UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM N-CSR

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED
MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES




Investment Company Act file number: (811-05452)
Exact name of registrant as specified in charter: Putnam Premier Income Trust
Address of principal executive offices: 100 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110
Name and address of agent for service: Stephen Tate, Vice President
100 Federal Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02110
Copy to:         Bryan Chegwidden, Esq.
Ropes & Gray LLP
1211 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
        James E. Thomas, Esq.
Ropes & Gray LLP
800 Boylston Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02199
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (617) 292-1000
Date of fiscal year end: July 31, 2023
Date of reporting period: August 1, 2022 – July 31, 2023



Item 1. Report to Stockholders:

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



 


 

Message from the Trustees

September 11, 2023

Dear Fellow Shareholder:

Stocks have generally advanced through much of 2023. Innovations in technology have attracted strong investor interest, helping that sector rebound and lead the market higher. More broadly, international markets are generally performing well, even though the reopening of China’s economy lacked the dynamism many had anticipated.

Bond markets have been more uneven, with some areas gaining and others down moderately. The U.S. Federal Reserve has continued to lift interest rates, but at a more gradual pace than in 2022. U.S. inflation has eased, while the country’s economic growth has remained positive. Against this backdrop, investors are weighing the impact of high borrowing costs, stress in the banking system, and a weaker housing market.

As active managers, your investment team continues to research attractive opportunities for your fund while monitoring risks. This report offers an update on their efforts.

Thank you for investing with Putnam.



 


Data are historical. Past performance does not guarantee future results. More recent returns may be less or more than those shown. Investment return and net asset value (NAV) will fluctuate, and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares. Performance assumes reinvestment of distributions and does not account for taxes. Fund returns in the bar chart are at NAV. See below and pages 9–10 for additional performance information, including fund returns at market price. Index and Lipper results should be compared with fund performance at NAV.

All Bloomberg indices are provided by Bloomberg Index Services Limited.

Lipper peer group median is provided by Lipper, a Refinitiv company.

* The fund’s primary benchmark, the ICE BofA U.S. Treasury Bill Index, was introduced on 6/30/92, which post-dates the inception of the fund.


This comparison shows your fund’s performance in the context of broad market indexes for the 12 months ended 7/31/23. See above and pages 9–10 for additional fund performance information. Index descriptions can be found on page 18.

All Bloomberg indices are provided by Bloomberg Index Services Limited.

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Please describe investing conditions during the 12-month reporting period.

Bond markets were challenged by persistent inflation, central bank tightening, and recessionary fears during the period. In March 2023, a banking crisis caused by the failure of three U.S. regional banks also weighed on investor sentiment. Action by policymakers helped to limit contagion across the financial system.

As U.S. inflation declined, the U.S. Federal Reserve began to reduce the size and pace of its interest-rate hikes in December 2022. Even with this moderation, the federal funds rate climbed to a 22-year high of 5.25%–5.50% at period-end. U.S. home prices, which enjoyed rapid price appreciation during the pandemic, began to soften. Consumer spending weakened but remained positive. A strong labor market helped keep the U.S. economy in expansion, which boosted investor confidence.

Credit spreads widened early in the period and began to tighten as investor sentiment improved. [Spreads are the yield advantage credit-sensitive bonds offer over comparable-maturity U.S. Treasuries. Bond prices rise as yield spreads tighten and decline as spreads widen.] The yield on the benchmark

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Credit qualities are shown as a percentage of the fund’s net assets as of 7/31/23. A bond rated BBB or higher (A-3 or higher, for short-term debt) is considered investment grade. This chart reflects the highest security rating provided by one or more of Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s, and Fitch. Ratings and portfolio credit quality will vary over time. Due to rounding, percentages may not equal 100%.

Cash and net other assets, if any, represent the market value weights of cash, derivatives, and short-term securities in the portfolio. The fund itself has not been rated by an independent rating agency.


This table shows the fund’s top holdings across three key sectors and the percentage of the fund’s net assets that each represented as of 7/31/23. Short-term investments, to-be-announced commitments, and derivatives, if any, are excluded. Holdings may vary over time. 

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10-year U.S. Treasury began the period at 2.67% and reached a high of 4.25% in October 2022 before ending the period at 3.97%.

How did the fund perform for the 12-month reporting period?

The fund returned 0.39% at net asset value, underperforming its primary benchmark, the ICE BofA U.S. Treasury Bill Index, which returned 3.94%, and the median return of its Lipper peer group, which returned 6.35%. The fund outperformed its secondary benchmark, the Bloomberg Government Bond Index, which returned –3.93%.

Which strategies detracted from fund performance during the reporting period?

Term structure risk strategies were the largest detractors from fund performance. The period was marked by higher yields and an inverted yield curve, which happens when yields on longer-term bonds fall below those of shorter-term bonds. These conditions negatively impacted the fund, which is positioned with a structural positive duration that has settled around four years. Our structural duration positioning and discretionary relative value strategies drove the fund’s underperformance relative to its primary, cash benchmark.

Currency risk strategies modestly detracted from fund performance. This strategy employs a hedge of safe-haven currencies that typically do well in risk-averse investing environments. We held a long position to the U.S. dollar, Japanese yen, and Swiss franc versus the remaining G10 currencies [the top 10 most traded currencies in the world]. During the period, the Japanese yen weakened, the Swiss franc strengthened, and the U.S. dollar fluctuated relative to all G10 currencies, which led to the strategies’ underperformance.

What strategies helped fund performance during the reporting period?

Corporate credit strategies were the fund’s largest contributors, led by high-yield bonds and convertibles. High-yield spreads tightened by approximately 100 basis points from the start of 2023 to period-end, as measured by the JPMorgan Developed High Yield Index. Prepayment risk strategies, led by our mortgage basis positioning, also were additive. We shifted to a long basis positioning in late 2022, which was beneficial as the mortgage basis significantly tightened. The fund’s long mortgage basis positioning is a strategy that capitalizes on the difference between longer-term U.S. Treasury yields and the interest rates on 30-year home mortgages.

Our agency interest-only securities, emerging market [EM] risk strategies, and exposure to residential mortgage credit, led by our seasoned credit risk transfer [CRT] holdings, also helped results. CRTs performed well as they continued to be tendered by issuers and received some upgrades by rating agencies.

How did you use derivatives during the reporting period?

We used CMBX credit default swaps to hedge the fund’s commercial mortgage-backed securities [CMBS] credit and market risks, and to gain access to specific areas of the market.

We used bond futures and interest-rate swaps to take tactical positions along the yield curve, and to hedge the risk associated with the fund’s yield curve positioning. We also employed interest-rate swaps to gain exposure to interest rates in various countries. We utilized options to hedge duration and convexity, to isolate the prepayment risk associated with our holdings of collateralized mortgage obligations, and to help manage overall portfolio downside risk. We used total return swaps as a hedging tool and to help manage the portfolio’s sector exposure and inflation risk. In addition, we used currency forward contracts to hedge the portfolio’s

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exposure to non-U.S. currencies and to gain exposure to various currencies.

What are your current views on the various sectors in which the fund invests?

Corporate fundamentals have been strong year to date. We do not believe a recession is imminent given the absence of further stress in the financial sector. We believe the economy may slow or experience a mild recession in calendar 2024. We expect market technicals [supply/demand metrics] will be influenced by broader risk appetite in the near term. We believe valuations are still somewhat attractive, especially among high-yield bonds and lower-dollar prices. Credit spreads are pricing in a continued increase in defaults along with slower growth, but they do not signal a harsh recession, in our view.

High inflation, central bank tightening, slowing growth, and tighter credit conditions remain considerable headwinds to fundamentals and market technicals, in our view. We believe we are nearing a point when the Fed’s interest-rate hiking cycle will start to wind down. We are monitoring industry and company fundamentals, the health of balance sheets, the generation and use of free cash flow, and the resiliency of credit to slow economic growth.

The broad commercial real estate market is facing meaningful headwinds and increased risks, in our view. The risk of recession remains a concern as the Fed continues to combat inflation by raising the cost of risk-free capital. We believe some of these risks already have been priced in to the CMBS market, which experienced significant spread widening in calendar 2022. In our view, the most attractive relative value opportunities will require detailed analysis and security selection. We expect greater return dispersion across the market in the near term, which we believe underscores the importance of rigorous loan-level analysis to uncover relative value. We favor shorter spread duration assets, including seasoned mezzanine tranches on deals with high-quality collateral. We believe these deals are attractively valued and provide insulation from losses, even in deep recessionary scenarios.


Within residential mortgage credit, U.S. homeowner balance sheets are well positioned, in our view. Homeowners who locked in ultra-low mortgage rates have been benefiting from rapid home price appreciation in recent years. We believe the risk of a housing or economic correction that would cause widespread defaults and delinquencies is low. Based on this view, supply is unlikely to grow from distressed home sales. Given our cautious macro and housing outlooks, we favor higher-quality bonds with shorter spread durations. We also prefer bonds with seasoned collateral that we believe can withstand home price declines due to significant built-up home equity.

Our intermediate outlook for EM is cautious, although we believe recession risks and inflation risks are declining. China’s economic reopening in late calendar 2022 has been disappointing, challenging the idea of a sustained recovery, in our view. However, the global growth outlook doesn’t appear to be as challenging as we anticipated earlier this year. We expect to see some monetary policy adjustments if a severe economic slowdown materializes. We believe central banks will be somewhat constrained based on continued inflationary pressures.

Regardless of the policy path, we continue to believe higher-grade EM names are overvalued in the current environment. We see the risks of recession and inflation declining, which we believe should be supportive of EM over the near term. Distressed names appear to be rich given current market dynamics. As such, we expect a bit more downside within the next three to nine months, but timing remains a

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challenge. We prefer to stay beta neutral and seek relative value opportunities, remaining very selective in our high-yield risk exposure.

We expect prepayment speeds will be stable going forward. We believe the sector can provide good protection against a potential recession. Macro volatility in interest rates can hinder performance, but we expect volatility will decline. We believe many prepayment-sensitive assets offer an attractive risk-adjusted return at current price levels and significant upside potential if rates stabilize and volatility declines.

Our selection efforts span a variety of collateral types that we believe are attractively priced based on anticipated prepayment speeds. We have a neutral to slightly long mortgage basis positioning. Uncertainty related to banks’ willingness to buy mortgages remains a focus. However, we are encouraged by robust sales of the FDIC’s mortgage holdings. We remain tactical and will actively trade the basis as new information emerges and events occur.

As of July 31, 2023, what is the team’s outlook?

In the near term, we expect uncertainty to remain high and market volatility to persist. The strength of the U.S. labor market will keep Fed policy hawkish, in our view. That said, the labor market is very sensitive to inflation and interest-rate changes. The fund maintains a position at the lower end of the risk spectrum with lower spread duration across credit sectors.

What were the fund’s distributions during the period?

The fund’s distributions are fixed at a targeted rate. The targeted rate is not expected to vary with each distribution, but may change from time to time. During the last fiscal year, the fund made monthly distributions totaling $0.312 per share from August 2022 to July 2023, which were characterized as $0.260756 per share of net investment income and $0.051244 per share of return of capital.

Distributions of capital decrease the fund’s total assets and total assets per share and, therefore, could have the effect of increasing the fund’s expense ratio. In general, the policy of fixing the fund’s distributions at a targeted rate does not affect the fund’s investment strategy. However, in order to make these distributions, on occasion the fund may have to sell portfolio securities at a less than opportune time.

[Please see the Distributions to shareholders note on page 90 for more information on fund distributions.]

Thanks for your time and for bringing us up to date, Mike.

The views expressed in this report are exclusively those of Putnam Management and are subject to change. Disclosures provide only a summary of certain changes that have occurred in the past fiscal period, which may not reflect all of the changes that have occurred since an investor purchased the fund. They are not meant as investment advice.

Please note that the holdings discussed in this report may not have been held by the fund for the entire period. Portfolio composition is subject to review in accordance with the fund’s investment strategy and may vary in the future.

Current and future portfolio holdings are subject to risk. Statements in the Q&A concerning the fund’s performance or portfolio composition relative to those of the fund’s Lipper peer group may reference information produced by Lipper Inc. or through a third party.

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CLOSED-END FUNDS OFFER DISTINCTIVE CHARACTERISTICS

Closed-end funds have some key characteristics that you should understand as you consider your portfolio strategies.

More assets at work Closed-end funds are typically fixed pools of capital that do not need to hold cash in connection with sales and redemptions, allowing the funds to keep more assets actively invested.

Traded like stocks Closed-end fund shares are traded on stock exchanges.

They have a market price A closed-end fund has a per-share net asset value (NAV) and a market price, which is how much you pay when you buy shares of the fund, and how much you receive when you sell them.

When looking at a closed-end fund’s performance, you will usually see that the NAV and the market price differ. The market price can be influenced by several factors that cause it to vary from the NAV, including fund distributions, changes in supply and demand for the fund’s shares, changing market conditions, and investor perceptions of the fund or its investment manager.

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Your fund’s performance

This section shows your fund’s performance, price, and distribution information for periods ended July 31, 2023, the end of its most recent fiscal year. In accordance with regulatory requirements for closed-end funds, we also include performance information as of the most recent calendar quarter-end. Performance should always be considered in light of a fund’s investment strategy. Data represent past performance. Past performance does not guarantee future results. More recent returns may be less or more than those shown. Investment return, net asset value, and market price will fluctuate, and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares.

Annualized fund performance Total return for periods ended 7/31/23

  Life of fund         
  (since 2/29/88)  10 years  5 years  3 years  1 year 
Net asset value  5.75%  2.10%  –0.07%  –0.17%  0.39% 
Market price  5.87  3.31  0.54  –0.95  2.08 

 

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

Performance includes the deduction of management fees and administrative expenses.

Comparative annualized index returns For periods ended 7/31/23

  Life of fund         
  (since 2/29/88)  10 years  5 years  3 years  1 year 
ICE BofA U.S. Treasury           
Bill Index  *  1.04%  1.61%  1.37%  3.94% 
Bloomberg Government           
Bond Index  4.95%  0.94  0.48  –5.17  –3.93 
Lipper General Bond           
Funds (closed-end)           
category median  6.97  4.53  3.24  3.57  6.35 

 

Index and Lipper results should be compared with fund performance at net asset value. Lipper calculates performance differently than the closed-end funds it ranks, due to varying methods for determining a fund’s monthly reinvestment net asset value.

All Bloomberg indices are provided by Bloomberg Index Services Limited.

Lipper peer group median is provided by Lipper, a Refinitiv company.

* The fund’s primary benchmark, the ICE BofA U.S. Treasury Bill Index, was introduced on 6/30/92, which post-dates the inception of the fund.

Over the 1-year, 3-year, 5-year, 10-year, and life-of-fund periods ended 7/31/23, there were 65, 50, 40, 24, and 4 funds, respectively, in this Lipper category.

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Past performance does not indicate future results.

Fund price and distribution information For the 12-month period ended 7/31/23

Distributions   
Number  12 
Income  $0.260756 
Capital gains   
Return of capital*  0.051244 
Total  $0.312000 
Share value  NAV  Market price 
7/31/22  $4.12  $3.89 
7/31/23  3.82  3.65 
Current dividend rate  8.17%  8.55% 

 

The classification of distributions, if any, is an estimate. Final distribution information will appear on your year-end tax forms.

* See page 101.

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

Annualized fund performance as of most recent calendar quarter
Total return for periods ended 6/30/23

  Life of fund         
  (since 2/29/88)  10 years  5 years  3 years  1 year 
Net asset value  5.74%  2.12%  –0.11%  –0.09%  1.58% 
Market price  5.75  2.71  –0.16  –2.13  0.70 

 

See the discussion following the fund performance table on page 9 for information about the calculation of fund performance.

 

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Information about the fund’s goal, investment strategies, principal risks, and fundamental investment policies

Goal

The goal of the fund is to seek high current income consistent with the preservation of capital by allocating its investments among the U.S. government sector, high yield sector and international sector of the fixed-income securities market.

The fund’s main investment strategies and related risks

This section contains detail regarding the fund’s main investment strategies and the related risks you face as a fund shareholder. It is important to keep in mind that risk and reward generally go hand in hand; the higher the potential reward, the greater the risk.

We pursue the fund’s goal by investing mainly in assignments of and participations in fixed and floating rate bank loans, bonds, securitized debt instruments (such as residential mortgage-backed securities and commercial mortgage-backed securities), and other obligations of companies and governments worldwide that are either investment-grade or below-investment-grade in quality (sometimes referred to as “junk bonds”), that have intermediate- to long-term maturities (three years or longer), and that are from multiple sectors. The fund currently has significant investment exposure to residential and commercial mortgage-backed investments. We may consider, among other factors, credit, interest rate and prepayment risks, as well as general market conditions, when deciding whether to buy or sell investments. We typically use to a significant extent derivatives, such as futures, options, certain foreign currency transactions and swap contracts, for hedging and non-hedging purposes and to obtain leverage.

The fund currently has significant investment exposure to CMBS, which are also subject to risks associated with the commercial real estate markets and the servicing of mortgage loans secured by commercial properties. During periods of difficult economic conditions, delinquencies and losses on CMBS in particular generally increase, including as a result of the effects of those conditions on commercial real estate markets, the ability of commercial tenants to make loan payments, and the ability of a property to attract and retain commercial tenants. The fund achieves exposure to CMBS via CMBX, an index that references a basket of CMBS.

Foreign investments. We consider any securities issued by a foreign government or a supranational organization (such as the World Bank) or denominated in a foreign currency to be securities of a foreign issuer. In addition, we consider an issuer to be a foreign issuer if we determine that (i) the issuer is headquartered or organized outside the United States, (ii) the issuer’s securities trade in a market outside the United States, (iii) the issuer derives a majority of its revenues or profits outside the United States, or (iv) the issuer is significantly exposed to the economic fortunes and risks of regions outside the United States. Foreign investments involve certain special risks, including:

— Unfavorable changes in currency exchange rates: Foreign investments are typically issued and traded in foreign currencies. As a result, their values may be affected by changes in exchange rates between foreign currencies and the U.S. dollar.

— Political and economic developments: Foreign investments may be subject to the risks of seizure by a foreign government, direct or indirect impact of sovereign debt default, imposition of economic sanctions, tariffs, trade restrictions, currency restrictions or similar actions (or retaliatory measures taken in response to such actions), and tax increases.

— Unreliable or untimely information: There may be less information publicly available about a foreign company than about most publicly-traded U.S. companies, and foreign companies are usually not subject to accounting, auditing and financial reporting standards and practices as stringent as those in the United States. Foreign securities may trade on markets that are closed when U.S. markets are open. As a result, accurate pricing information based on foreign market prices may not always be available.

— Limited legal recourse: Legal remedies for investors may be more limited than the remedies available in the United States.

