Exchange Business Day; and (ii) the deadline for the submission of orders to be entered into such Related Exchange system for execution at the Valuation Time on such Exchange Business Day).

 

3.adjustment events

 

Adjustment Event” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, the occurrence of any of the events set out below:

 

(a)a Corporate Action; or

 

(b)a Delisting; or

 

(c)an Insolvency; or

 

(d)a Merger Event; or

 

(e)a Nationalisation; or

 

(f)a Tender Offer; or

 

(g)a Cross-contamination; or

 

(h)an Issuer Modification; or

 

(i)a Regulatory Action; or

 

(j)a Strategy Breach; or

 

(k)a Failure by a Service Provider.

 

(a) Corporate Action

 

Corporate Action” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, any of the following events (provided that, in each case, the relevant event has a diluting or concentrative effect on the theoretical value of such Exchange Traded Product and is not adjusted for as provided in Part D (Calculation of the Index Level) of the Index Methodology):

 

(i)a subdivision, consolidation or reclassification of such Exchange Traded Product, unless resulting in a Merger Event; or

 

(ii)a free distribution or dividend of such Exchange Traded Product to existing holders by way of bonus, capitalisation or similar issue; or

 

(iii)a distribution, issue or dividend to existing holders of such Exchange Traded Product of (A) an additional amount of such Exchange Traded Product; or (B) other share capital or securities granting the right to payment of dividends and/or the proceeds of the liquidation of the relevant Issuer equally or proportionately with such payments to holders of such Exchange Traded Product; or (C) share capital or other securities of another issuer acquired or owned (directly or indirectly) by the Issuer of such Exchange Traded Product as a result of a spin-off or other

 

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similar transaction; or (D) any other type of securities, rights or warrants or other assets, in any case for payment (whether in cash or otherwise) at less than their prevailing market price; or

 

(iv)an Extraordinary Dividend; or

 

(v)any repurchase by the relevant Issuer of such Exchange Traded Product whether:

 

x) such repurchase is direct or indirect from an investor in such Exchange Traded Product; or

 

y) the consideration for such repurchase is cash, securities or otherwise,

 

other than in respect of a redemption of such Exchange Traded Product initiated by an investor in such Exchange Traded Product which is consistent with the relevant Offering Documents; or

 

(vi)any other event which may have a similarly diluting or concentrative effect on the theoretical value of such Exchange Traded Product.

 

(b) Delisting

 

Delisting” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, that any relevant Exchange announces that pursuant to the rules of such Exchange such Exchange Traded Product ceases (or will cease) to be listed, traded or publicly quoted on such Exchange for any reason (other than a Merger Event or a Tender Offer) and are not (or will not be) immediately re-listed, re-traded or re-quoted on an exchange or quotation system located in the same country as such Exchange (or, where such Exchange is located within the European Union, in any member state of the European Union) or another exchange or quotation system (that is acceptable to the Index Calculation Agent) located in another country (that is acceptable to the Index Calculation Agent). In addition, it will also constitute a Delisting if the relevant Exchange is located in the United States and the relevant Exchange Traded Product is not immediately re-listed, re-traded or re-quoted on any of the New York Stock Exchange, the NASDAQ Global Select Market and the NASDAQ Global Market (or their respective successors).

 

(c) Insolvency

 

Insolvency” shall mean, in respect of an Issuer, that either (i) by reason of the voluntary or involuntary liquidation, bankruptcy, insolvency, dissolution or winding up of (or any analogous proceeding) affecting such Issuer (A) all Exchange Traded Products of such Issuer are required to be transferred to an Insolvency Officer; or (B) holders of such Exchange Traded Products become legally prohibited from transferring or redeeming such Exchange Traded Products; or (ii) an Insolvency Event occurs in respect of such Issuer or any of its Service Providers.

 

Insolvency Officer” shall mean an administrator, provisional liquidator, conservator, receiver, trustee, custodian or other similar official.

 

Insolvency Event” shall mean, in respect of an entity, that such entity (i) is dissolved or has a resolution passed for its dissolution, winding-up or official liquidation (other than pursuant to a consolidation, amalgamation or merger); (ii) makes a general assignment or arrangement with or for the benefit of its creditors; (iii) either (A) institutes, or has instituted against it by a Competent Official, a proceeding seeking an Insolvency Judgment, or a petition is presented for its winding-up or liquidation by it or by such Competent Official; or (B) has instituted against it a proceeding seeking an Insolvency Judgment, or a petition is presented for its winding-up or liquidation, and such proceeding or petition is instituted or presented by a person not described in (A) above and either (1) results in an Insolvency Judgment or the entry of an order for relief or the making of an order for its winding up or liquidation; or (2) is not dismissed, discharged, stayed or restrained, in each case within 15 days of the institution or presentation thereof; or (iv) seeks or becomes subject to the appointment of an Insolvency Officer of all or substantially all of its assets; or (v) has a secured party take possession of all or substantially all of its assets (and such secured party maintains possession for not less than 15 days thereafter); or (vi) has a distress, execution, attachment, sequestration or other legal process levied, enforced or sued on or against all or substantially all of its assets (and such process is not dismissed, discharged, stayed or restrained within 15 days thereafter); or (vii) the holders of securities issued by such entity become legally prohibited from transferring such securities; or (viii) causes or is subject to any event which, under the applicable laws of any jurisdiction, has an analogous effect to any of the events specified in (iv) to (vi) above. For these purposes, “Competent Official” shall mean, in respect of such entity, a

