John Hancock
Disciplined Value Fund
SUMMARY PROSPECTUS 7–1–13
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Before you invest, you may want to review the fund’s prospectus,
which contains more information about the fund and its risks. You can find the fund’s prospectus and other information about
the fund, including the statement of additional information and most recent reports, online at www.jhfunds.com/Forms/Prospectuses.aspx.
You can also get this information at no cost by calling 1-888-972-8696 or by sending an e-mail request to info@jhfunds.com. The
fund’s prospectus and statement of additional information, both dated 7-1-13, and most recent financial highlights information
included in the shareholder report, dated 3-31-13, are incorporated by reference into this Summary Prospectus.
Investment objective
The fund seeks to provide long-term growth of capital primarily
through investment in equity securities. Current income is a secondary objective.
Fees and expenses
This table describes the fees and expenses you may pay if you
buy and hold shares of the fund.
Shareholder fees
(%) (fees paid directly from your investment)
|
Class R6
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Maximum front-end sales charge (load) on purchases as a % of purchase price
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None
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Maximum deferred sales charge (load) as a % of purchase or sale price, whichever is less
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None
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Annual fund operating expenses
(%)
(expenses that you pay each year as a percentage
of the value of your investment)
|
Class R6
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Management fee
|
0.70
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Other expenses
|
0.12
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Total annual fund operating expenses
|
0.82
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Expense example
This example is intended to help you compare
the cost of investing in the fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. Please see below a hypothetical example showing
the expenses of a $10,000 investment for the time periods indicated assuming that you redeem all of your shares at the end of those
periods. The example assumes a 5% average annual return. The example assumes fund expenses will not change over the periods. Although
your actual costs may be higher or lower, based on these assumptions, your costs would be:
Expenses
($)
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Class R6
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1
Year
|
84
|
3
Years
|
262
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5
Years
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455
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10 Years
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1,014
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Portfolio turnover
The fund pays transaction costs, such as commissions, when it
buys and sells securities (or “turns over” its portfolio). A higher portfolio turnover rate may indicate higher transaction
costs and may result in higher taxes when fund shares are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in annual
fund operating expenses or in the example, affect the fund’s performance. During its most recent fiscal year, the fund’s
portfolio turnover rate was 44% of the average value of its portfolio.
John Hancock
Disciplined Value Fund
|
Principal investment strategies
The fund pursues its objective by investing, under normal circumstances,
at least 80% of its net assets in a diversified portfolio consisting primarily of equity securities, such as common stocks, of
issuers with a market capitalization of $1 billion or greater and identified by the subadvisor as having value characteristics.
The subadvisor examines various factors in determining the value
characteristics of such issuers including price-to-book value ratios and price-to-earnings ratios. These value characteristics
are examined in the context of the issuer’s operating and financial fundamentals, such as return on equity and earnings growth
and cash flow. The subadvisor selects securities for the fund based on a continuous study of trends in industries and companies,
earnings power and growth and other investment criteria.
The fund may also invest up to 20% of its total assets in foreign
currency-denominated securities.
The fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities,
including securities that are illiquid by virtue of the absence of a readily available market or legal or contractual restrictions
on resale.
The fund may participate as a purchaser in initial public offerings
of securities (IPOs). An IPO is a company’s first offering of stock to the public.
Principal risks
An investment in the fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured
or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency. The fund’s shares will go up and
down in price, meaning that you could lose money by investing in the fund. Many factors influence a mutual fund’s performance.
Instability in the financial markets has led many governments,
including the United States government, to take a number of unprecedented actions designed to support certain financial institutions
and segments of the financial markets that have experienced extreme volatility and, in some cases, a lack of liquidity. Federal,
state and other governments, and their regulatory agencies or self-regulatory organizations, may take actions that affect the regulation
of the instruments in which the fund invests, or the issuers of such instruments, in ways that are unforeseeable. Legislation or
regulation may also change the way in which the fund itself is regulated. Such legislation or regulation could limit or preclude
the fund’s ability to achieve its investment objective.
Governments or their agencies may also acquire distressed assets
from financial institutions and acquire ownership interests in those institutions. The implications of government ownership and
disposition of these assets are unclear, and such a program may have positive or negative effects on the liquidity, valuation and
performance of the fund’s portfolio holdings. Furthermore, volatile financial markets can expose the fund to greater market
and liquidity risk and potential difficulty in valuing portfolio instruments held by the fund.
The fund’s
main risk factors are listed below in alphabetical order.
Before investing, be sure to read the additional descriptions
of these risks
beginning on page 5 of the prospectus.
Active management risk
The
subadvisor’s investment strategy may fail to produce the intended result.