— Limited markets: Certain foreign investments may be less liquid (harder to buy and sell) and more volatile than most U.S. investments, which means we may at times be unable to sell these foreign investments at desirable prices. In addition, there may be limited or no markets for bonds of issuers that become distressed. For the same reason, we

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may at times find it difficult to value the fund’s foreign investments.

— Trading practices: Brokerage commissions and other fees are generally higher for foreign investments than for U.S. investments. The procedures and rules governing foreign transactions and custody may also involve delays in payment, delivery or recovery of money or investments.

— Sovereign issuers: The willingness and ability of sovereign issuers to pay principal and interest on government securities depends on various economic factors, including the issuer’s balance of payments, overall debt level, and cash flow from tax or other revenues. In addition, there may be no legal recourse for investors in the event of default by a sovereign government.

The risks of foreign investments are typically increased in countries with less developed markets, which are sometimes referred to as emerging markets. Emerging markets may have less developed economies and legal and regulatory systems and may be susceptible to greater political and economic instability than developed foreign markets. Countries with emerging markets are also more likely to experience high levels of inflation, or currency devaluation, and investments in emerging markets may be more volatile and less liquid than investments in developed markets. For these and other reasons, investments in emerging markets are often considered speculative.

Certain risks related to foreign investments may also apply to some extent to U.S.- traded investments that are denominated in foreign currencies, investments in U.S. companies that are traded in foreign markets, or investments in U.S. companies that have significant foreign operations.

Interest rate risk. The values of bonds and other debt instruments usually rise and fall in response to changes in interest rates. Interest rates can change in response to the supply and demand for credit, government and/or central bank monetary policy and action, inflation rates, and other factors. Declining interest rates generally result in an increase in the value of existing debt instruments, and rising interest rates generally result in a decrease in the value of existing debt instruments. Changes in a debt instrument’s value usually will not affect the amount of interest income paid to the fund but will affect the value of the fund’s shares. Interest rate risk is generally greater for investments with longer maturities.

Some investments give the issuer the option to call or redeem an investment before its maturity date. If an issuer calls or redeems an investment during a time of declining interest rates, we might have to reinvest the proceeds in an investment offering a lower yield, and, therefore, the fund might not benefit from any increase in value as a result of declining interest rates.

Credit risk. Investors normally expect to be compensated in proportion to the risk they are assuming. Thus, debt of issuers with poor credit prospects usually offers higher yields than debt of issuers with more secure credit. Higher-rated investments generally have lower credit risk.

Investments rated below BBB or its equivalent are below investment-grade in quality (sometimes referred to as “junk bonds”). This rating reflects a greater possibility that the issuers may be unable to make timely payments of interest and principal and thus default. If a default occurs, or is perceived as likely to occur, the value of the investment will usually be more volatile and could decrease. The value of a debt instrument may also be affected by changes in, or perceptions of, the financial condition of the issuer, borrower, counterparty, or other entity, or underlying collateral or assets, or changes in, or perceptions of, specific or general market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions. A default or expected default could also make it difficult for us to sell the investment at a price approximating the value we had previously placed on it. Lower-rated debt usually has a more limited market than higher-rated debt, which may at times make it difficult for us to buy or sell certain debt instruments or to establish their fair values. Credit risk is generally greater for zero-coupon bonds and other investments that are issued at less than their face value and that are required to make interest payments only at maturity rather than at intervals during the life of the investment.

Credit ratings are based largely on the issuer’s historical financial condition and the rating agencies’ investment analysis at the time of rating. The rating assigned to any particular investment does not necessarily reflect the issuer’s current financial condition and does not reflect an assessment of the investment’s volatility or liquidity. Although we consider credit ratings in making investment decisions, we perform our own investment analysis and do not rely only on ratings assigned by the rating agencies. Our success in achieving the fund’s goal may depend more on our own credit analysis when we buy lower-rated debt than when we buy investment-grade debt. We may have to participate in legal proceedings involving

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the issuer. This could increase the fund’s operating expenses and decrease its net asset value.

Although investment-grade investments generally have lower credit risk, they may share some of the risks of lower-rated investments. U.S. government investments generally have the least credit risk but are not completely free of credit risk. While some investments, such as U.S. Treasury obligations and Ginnie Mae certificates, are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, others are backed only by the credit of the issuer. Mortgage-backed securities may be subject to the risk that underlying borrowers will be unable to meet their obligations.

Bond investments may be more susceptible to downgrades or defaults during economic downturns or other periods of economic stress, which can significantly strain the financial resources of debt issuers, including the issuers of the bonds in which the fund invests (or has exposure to). This may make it less likely that those issuers can meet their financial obligations when due and may adversely impact the value of their bonds, which could negatively impact the performance of the fund. It is difficult to predict the level of financial stress and duration of such stress issuers may experience.

Prepayment risk. Traditional debt investments typically pay a fixed rate of interest until maturity, when the entire principal amount is due. In contrast, payments on securitized debt instruments, including mortgage-backed and asset-backed investments, typically include both interest and partial payment of principal. Principal may also be prepaid voluntarily or as a result of refinancing or foreclosure. We may have to invest the proceeds from prepaid investments in other investments with less attractive terms and yields.

Compared to debt that cannot be prepaid, mortgage-backed investments are less likely to increase in value during periods of declining interest rates and have a higher risk of decline in value during periods of rising interest rates. These investments may increase the volatility of the fund. Some mortgage-backed investments receive only the interest portion or the principal portion of payments on the underlying mortgages. The yields and values of these investments are extremely sensitive to changes in interest rates and in the rate of principal payments on the underlying mortgages. The market for these investments may be volatile and limited, which may make them difficult to buy or sell. Asset-backed securities are structured like mortgage-backed securities, but instead of mortgage loans or interests in mortgage loans, the underlying assets may include such items as motor vehicle installment sales or installment loan contracts, leases of various types of real and personal property and receivables from credit card agreements. Asset-backed securities are subject to risks similar to those of mortgage-backed securities.

Derivatives. We may engage to a significant extent in a variety of transactions involving derivatives, such as to-be-announced (TBA) commitments, futures, options and swaptions on mortgage-backed securities and indices, forward contracts, certain foreign currency transactions, credit default, total return and interest rate swap contracts, including to obtain or adjust exposure to commercial and residential mortgage-backed instruments.

Derivatives are financial instruments whose value depends upon, or is derived from, the value of something else, such as one or more underlying investments, pools of investments, indexes or currencies. We may make use of “short” derivatives positions, the values of which typically move in the opposite direction from the price of the underlying investment, pool of investments, index or currency. We may use derivatives for hedging and non-hedging purposes and to obtain leverage. For example, we may use derivatives to increase or decrease the fund’s exposure to long- or short-term interest rates (in the United States or abroad), increase or decrease the fund’s exposure to inflation, adjust the term of the fund’s U.S. Treasury security exposure, adjust the fund’s positioning on the yield curve (a line that plots interest rates of bonds having equal credit quality but differing maturity dates) or to take tactical positions along the yield curve or to a particular currency or group of currencies, or as a substitute for a direct investment in the securities of one or more issuers. The fund may also use derivatives to isolate prepayment risk associated with the fund’s holdings of collateralized mortgage obligations. However, we may also choose not to use derivatives based on our evaluation of market conditions or the availability of suitable derivatives. Investments in derivatives may be applied toward meeting a requirement to invest in a particular kind of investment if the derivatives have economic characteristics similar to that investment.

Derivatives involve special risks and may result in losses. The successful use of derivatives depends on our ability to manage these sophisticated instruments. Some derivatives are “leveraged,”

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which means they provide the fund with investment exposure greater than the value of the fund’s investment in the derivatives. As a result, these derivatives may magnify or otherwise increase investment losses to the fund. The risk of loss from certain short derivatives positions is theoretically unlimited. The value of derivatives may move in unexpected ways due to unanticipated market movements, the use of leverage, imperfect correlation between the derivative instrument and the reference asset or other factors, especially in unusual market conditions, and volatility in the value of derivatives could adversely impact the fund’s returns, obligations, and exposures.

Other risks arise from the potential inability to terminate or sell derivatives positions. Derivatives may be subject the fund to liquidity risk due to the fund’s obligation to make payments of margin, collateral, or settlement payments to counterparties. A liquid secondary market may not always exist for the fund’s derivative positions. In fact, certain over-the-counter instruments (investments not traded on an exchange) may not be liquid. Over-the-counter instruments also involve the risk that the other party to the derivative transaction may not be willing or able to meet its obligations with respect to the derivative transaction. The risk of a party failing to meet its obligations may increase if the fund has significant exposure to that counterparty. Derivative transactions may also be subject to operational risk, including due to documentation and settlement issues, system failures, inadequate controls and human error, and legal risk due to insufficient documentation, insufficient capacity or authority of a counterparty, or issues with respect to the legality or enforceability of the derivative contract.

Floating rate loans. Floating rate loans are debt obligations with interest rates that adjust or “float” periodically (normally on a monthly or quarterly basis) based on a generally recognized base rate, such as the London Inter-Bank Offered Rate or the prime rate offered by one or more major U.S. banks. While most floating rate loans are below-investment-grade in quality, many also are senior in rank in the event of bankruptcy to most other securities of the borrower, such as common stock or public bonds. Floating rate loans are also normally secured by specific collateral or assets of the borrower so that the holders of the loans will have a priority claim on those assets in the event of default or bankruptcy of the issuer.

Floating rate loans generally are less sensitive to interest rate changes than obligations with fixed interest rates but may decline in value if their interest rates do not rise as much, or as quickly, as interest rates in general. Conversely, floating rate instruments will not generally increase in value if interest rates decline. Changes in interest rates will also affect the amount of interest income the fund earns on its floating rate investments. Most floating rate loans allow for prepayment of principal without penalty. If a borrower prepays a loan, we might have to reinvest the proceeds in an investment that may have lower yields than the yield on the prepaid loan or might not be able to take advantage of potential gains from increases in the credit quality of the issuer.

The value of collateral, if any, securing a floating rate loan can decline, and may be insufficient to meet the borrower’s obligations or difficult to liquidate. In addition, the fund’s access to collateral may be limited by bankruptcy or other insolvency proceedings. Floating rate loans may not be fully collateralized and may decline in value. Loans may not be considered “securities,” and it is possible that the fund may not be entitled to rely on anti-fraud and other protections under the federal securities laws when it purchases loans.

Although the market for the types of floating rate loans in which the fund invests has become increasingly liquid over time, this market is still developing, and there can be no assurance that adverse developments with respect to this market or particular borrowers will not prevent the fund from selling these loans at their market values when we consider such a sale desirable. In addition, the settlement period (the period between the execution of the trade and the delivery of cash to the purchaser) for floating rate loan transactions may be significantly longer than the settlement period for other investments, and in some cases longer than seven days. Requirements to obtain consent of borrower and/or agent can delay or impede the fund’s ability to sell the floating rate loans and can adversely affect the price that can be obtained. It is possible that sale proceeds from floating rate loan transactions will not be available to meet redemption obligations.

Liquidity and illiquid investments. We may invest the fund’s assets in illiquid investments, which may be considered speculative, and which may be difficult to sell. The sale of many of these investments is prohibited or limited by law or contract. Some investments may be difficult to value for purposes of determining the fund’s net asset value. Certain other investments may not have an active trading market due to adverse market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions, including

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investors trying to sell large quantities of a particular investment or type of investment, or lack of market makers or other buyers for a particular investment or type of investment. Commercial mortgage-backed securities may be less liquid and exhibit greater price volatility than other types of mortgage- or asset-backed securities. We may not be able to sell the fund’s illiquid investments when we consider it desirable to do so, or we may be able to sell them only at less than their value.

Focused investment risk. Focusing investments in sectors and industries with high positive correlations to one another creates additional risk. The fund currently has significant investment exposure to private issuers of residential and commercial mortgage-backed securities and mortgage-backed securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or its agencies or instrumentalities, which makes the fund’s net asset value more susceptible to economic, market, political and other developments affecting the residential and commercial real estate markets and the servicing of mortgage loans secured by real estate properties. Factors affecting the residential and commercial real estate markets include the supply and demand of real property in particular markets, changes in the availability, terms and costs of mortgages, changes in tenants’ ability to make loan payments, changes in zoning laws and eminent domain practices, the impact of environmental laws, delays in completion of construction, changes in real estate values, changes in property taxes, levels of occupancy, adequacy of rent to cover operating expenses, changes in government regulations, and local and regional market conditions. Some of these factors may vary greatly by geographic location. The value of these investments also may be affected by changes in interest rates and social and economic trends. Mortgage-backed securities are subject to the risk of fluctuations in income from underlying real estate assets, prepayments, extensions, and defaults by borrowers.

Because the fund currently has significant investment exposure to commercial mortgage-backed securities, the fund may be particularly susceptible to adverse developments affecting those securities. Commercial mortgage-backed securities include securities that reflect an interest in, or are secured by, mortgage loans on commercial real property, such as industrial and warehouse properties, office buildings, retail space and shopping malls, cooperative apartments, hotels and motels, nursing homes, hospitals and senior living centers. Many of the risks of investing in commercial mortgage-backed securities reflect the risks of investing in the real estate securing the underlying mortgage loans. During periods of difficult economic conditions (including periods of significant disruptions to business operations, supply chains, and customer activity and lower consumer demand for goods and services), delinquencies and losses on commercial real estate generally increase, including as a result of the effects of those conditions on commercial real estate markets, the ability of commercial tenants to make loan payments, and the ability of a property to attract and retain commercial tenants. The risk of defaults on residential mortgage-backed securities is generally higher in the case of mortgage-backed investments that include non-qualified mortgages. Litigation with respect to the representations and warranties given in connection with the issuance of mortgage-backed securities can be an important consideration in investing in such securities, and the outcome of any such litigation could significantly impact the value of the fund’s mortgage-backed investments.

Market risk. The value of investments in the fund’s portfolio may fall or fail to rise over extended periods of time for a variety of reasons, including general economic, political or financial market conditions; investor sentiment and market perceptions (including perceptions about monetary policy, interest rates, inflation or the risk of default); government actions (including protectionist measures, intervention in the financial markets or other regulation, and changes in fiscal, monetary or tax policies); geopolitical events or changes (including natural disasters, terrorism and war); outbreaks of infectious illnesses or other widespread public health issues (including epidemics and pandemics); and factors related to a specific issuer, asset class, geography, industry or sector. Foreign financial markets have their own market risks, and they may be more or less volatile than U.S. markets and may move in different directions. During a general downturn in financial markets, multiple asset classes may decline in value simultaneously. These and other factors may lead to increased volatility and reduced liquidity in the fund’s portfolio holdings. These risks may be exacerbated during economic downturns or other periods of economic stress.

The Covid-19 pandemic and efforts to contain its spread have resulted in, among other effects, significant market volatility, exchange trading suspensions and closures, declines in global financial markets, higher default rates, significant changes in fiscal and monetary policies, and economic downturns and

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recessions. The effects of the Covid-19 pandemic have negatively affected, and may continue to negatively affect, the global economy, the economies of the United States and other individual countries, the financial performance of individual issuers, sectors, industries, asset classes, and markets, and the value, volatility, and liquidity of particular securities and other assets. The effects of the Covid-19 pandemic also are likely to exacerbate other risks that apply to the fund, which could negatively impact the fund’s performance and lead to losses on your investment in the fund. The duration of the Covid-19 pandemic and its effects cannot be determined with certainty.

ESG considerations. Although ESG considerations do not represent a primary focus of the fund, we expect to integrate environmental, social, or governance (“ESG”) considerations into our fundamental research process and investment decision-making for the fund, where we consider them material and relevant, and where data is available. We believe that ESG considerations, like other, more traditional subjects of investment analysis such as credit, interest rate, prepayment and liquidity risks, as well as general market conditions, have the potential to impact financial risk and investment returns. We believe that ESG considerations are best analyzed in combination with traditional fundamental considerations, including a company’s industry, geography, and strategic position or the fundamentals of a securitized product and its underlying assets. With respect to securitized products, we may evaluate ESG considerations related to the originator, servicers and other relevant parties. We also consider ESG factors when evaluating sovereign debt, including both current ESG metrics and goals and progress by the sovereign issuer with respect to ESG considerations. When considering ESG factors for all asset classes, we use company or issuer disclosures, public data sources, and independent third-party data (where available) as inputs into our analytical processes. With respect to certain fund holdings, such as holdings of securitized investments, data on material ESG considerations may be limited. Because fixed income investments generally represent a promise to pay principal and interest by an issuer, and not an ownership interest, and may involve complex structures, ESG-related investment considerations may have a more limited impact on risk and return (or may have an impact over a different investment time horizon) relative to other asset classes, and this may be particularly true for shorter-term investments. The consideration of ESG factors as part of the fund’s investment process does not mean that the fund pursues a specific “ESG” or “sustainable” investment strategy, and we may make investment decisions for the fund other than on the basis of relevant ESG considerations.

Management and operational risk. The fund is actively managed, and its performance will reflect, in part, our ability to make investment decisions that seek to achieve the fund’s investment objective. There is no guarantee that the investment techniques, analyses, or judgments that we apply in making investment decisions for the fund will produce the intended outcome or that the investments we select for the fund will perform as well as other securities that were not selected for the fund. As a result, the fund may underperform its benchmark or other funds with a similar investment goal and may realize losses. In addition, we, or the fund’s other service providers, may experience disruptions or operating errors that could negatively impact the fund. Although service providers may have operational risk management policies and procedures and take appropriate precautions to avoid and mitigate risks that could lead to disruptions and operating errors, it may not be possible to identify all of the operational risks that may affect the fund or to develop processes and controls to completely eliminate or mitigate their occurrence or effects.

Other investments. In addition to the main investment strategies described above, the fund may make other types of investments, such as investments in asset-backed, hybrid and structured bonds and notes, preferred securities that would be characterized as debt securities under applicable accounting standards and tax laws, and assignments of and participations in fixed and floating rate loans. The fund may also invest in cash or cash equivalents, including money market instruments or short-term instruments such as commercial paper, bank obligations (e.g., certificates of deposit and bankers’ acceptances), repurchase agreements, and U.S. Treasury bills or other government obligations. The fund may also from time to time invest all or a portion of its cash balances in money market and/or short-term bond funds advised by Putnam Management or its affiliates. The percentage of the fund invested in cash and cash equivalents and such money market and short-term bond funds is expected to vary over time and will depend on various factors, including market conditions, purchase and redemption activity by fund shareholders, and our assessment of the cash level that is appropriate to allow the fund to pursue investment opportunities as they arise. Large cash positions

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may dampen performance and may prevent the fund from achieving its goal. The fund may also loan portfolio securities to earn income.

Temporary defensive strategies. In response to adverse market, economic, political or other conditions, we may take temporary defensive positions, such as investing some or all of the fund’s assets in cash and cash equivalents, that differ from the fund’s usual investment strategies. However, we may choose not to use these temporary defensive strategies for a variety of reasons, even in very volatile market conditions. If we do employ these strategies, the fund may miss out on investment opportunities, and may not achieve its goal. Additionally, while temporary defensive strategies are mainly designed to limit losses, they may not work as intended.