 

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regulator, supervisor or other similar official with primary insolvency, rehabilitative or regulatory jurisdiction over it in the jurisdiction of its incorporation or organisation or in the jurisdiction of its head office or home office; “Insolvency Law” shall mean any bankruptcy law, insolvency law or other similar law affecting creditors’ rights; and “Insolvency Judgment” shall mean any judgment of insolvency or bankruptcy or any other relief under any Insolvency Law.

 

(d) Merger Event

 

Merger Event” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, any:

 

(i)reclassification or change of such Exchange Traded Product which results in a transfer of or an irrevocable commitment to transfer all such Exchange Traded Products outstanding to another entity or person; or

 

(ii)consolidation, amalgamation, merger or binding share exchange of the relevant Issuer with or into another entity (other than a consolidation, amalgamation, merger or binding share exchange in which it is the continuing entity and which does not result in a reclassification of all such Exchange Traded Products outstanding); or

 

(iii)takeover offer, tender offer, exchange offer, solicitation, proposal or other event by any entity or person to purchase or otherwise obtain 100 per cent. of the outstanding Exchange Traded Products for the relevant Issuer, which results in a transfer of or an irrevocable commitment to transfer all such Exchange Traded Products (other than those owned or controlled by such entity or person); or

 

(iv)consolidation, amalgamation, merger or binding share exchange of the relevant Issuer or its subsidiaries with or into another entity in which such Issuer is the continuing entity and which does not result in the reclassification or change of all such Exchange Traded Products outstanding but results in the outstanding Exchange Traded Products (other than those owned or controlled by such other entity) immediately prior to such event collectively representing less than 50 per cent. of the outstanding Exchange Traded Products immediately following such event.

 

(e) Nationalisation

 

Nationalisation” shall mean, in respect of an Issuer, that all the Exchange Traded Products or all the assets or substantially all the assets of such Issuer are nationalised, expropriated or are otherwise required to be transferred to any governmental agency, authority, entity or instrumentality thereof.

 

(f) Tender Offer

 

Tender Offer” shall mean, in respect of an Issuer, a takeover offer, tender offer, exchange offer, solicitation, proposal or other event by any entity or person that results in such entity or person purchasing, or otherwise obtaining or having the right to obtain, by conversion or other means, greater than 10 per cent. and less than 100 per cent. of the outstanding voting shares of such Issuer, as assessed with reference to the filings made with governmental or self-regulatory agencies or such other reasonably relevant information.

 

(g) Cross-contamination

 

Cross-contamination” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and the relevant Issuer, the occurrence of a cross-contamination or other failure to segregate effectively assets between different classes, series, cells, compartments or equivalent of such Issuer, and such event continues for the foreseeable future.

 

(h) Issuer Modification

 

Issuer Modification” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and the relevant Issuer, any change in or modification of the Offering Documents of such Issuer in respect of such Exchange Traded Product which could reasonably be expected to materially affect (i) the value of such Exchange

 

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Traded Product; or (ii) the rights and remedies of any holder of such Exchange Traded Product as compared with those rights and remedies prevailing on the applicable Index Launch Date.

 

(i) Regulatory Action

 

Regulatory Action” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and the relevant Issuer, (i) the cancellation, suspension, or revocation of the registration or approval of such Issuer or such Exchange Traded Product by any governmental, legal or regulatory entity with authority over such Issuer or such Exchange Traded Product; (ii) any change in the legal, tax, accounting or regulatory treatment of such Exchange Traded Product, such Issuer or its Adviser which is reasonably likely to have a material adverse impact on the value of such Exchange Traded Product or on any investor in such Exchange Traded Product; or (iii) such Issuer or any of its Service Providers becomes subject to any investigation, proceeding or litigation by any relevant governmental, legal or regulatory authority involving the alleged violation of applicable law or regulation for any activity relating to or resulting from the operation of such Issuer or Service Provider, as the case may be, which in each case is reasonably likely to have a material adverse impact on the value of such Exchange Traded Product or on any investor in such Exchange Traded Product.