Changes in policies. The Trustees may change the fund’s goal, investment strategies and other policies without shareholder approval, except in circumstances in which shareholder approval is specifically required by law (such as changes to fundamental investment policies) or where a shareholder approval requirement was specifically disclosed in the fund’s prospectus, statement of additional information or shareholder report and is otherwise still in effect.

The fund’s fundamental investment policies

The fund has adopted the following investment restrictions which may not be changed without the affirmative vote of a “majority of the outstanding voting securities” of the fund (which is defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, (the “1940 Act”) to mean the affirmative vote of the lesser of (1) more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the fund, or (2) 67% or more of the shares present at a meeting if more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the fund are represented at the meeting in person or by proxy). The fund may not:

1. Borrow money or issue senior securities (as defined in the 1940 Act), except as permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, (ii) the rules or regulations promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission under the 1940 Act or (iii) any applicable exemption from the provisions of the 1940 Act.

2. Underwrite securities issued by other persons except to the extent that, in connection with the disposition of its portfolio investments, it may be deemed to be an underwriter under the federal securities laws.

3. Purchase or sell real estate, although it may purchase securities of issuers which deal in real estate, securities which are secured by interests in real estate, and securities representing interests in real estate, and it may acquire and dispose of real estate or interests in real estate acquired through the exercise of its rights as a holder of debt obligations secured by real estate or interests therein.

4. Purchase or sell commodities or commodity contracts, except that the fund may purchase and sell financial futures contracts and options and may enter into foreign exchange contracts and other financial transactions not involving physical commodities.

5. Make loans, except by purchase of debt obligations in which the fund may invest consistent with its investment policies (including without limitation debt obligations issued by other Putnam funds), by entering into repurchase agreements or by lending its portfolio securities.

6. With respect to 50% of its total assets, invest in securities of any issuer if, immediately after such investment, more than 5% of the total assets of the fund (taken at current value) would be invested in the securities of such issuer; provided that this limitation does not apply to obligations issued or guaranteed as to interest or principal by the U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities.

7. With respect to 50% of its total assets, acquire more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of any issuer.

8. Invest more than 25% of the value of its total assets in any one industry. (Securities of the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities, or of any foreign government, its agencies or instrumentalities, securities of supranational entities, and securities backed by the credit of a governmental entity are not considered to represent industries.)

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Comparative index definitions

Bloomberg Government Bond Index is an unmanaged index of U.S. Treasury and government agency bonds.

Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index is an unmanaged index of U.S. investment-grade fixed income securities.

CMBX Index is an unmanaged index that tracks the performance of a basket of commercial mortgage-backed securities issued in a particular year.

ICE BofA (Intercontinental Exchange Bank of America) U.S. Treasury Bill Index is an unmanaged index that tracks the performance of U.S. dollar-denominated U.S. Treasury bills publicly issued in the U.S. domestic market. Qualifying securities must have a remaining term of at least one month to final maturity and a minimum amount outstanding of $1 billion.

JPMorgan Developed High Yield Index is an unmanaged index of high-yield fixed income securities issued in developed countries.

S&P 500® Index is an unmanaged index of common stock performance.

Indexes assume reinvestment of all distributions and do not account for fees. Securities and performance of a fund and an index will differ. You cannot invest directly in an index.

BLOOMBERG® is a trademark and service mark of Bloomberg Finance L.P. and its affiliates (collectively “Bloomberg”). Bloomberg or Bloomberg’s licensors own all proprietary rights in the Bloomberg Indices. Neither Bloomberg nor Bloomberg’s licensors approve or endorse this material, or guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any information herein, or make any warranty, express or implied, as to the results to be obtained therefrom, and to the maximum extent allowed by law, neither shall have any liability or responsibility for injury or damages arising in connection therewith.

ICE Data Indices, LLC (“ICE BofA”), used with permission. ICE BofA permits use of the ICE BofA indices and related data on an “as is” basis; makes no warranties regarding same; does not guarantee the suitability, quality, accuracy, timeliness, and/or completeness of the ICE BofA indices or any data included in, related to, or derived therefrom; assumes no liability in connection with the use of the foregoing; and does not sponsor, endorse, or recommend Putnam Investments, or any of its products or services.

Lipper, a Refinitiv company, is a third-party industry-ranking entity that ranks funds. Its rankings do not reflect sales charges. Lipper rankings are based on total return at net asset value relative to other funds that have similar current investment styles or objectives as determined by Lipper. Lipper may change a fund’s category assignment at its discretion. Lipper category medians reflect performance trends for funds within a category.

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Other information for shareholders

Important notice regarding share repurchase program

In September 2022, the Trustees of your fund approved the renewal of a share repurchase program that had been in effect since 2005. This renewal allows your fund to repurchase, in the 365 days beginning October 1, 2022, up to 10% of the fund’s common shares outstanding as of September 30, 2022.

Important notice regarding delivery of shareholder documents

In accordance with Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations, Putnam sends a single notice of internet availability, or a single printed copy, of annual and semiannual shareholder reports, prospectuses, and proxy statements to Putnam shareholders who share the same address, unless a shareholder requests otherwise. If you prefer to receive your own copy of these documents, please call Putnam at 1-800-225-1581, and Putnam will begin sending individual copies within 30 days.

Proxy voting

Putnam is committed to managing our funds in the best interests of our shareholders. The Putnam funds’ proxy voting guidelines and procedures, as well as information regarding how your fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the 12-month period ended June 30, 2023, are available in the Individual Investors section of putnam.com and on the SEC’s website, www.sec.gov. If you have questions about finding forms on the SEC’s website, you may call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330. You may also obtain the Putnam funds’ proxy voting guidelines and procedures at no charge by calling Putnam’s Shareholder Services at 1-800-225-1581.

Fund portfolio holdings

The fund will file a complete schedule of its portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-PORT within 60 days of the end of such fiscal quarter. Shareholders may obtain the fund’s Form N-PORT on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.

Trustee and employee fund ownership

Putnam employees and members of the Board of Trustees place their faith, confidence, and, most importantly, investment dollars in Putnam funds. As of July 31, 2023, Putnam employees had approximately $504,000,000 and the Trustees had approximately $70,000,000 invested in Putnam funds. These amounts include investments by the Trustees’ and employees’ immediate family members as well as investments through retirement and deferred compensation plans.

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Important notice regarding Putnam’s privacy policy

In order to conduct business with our shareholders, we must obtain certain personal information such as account holders’ names, addresses, Social Security numbers, and dates of birth. Using this information, we are able to maintain accurate records of accounts and transactions.

It is our policy to protect the confidentiality of our shareholder information, whether or not a shareholder currently owns shares of our funds. In particular, it is our policy not to sell information about you or your accounts to outside marketing firms. We have safeguards in place designed to prevent unauthorized access to our computer systems and procedures to protect personal information from unauthorized use.

Under certain circumstances, we must share account information with outside vendors who provide services to us, such as mailings and proxy solicitations. In these cases, the service providers enter into confidentiality agreements with us, and we provide only the information necessary to process transactions and perform other services related to your account. Finally, it is our policy to share account information with your financial representative, if you’ve listed one on your Putnam account.

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Summary of Putnam closed-end funds’ amended and restated dividend reinvestment plans

Putnam Managed Municipal Income Trust, Putnam Master Intermediate Income Trust, Putnam Municipal Opportunities Trust and Putnam Premier Income Trust (each, a “Fund” and collectively, the “Funds”) each offer a dividend reinvestment plan (each, a “Plan” and collectively, the “Plans”). If you participate in a Plan, all income dividends and capital gain distributions are automatically reinvested in Fund shares by the Fund’s agent, Putnam Investor Services, Inc. (the “Agent”). If you are not participating in a Plan, every month you will receive all dividends and other distributions in cash, paid by check and mailed directly to you or your intermediary.

Upon a purchase (or, where applicable, upon registration of transfer on the shareholder records of a Fund) of shares of a Fund by a registered shareholder, each such shareholder will be deemed to have elected to participate in that Fund’s Plan. Each such shareholder will have all distributions by a Fund automatically reinvested in additional shares, unless such shareholder elects to terminate participation in a Plan by instructing the Agent to pay future distributions in cash. Shareholders who were not participants in a Plan as of January 31, 2010, will continue to receive distributions in cash but may enroll in a Plan at any time by contacting the Agent.

If you participate in a Fund’s Plan, the Agent will automatically reinvest subsequent distributions, and the Agent will send you a confirmation in the mail telling you how many additional shares were issued to your account.

To change your enrollment status or to request additional information about the Plans, you may contact the Agent either in writing, at P.O. Box 8383, Boston, MA 02266-8383, or by telephone at 1-800-225-1581 during normal East Coast business hours.

How you acquire additional shares through a Plan If the market price per share for your Fund’s shares (plus estimated brokerage commissions) is greater than or equal to their net asset value per share on the payment date for a distribution, you will be issued shares of the Fund at a value equal to the higher of the net asset value per share on that date or 95% of the market price per share on that date.

If the market price per share for your Fund’s shares (plus estimated brokerage commissions) is less than their net asset value per share on the payment date for a distribution, the Agent will buy Fund shares for participating accounts in the open market. The Agent will aggregate open-market purchases on behalf of all participants, and the average price (including brokerage commissions) of all shares purchased by the Agent will be the price per share allocable to each participant. The Agent will generally complete these open-market purchases within five business days following the payment date. If, before the Agent has completed open-market purchases, the market price per share (plus estimated brokerage commissions) rises to exceed the net asset value per share on the payment date, then the purchase price may exceed the net asset value per share, potentially resulting in the acquisition of fewer shares than if the distribution had been paid in newly issued shares.

How to withdraw from a Plan Participants may withdraw from a Fund’s Plan at any time by notifying the Agent, either in writing or by telephone. Such withdrawal will be effective immediately if notice is received by the Agent with sufficient time prior to any distribution record date; otherwise, such withdrawal will be effective with respect to any subsequent distribution following notice of withdrawal. There is no penalty for withdrawing from or not participating in a Plan.

Plan administration The Agent will credit all shares acquired for a participant under a Plan to the account in which the participant’s common shares are held. Each participant will

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be sent reasonably promptly a confirmation by the Agent of each acquisition made for his or her account.

About brokerage fees Each participant pays a proportionate share of any brokerage commissions incurred if the Agent purchases additional shares on the open market, in accordance with the Plans. There are no brokerage charges applied to shares issued directly by the Funds under the Plans.

About taxes and Plan amendments Reinvesting dividend and capital gain distributions in shares of the Funds does not relieve you of tax obligations, which are the same as if you had received cash distributions. The Agent supplies tax information to you and to the IRS annually. Each Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate its Plan upon 30 days’ written notice. However, the Agent may assign its rights, and delegate its duties, to a successor agent with the prior consent of a Fund and without prior notice to Plan participants.

If your shares are held in a broker or nominee name If your shares are held in the name of a broker or nominee offering a dividend reinvestment service, consult your broker or nominee to ensure that an appropriate election is made on your behalf. If the broker or nominee holding your shares does not provide a reinvestment service, you may need to register your shares in your own name in order to participate in a Plan.

In the case of record shareholders such as banks, brokers or nominees that hold shares for others who are the beneficial owners of such shares, the Agent will administer the Plan on the basis of the number of shares certified by the record shareholder as representing the total amount registered in such shareholder’s name and held for the account of beneficial owners who are to participate in the Plan.

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Trustee approval of management contracts

Consideration of your fund’s new and interim management and sub-management contracts

At their meeting on June 23, 2023, the Board of Trustees of your fund, including all of the Trustees who are not “interested persons” (as this term is defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”)) of the Putnam mutual funds, closed-end funds and exchange-traded funds (collectively, the “funds”) (the “Independent Trustees”) approved, subject to approval by your fund’s shareholders, a new management contract with Putnam Investment Management (“Putnam Management”) and a new sub-management contract between Putnam Management and its affiliate, Putnam Investments Limited (“PIL”) (collectively, the “New Management Contracts”). The Trustees considered the proposed New Management Contracts in connection with the planned acquisition of Putnam U.S. Holdings I, LLC (“Putnam Holdings”) by a subsidiary of Franklin Resources, Inc. (“Franklin Templeton”). The Trustees considered that, on May 31, 2023, Franklin Templeton and Great-West Lifeco Inc., the parent company of Putnam Holdings, announced that they had entered into a definitive agreement for a subsidiary of Franklin Templeton to acquire Putnam Holdings in a stock and cash transaction (the “Transaction”). The Trustees noted that Putnam Holdings was the parent company of Putnam Management and PIL. The Trustees were advised that the Transaction would result in a “change of control” of Putnam Management and PIL and would cause your fund’s current Management Contract with Putnam Management and Sub-Management Contract with PIL (collectively, the “Current Management Contracts”) to terminate in accordance with the 1940 Act. The Trustees considered that the New Management Contracts would take effect upon the closing of the Transaction, which was expected to occur in the fourth quarter of 2023.

In addition to the New Management Contracts, the Trustees also approved interim management and sub-management contracts with Putnam Management and PIL, respectively (the “Interim Management Contracts”), which would take effect in the event that for any reason shareholder approval of a New Management Contract was not received by the time of the Transaction closing. The Trustees considered that each Interim Management Contract that became effective would remain in effect until shareholders approved the proposed New Management Contract, or until 150 days elapse after the closing of the Transaction, whichever occurred first. The considerations and conclusions discussed in connection with the Trustees’ consideration of the New Management Contracts and the continuance of your fund’s Current Management Contracts also apply to the Trustees’ consideration of the Interim Management Contracts, supplemented by consideration of the terms, nature and reason for any Interim Management Contract.

The Independent Trustees met with their independent legal counsel, as defined in Rule 0 – 1(a)(6) under the 1940 Act (their “independent legal counsel”), and representatives of Putnam Management and its parent company, Power Corporation of Canada, to discuss the potential Transaction, including the timing and structure of the Transaction and its implications for Putnam Management and the funds, during their regular meeting on November 18, 2022, and the full Board of Trustees further discussed these matters with representatives of Putnam Management at its regular meeting on December 15, 2022. At a special meeting on December 20, 2022, the full Board of Trustees met with representatives of Putnam Management, Power Corporation of Canada and Franklin Templeton to further discuss the potential Transaction, including Franklin Templeton’s strategic plans for Putnam Management’s asset management business and the funds, potential sources of synergy between Franklin Templeton and Putnam Management, potential areas of partnership between Power Corporation of Canada and Franklin Templeton, Franklin Templeton’s distribution capabilities, Franklin Templeton’s existing service provider relationships and Franklin Templeton’s recent acquisitions of other asset management firms.

In order to assist the Independent Trustees in their consideration of the New Management Contracts and other anticipated impacts of the Transaction on the funds and their shareholders, independent legal counsel for the Independent Trustees furnished an initial information request to Franklin Templeton (the “Initial Franklin Request”). At a special meeting of the full Board of Trustees held on January 25, 2023, representatives of Franklin Templeton addressed the firm’s responses to the

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Initial Franklin Request. At the meeting, representatives of Franklin Templeton discussed, among other things, the business and financial condition of Franklin Templeton and its affiliates, Franklin Templeton’s U.S. registered fund operations, its recent acquisition history, Franklin Templeton’s intentions regarding the operation of Putnam Management and the funds following the completion of the potential Transaction and expected benefits to the funds and Putnam Management that might result from the Transaction.

The Board of Trustees actively monitored developments with respect to the potential Transaction throughout the period leading up to the public announcement of a final sale agreement on May 31, 2023. The Independent Trustees met to discuss these matters at their regular meetings on January 27, April 20 and May 19, 2023. The full Board of Trustees also discussed developments at their regular meeting on February 23, 2023. Following the public announcement of the Transaction on May 31, 2023, independent legal counsel for the Independent Trustees furnished a supplemental information request (the “Supplemental Franklin Request”) to Franklin Templeton. At the Board of Trustees’ regular in-person meeting held on June 22–23, 2023, representatives of Putnam Management and Power Corporation of Canada provided further information regarding, among other matters, the final terms of the Transaction and efforts undertaken to retain Putnam employees. The Contract Committee of the Board of Trustees also met on June 22, 2023 to discuss Franklin Templeton’s responses to the Supplemental Franklin Request. Mr. Reynolds, the only Trustee affiliated with Putnam Management, participated in portions of these meetings to provide the perspective of the Putnam organization, but did not otherwise participate in the deliberations of the Independent Trustees or the Contract Committee regarding the potential Transaction.

After the presentations and after reviewing the written materials provided, the Independent Trustees met at their in-person meeting on June 23, 2023 to consider the New Management Contracts for each fund, proposed to become effective upon the closing of the Transaction, and the filing of a preliminary proxy statement. At this meeting and throughout the process, the Independent Trustees also received advice from their independent legal counsel regarding their responsibilities in evaluating the potential Transaction and the New Management Contracts. The Independent Trustees reviewed the terms of the proposed New Management Contracts and the differences between the New Management Contracts and the Current Management Contracts. They noted that the terms of the proposed New Management Contracts were identical to the Current Management Contracts, except for the effective dates and initial terms.

In considering the approval of the proposed New Management Contracts, the Board of Trustees took into account a number of factors, including:1

(i) Franklin Templeton’s and Putnam Management’s belief that the Transaction would not adversely affect the funds or their shareholders and their belief that the Transaction was likely to result in certain benefits (described below) for the funds and their shareholders;

(ii) That Franklin Templeton did not intend to make any material change in Putnam Management’s senior investment professionals (other than certain changes related to reporting structure and organization of personnel discussed below), including the portfolio managers of the funds, or to the firm’s operating locations as a result of the Transaction;

(iii) That Franklin Templeton intended for Putnam Management’s equity investment professionals to continue to operate largely independently from Franklin Templeton, reporting to Franklin Templeton’s Head of Public Markets following the Transaction;

(iv) That, while Putnam Management’s organizational structure was not expected to change immediately following the Transaction, Franklin Templeton intended to revise Putnam Management’s reporting structure in order to include Putnam Management’s fixed income investment professionals in Franklin Templeton’s fixed income group and to include Putnam Management’s Global Asset Allocation (“GAA”) investment professionals in Franklin Templeton’s investment solutions group, with both Franklin Templeton groups reporting to Franklin Templeton’s Head of Public Markets;


1All subsequent references to Putnam Management describing the Board of Trustees’ considerations should be deemed to include references to PIL as necessary or appropriate in the context.

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(v) Franklin Templeton’s expectation that there would not be any changes in the investment objectives, strategies or portfolio holdings of the funds as a result of the Transaction;

(vi) That neither Franklin Templeton nor Putnam Management had any current plans to propose changes to the funds’ existing management fees or expense limitations;

(vii) Franklin Templeton’s and Putnam Management’s representations that, following the Transaction, there was not expected to be any diminution in the nature, quality and extent of services provided to the funds and their shareholders by Putnam Management and PIL, including compliance and other non-advisory services;

(viii) That Franklin Templeton did not currently plan to change the branding of the funds or to change the lineup of funds in connection with the Transaction but would continue to evaluate how best to position the funds in the market;

(ix) The possible benefits accruing to the funds and their shareholders as a result of the Transaction, including:

a. That the scale of Franklin Templeton’s investment operations platform would increase the investment and operational resources available to the funds;

b. That the Putnam open-end funds would benefit from Franklin Templeton’s large retail and institutional global distribution capabilities and significant network of intermediary relationships, which may provide additional opportunities for the funds to increase assets and reduce expenses by spreading expenses over a larger asset base; and

c. Potential benefits to shareholders of the Putnam open-end funds that could result from the alignment of certain fund features and shareholder benefits with those of other funds sponsored by Franklin Templeton and its affiliates and access to a broader array of investment opportunities;

(x) The financial strength, reputation, experience and resources of Franklin Templeton and its investment advisory subsidiaries;

(xi) Franklin Templeton’s expectation that the Transaction would not impact the capabilities or responsibilities of Putnam Management’s Investment Division (other than any impact related to reporting structure changes for Putnam Management’s equity, fixed income and GAA investment groups and to including Putnam Management’s fixed income and GAA investment professionals in existing Franklin Templeton investment groups, as discussed above) and that any changes to the Investment Division over the longer term would be made in order to achieve perceived operational efficiencies or improvements to the portfolio management process;

(xii) Franklin Templeton’s commitment to maintaining competitive compensation arrangements to allow Putnam Management to continue to attract and retain highly qualified personnel and Putnam Management’s and Franklin Templeton’s efforts to retain personnel, including efforts implemented since the Transaction was announced;

(xiii) That the current senior management teams at Putnam Management and Power Corporation of Canada had indicated their strong support of the Transaction and that Putnam Management had recommended that the Board of Trustees approve the New Management Contracts; and

(xiv) Putnam Management’s and Great-West Lifeco Inc.’s commitment to bear all expenses incurred by the funds in connection with the Transaction, including all costs associated with the proxy solicitation in connection with seeking shareholder approval of the New Management Contracts.

Finally, in considering the proposed New Management Contracts, the Board of Trustees also took into account their concurrent deliberations and conclusions, as described below, in connection with their annual review of the funds’ Current Management Contracts and the approval of their continuance, effective July 1, 2023, and the extensive materials that they had reviewed in connection with that review process.

Based upon the foregoing considerations, on June 23, 2023, the Board of Trustees, including all of the Independent Trustees, unanimously approved the proposed New Management Contracts and determined to recommend their approval to the shareholders of the funds.

General conclusions — Current Management Contracts

The Board of Trustees oversees the management of each fund and, as required by law, determines annually whether to approve the continuance of your fund’s management contract with Putnam

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Management and the sub-management contract with respect to your fund between Putnam Management and PIL. (Because PIL is an affiliate of Putnam Management and Putnam Management remains fully responsible for all services provided by PIL, the Trustees did not attempt to evaluate PIL as a separate entity.) The Board of Trustees, with the assistance of its Contract Committee, requests and evaluates all information it deems reasonably necessary under the circumstances in connection with its annual contract review. The Contract Committee consists solely of Independent Trustees.

At the outset of the review process, members of the Board of Trustees’ independent staff and independent legal counsel considered any possible changes to the annual contract review materials furnished to the Contract Committee during the course of the previous year’s review and, as applicable, identified those changes to Putnam Management. Following these discussions and in consultation with the Contract Committee, the Independent Trustees’ independent legal counsel requested that Putnam Management and its affiliates furnish specified information, together with any additional information that Putnam Management considered relevant, to the Contract Committee. Over the course of several months ending in June 2023, the Contract Committee met on a number of occasions with representatives of Putnam Management, and separately in executive session, to consider the information that Putnam Management provided. Throughout this process, the Contract Committee was assisted by the members of the Board of Trustees’ independent staff and by independent legal counsel for the funds and the Independent Trustees.

At the Board of Trustees’ June 2023 meeting, the Contract Committee met in executive session to discuss and consider its recommendations with respect to the continuance of the contracts. At that meeting, the Contract Committee also met in executive session with the other Independent Trustees to review a summary of the key financial, performance and other data that the Contract Committee considered in the course of its review. The Contract Committee recommended, and the Independent Trustees approved, the continuance of your fund’s Current Management Contracts, effective July 1, 2023, and the approval of your fund’s New Management Contracts and Interim Management Contracts, as discussed above.

The Independent Trustees’ approvals were based on the following conclusions:

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

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

These conclusions were based on a comprehensive consideration of all information provided to the Trustees and were not the result of any single factor. Some of the factors that figured particularly in the Trustees’ deliberations and how the Trustees considered these factors are described below, although individual Trustees may have evaluated the information presented differently, giving different weights to various factors. It is also important to recognize that the management arrangements for your fund and the other Putnam mutual funds and closed-end funds are the result of many years of review and discussion between the Independent Trustees and Putnam Management, that some aspects of the arrangements may receive greater scrutiny in some years than others and that the Trustees’ conclusions may be based, in part, on their consideration of fee arrangements in previous years. The Trustees also took into account their concurrent deliberations and conclusions, and the materials that they had reviewed, in connection with their approval on June 23, 2023 of the Interim Management Contracts and the New Management Contracts, which had been proposed in light of the Transaction (which would cause the fund’s Current Management Contracts to terminate in accordance with applicable law or the terms of each contract).

Management fee schedules and total expenses

The Trustees reviewed the management fee schedules in effect for all funds, including fee levels and any breakpoints. Under its management contract, your fund has the benefit of breakpoints in its management fee schedule that provide shareholders with reduced fee rates as

26 Premier Income Trust 

 


 

the fund’s assets under management increase. The Trustees noted, however, that since closed-end funds typically do not change materially in size through the sale or redemption of shares, these are not likely to have a meaningful impact. The Trustees also reviewed the total expenses of each Putnam fund, recognizing that in most cases management fees represented the major, but not the sole, determinant of total costs to fund shareholders.

In reviewing fees and expenses, the Trustees generally focus their attention on material changes in circumstances — for example, changes in assets under management, changes in a fund’s investment strategy, changes in Putnam Management’s operating costs or profitability, or changes in competitive practices in the fund industry — that suggest that consideration of fee changes might be warranted. The Trustees concluded that the circumstances did not indicate that changes to the management fee schedule for your fund would be appropriate at this time.

The Trustees reviewed comparative fee and expense information for a custom group of competitive funds selected by Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (“Broadridge”). This comparative information included your fund’s percentile ranking for effective management fees and total expenses, which provides a general indication of your fund’s relative standing. In the custom peer group, your fund ranked in the third quintile in effective management fees (determined for your fund and the other funds in the custom peer group based on fund asset size and the applicable contractual management fee schedule) and in the third quintile in total expenses as of December 31, 2022. The first quintile represents the least expensive funds and the fifth quintile the most expensive funds. The fee and expense data reported by Broadridge as of December 31, 2022 reflected the most recent fiscal year-end data available in Broadridge’s database at that time.

In connection with their review of fund management fees and total expenses, the Trustees also reviewed the costs of the services provided and the profits realized by Putnam Management and its affiliates from their contractual relationships with the funds. This information included trends in revenues, expenses and profitability of Putnam Management and its affiliates relating to the investment management and investor services provided to the funds, as applicable. In this regard, the Trustees also reviewed an analysis of the revenues, expenses and profitability of Putnam Management and its affiliates, allocated on a fund-by-fund basis, with respect to (as applicable) the funds’ management and investor servicing contracts. For each fund, the analysis presented information about revenues, expenses and profitability in 2022 for each of the applicable agreements separately and for the agreements taken together on a combined basis. The Trustees concluded that, at current asset levels, the fee schedules in place for each of the funds, including the fee schedule for your fund, represented reasonable compensation for the services being provided and represented an appropriate sharing between fund shareholders and Putnam Management of any economies of scale as may exist in the management of the funds at that time.

The information examined by the Trustees in connection with their annual contract review for the funds included information regarding services provided and fees charged by Putnam Management and its affiliates to other clients, including collective investment trusts offered in the defined contribution and defined benefit retirement plan markets, sub-advised mutual funds, private funds sponsored by affiliates of Putnam Management, model-only separately managed accounts and Putnam Management’s manager-traded separately managed account programs. This information included, in cases where a product’s investment strategy corresponds with a fund’s strategy, comparisons of those fees with fees charged to the funds, as well as an assessment of the differences in the services provided to these clients as compared to the services provided to the funds. The Trustees observed that the differences in fee rates between these clients and the funds are by no means uniform when examined by individual asset sectors, suggesting that differences in the pricing of investment management services to these types of clients may reflect, among other things, historical competitive forces operating in separate marketplaces. The Trustees considered the fact that in many cases fee rates across different asset classes are higher on average for 1940 Act-registered funds than for other clients, and the Trustees also considered the differences between the services that Putnam Management provides to the funds and those that it provides to its other clients. The Trustees did not rely on these comparisons to any significant extent in concluding that the management fees paid by your fund are reasonable.

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Investment performance

The quality of the investment process provided by Putnam Management represented a major factor in the Trustees’ evaluation of the quality of services provided by Putnam Management under your fund’s management contract. The Trustees were assisted in their review of Putnam Management’s investment process and performance by the work of the investment oversight committees of the Trustees and the full Board of Trustees, which meet on a regular basis with individual portfolio managers and with senior management of Putnam Management’s Investment Division throughout the year. The Trustees concluded that Putnam Management generally provides a high-quality investment process — based on the experience and skills of the individuals assigned to the management of fund portfolios, the resources made available to them and in general Putnam Management’s ability to attract and retain high-quality personnel — but also recognized that this does not guarantee favorable investment results for every fund in every time period.

The Trustees considered that, in the aggregate, peer-relative and benchmark-relative Putnam fund performance was generally encouraging in 2022 against a backdrop of volatile equity and fixed income markets, driven by factors such as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, increased tensions with China, disruptions in energy markets and broader supply chains, rising inflation and the significant tightening of monetary policy by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve in an effort to combat inflation. The Trustees further noted that, in the face of these numerous economic headwinds, corporate earnings and employment data had been generally robust throughout 2022. For the one-year period ended December 31, 2022, the Trustees noted that the Putnam funds, on an asset-weighted basis, ranked in the 41st percentile of their peers as determined by Lipper Inc. (“Lipper”) and, on an asset-weighted-basis, outperformed their benchmarks by 1.3% gross of fees over the one-year period. The Committee also noted that the funds’ aggregate performance over longer-term periods continued to be strong, with the funds, on an asset-weighted basis, ranking in the 34th, 27th and 22nd percentiles of their Lipper peers over the three-year, five-year and ten-year periods ended December 31, 2022, respectively. The Trustees further noted that the funds, in the aggregate, outperformed their benchmarks on a gross basis for each of the three-year, five-year and ten-year periods. The Trustees also considered the Morningstar Inc. ratings assigned to the funds and that 40 funds were rated four or five stars at the end of 2022, which represented an increase of 15 funds year-over-year. The Trustees also considered that seven funds were five-star rated at the end of 2022, which was a year-over-year decrease of two funds, and that 83% of the funds’ aggregate assets were in four- or five-star rated funds at year end.

In addition to the performance of the individual Putnam funds, the Trustees considered, as they had in prior years, the performance of The Putnam Fund complex versus competitor fund complexes, as reported in the Barron’s/Lipper Fund Families survey (the “Survey”). The Trustees noted that the Survey ranks mutual fund companies based on their performance across a variety of asset types, and that The Putnam Fund complex had performed exceptionally well in 2022. In this regard, the Trustees considered that the funds had ranked 9th out of 49 fund companies, 3rd out of 49 fund companies and 2nd out of 47 fund companies for the one-year, five-year and ten-year periods, respectively. The Trustees also noted that The Putnam Fund complex had been the only fund family to rank in the top ten in all three time periods. They also noted, however, the disappointing investment performance of some Putnam funds for periods ended December 31, 2022 and considered information provided by Putnam Management regarding the factors contributing to the underperformance and, where relevant, actions being taken to improve the performance of these particular funds. The Trustees indicated their intention to continue to monitor the performance of those funds.

For purposes of the Trustees’ evaluation of the Putnam funds’ investment performance, the Trustees generally focus on a competitive industry ranking of each fund’s total net return over a one-year, three-year and five-year period. For a number of Putnam funds with relatively unique investment mandates for which Putnam Management informed the Trustees that meaningful competitive performance rankings are not considered to be available, the Trustees evaluated performance based on their total gross and net returns and comparisons of those returns to the returns of selected investment benchmarks. In the case of your fund, the Trustees considered that its common share cumulative total return performance at net asset value was in

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the following quartiles of its Lipper peer group (Lipper General Bond Funds (closed-end)) for the one-year, three-year and five-year periods ended December 31, 2022 (the first quartile representing the best-performing funds and the fourth quartile the worst-performing funds):

One-year period  1st 
Three-year period  4th 
Five-year period  4th 

 

Over the one-year, three-year and five-year periods ended December 31, 2022, there were 62, 46 and 37 funds, respectively, in your fund’s Lipper peer group. (When considering performance information, shareholders should be mindful that past performance is not a guarantee of future results.)

The Trustees expressed concern about your fund’s fourth quartile performance over the three-year and five-year periods ended December 31, 2022 and considered the circumstances that may have contributed to this disappointing performance. The Trustees considered Putnam Management’s observation that the fund’s underperformance over those periods was driven by disappointing performance in 2021 and, to a lesser extent, in 2020. The Trustees observed that significant underperformance in the securitized products sector in 2021 had contributed to the fund’s disappointing results, noting that prepayment strategies had suffered as a result of significantly elevated refinancing (given strong home price appreciation and low interest rates) relative to expectations. The Trustees considered that the fund’s underperformance was also driven by significant underperformance in the securitized products sector in 2020, which resulted from the outsized impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the commercial mortgage sector. In addition, the Trustees considered the negative impact that the fund’s term structure strategies had on performance in 2021.

The Trustees considered the fund’s strong, top quintile returns relative to its peers in 2022, noting Putnam Management’s observation that the solid performance of the commercial mortgage-backed securities sector contributed to the fund’s returns. In addition, the Trustees considered the retirement of two of the fund’s portfolio managers and the addition of a portfolio manager since 2022. The Trustees noted that Putnam Management remained confident in the fund’s portfolio managers. The Trustees also considered Putnam Management’s continued efforts to support fund performance through certain initiatives, including structuring compensation for portfolio managers to enhance accountability for fund performance, emphasizing accountability in the portfolio management process and affirming its commitment to a fundamental-driven approach to investing.

As a general matter, the Trustees believe that cooperative efforts between the Trustees and Putnam Management represent the most effective way to address investment performance concerns that may arise from time to time. The Trustees noted that investors in the Putnam funds have, in effect, placed their trust in the Putnam organization, under the oversight of the funds’ Trustees, to make appropriate decisions regarding the management of the funds. The Trustees also considered that Putnam Management has made changes in light of subpar investment performance when warranted. Based on Putnam Management’s willingness to take appropriate measures to address fund performance issues, the Trustees concluded that it continued to be advisable to seek change within Putnam Management to address performance shortcomings. In the Trustees’ view, the alternative of engaging a new investment adviser for an underperforming fund, with all the attendant risks and disruptions, would not likely provide any greater assurance of improved investment performance.

Brokerage and soft-dollar allocations; investor servicing

The Trustees considered various potential benefits that Putnam Management may receive in connection with the services it provides under the management contract with your fund. These include benefits related to brokerage allocation and the use of soft dollars, whereby a portion of the commissions paid by a fund for brokerage may be used to acquire research services that are expected to be useful to Putnam Management in managing the assets of the fund and of other clients. Subject to policies established by the Trustees, soft dollars generated by these means are used predominantly to acquire brokerage and research services (including third-party research and market data) that enhance Putnam Management’s investment capabilities and supplement Putnam Management’s internal research efforts. The Trustees indicated their continued intent to monitor regulatory and industry developments in this area with the assistance of their Brokerage Committee. In addition, with the assistance of their Brokerage Committee, the Trustees

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indicated their continued intent to monitor the allocation of the funds’ brokerage in order to ensure that the principle of seeking best price and execution remains paramount in the portfolio trading process.

Putnam Management may also receive benefits from payments made to Putnam Management’s affiliate by the closed-end funds for investor services. In conjunction with the review of your fund’s management and sub-management contracts, the Trustees reviewed your fund’s investor servicing agreement with Putnam Investor Services, Inc. (“PSERV”), which is an affiliate of Putnam Management. The Trustees concluded that the fees payable by the closed-end funds to PSERV for such services were fair and reasonable in relation to the nature and quality of such services, the fees paid by competitive funds and the costs incurred by PSERV in providing such services. Furthermore, the Trustees were of the view that the investor services provided by PSERV were required for the operation of the closed-end funds, and that they were of a quality at least equal to those provided by other providers.

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Audited financial statements

These sections of the report, as well as the accompanying Notes, preceded by the Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, constitute the fund’s audited financial statements.

The fund’s portfolio lists all the fund’s investments and their values as of the last day of the reporting period. Holdings are organized by asset type and industry sector, country, or state to show areas of concentration and diversification.

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

Statement of operations shows the fund’s net investment gain or loss. This is done by first adding up all the fund’s earnings — from dividends and interest income — and subtracting its operating expenses to determine net investment income (or loss). Then, any net gain or loss the fund realized on the sales of its holdings — as well as any unrealized gains or losses over the period — is added to or subtracted from the net investment result to determine the fund’s net gain or loss for the fiscal period.

Statement of changes in net assets shows how the fund’s net assets were affected by the fund’s net investment gain or loss, by distributions to shareholders, and by changes in the number of the fund’s shares. It lists distributions and their sources (net investment income or realized capital gains) over the current reporting period and the most recent fiscal year-end. The distributions listed here may not match the sources listed in the Statement of operations because the distributions are determined on a tax basis and may be paid in a different period from the one in which they were earned.

Financial highlights provide an overview of the fund’s investment results, per-share distributions, expense ratios, net investment income ratios, and portfolio turnover (not required for money market funds) in one summary table, reflecting the five most recent reporting periods. In a semiannual report, the highlights table also includes the current reporting period.

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Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Board of Trustees and Shareholders of
Putnam Premier Income Trust:

Opinion on the Financial Statements

We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the fund’s portfolio, of Putnam Premier Income Trust (the “Fund”) as of July 31, 2023, the related statement of operations for the year ended July 31 2023, the statement of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period ended July 31, 2023, including the related notes, and the financial highlights for each of the four years in the period ended July 31, 2023 (collectively referred to as the “financial statements”). In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Fund as of July 31, 2023, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period ended July 31, 2023 and the financial highlights for each of the four years in the period ended July 31, 2023 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

The financial statements of the Fund as of and for the year ended July 31, 2019 and the financial highlights for each of the periods ended on or prior to July 31, 2019 (not presented herein, other than the financial highlights) were audited by other auditors whose report dated September 19, 2019 expressed an unqualified opinion on those financial statements and financial highlights.