 

(j) Strategy Breach

 

Strategy Breach” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, any breach or violation of any strategy or investment guidelines stated in the Offering Documents of the relevant Issuer which is reasonably likely to have a material adverse impact on: (i) the value of such Exchange Traded Product; or (ii) the rights and remedies of any holder of such Exchange Traded Product as compared with those rights and remedies prevailing on the applicable Index Launch Date.

 

(j) Failure by a Service Provider

 

Failure by a Service Provider” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and the related Issuer, a failure by a Service Provider in respect of such Exchange Traded Product to perform any of its obligations in respect of such Exchange Traded Product in a manner which is reasonably likely to materially affect: (i) the value of such Exchange Traded Product; or (ii) the rights and remedies of any holder of such Exchange Traded Product as compared with those rights and remedies prevailing on the applicable Index Launch Date.

 

4.additional provisions

 

Correction Period” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, two Index Business Days.

 

5.replacement criteria

 

Replacement Criteria” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, the criteria (if any) specified as such in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

6.definitions

 

Administrator” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and the relevant Issuer, the administrator, manager, trustee or similar person with the primary administrative responsibilities for such Issuer in respect of such Exchange Traded Product, as described in the Offering Documents of such Issuer and such Exchange Traded Product.

 

Adviser” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and the relevant Issuer, any person appointed in the role of discretionary investment manager or non-discretionary investment adviser (including a non-discretionary investment adviser to a discretionary investment manager or to another non-discretionary investment adviser) to such Issuer in respect of such Exchange Traded Product.

 

Exchange” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and unless otherwise specified in the applicable Index Methodology, the primary exchange, trading system or quotation system in respect of such Exchange Traded Product or any successor to such exchange, trading system or quotation

 

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system, or any substitute exchange, trading system or quotation system to which trading in such Exchange Traded Product has temporarily relocated (PROVIDED THAT, in the determination of the Index Calculation Agent, there is comparable liquidity relative to such Exchange Traded Product on such temporary substitute exchange, trading system or quotation system as on the original exchange, trading system or quotation system).

 

Exchange Business Day” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, any Scheduled Trading Day for such Exchange Traded Product on which each relevant Exchange and each relevant Related Exchange are open for trading during their respective regular trading sessions, notwithstanding any such Exchange or any such Related Exchange closing prior to its Scheduled Closing Time.

 

Exchange Traded Product” shall mean each Constituent classified as such in the applicable Index Methodology.

 

Extraordinary Dividend” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, a dividend or a distribution or portion thereof which is determined by the Index Calculation Agent to be an extraordinary dividend relating to such Exchange Traded Product having regard to general market consensus.

 

Issuer” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, the issuer of such Exchange Traded Product, as specified in the applicable Offering Documents.

 

Offering Documents” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and the relevant Issuer, the constitutive and governing documents of such Issuer in respect of such Exchange Traded Product, including the prospectus or offering circular (howsoever described), together with the subscription agreements and other agreements, in each case relating to such Exchange Traded Product and as amended from time to time.

 

Related Exchange” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and unless otherwise specified in the applicable Index Methodology, each exchange, trading system or quotation system in respect of futures contracts or options contracts relating to such Exchange Traded Product or any successor to such exchange, trading system or quotation system, or any substitute exchange, trading system or quotation system to which trading in such futures contracts or options contracts has temporarily relocated (PROVIDED THAT, in the determination of the Index Calculation Agent, there is comparable liquidity relative to such futures contracts or options contracts on such temporary substitute exchange, trading system or quotation system as on the original exchange, trading system or quotation system). Where “All Exchanges” is specified in the applicable Index Methodology as the applicable Related Exchange in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, then “Related Exchange” shall mean each exchange, trading system or quotation system where trading has a material effect on the overall market for futures contracts or options contracts relating to such Exchange Traded Product.

 

Service Provider” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product and the relevant Issuer, any person who is appointed to provide services, directly or indirectly, for such Issuer in respect of such Exchange Traded Product, whether or not specified in the relevant Offering Documents, or any successor, including without limitation any Adviser, Administrator, operator, management company, depositary, custodian, sub-custodian, prime broker, trustee, registrar and transfer agent or domiciliary agent.

 

Scheduled Closing Time” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, a Scheduled Trading Day and an Exchange or a Related Exchange (as relevant) for such Exchange Traded Product, the scheduled weekday closing time on such Exchange or Related Exchange on such Scheduled Trading Day, without regard to after-hours trading or any other trading outside the hours of the regular trading session on such Exchange or Related Exchange.

 

Scheduled Trading Day” shall mean, in respect of an Exchange Traded Product, any day on which each relevant Exchange and each relevant Related Exchange is scheduled to be open for trading for its regular trading session.

 

 

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