Basis for Opinion

These financial statements are the responsibility of the Fund’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Fund’s financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (“PCAOB”) and are required to be independent with respect to the Fund in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud.

Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of July 31, 2023 by correspondence with the custodian, transfer agent, agent banks and brokers; when replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
September 11, 2023

We have served as the auditor of one or more investment companies in the Putnam Investments family of funds since at least 1957. We have not been able to determine the specific year we began serving as auditor.

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The fund’s portfolio 7/31/23

U.S. GOVERNMENT AND AGENCY
MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (67.0%)*
Principal
amount
Value
U.S. Government Guaranteed Mortgage Obligations (8.5%)
Government National Mortgage Association Pass-Through Certificates    
5.50%, TBA, 8/1/53 $11,000,000 $10,934,982
5.50%, 5/20/49 74,743 75,654
5.00%, with due dates from 5/20/49 to 3/20/50 252,438 249,564
4.50%, TBA, 8/1/53 12,000,000 11,545,153
4.50%, with due dates from 10/20/49 to 1/20/50 122,915 118,919
4.00%, TBA, 8/1/53 8,000,000 7,536,658
4.00%, with due dates from 8/20/49 to 1/20/50 98,319 93,453
3.50%, with due dates from 8/20/49 to 3/20/50 950,029 878,486
31,432,869
U.S. Government Agency Mortgage Obligations (58.5%)
Federal National Mortgage Association Pass-Through Certificates    
5.00%, with due dates from 1/1/49 to 8/1/49 124,810 122,450
4.50%, 5/1/49 18,702 18,144
Uniform Mortgage-Backed Securities    
6.00%, TBA, 8/1/53 19,000,000 19,121,718
5.50%, TBA, 8/1/53 140,000,000 139,070,316
5.00%, TBA, 8/1/53 44,000,000 42,999,686
3.50%, TBA, 8/1/53 8,000,000 7,251,875
3.00%, TBA, 8/1/53 4,000,000 3,502,500
2.50%, TBA, 8/1/53 5,000,000 4,215,625
216,302,314
Total U.S. government and agency mortgage obligations (cost $248,656,063) $247,735,183

U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS (0.1%)* Principal
amount
Value
U.S. Treasury Bonds 3.125%, 5/15/48 i $116,000 $98,170
U.S. Treasury Notes 0.625%, 8/15/30 i 261,000 207,680
Total U.S. treasury obligations (cost $305,850) $305,850

MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* Principal
amount
Value
Agency collateralized mortgage obligations (13.1%)
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation      
REMICs Ser. 4077, Class IK, IO, 5.00%, 7/15/42   $947,630 $189,336
REMICs Ser. 5091, Class IL, IO, 4.50%, 3/25/51   5,583,957 1,073,437
REMICs Ser. 5093, Class YI, IO, 4.50%, 12/25/50   4,201,033 914,287
REMICs Ser. 5024, Class HI, IO, 4.50%, 10/25/50   7,413,374 1,592,815
REMICs Ser. 4984, Class IL, IO, 4.50%, 6/25/50   5,175,020 1,124,054
REMICs Ser. 4000, Class PI, IO, 4.50%, 1/15/42   387,665 56,866
REMICs Ser. 4024, Class PI, IO, 4.50%, 12/15/41   521,000 68,100
REMICs Ser. 5134, Class IC, IO, 4.00%, 8/25/51   8,442,761 1,544,249
REMICs Ser. 4546, Class TI, IO, 4.00%, 12/15/45   1,257,395 230,226
REMICs Ser. 4425, IO, 4.00%, 1/15/45   1,297,613 203,362
REMICs Ser. 4452, Class QI, IO, 4.00%, 11/15/44   1,795,296 352,131
REMICs Ser. 4193, Class PI, IO, 4.00%, 3/15/43   1,164,631 170,789
REMICs Ser. 4105, Class HI, IO, 3.50%, 7/15/41   525,614 37,965
Strips Ser. 304, Class C37, IO, 3.50%, 12/15/27   297,740 9,984


Premier Income Trust 33



MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Agency collateralized mortgage obligations cont.
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation      
REMICs Ser. 4165, Class TI, IO, 3.00%, 12/15/42   $2,608,816 $198,933
REMICs Ser. 4210, Class PI, IO, 3.00%, 12/15/41   102,592 705
REMICs IFB Ser. 5011, Class SA, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.25%), 1.067%, 9/25/50   8,334,062 1,008,838
REMICs IFB Ser. 4742, Class S, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.20%), 1.018%, 12/15/47   1,413,761 157,352
REMICs IFB Ser. 4839, Class WS, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.10%), 0.918%, 8/15/56   4,923,168 579,998
REMICs IFB Ser. 4678, Class MS, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.10%), 0.918%, 4/15/47   1,019,284 113,194
REMICs IFB Ser. 5002, Class SJ, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 5.99%), 0.917%, 7/25/50   7,874,211 865,273
REMICs IFB Ser. 4945, Class SL, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.05%), 0.867%, 1/25/50   5,083,335 452,660
Structured Pass-Through Certificates FRB Ser. 57, Class 1AX, IO, 0.382%, 7/25/43 W   1,414,335 18,907
Federal National Mortgage Association      
REMICs Ser. 16-3, Class NI, IO, 6.00%, 2/25/46   1,860,830 313,530
Interest Strip Ser. 374, Class 6, IO, 5.50%, 8/25/36   80,171 13,086
REMICs Ser. 15-30, IO, 5.50%, 5/25/45   2,800,804 431,940
Interest Strip Ser. 378, Class 19, IO, 5.00%, 6/25/35   246,088 34,584
REMICs Ser. 20-76, Class BI, IO, 4.50%, 11/25/50   7,659,097 1,369,589
REMICs Ser. 12-127, Class BI, IO, 4.50%, 11/25/42   311,373 59,625
REMICs Ser. 15-88, Class QI, IO, 4.00%, 10/25/44   445,781 29,024
REMICs Ser. 13-58, Class DI, IO, 4.00%, 6/25/43   2,859,602 496,798
REMICs Ser. 13-41, Class IP, IO, 4.00%, 5/25/43   881,389 125,801
REMICs Ser. 13-44, Class PI, IO, 4.00%, 1/25/43   651,716 89,833
REMICs Ser. 13-60, Class IP, IO, 4.00%, 10/25/42   469,843 54,502
REMICs Ser. 12-145, Class TI, IO, 3.00%, 11/25/42   355,075 11,381
REMICs Ser. 21-56, Class WI, IO, 2.50%, 9/25/51   15,501,835 2,032,785
REMICs IFB Ser. 10-35, Class SG, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.40%), 1.217%, 4/25/40   641,296 62,925
REMICs IFB Ser. 18-20, Class SB, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.25%), 1.067%, 3/25/48   3,153,696 248,511
REMICs IFB Ser. 18-38, Class SA, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.20%), 1.017%, 6/25/48   5,551,380 572,062
REMICs IFB Ser. 17-32, Class SA, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.15%), 0.967%, 5/25/47   6,865,690 625,396
REMICs IFB Ser. 13-18, Class SB, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.15%), 0.967%, 10/25/41   72,453 172
REMICs IFB Ser. 16-96, Class ST, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.10%), 0.917%, 12/25/46   2,855,086 185,428
REMICs IFB Ser. 16-78, Class CS, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.10%), 0.917%, 5/25/39   9,243,958 562,301
REMICs IFB Ser. 20-12, Class SK, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.05%), 0.867%, 3/25/50   4,579,111 470,092
REMICs IFB Ser. 19-43, Class JS, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 5.94%), 0.867%, 8/25/49   3,047,408 236,044
REMICs FRB Ser. 19-61, Class S, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 6.00%), 0.817%, 11/25/49   5,867,716 587,358


34 Premier Income Trust



MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Agency collateralized mortgage obligations cont.
Federal National Mortgage Association      
Grantor Trust Ser. 00-T6, IO, 0.717%, 11/25/40 W   $850,592 $3,929
REMICs IFB Ser. 11-101, Class SA, IO, ((-1 x US 30 Day Average SOFR) + 5.90%), 0.717%, 10/25/41   1,370,171 101,776
Government National Mortgage Association      
Ser. 16-42, IO, 5.00%, 2/20/46   1,928,003 361,451
Ser. 18-127, Class IC, IO, 5.00%, 10/20/44   3,290,045 742,958
Ser. 14-76, IO, 5.00%, 5/20/44   767,340 151,904
Ser. 12-146, IO, 5.00%, 12/20/42   551,816 102,732
Ser. 10-35, Class UI, IO, 5.00%, 3/20/40   777,573 158,811
Ser. 10-20, Class UI, IO, 5.00%, 2/20/40   564,959 113,204
Ser. 10-9, Class UI, IO, 5.00%, 1/20/40   2,513,347 514,457
Ser. 09-121, Class UI, IO, 5.00%, 12/20/39   1,290,478 254,715
Ser. 17-26, Class MI, IO, 5.00%, 11/20/39   2,610,965 512,059
Ser. 15-79, Class GI, IO, 5.00%, 10/20/39   465,016 90,569
Ser. 18-94, Class AI, IO, 4.50%, 7/20/48   1,407,440 270,766
Ser. 13-34, Class IH, IO, 4.50%, 3/20/43   1,063,559 206,512
Ser. 17-42, Class IC, IO, 4.50%, 8/20/41   946,120 183,538
Ser. 10-35, Class AI, IO, 4.50%, 3/20/40   1,038,117 170,206
Ser. 10-35, Class DI, IO, 4.50%, 3/20/40   1,674,367 291,373
Ser. 10-35, Class QI, IO, 4.50%, 3/20/40   900,567 155,966
Ser. 15-186, Class AI, IO, 4.00%, 12/20/45   2,119,475 348,060
Ser. 15-53, Class MI, IO, 4.00%, 4/16/45   1,861,232 342,467
Ser. 15-64, Class YI, IO, 4.00%, 11/20/44   1,220,563 152,668
Ser. 14-149, Class IP, IO, 4.00%, 7/16/44   4,100,250 605,879
Ser. 17-93, Class TI, IO, 4.00%, 3/20/44   897,230 33,577
Ser. 14-4, Class IC, IO, 4.00%, 1/20/44   490,460 80,835
Ser. 14-100, Class NI, IO, 4.00%, 6/20/43   1,068,902 64,764
Ser. 13-165, Class IL, IO, 4.00%, 3/20/43   473,559 72,805
Ser. 12-56, Class IB, IO, 4.00%, 4/20/42   451,098 76,462
Ser. 16-H16, Class EI, IO, 3.637%, 6/20/66 W   4,213,521 137,782
Ser. 21-156, IO, 3.50%, 7/20/51   9,276,199 1,562,900
Ser. 20-167, Class PI, IO, 3.50%, 11/20/50   5,415,257 987,193
Ser. 16-75, Class EI, IO, 3.50%, 8/20/45   944,446 151,416
Ser. 13-28, IO, 3.50%, 2/20/43   320,310 44,071
Ser. 13-54, Class JI, IO, 3.50%, 2/20/43   503,288 57,249
Ser. 13-14, IO, 3.50%, 12/20/42   1,891,986 203,161
Ser. 12-140, Class IC, IO, 3.50%, 11/20/42   2,068,502 341,876
Ser. 12-128, Class IA, IO, 3.50%, 10/20/42   2,004,618 312,416
Ser. 12-113, Class ID, IO, 3.50%, 9/20/42   882,184 140,917
Ser. 15-52, Class KI, IO, 3.50%, 11/20/40   902,101 55,310
Ser. 21-59, Class IP, IO, 3.00%, 4/20/51   7,874,495 1,176,292
Ser. 20-175, Class NI, IO, 3.00%, 11/20/50   6,297,741 950,630
Ser. 17-H19, Class MI, IO, 2.07%, 4/20/67 W   2,534,349 141,924
Ser. 16-H03, Class DI, IO, 2.051%, 12/20/65 W   5,244,494 229,337
Ser. 15-H25, Class EI, IO, 1.868%, 10/20/65 W   4,019,737 166,819
Ser. 15-H20, Class AI, IO, 1.806%, 8/20/65 W   5,102,152 189,800
FRB Ser. 15-H08, Class CI, IO, 1.782%, 3/20/65 W   3,842,626 127,191
Ser. 15-H23, Class BI, IO, 1.724%, 9/20/65 W   5,450,309 175,500


Premier Income Trust 35



MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Agency collateralized mortgage obligations cont.
Government National Mortgage Association      
Ser. 16-H24, Class CI, IO, 1.661%, 10/20/66 W   $3,987,687 $137,176
Ser. 16-H14, IO, 1.647%, 6/20/66 W   3,936,187 111,831
Ser. 13-H08, Class CI, IO, 1.578%, 2/20/63 W   3,098,886 101,024
Ser. 17-H16, Class JI, IO, 1.561%, 8/20/67 W   12,748,530 592,102
Ser. 14-H21, Class BI, IO, 1.511%, 10/20/64 W   5,767,643 181,104
Ser. 18-H15, Class KI, IO, 1.216%, 8/20/68 W   4,872,579 201,561
Ser. 16-H18, Class QI, IO, 1.161%, 6/20/66 W   3,739,164 167,339
IFB Ser. 21-98, Class SK, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.19%), 0.931%, 6/20/51   10,983,693 1,236,984
IFB Ser. 21-77, Class SM, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.19%), 0.931%, 5/20/51   6,888,024 792,395
IFB Ser. 21-59, Class SQ, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.19%), 0.931%, 4/20/51   4,824,858 486,077
IFB Ser. 20-133, Class CS, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.30%), 0.931%, 9/20/50   6,215,540 754,734
FRB Ser. 21-116, Class ES, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.09%), 0.864%, 11/20/47   7,305,622 881,021
IFB Ser. 14-60, Class SD, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.18%), 0.811%, 4/20/44   3,716,377 353,674
IFB Ser. 20-97, Class QS, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.15%), 0.781%, 7/20/50   3,743,213 435,467
IFB Ser. 19-5, Class SB, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.15%), 0.781%, 1/20/49   3,303,459 297,876
IFB Ser. 20-63, Class SP, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 5.99%), 0.731%, 5/20/50   4,558,539 459,436
IFB Ser. 20-63, Class PS, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 5.99%), 0.731%, 4/20/50   5,829,216 634,344
IFB Ser. 19-96, Class SY, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.10%), 0.731%, 8/20/49   4,578,063 432,078
IFB Ser. 19-83, Class SY, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.10%), 0.731%, 7/20/49   4,037,556 356,112
IFB Ser. 19-89, Class PS, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 5.99%), 0.731%, 7/20/49   5,282,189 451,874
Ser. 17-H16, Class IG, IO, 0.719%, 7/20/67 W   11,472,542 274,312
IFB Ser. 20-7, Class SK, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.05%), 0.681%, 1/20/50   3,444,715 336,624
IFB Ser. 19-152, Class ES, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.05%), 0.681%, 12/20/49   2,833,775 258,328
IFB Ser. 19-110, Class SQ, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 6.05%), 0.681%, 9/20/49   4,525,219 433,177
Ser. 15-H15, Class BI, IO, 0.656%, 6/20/65 W   3,159,513 93,838
IFB Ser. 20-63, Class AS, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 5.89%), 0.631%, 8/20/43   5,069,457 428,724
IFB Ser. 10-90, Class ES, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 5.95%), 0.581%, 7/20/40   4,082,906 302,233
Ser. 17-H11, Class DI, IO, 0.488%, 5/20/67 W   4,854,590 247,868
Ser. 16-H17, Class KI, IO, 0.251%, 7/20/66 W   2,396,456 99,789
IFB Ser. 14-119, Class SA, IO, ((-1 x CME Term SOFR 1 Month) + 5.60%), 0.231%, 8/20/44   1,612,585 125,689
Ser. 17-H12, Class QI, IO, 0.18%, 5/20/67 W   4,383,519 144,511


36 Premier Income Trust



MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Agency collateralized mortgage obligations cont.
Government National Mortgage Association      
Ser. 16-H09, Class BI, IO, 0.105%, 4/20/66 W   $6,731,170 $296,171
Ser. 15-H20, Class CI, IO, 0.091%, 8/20/65 W   5,711,750 278,733
Ser. 18-H02, Class EI, IO, 0.05%, 1/20/68 W   8,351,660 434,547
Ser. 15-H10, Class BI, IO, 0.047%, 4/20/65 W   3,633,979 147,903
Ser. 18-H05, Class AI, IO, 0.036%, 2/20/68 W   3,619,191 177,001
Ser. 18-H05, Class BI, IO, 0.036%, 2/20/68 W   5,703,584 266,464
Ser. 16-H03, Class AI, IO, 0.034%, 1/20/66 W   4,274,153 141,717
Ser. 17-H02, Class BI, IO, 0.031%, 1/20/67 W   3,652,050 106,874
Ser. 16-H22, Class AI, IO, 0.029%, 10/20/66 W   5,716,882 184,215
Ser. 16-H23, Class NI, IO, 0.027%, 10/20/66 W   15,001,990 574,576
Ser. 18-H03, Class XI, IO, 0.019%, 2/20/68 W   5,869,528 251,216
Ser. 17-H08, Class NI, IO, 0.019%, 3/20/67 W   7,145,026 223,639
Ser. 17-H06, Class BI, IO, 0.015%, 2/20/67 W   5,569,458 187,574
Ser. 15-H24, Class AI, IO, 0.015%, 9/20/65 W   4,651,654 118,515
Ser. 17-H09, IO, 0.014%, 4/20/67 W   7,172,523 185,862
Ser. 16-H06, Class DI, IO, 0.01%, 7/20/65 W   6,958,996 132,430
Ser. 16-H06, Class CI, IO, 0.002%, 2/20/66 W   6,287,445 93,048
Ser. 16-H10, Class AI, IO, zero %, 4/20/66 W   10,233,027 162,654
48,664,896
Commercial mortgage-backed securities (14.4%)
Barclays Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A Ser. 19-C4, Class E, 3.25%, 8/15/52   802,000 469,199
Benchmark Mortgage Trust FRB Ser. 18-B1, Class C, 4.189%, 1/15/51 W   735,000 572,446
Benchmark Mortgage Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 18-B3, Class D, 3.025%, 4/10/51 W   1,213,000 758,021
Ser. 19-B13, Class D, 2.50%, 8/15/57   781,000 444,483
BWAY Mortgage Trust 144A FRB Ser. 22-26BW, Class F, 4.866%, 2/10/44 W   1,247,000 762,966
CD Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A      
Ser. 17-CD3, Class D, 3.25%, 2/10/50   1,309,000 614,762
Ser. 19-CD8, Class D, 3.00%, 8/15/57   814,000 510,459
CFCRE Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 11-C2, Class F, 5.25%, 12/15/47 W   2,121,000 1,357,440
FRB Ser. 11-C2, Class E, 5.08%, 12/15/47 W   1,068,000 875,760
Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A      
Ser. 15-P1, Class D, 3.225%, 9/15/48   1,273,000 1,003,483
Ser. 15-GC27, Class E, 3.00%, 2/10/48   886,000 670,971
COMM Mortgage Trust      
FRB Ser. 14-CR16, Class C, 4.916%, 4/10/47 W   912,000 782,379
Ser. 13-CR12, Class AM, 4.30%, 10/10/46   1,123,000 950,699
Ser. 15-DC1, Class B, 4.035%, 2/10/48 W   906,000 781,045
FRB Ser. 15-CR26, Class D, 3.466%, 10/10/48 W   658,000 425,399
COMM Mortgage Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 13-CR13, Class D, 4.872%, 11/10/46 W   581,000 490,678
FRB Ser. 14-CR17, Class D, 4.844%, 5/10/47 W   617,000 544,003
FRB Ser. 14-CR17, Class E, 4.844%, 5/10/47 W   919,000 615,261
FRB Ser. 14-UBS3, Class D, 4.764%, 6/10/47 W   481,000 320,519


Premier Income Trust 37



MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Commercial mortgage-backed securities cont.
COMM Mortgage Trust 144A      
Ser. 12-CR3, Class F, 4.75%, 10/15/45 W   $1,755,510 $393,906
FRB Ser. 14-CR19, Class D, 4.697%, 8/10/47 W   507,000 443,914
FRB Ser. 15-LC19, Class E, 4.214%, 2/10/48 W   781,000 601,056
FRB Ser. 18-COR3, Class D, 2.809%, 5/10/51 W   672,000 341,837
Credit Suisse Mortgage Trust 144A FRB Ser. 22-NWPT, Class A, 8.365%, 9/9/24   511,000 510,472
CSAIL Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A FRB Ser. 15-C1, Class D, 3.751%, 4/15/50 W   1,390,000 837,310
DBUBS Mortgage Trust 144A FRB Ser. 11-LC3A, Class D, 5.359%, 8/10/44 W   467,786 410,442
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation 144A Multifamily Structured Credit Risk FRB Ser. 21-MN3, Class M2, 9.069%, 11/25/51   1,746,000 1,638,772
GS Mortgage Securities Corp., II 144A FRB Ser. 13-GC10, Class D, 4.537%, 2/10/46 W   1,423,000 1,211,131
GS Mortgage Securities Trust Ser. 14-GC18, Class B, 4.885%, 1/10/47 W   700,000 577,490
GS Mortgage Securities Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 11-GC5, Class B, 5.152%, 8/10/44 W   533,000 415,575
FRB Ser. 14-GC24, Class D, 4.525%, 9/10/47 W   2,827,000 1,267,995
Ser. 19-GC38, Class D, 3.00%, 2/10/52   1,109,000 709,809
JPMBB Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 14-C18, Class D, 4.735%, 2/15/47 W   2,173,000 1,510,311
FRB Ser. 14-C19, Class C19, 4.628%, 4/15/47 W   914,000 858,601
FRB Ser. 13-C14, Class E, 4.355%, 8/15/46 W   1,277,000 225,100
FRB Ser. C14, Class D, 4.355%, 8/15/46 W   1,265,000 664,406
FRB Ser. 14-C18, Class E, 4.235%, 2/15/47 W   914,000 535,958
FRB Ser. 14-C23, Class D, 3.98%, 9/15/47 W   574,000 459,200
FRB Ser. 14-C25, Class D, 3.934%, 11/15/47 W   1,404,000 974,589
Ser. 14-C25, Class E, 3.332%, 11/15/47 W   1,823,000 1,127,196
JPMCC Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust 144A FRB Ser. 17-JP7, Class D, 4.381%, 9/15/50 W   577,000 390,570
JPMDB Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust      
FRB Ser. 18-C8, Class C, 4.769%, 6/15/51 W   420,000 339,486
Ser. 17-C5, Class C, 4.512%, 3/15/50 W   680,000 484,019
JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust      
FRB Ser. 13-LC11, Class D, 4.168%, 4/15/46 W   1,312,000 806,751
Ser. 13-LC11, Class B, 3.499%, 4/15/46   508,000 445,686
JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 11-C3, Class F, 5.526%, 2/15/46 W   1,113,000 281,161
FRB Ser. 12-C6, Class E, 4.964%, 5/15/45 W   659,000 529,879
FRB Ser. 13-LC11, Class E, 3.25%, 4/15/46 W   1,807,000 786,045
Mezz Cap Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A FRB Ser. 07-C5, Class X, IO, 6.571%, 12/15/49 W   26,213
Morgan Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Trust      
Ser. 12-C6, Class C, 4.536%, 11/15/45 W   668,134 615,172
FRB Ser. 15-C22, Class C, 4.201%, 4/15/48 W   1,227,000 1,063,365
Morgan Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 13-C12, Class D, 4.913%, 10/15/46 W   929,000 770,046
FRB Ser. 12-C6, Class E, 4.522%, 11/15/45 W   619,000 434,231


38 Premier Income Trust



MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Commercial mortgage-backed securities cont.
Morgan Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 13-C11, Class D, 4.326%, 8/15/46 W   $1,900,000 $110,980
FRB Ser. 15-C23, Class D, 4.139%, 7/15/50 W   1,499,000 1,244,480
FRB Ser. 13-C10, Class E, 3.989%, 7/15/46 W   2,187,000 579,876
FRB Ser. 13-C10, Class F, 3.989%, 7/15/46 W   1,988,000 100,042
Ser. 14-C17, Class E, 3.50%, 8/15/47   1,025,000 782,331
Ser. 14-C19, Class D, 3.25%, 12/15/47   1,493,000 1,203,873
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust      
Ser. 06-HQ10, Class B, 5.448%, 11/12/41 W   384,505 322,215
FRB Ser. 18-H3, Class C, 4.851%, 7/15/51 W   576,000 467,319
Multifamily Connecticut Avenue Securities Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 20-01, Class M10, 8.933%, 3/25/50   1,558,000 1,498,204
FRB Ser. 19-01, Class M10, 8.433%, 10/25/49   1,191,035 1,172,467
Ready Capital Mortgage Financing, LLC 144A FRB Ser. 22-FL9, Class A, 7.765%, 6/25/37   903,683 901,317
RIAL Issuer, Ltd. 144A FRB Ser. 22-FL8, Class B, 8.48%, 1/19/37   1,046,000 1,004,160
TIAA Real Estate CDO, Ltd. 144A Ser. 03-1A, Class E, 8.00%, 12/28/38 (In default)   1,081,996 11
UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust FRB Ser. 17-C3, Class C, 4.389%, 8/15/50 W   629,000 505,195
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A FRB Ser. 04-C15, Class G, 5.395%, 10/15/41 W   20,812 18,726
Wells Fargo Commercial Mortgage Trust      
FRB Ser. 15-SG1, Class B, 4.453%, 9/15/48 W   710,000 616,970
FRB Ser. 15-C29, Class D, 4.218%, 6/15/48 W   819,000 693,954
Wells Fargo Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 15-C30, Class D, 4.498%, 9/15/58 W   265,000 192,552
FRB Ser. 13-LC12, Class D, 4.195%, 7/15/46 W   356,000 132,082
Ser. 14-LC16, Class D, 3.938%, 8/15/50   2,218,000 164,657
Ser. 16-C33, Class D, 3.123%, 3/15/59   1,698,000 1,190,656
WF-RBS Commercial Mortgage Trust Ser. 14-C21, Class C, 4.234%, 8/15/47 W   514,000 426,241
WF-RBS Commercial Mortgage Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 13-UBS1, Class D, 5.027%, 3/15/46 W   457,000 434,394
FRB Ser. 13-UBS1, Class E, 5.027%, 3/15/46 W   616,000 589,737
Ser. 11-C4, Class F, 5.00%, 6/15/44 W   2,560,000 1,616,243
FRB Ser. 12-C9, Class E, 4.719%, 11/15/45 W   537,000 463,659
FRB Ser. 13-C15, Class D, 4.414%, 8/15/46 W   2,693,000 665,529
FRB Ser. 12-C10, Class D, 4.393%, 12/15/45 W   687,000 358,150
53,067,474
Residential mortgage-backed securities (non-agency) (11.6%)
American Home Mortgage Investment Trust FRB Ser. 07-1, Class GA1C, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.19%), 5.602%, 5/25/47   627,288 347,503
Bear Stearns Alt-A Trust FRB Ser. 05-10, Class 11A1, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.61%), 5.912%, 1/25/36   120,962 107,530
Chevy Chase Funding, LLC Mortgage-Backed Certificates 144A FRB Ser. 06-4A, Class A2, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.18%), 5.592%, 11/25/47   504,970 369,420
Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc. FRB Ser. 07-AMC3, Class A2D, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.35%), 5.762%, 3/25/37   1,600,627 1,311,973


Premier Income Trust 39



MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Residential mortgage-backed securities (non-agency) cont.
Countrywide Alternative Loan Trust      
FRB Ser. 05-38, Class A3, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.70%), 6.112%, 9/25/35   $421,123 $362,382
FRB Ser. 05-59, Class 1A1, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.66%), 6.029%, 11/20/35   1,081,948 960,051
FRB Ser. 06-OA10, Class 3A1, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.38%), 5.792%, 8/25/46   516,023 452,464
FRB Ser. 06-OA10, Class 4A1, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.38%), 5.792%, 8/25/46   2,680,086 2,208,208
FRB Ser. 07-OH1, Class A1D, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.21%), 5.622%, 4/25/47   414,597 328,738
FRB Ser. 06-OA10, Class 1A1, (Federal Reserve US 12 Month Cumulative Avg 1 yr CMT + 0.96%), 5.174%, 8/25/46   210,257 192,550
FRB Ser. 06-OA7, Class 1A2, (Federal Reserve US 12 Month Cumulative Avg 1 yr CMT + 0.94%), 5.154%, 6/25/46   347,901 296,723
FRB Ser. 06-OA7, Class 1A1, 3.319%, 6/25/46 W   892,903 792,005
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation      
Structured Agency Credit Risk Debt FRN Ser. 16-DNA3, Class B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 11.25%), 16.433%, 12/25/28   482,634 551,816
Structured Agency Credit Risk Debt FRN Ser. 15-HQA2, Class B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 10.50%), 15.683%, 5/25/28   826,886 892,835
Structured Agency Credit Risk Debt FRN Ser. 16-DNA1, Class B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 10.00%), 15.183%, 7/25/28   2,795,203 3,086,146
Structured Agency Credit Risk Debt FRN Ser. 15-DNA3, Class B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 9.35%), 14.533%, 4/25/28   1,284,221 1,381,744
Structured Agency Credit Risk Debt FRN Ser. 15-DNA1, Class B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 9.20%), 14.383%, 10/25/27   727,626 774,973
Structured Agency Credit Risk Debt FRN Ser. 15-DNA2, Class B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 7.55%), 12.733%, 12/25/27   1,178,971 1,210,564
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation 144A      
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust FRB Ser. 19-HQA1, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 12.25%), 17.433%, 2/25/49   254,000 312,773
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust REMICs FRB Ser. 20-DNA5, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 11.50%), 16.569%, 10/25/50   491,000 633,248
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust FRB Ser. 19-HQA2, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 11.25%), 16.433%, 4/25/49   298,000 358,330
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust FRB Ser. 18-HQA2, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 11.00%), 16.183%, 10/25/48   1,619,000 1,960,481
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust FRB Ser. 19-DNA1, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 10.75%), 15.933%, 1/25/49   315,000 377,255
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust FRB Ser. 19-DNA2, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 10.50%), 15.683%, 3/25/49   252,000 292,759
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust REMICs FRB Ser. 20-DNA4, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 10.00%), 15.183%, 8/25/50   966,000 1,242,992
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust REMICs FRB Ser. 20-HQA3, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 10.00%), 15.183%, 7/25/50   1,027,000 1,294,949
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust FRB Ser. 18-DNA3, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 7.75%), 12.933%, 9/25/48   389,000 426,030
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust REMICs FRB Ser. 20-HQA2, Class B2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 7.71%), 12.783%, 3/25/50   625,000 696,634


40 Premier Income Trust



MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Residential mortgage-backed securities (non-agency) cont.
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation 144A      
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust REMICs FRB Ser. 20-HQA3, Class B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 5.75%), 10.933%, 7/25/50   $576,604 $627,519
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust REMICs FRB Ser. 20-HQA4, Class B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 5.36%), 10.433%, 9/25/50   801,365 868,087
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust REMICs FRB Ser. 20-DNA5, Class B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 4.80%), 9.869%, 10/25/50   900,000 972,000
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust FRB Ser. 19-HQA1, Class HQA1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 4.40%), 9.583%, 2/25/49   410,000 441,945
Structured Agency Credit Risk Trust FRB Ser. 18-DNA3, Class B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 3.90%), 9.083%, 9/25/48   420,000 441,313
Seasoned Credit Risk Transfer Trust Ser. 19-2, Class M, 4.75%, 8/25/58 W   685,000 600,047
Seasoned Credit Risk Transfer Trust Ser. 17-3, Class M2, 4.75%, 7/25/56 W   879,000 814,750
Seasoned Credit Risk Transfer Trust Ser. 19-4, Class M, 4.50%, 2/25/59 W   346,000 293,290
Federal National Mortgage Association      
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 16-C03, Class 2B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 12.75%), 17.933%, 10/25/28   238,577 278,942
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 16-C02, Class 1B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 12.25%), 17.433%, 9/25/28   2,300,099 2,649,421
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 16-C03, Class 1B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 11.75%), 16.933%, 10/25/28   1,289,698 1,460,504
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 16-C01, Class 1B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 11.75%), 16.933%, 8/25/28   833,699 934,091
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 16-C05, Class 2B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 10.75%), 15.933%, 1/25/29   268,948 292,274
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 16-C04, Class 1B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 10.25%), 15.433%, 1/25/29   266,786 289,914
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 16-C06, Class 1B, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 9.25%), 14.433%, 4/25/29   396,409 420,326
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 17-C02, Class 2B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 5.50%), 10.683%, 9/25/29   872,000 968,644
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 18-C04, Class 2B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 4.50%), 9.683%, 12/25/30   699,000 762,084
Connecticut Avenue Securities FRB Ser. 17-C07, Class 2B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 4.45%), 9.633%, 5/25/30   180,000 195,697
Federal National Mortgage Association 144A      
Connecticut Avenue Securities Trust FRB Ser. 22-R02, Class 2B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 4.50%), 9.569%, 1/25/42   402,000 415,065
Connecticut Avenue Securities Trust FRB Ser. 19-R03, Class 1B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 4.10%), 9.283%, 9/25/31   578,000 607,542
Connecticut Avenue Securities Trust FRB Ser. 20-R01, Class 1B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 3.25%), 8.433%, 1/25/40   459,000 453,895
Connecticut Avenue Securities Trust FRB Ser. 19-R01, Class 2M2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 2.45%), 7.633%, 7/25/31   11,092 11,134
Connecticut Avenue Securities Trust FRB Ser. 20-R01, Class 1M2, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 2.05%), 7.233%, 1/25/40   231,809 233,302
GSR Mortgage Loan Trust FRB Ser. 07-OA1, Class 2A3A, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.31%), 5.722%, 5/25/37   541,904 313,755


Premier Income Trust 41




MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES (39.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Residential mortgage-backed securities (non-agency) cont.
HarborView Mortgage Loan Trust FRB Ser. 05-2, Class 1A,
(CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.52%), 5.881%, 5/19/35
  $402,187 $129,187
Home Re, Ltd. 144A FRB Ser. 21-2, Class B1, (US 30 Day Average SOFR + 4.15%), 9.219%, 1/25/34 (Bermuda)   300,000 280,740
JPMorgan Alternative Loan Trust FRB Ser. 07-A2, Class 12A1, IO, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.40%), 5.812%, 6/25/37   648,846 263,558
LHOME Mortgage Trust 144A Ser. 23-RTL2, Class A1, 8.00%, 6/25/28   786,000 781,984
Morgan Stanley Re-REMIC Trust 144A FRB Ser. 10-R4, Class 4B,
(ICE LIBOR USD 1 Month + 0.23%), 3.746%, 2/26/37
  425,963 350,062
MortgageIT Trust FRB Ser. 05-3, Class M2, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.80%), 6.207%, 8/25/35   80,176 75,667
Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II Trust      
FRB Ser. 06-AR7, Class A1A, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.42%), 5.832%, 8/25/36   401,197 304,910
FRB Ser. 07-AR1, Class 2A1, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.18%), 5.592%, 1/25/37   547,799 469,540
Towd Point Mortgage Trust 144A      
Ser. 19-2, Class A2, 3.75%, 12/25/58 W   1,033,000 916,704
Ser. 18-5, Class M1, 3.25%, 7/25/58 W   815,000 642,877
WaMu Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Trust FRB Ser. 05-AR13, Class A1C3, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 0.98%), 6.392%, 10/25/45   256,089 235,059
43,018,905
Total mortgage-backed securities (cost $167,006,754) $144,751,275

CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (20.0%)* Principal
amount
Value
Basic materials (2.2%)
Axalta Coating Systems, LLC 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.375%, 2/15/29   $150,000 $128,375
Boise Cascade Co. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.875%, 7/1/30   680,000 620,500
Braskem Netherlands Finance BV 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 7.25%, 2/13/33 (Brazil)   690,000 677,014
Builders FirstSource, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. bonds 6.375%, 6/15/32   70,000 69,640
Builders FirstSource, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. bonds 4.25%, 2/1/32   165,000 143,175
Celanese US Holdings, LLC company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 6.33%, 7/15/29 (Germany)   200,000 200,743
Celanese US Holdings, LLC company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 6.165%, 7/15/27 (Germany)   85,000 85,608
Constellium SE sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 3.125%, 7/15/29 (France) EUR 650,000 612,763
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.375%, 8/1/28 (Indonesia)   $130,000 122,932
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.45%, 3/15/43 (Indonesia)   670,000 623,844
HTA Group, Ltd./Mauritius company guaranty sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 7.00%, 12/18/25 (Tanzania)   440,000 419,100
HudBay Minerals, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.50%, 4/1/26 (Canada)   285,000 270,260


42 Premier Income Trust



CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (20.0%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Basic materials cont.
HudBay Minerals, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 6.125%, 4/1/29 (Canada)   $590,000 $565,208
IHS Holding, Ltd. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 6.25%, 11/29/28 (Nigeria)   1,100,000 907,500
Louisiana-Pacific Corp. 144A sr. unsec. notes 3.625%, 3/15/29   345,000 301,893
Novelis Corp. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. bonds 3.875%, 8/15/31   255,000 212,339
Novelis Corp. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.75%, 1/30/30   175,000 157,283
Novelis Corp. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.25%, 11/15/26   693,000 629,714
WR Grace Holdings, LLC 144A company guaranty sr. notes 4.875%, 6/15/27   140,000 131,968
WR Grace Holdings, LLC 144A sr. notes 7.375%, 3/1/31   1,315,000 1,311,713
8,191,572
Capital goods (2.8%)
Ball Corp. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 6.00%, 6/15/29   20,000 20,000
Benteler International AG 144A company guaranty sr. notes 10.50%, 5/15/28 (Austria)   640,000 649,600
Chart Industries, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 7.50%, 1/1/30   300,000 307,455
Clarios Global LP 144A company guaranty sr. notes 6.75%, 5/15/25   158,000 158,363
Clarios Global LP 144A sr. notes 6.75%, 5/15/28   128,000 128,571
Clarios Global LP/Clarios US Finance Co. company guaranty sr. notes Ser. REGS, 4.375%, 5/15/26 EUR 895,000 954,453
Crown Cork & Seal Co., Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. bonds 7.375%, 12/15/26   $347,000 362,615
GFL Environmental, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.75%, 6/15/29 (Canada)   678,000 618,446
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corp. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.25%, 6/1/29   520,000 434,200
Howmet Aerospace, Inc. sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 5.95%, 2/1/37   625,000 635,430
Howmet Aerospace, Inc. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 3.00%, 1/15/29   603,000 526,384
Owens-Brockway Glass Container, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 7.25%, 5/15/31   245,000 248,974
Ritchie Bros Holdings, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 6.75%, 3/15/28   70,000 70,875
Ritchie Bros Holdings, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 7.75%, 3/15/31   757,000 787,280
Sensata Technologies BV 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.00%, 4/15/29   700,000 618,570
Sensata Technologies BV 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.875%, 9/1/30   702,000 676,502
Terex Corp. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.00%, 5/15/29   603,000 561,073
TransDigm, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. sub. notes 5.50%, 11/15/27   840,000 796,165
TransDigm, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. sub. notes 4.875%, 5/1/29   265,000 238,450
TransDigm, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. sub. notes 4.625%, 1/15/29   175,000 156,188


Premier Income Trust 43



CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (20.0%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Capital goods cont.
TransDigm, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 6.25%, 3/15/26   $205,000 $203,896
TransDigm, Inc. 144A sr. notes 6.75%, 8/15/28   95,000 95,238
Vertiv Group Corp. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 4.125%, 11/15/28   563,000 505,389
WESCO Distribution, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 7.25%, 6/15/28   266,000 271,261
WESCO Distribution, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 7.125%, 6/15/25   298,000 301,420
10,326,798
Communication services (0.7%)
CCO Holdings, LLC/CCO Holdings Capital Corp. 144A sr. unsec. bonds 5.375%, 6/1/29   1,478,000 1,350,677
Frontier Communications Corp. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 5.875%, 10/15/27   1,275,000 1,167,808
Frontier Communications Holdings, LLC 144A company guaranty sr. notes 8.75%, 5/15/30   130,000 125,422
2,643,907
Consumer cyclicals (4.6%)
ADT Security Corp. 144A sr. notes 4.125%, 8/1/29   150,000 130,125
Bath & Body Works, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 7.50%, perpetual maturity   719,000 728,101
Bath & Body Works, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 9.375%, 7/1/25   29,000 30,611
Bath & Body Works, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 6.625%, 10/1/30   601,000 580,797
Block, Inc. sr. unsec. notes 3.50%, 6/1/31   165,000 138,200
Boyd Gaming Corp. 144A sr. unsec. bonds 4.75%, 6/15/31   130,000 116,321
Caesars Entertainment, Inc. 144A sr. notes 7.00%, 2/15/30   1,224,000 1,236,266
Caesars Resort Collection, LLC/CRC Finco, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 5.75%, 7/1/25   625,000 631,311
Carnival Corp. notes Ser. REGS, 10.125%, 2/1/26 EUR 465,000 537,225
Carnival Corp. 144A notes 10.50%, 2/1/26   $100,000 105,412
Carnival Corp. 144A notes 9.875%, 8/1/27   685,000 716,161
Everi Holdings, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.00%, 7/15/29   710,000 624,800
Hilton Domestic Operating Co., Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. bonds 4.875%, 1/15/30   422,000 395,625
Hilton Domestic Operating Co., Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.00%, 5/1/31   1,755,000 1,530,813
Levi Strauss & Co. sr. unsec. notes 3.375%, 3/15/27 EUR 668,000 696,531
Levi Strauss & Co. 144A sr. unsec. sub. bonds 3.50%, 3/1/31   $127,000 104,021
Mattel, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.875%, 12/15/27   380,000 372,614
Mattel, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.75%, 4/1/29   195,000 174,475
Mattel, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.375%, 4/1/26   55,000 51,135
McGraw-Hill Education, Inc. 144A sr. notes 5.75%, 8/1/28   1,535,000 1,347,730
Neptune Bidco US, Inc. 144A sr. notes 9.29%, 4/15/29   1,509,000 1,388,060
News Corp. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 5.125%, 2/15/32   20,000 18,300


44 Premier Income Trust



CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (20.0%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Consumer cyclicals cont.
News Corp. 144A sr. unsec. notes 3.875%, 5/15/29   $200,000 $176,616
Prime Security Services Borrower, LLC/Prime Finance, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 3.375%, 8/31/27   125,000 110,343
Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 9.25%, 1/15/29   1,065,000 1,133,830
Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. (The) company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.50%, 10/15/29   368,000 322,920
Shift4 Payments, LLC/Shift4 Payments Finance Sub, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.625%, 11/1/26   221,000 208,812
Spectrum Brands, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. bonds 5.00%, 10/1/29   125,000 112,500
Standard Industries, Inc. sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 2.25%, 11/21/26 EUR 370,000 362,342
Standard Industries, Inc. 144A sr. unsec. bonds 3.375%, 1/15/31   $95,000 76,718
Standard Industries, Inc. 144A sr. unsec. notes 5.00%, 2/15/27   868,000 831,296
Standard Industries, Inc. 144A sr. unsec. notes 4.75%, 1/15/28   25,000 23,292
Station Casinos, LLC 144A sr. unsec. notes 4.50%, 2/15/28   250,000 226,768
Taylor Morrison Communities, Inc. 144A sr. unsec. bonds 5.125%, 8/1/30   981,000 915,764
Taylor Morrison Communities, Inc. 144A sr. unsec. notes 5.75%, 1/15/28   617,000 601,430
Univision Communications, Inc. 144A sr. notes 7.375%, 6/30/30   45,000 43,799
Victoria’s Secret & Co. 144A sr. unsec. notes 4.625%, 7/15/29   100,000 75,000
16,876,064
Consumer staples (1.2%)
1011778 BC ULC/New Red Finance, Inc. 144A bonds 4.00%, 10/15/30 (Canada)   490,000 421,083
1011778 BC ULC/New Red Finance, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 3.875%, 1/15/28 (Canada)   225,000 205,875
Albertsons Cos., Inc./Safeway, Inc./New Albertsons LP/Albertsons, LLC 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.875%, 2/15/30   930,000 853,275
Albertsons Cos., Inc./Safeway, Inc./New Albertsons LP/Albertsons, LLC 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.50%, 3/15/29   590,000 513,625
Aramark Services, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.00%, 2/1/28   589,000 553,662
Avis Budget Finance PLC 144A sr. unsec. notes 7.25%, 7/31/30 EUR 245,000 269,766
Lamb Weston Holdings, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.875%, 5/15/28   $185,000 175,721
Lamb Weston Holdings, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.125%, 1/31/30   190,000 167,684
Match Group Holdings II, LLC 144A sr. unsec. bonds 5.00%, 12/15/27   80,000 75,804
Match Group Holdings II, LLC 144A sr. unsec. bonds 3.625%, 10/1/31   70,000 57,624
Match Group Holdings II, LLC 144A sr. unsec. notes 4.125%, 8/1/30   55,000 47,462
Match Group Holdings II, LLC 144A sr. unsec. unsub. notes 4.625%, 6/1/28   130,000 119,921
Match Group Holdings II, LLC 144A sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.625%, 2/15/29   430,000 408,579
US Foods, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.75%, 2/15/29   619,000 569,330
4,439,411


Premier Income Trust 45



CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (20.0%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Energy (4.5%)
Apache Corp. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.10%, 9/1/40   $893,000 $758,827
Apache Corp. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 4.375%, 10/15/28   83,000 76,426
Callon Petroleum Co. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 7.50%, 6/15/30   1,445,000 1,402,831
Cenovus Energy, Inc. sr. unsec. bonds 6.75%, 11/15/39 (Canada)   96,000 100,604
Centennial Resource Production, LLC 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 6.875%, 4/1/27   877,000 868,230
Cheniere Energy Partners LP company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 4.00%, 3/1/31   200,000 177,974
Civitas Resources, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 8.375%, 7/1/28   260,000 267,426
Civitas Resources, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 8.75%, 7/1/31   520,000 538,200
DCP Midstream Operating LP 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 6.75%, 9/15/37   118,000 125,750
Ecopetrol SA sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 8.875%, 1/13/33 (Colombia)   1,300,000 1,333,587
Endeavor Energy Resources LP/EER Finance, Inc. 144A sr. unsec. bonds 5.75%, 1/30/28   1,653,000 1,609,526
Kinetik Holdings LP 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.875%, 6/15/30   490,000 471,013
Occidental Petroleum Corp. sr. unsec. sub. bonds 6.20%, 3/15/40   248,000 250,024
Ovintiv, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 7.375%, 11/1/31   351,000 379,819
Ovintiv, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 6.625%, 8/15/37   155,000 157,113
Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc. sr. unsec. notes 3.95%, 2/1/28   124,000 114,212
Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc. sr. unsec. sub. notes 5.15%, 11/15/29   1,321,000 1,226,221
Petrobras Global Finance BV company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 6.50%, 7/3/33 (Brazil)   473,000 464,572
Petrobras Global Finance BV company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.299%, 1/27/25 (Brazil)   300,000 297,364
Petroleos Mexicanos company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 6.70%, 2/16/32 (Mexico)   425,000 327,463
Petroleos Mexicanos company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 6.49%, 1/23/27 (Mexico)   1,250,000 1,113,826
Petroleos Mexicanos 144A sr. unsec. bonds 10.00%, 2/7/33 (Mexico)   1,110,000 1,023,975
Rockcliff Energy II, LLC 144A sr. unsec. notes 5.50%, 10/15/29   796,000 728,935
SM Energy Co. sr. unsec. notes 6.625%, 1/15/27   137,000 134,743
SM Energy Co. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 6.75%, 9/15/26   263,000 258,398
SM Energy Co. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 6.50%, 7/15/28   291,000 284,446
SM Energy Co. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.625%, 6/1/25   140,000 137,196
Southwestern Energy Co. company guaranty sr. unsec. bonds 4.75%, 2/1/32   397,000 352,749
Southwestern Energy Co. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.375%, 3/15/30   757,000 708,278
Southwestern Energy Co. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.375%, 2/1/29   505,000 476,859
Venture Global LNG, Inc. 144A sr. notes 8.375%, 6/1/31   215,000 218,164


46 Premier Income Trust



CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (20.0%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Energy cont.
Venture Global LNG, Inc. 144A sr. notes 8.125%, 6/1/28   $95,000 $96,556
Viper Energy Partners LP 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.375%, 11/1/27   80,000 76,800
16,558,107
Financials (0.8%)
AG Issuer, LLC 144A sr. notes 6.25%, 3/1/28   235,000 226,680
Alliant Holdings Intermediate, LLC/Alliant Holdings Co-Issuer 144A sr. notes 4.25%, 10/15/27   60,000 54,750
CNO Financial Group, Inc. sr. unsec. notes 5.25%, 5/30/29   225,000 216,068
Deutsche Bank AG jr. unsec. sub. FRN 6.00%, perpetual maturity (Germany)   200,000 166,439
Dresdner Funding Trust I 144A jr. unsec. sub. notes 8.151%, 6/30/31   200,000 212,994
Ford Motor Credit Co., LLC sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.125%, 6/16/25   200,000 194,730
Ford Motor Credit Co., LLC sr. unsec. unsub. notes 4.271%, 1/9/27   260,000 242,714
Ford Motor Credit Co., LLC sr. unsec. unsub. notes 4.00%, 11/13/30   425,000 365,093
Freedom Mortgage Corp. 144A sr. unsec. notes 7.625%, 5/1/26   580,000 530,593
OneMain Finance Corp. company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.375%, 11/15/29   448,000 388,124
Stichting AK Rabobank Certificaten jr. unsec. sub. FRN 6.50%, perpetual maturity (Netherlands) EUR 252,125 260,925
2,859,110
Health care (1.6%)
Centene Corp. sr. unsec. bonds 3.00%, 10/15/30   $120,000 100,402
Centene Corp. sr. unsec. notes 4.625%, 12/15/29   349,000 324,476
Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 4.00%, 3/15/31   125,000 108,281
Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.75%, 3/15/29   120,000 105,600
Elanco Animal Health, Inc. sr. unsec. notes Ser. WI, 6.65%, 8/28/28   585,000 577,260
HCA, Inc. company guaranty sr. notes 4.125%, 6/15/29   155,000 143,801
Organon Finance 1, LLC 144A sr. notes 4.125%, 4/30/28   270,000 241,958
Service Corp. International sr. unsec. bonds 5.125%, 6/1/29   350,000 332,500
Service Corp. International sr. unsec. notes 3.375%, 8/15/30   1,155,000 963,025
Service Corp. International sr. unsec. sub. notes 4.00%, 5/15/31   90,000 76,725
Tenet Healthcare Corp. company guaranty sr. notes 5.125%, 11/1/27   300,000 284,878
Tenet Healthcare Corp. company guaranty sr. notes 4.875%, 1/1/26   282,000 272,934
Tenet Healthcare Corp. company guaranty sr. notes 4.25%, 6/1/29   120,000 107,525
Tenet Healthcare Corp. company guaranty sr. unsub. notes 6.125%, 6/15/30   190,000 184,633
Teva Pharmaceutical Finance Netherlands III BV company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 6.75%, 3/1/28 (Israel)   435,000 431,622
Teva Pharmaceutical Finance Netherlands III BV company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 8.125%, 9/15/31 (Israel)   1,070,000 1,131,525
Teva Pharmaceutical Finance Netherlands III BV company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.125%, 5/9/29 (Israel)   505,000 462,706
5,849,851


Premier Income Trust 47




CORPORATE BONDS AND NOTES (20.0%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Technology (1.0%)
Cloud Software Group, Inc. 144A sr. notes. 6.50%, 3/31/29   $444,000 $399,617
CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.00%, 2/15/29   542,000 467,932
Imola Merger Corp. 144A sr. notes 4.75%, 5/15/29   818,000 718,229
Twilio, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.875%, 3/15/31   915,000 775,106
Twilio, Inc. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.625%, 3/15/29   695,000 596,449
ZoomInfo Technologies, LLC/ZoomInfo Finance Corp. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 3.875%, 2/1/29   938,000 805,680
3,763,013
Utilities and power (0.6%)
Diamond II, Ltd. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 7.95%, 7/28/26 (India)   1,220,000 1,213,900
Energy Transfer LP jr. unsec. sub. FRN 6.625%, perpetual maturity   41,000 32,493
NRG Energy, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. notes 3.75%, 6/15/24   385,000 375,654
NRG Energy, Inc. 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. bonds 3.875%, 2/15/32   197,000 152,446
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 2.95%, 3/1/26   122,000 112,344
Vistra Operations Co., LLC 144A company guaranty sr. notes 4.30%, 7/15/29   115,000 102,539
Vistra Operations Co., LLC 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 5.50%, 9/1/26   224,000 216,608
Vistra Operations Co., LLC 144A company guaranty sr. unsec. sub. notes 5.00%, 7/31/27   165,000 155,443
2,361,427
Total corporate bonds and notes (cost $76,432,084) $73,869,260

FOREIGN GOVERNMENT AND AGENCY
BONDS AND NOTES (8.3%)*
Principal
amount
Value
Benin (Republic of) sr. unsec. bonds Ser. REGS, 4.95%, 1/22/35 (Benin) EUR 470,000 $376,805
Benin (Republic of) sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 4.875%, 1/19/32 (Benin) EUR 690,000 587,836
Cameroon (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes Ser. REGS, 5.95%, 7/7/32 (Cameroon) EUR 760,000 614,306
Cote d’lvoire (Republic of) sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 5.875%, 10/17/31 (Cote d’lvoire) EUR 760,000 722,795
Cote d’lvoire (Republic of) sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 4.875%, 1/30/32 (Cote d’lvoire) EUR 2,060,000 1,834,128
Cote d’lvoire (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. bonds Ser. REGS, 6.125%, 6/15/33 (Cote d’lvoire)   $2,765,000 2,478,131
Cote d’lvoire (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes Ser. REGS, 5.375%, 7/23/24 (Cote d’lvoire)   300,000 293,250
Dominican (Republic of) sr. unsec. bonds Ser. REGS, 4.875%, 9/23/32 (Dominican Republic)   920,000 796,728
Dominican (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes Ser. REGS, 6.875%, 1/29/26 (Dominican Republic)   715,000 721,095
Dominican (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes Ser. REGS, 6.00%, 7/19/28 (Dominican Republic)   1,350,000 1,319,975
Dominican (Republic of) 144A sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 5.50%, 1/27/25 (Dominican Republic)   1,650,000 1,624,838


48 Premier Income Trust




FOREIGN GOVERNMENT AND AGENCY
BONDS AND NOTES (8.3%)*
cont.
Principal
amount
Value
Egypt (Arab Republic of) sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 7.60%, 3/1/29 (Egypt)   $2,480,000 $1,779,400
Ghana (Republic of) sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 7.625%, 5/16/29 (Ghana) (In default)   1,310,000 550,200
Ghana (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes Ser. REGS, 8.125%, 1/18/26 (Ghana) (In default)   2,610,000 1,174,500
Ghana (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes Ser. REGS, 6.375%, 2/11/27 (Ghana) (In default)   1,300,000 552,500
Indonesia (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes 4.65%, 9/20/32 (Indonesia)   2,670,000 2,627,795
Indonesia (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes Ser. REGS, 4.125%, 1/15/25 (Indonesia)   760,000 747,408
Indonesia (Republic of) 144A sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 6.625%, 2/17/37 (Indonesia)   640,000 728,352
Indonesia (Republic of) 144A sr. unsec. unsub. notes 4.35%, 1/8/27 (Indonesia)   1,265,000 1,239,725
Mongolia (Government of) sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 5.125%, 4/7/26 (Mongolia)   670,000 632,313
Mozambique (Republic of) unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 5.00%, 9/15/31 (Mozambique)   550,000 431,063
Romania (Government of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes 7.125%, 1/17/33 (Romania)   910,000 978,545
Serbia (Republic of) sr. unsec. notes 6.25%, 5/26/28 (Serbia)   950,000 950,000
Tunisia (Central Bank of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes Ser. REGS, 5.75%, 1/30/25 (Tunisia)   3,080,000 2,161,028
Turkey (Republic of) sr. unsec. unsub. notes 9.125%, 7/13/30 (Turkey)   660,000 686,400
United Mexican States sr. unsec. unsub. bonds 4.28%, 8/14/41 (Mexico)   1,390,000 1,147,461
United Mexican States sr. unsec. unsub. notes 6.338%, 5/4/53 (Mexico)   1,150,000 1,172,461
Vietnam (Socialist Republic of) sr. unsec. notes Ser. REGS, 4.80%, 11/19/24 (Vietnam)   1,720,000 1,682,174
Total foreign government and agency bonds and notes (cost $33,927,936) $30,611,212

CONVERTIBLE BONDS AND NOTES (6.1%)* Principal
amount
Value
Basic materials (—%)
MP Materials Corp. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.25%, 4/1/26   $113,000 $102,612
102,612
Capital goods (0.3%)
Axon Enterprise, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.50%, 12/15/27   321,000 330,470
Granite Construction, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 3.75%, 5/15/28   101,000 110,499
John Bean Technologies Corp. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.25%, 5/15/26   235,000 224,073
Middleby Corp. (The) cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.00%, 9/1/25   220,000 277,310
942,352
Communication services (0.1%)
Liberty Broadband Corp. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 3.125%, 3/31/53   299,000 303,784
303,784
Consumer cyclicals (1.0%)
Alarm.com Holdings, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 1/15/26   242,000 207,273
Block, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 0.25%, 11/1/27   253,000 197,656


Premier Income Trust 49



CONVERTIBLE BONDS AND NOTES (6.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Consumer cyclicals cont.
Block, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes zero %, 5/1/26   $120,000 $100,740
Booking Holdings, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.75%, 5/1/25   200,000 323,500
Carnival Corp. 144A cv. company guaranty sr. unsec. unsub. notes 5.75%, 12/1/27   280,000 465,220
DraftKings, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes zero %, 3/15/28   224,000 172,256
Expedia Group, Inc. company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes zero %, 2/15/26   256,000 228,813
Ford Motor Co. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 3/15/26   375,000 382,500
Liberty Media Corp. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 2.25%, 8/15/27   303,000 319,059
Liberty TripAdvisor Holdings, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. bonds 0.50%, 6/30/51   212,000 174,476
Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 3.125%, 1/15/29   427,000 466,284
NCL Corp., Ltd. company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. notes 5.375%, 8/1/25   88,000 122,408
NCL Corp., Ltd. company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 2.50%, 2/15/27   81,000 77,558
Patrick Industries, Inc. cv. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 1.75%, 12/1/28   125,000 126,500
Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. 144A cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 6.00%, 8/15/25   152,000 348,688
Shift4 Payments, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 0.50%, 8/1/27   282,000 250,698
Vail Resorts, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes zero %, 1/1/26   298,000 263,730
4,227,359
Consumer staples (0.8%)
Airbnb, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes zero %, 3/15/26   132,000 118,734
Beauty Health Co. (The) 144A cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 1.25%, 10/1/26   223,000 176,170
Cheesecake Factory, Inc. (The) cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 0.375%, 6/15/26   158,000 133,510
Chefs’ Warehouse, Inc. (The) 144A cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 2.375%, 12/15/28   175,000 184,363
Chegg, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 9/1/26   141,000 105,539
Dufry One BV 144A cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 3.25%, 9/15/27   176,000 252,120
Etsy, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.25%, 6/15/28   450,000 363,600
Lyft, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.50%, 5/15/25   107,000 97,424
MGP Ingredients, Inc. company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. bonds 1.875%, 11/15/41   88,000 113,476
Post Holdings, Inc. 144A company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. notes 2.50%, 8/15/27   239,000 237,566
Shake Shack, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 3/1/28   137,000 108,641
Uber Technologies, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 12/15/25   122,000 117,167
Upwork, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.25%, 8/15/26   199,000 165,447
Wayfair, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.625%, 10/1/25   263,000 224,873
Zillow Group, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 1.375%, 9/1/26   318,000 420,237
2,818,867
Energy (0.2%)
Enphase Energy, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes zero %, 3/1/28   263,000 236,974
Nabors Industries, Inc. 144A company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 1.75%, 6/15/29   138,000 119,439


50 Premier Income Trust



CONVERTIBLE BONDS AND NOTES (6.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Energy cont.
Northern Oil and Gas, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 3.625%, 4/15/29   $223,000 $271,707
SolarEdge Technologies, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 9/15/25, (Israel)   119,000 133,994
762,114
Financials (0.2%)
SoFi Technologies, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 10/15/26   257,000 218,707
Welltower OP, LLC 144A company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. notes 2.75%, 5/15/28, R   335,000 340,528
559,235
Health care (1.0%)
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 1.00%, 9/15/27   291,000 283,959
BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 1.25%, 5/15/27   180,000 180,762
CONMED Corp. cv. sr. unsec. notes 2.25%, 6/15/27   203,000 213,049
Cytokinetics, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 3.50%, 7/1/27   113,000 104,580
Dexcom, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 0.375%, 5/15/28   558,000 560,790
Exact Sciences Corp. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 0.375%, 3/1/28   398,000 412,874
Halozyme Therapeutics, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.25%, 3/1/27   370,000 324,100
Insulet Corp. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.375%, 9/1/26   216,000 286,092
Integer Holdings Corp. 144A cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 2.125%, 2/15/28   135,000 164,430
Jazz Investments I, Ltd. company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 1.50%, 8/15/24, (Ireland)   252,000 241,542
Lantheus Holdings, Inc. 144A company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 2.625%, 12/15/27   222,000 295,099
Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 2.25%, 5/15/24   92,000 125,442
Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 1.25%, 9/15/27   190,000 201,521
Teladoc Health, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 1.25%, 6/1/27   202,000 163,236
3,557,476
Technology (2.0%)
3D Systems Corp. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 11/15/26   97,000 74,205
Akamai Technologies, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.375%, 9/1/27   258,000 253,485
Akamai Technologies, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.125%, 5/1/25   202,000 220,353
Altair Engineering, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 1.75%, 6/15/27   189,000 225,950
Bentley Systems, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 0.375%, 7/1/27   235,000 210,560
Bill.com Holdings, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes zero %, 4/1/27   228,000 187,958
Box, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 1/15/26   179,000 231,447
Ceridian HCM Holding, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.25%, 3/15/26   246,000 218,490
Cloudflare, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 8/15/26   122,000 104,554
Confluent, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes zero %, 1/15/27   196,000 162,857
CyberArk Software, Ltd. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 11/15/24, (Israel)   127,000 148,666
Datadog, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.125%, 6/15/25   208,000 285,121
DigitalOcean Holdings, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 12/1/26   211,000 166,952
Dropbox, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes zero %, 3/1/28   161,000 155,124
Envestnet, Inc. 144A company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. notes 2.625%, 12/1/27   181,000 194,575
Everbridge, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 3/15/26   138,000 113,850


Premier Income Trust 51




CONVERTIBLE BONDS AND NOTES (6.1%)* cont. Principal
amount
Value
Technology cont.
Five9, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.50%, 6/1/25   $139,000 $137,749
HubSpot, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.375%, 6/1/25   183,000 379,542
Impinj, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.125%, 5/15/27   180,000 168,565
Lumentum Holdings, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.50%, 12/15/26   302,000 260,956
Lumentum Holdings, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.50%, 12/15/29   69,000 67,896
MongoDB, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.25%, 1/15/26   230,000 469,545
Okta, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.375%, 6/15/26   338,000 290,173
ON Semiconductor Corp. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 5/1/27   47,000 96,820
ON Semiconductor Corp. 144A cv. company guaranty sr. unsec. notes 0.50%, 3/1/29   329,000 400,616
Palo Alto Networks, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.375%, 6/1/25   68,000 170,918
Pegasystems, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.75%, 3/1/25   159,000 145,883
Progress Software Corp. cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.00%, 4/15/26   167,000 187,374
RingCentral, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 3/1/25   195,000 179,400
Snap, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 5/1/27   275,000 206,113
Splunk, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.125%, 6/15/27   459,000 395,429
Spotify USA, Inc. company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 3/15/26   199,000 169,150
Tyler Technologies, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. sub. notes 0.25%, 3/15/26   214,000 214,107
Unity Software, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes zero %, 11/15/26   177,000 141,600
Wolfspeed, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.875%, 12/1/29   182,000 156,702
Workiva, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.125%, 8/15/26   121,000 173,529
Ziff Davis, Inc. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.75%, 11/1/26   182,000 172,900
Zscaler, Inc. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.125%, 7/1/25   183,000 224,709
7,763,823
Transportation (0.2%)
JetBlue Airways Corp. cv. sr. unsec. notes 0.50%, 4/1/26   163,000 132,160
Southwest Airlines Co. cv. sr. unsec. notes 1.25%, 5/1/25   424,000 465,976
598,136
Utilities and power (0.3%)
CMS Energy Corp. 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 3.375%, 5/1/28   221,000 219,895
NextEra Energy Partners LP 144A company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. unsub. notes 2.50%, 6/15/26   245,000 218,908
NRG Energy, Inc. company guaranty cv. sr. unsec. bonds 2.75%, 6/1/48   254,000 269,875
Southern Co. (The) 144A cv. sr. unsec. notes 3.875%, 12/15/25   332,000 333,162
1,041,840
Total convertible bonds and notes (cost $23,437,645) $22,677,598

SENIOR LOANS (2.4%)*c Principal
amount
Value
Axalta Coating Systems US Holdings, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 3.00%), 8.242%, 12/7/29   $502,763 $503,939
Chart Industries, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 3.75%), 9.105%, 12/8/29   1,076,303 1,076,303
Clear Channel Outdoor Holdings, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, (CME Term SOFR 3 Month + 3.50%), 8.81%, 8/21/26   494,774 478,461
Cloud Software Group, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 4.50%), 9.842%, 3/30/29   287,280 274,743


52 Premier Income Trust




SENIOR LOANS (2.4%)*c cont. Principal
amount
Value
CQP Holdco LP bank term loan FRN (CME Term SOFR 3 Month + 3.50%), 9.048%, 5/27/28   $1,690,687 $1,688,929
DIRECTV Financing, LLC bank term loan FRN (CME Term SOFR 3 Month + 5.00%), 10.433%, 7/22/27   531,655 527,752
Forest City Enterprises LP bank term loan FRN Ser. B, (CME Term SOFR 3 Month + 3.50%), 8.933%, 12/7/25   185,143 160,149
Genesys Cloud Services Holdings, LLC bank term loan FRN
(CME Term SOFR 3 Month + 4.00%), 9.346%, 12/1/27
  394,875 394,137
GFL Environmental, Inc. bank term loan FRN (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 3.00%), 8.145%, 5/31/27   242,943 243,164
IRB Holding Corp. bank term loan FRN (CME Term SOFR 3 Month Plus CSA + 3.00%), 8.419%, 12/15/27   802,967 798,149
PetSmart, LLC bank term loan FRN Ser. B, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 3.75%), 9.169%, 1/29/28   1,357,169 1,354,984
Proofpoint, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, (CME Term SOFR 3 Month + 6.25%), 11.56%, 8/31/29   115,000 113,886
Robertshaw US Holding Corp. bank term loan FRN (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 8.00%), 13.342%, 2/28/27   162,000 35,640
Rocket Software, Inc. bank term loan FRN Ser. B, (CME Term SOFR 1 Month + 4.25%), 9.392%, 11/28/25   643,320 640,670
Vision Solutions, Inc. bank term loan FRN (ICE LIBOR USD 1 Month + 4.25%), 9.863%, 4/24/28   446,591 426,414
Total senior loans (cost $8,785,511) $8,717,320

ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES (0.7%)* Principal
amount
Value
Mello Warehouse Securitization Trust 144A      
FRB Ser. 21-3, Class E, (ICE LIBOR USD 1 Month + 3.25%), 8.662%, 10/22/24   $1,286,000 $1,257,065
FRB Ser. 21-3, Class D, (ICE LIBOR USD 1 Month + 2.00%), 7.412%, 10/22/24   1,086,000 1,049,317
NewRez Warehouse Securitization Trust 144A FRB Ser. 21-1, Class F, (ICE LIBOR USD 1 Month + 5.25%), 10.662%, 5/7/24   416,000 414,606
Total asset-backed securities (cost $2,645,424) $2,720,988

COMMON STOCKS (—%)* Shares Value
Texas Competitive Electric Holdings Co., LLC/TCEH Finance, Inc. (Rights) 21,073 $24,234
Total common stocks (cost $21,953) $24,234

SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS (23.5%)* Principal amount/
shares
Value
Banco Santander SA commercial paper 5.530%, 8/17/23 (Spain) $2,000,000 $1,994,945
Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank/New York commercial paper 5.285%, 8/25/23 (France) 2,000,000 1,992,539
ING (U.S.) Funding, LLC commercial paper 5.057%, 9/1/23 2,000,000 1,990,437
Interest in $424,521,000 joint tri-party repurchase agreement dated 7/31/23 with Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. due 8/1/23 — maturity value of $28,452,188 for an effective yield of 5.300% (collateralized by Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities and U.S. Treasuries (including strips) with coupon rates ranging from 2.250% to 6.500% and due dates ranging from 11/15/25 to 2/1/53, valued at $433,015,574) 28,448,000 28,448,000


Premier Income Trust 53




SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS (23.5%)* cont. Principal amount/
shares
Value
Lloyds Bank PLC commercial paper 5.329%, 9/7/23 (United Kingdom) $2,000,000 $1,988,606
Mitsubishi UFJ Trust & Banking Corp./NY commercial paper 5.287%, 8/1/23 1,250,000 1,249,817
Svenska Handelsbanken AB commercial paper 5.349%, 8/1/23 (Sweden) 2,000,000 1,999,708
TotalEnergies Capital Canada, Ltd. commercial paper 5.312%, 8/21/23 (Canada) 2,000,000 1,993,686
U.S. Treasury Bills 5.453%, 10/26/23 # ∆ Φ 6,000,000 5,924,569
U.S. Treasury Bills 5.335%, 11/16/23 300,000 295,306
U.S. Treasury Bills 5.063%, 11/9/23 100,000 98,534
State Street Institutional U.S. Government Money Market Fund, Premier Class 5.19% P Shares 2,305,000 2,305,000
Putnam Short Term Investment Fund Class P 5.39% L Shares 36,793,801 36,793,801
Total short-term investments (cost $87,078,723) $87,074,948

TOTAL INVESTMENTS
Total investments (cost $648,297,943) $618,487,868

Key to holding’s currency abbreviations
AUD Australian Dollar
CAD Canadian Dollar
CHF Swiss Franc
EUR Euro
GBP British Pound
NZD New Zealand Dollar
SEK Swedish Krona
USD /$ United States Dollar

Key to holding’s abbreviations
bp Basis Points
CME Chicago Mercantile Exchange
FRB Floating Rate Bonds: The rate shown is the current interest rate at the close of the reporting period. Rates may be subject to a cap or floor. For certain securities, the rate may represent a fixed rate currently in place at the close of the reporting period.
FRN Floating Rate Notes: The rate shown is the current interest rate or yield at the close of the reporting period. Rates may be subject to a cap or floor. For certain securities, the rate may represent a fixed rate currently in place at the close of the reporting period.
ICE Intercontinental Exchange
IFB Inverse Floating Rate Bonds, which are securities that pay interest rates that vary inversely to changes in the market interest rates. As interest rates rise, inverse floaters produce less current income. The rate shown is the current interest rate at the close of the reporting period. Rates may be subject to a cap or floor.
IO Interest Only
LIBOR London Interbank Offered Rate
OTC Over-the-counter
REGS Securities sold under Regulation S may not be offered, sold or delivered within the United States except pursuant to an exemption from, or in a transaction not subject to, the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933.
REMICs Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduits
SOFR Secured Overnight Financing Rate
TBA To Be Announced Commitments


54 Premier Income Trust




Notes to the fund’s portfolio
Unless noted otherwise, the notes to the fund’s portfolio are for the close of the fund’s reporting period, which ran from August 1, 2022 through July 31, 2023 (the reporting period). Within the following notes to the portfolio, references to “Putnam Management” represent Putnam Investment Management, LLC, the fund’s manager, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Putnam Investments, LLC and references to “ASC 820” represent Accounting Standards Codification 820 Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures.
* Percentages indicated are based on net assets of $369,806,392.
This security is non-income-producing.
# This security, in part or in entirety, was pledged and segregated with the broker to cover margin requirements for futures contracts at the close of the reporting period. Collateral at period end totaled $1,052,249 and is included in Investments in securities on the Statement of assets and liabilities (Notes 1 and 9).
This security, in part or in entirety, was pledged and segregated with the custodian for collateral on certain derivative contracts at the close of the reporting period. Collateral at period end totaled $3,139,926 and is included in Investments in securities on the Statement of assets and liabilities (Notes 1 and 9).
Φ This security, in part or in entirety, was pledged and segregated with the custodian for collateral on certain TBA commitments at the close of the reporting period. Collateral at period end totaled $559,686 and is included in Investments in securities on the Statement of assets and liabilities (Notes 1 and 9).
c Senior loans are exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, but contain certain restrictions on resale and cannot be sold publicly. These loans pay interest at rates which adjust periodically. The interest rates shown for senior loans are the current interest rates at the close of the reporting period. Senior loans are also subject to mandatory and/or optional prepayment which cannot be predicted. As a result, the remaining maturity may be substantially less than the stated maturity shown (Notes 1 and 7).
i This security was pledged, or purchased with cash that was pledged, to the fund for collateral on certain derivative contracts (Note 1).
L Affiliated company (Note 5). The rate quoted in the security description is the annualized 7-day yield of the fund at the close of the reporting period.
P This security was pledged, or purchased with cash that was pledged, to the fund for collateral on certain derivative contracts. The rate quoted in the security description is the annualized 7-day yield of the fund at the close of the reporting period.
R Real Estate Investment Trust.
W The rate shown represents the weighted average coupon associated with the underlying mortgage pools. Rates may be subject to a cap or floor.
Unless otherwise noted, the rates quoted in Short-term investments security descriptions represent the weighted average yield to maturity.
Debt obligations are considered secured unless otherwise indicated.
144A after the name of an issuer represents securities exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers.
See Note 1 to the financial statements regarding TBA commitments.
The dates shown on debt obligations are the original maturity dates.

DIVERSIFICATION BY COUNTRY
Distribution of investments by country of risk at the close of the reporting period, excluding collateral received, if any (as a percentage of Portfolio Value):
United States 90.9% Dominican Republic 0.7%
Indonesia 1.0 Canada 0.7
Cote d’lvoire 0.9 Other 5.0
Mexico 0.8 Total 100.0%



Premier Income Trust 55