Currency risk
Fluctuations
in exchange rates may adversely affect the U.S. dollar value of a fund’s investments. Currency risk includes the risk that
currencies in which a fund’s investments are traded, or currencies
in which a fund has taken an active position, will decline in value relative to the U.S. dollar.
Equity securities risk
The
value of a company’s equity securities is subject to changes in the company’s financial condition, and overall market
and
economic conditions. The securities of value companies
are subject to the risk that the companies may not overcome the adverse business developments or other factors causing their securities
to be underpriced or that the market may never come to recognize their fundamental value.
Foreign securities risk
As
compared to U.S. companies, there may be less publicly available information relating to foreign companies. Foreign
securities may be subject to foreign taxes. The value of foreign securities
is subject to currency fluctuations and adverse political and
economic developments.
Initial public offerings risk
IPO
shares may have a magnified impact on fund performance and are frequently volatile in price. They can be held for
a
short period of time causing an increase in portfolio turnover.
Large company risk
Large-capitalization
stocks as a group could fall out of favor with the market, causing the fund to underperform investments
that
focus on small- or medium-capitalization stocks. Larger, more established companies may be slow to respond to challenges and may
grow more slowly than smaller companies. For purposes of the fund’s investment policies, the market capitalization of a company
is based on its market capitalization at the time the fund purchases the company’s securities. Market capitalizations of
companies change over time.
Liquidity risk
Exposure
exists when trading volume, lack of a market maker or legal restrictions impair the ability to sell particular securities or close
derivative positions at an advantageous price.
Medium and smaller company risk
The
prices of medium and smaller company stocks can change more frequently and dramatically than those of
large
company stocks. For purposes of the fund’s investment policies, the market capitalization of a company is based on its market
capitalization at the time the fund purchases the company’s securities. Market capitalizations of companies change over time.
Sector risk
Because
the fund may from time to time focus on one or more sectors of the economy, at such times its performance will depend in
large part on the performance of those sectors. A fund that invests
in particular sectors is particularly susceptible to the impact of market, economic, regulatory and other factors affecting those
sectors. As a result, at such times, the value of your investment may fluctuate more widely than it would in a fund that is invested
across sectors.
Past performance
The following performance information in the bar chart and table
below illustrates the variability of the fund’s returns and provides some indication of the risks of investing in the fund
by showing changes in the fund’s performance from year to year. However, past performance (before and after taxes) does not
indicate future results. All figures assume dividend reinvestment. Performance for the fund is updated daily, monthly and quarterly
and may be obtained at our Web site: www.jhfunds.com/InstitutionalPerformance, or by calling 1-888-972-8696 between 8:30 A.M. and
5:00 P.M., Eastern Time, on most business days.
Average annual total returns
Performance
of a broad-based market index is included for comparison. The S&P 500 Index shows how the fund’s
performance
compares with the returns of an index of stocks with a broad range of market capitalizations.
After-tax returns
These
reflect the highest individual federal marginal income tax rates in effect as of the date provided and do not reflect any state
or local taxes. Your actual after-tax returns may be different. After-tax
returns are not relevant to shares held in an IRA, 401(k) or other tax-advantaged investment plan.
Russell 1000 Value Index
is
an unmanaged index containing those securities in the Russell 1000 Index with a with a lower price-to-book ratio and
less-than-average growth orientation.
S&P 500 Index
is
an unmanaged index that includes 500 widely traded stocks.
Class R6 shares of the fund commenced operations on September
1, 2011. The returns prior to that date are those of Robeco Boston Partners Large Cap Value Fund’s (predecessor fund) Institutional
shares (through December 19, 2008), first offered on January 16, 1997, and the fund’s Class I shares (from inception, December
22, 2008) that in each case have been recalculated to apply the gross fees and expenses of Class R6 shares. Returns for Class R6
shares would have been substantially similar to returns of Class A shares because both share classes are invested in the same portfolio
of securities and returns would differ only to the extent that expenses of the classes are different.
Calendar year total returns — Class R6
(%)
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Year-to-date total return
The
fund’s total return for the three months ended March 31, 2013 was 10.98%.
Best quarter:
Q2
‘09, 18.24%
Worst quarter:
Q4
’08, –20.51%
Average annual total returns
(%)
|
1 Year
|
5 Year
|
10 Year
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as of 12-31-12
|
|
|
|
Class R6
before tax
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20.08
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2.84
|
8.75
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After tax on distributions
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19.25
|
2.48
|
7.76
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After tax on distributions, with sale
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14.16
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2.38
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7.41
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Russell 1000 Value Index
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17.51
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0.59
|
7.38
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S&P 500 Index
|
16.00
|
1.66
|
7.10
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Investment management
Investment advisor
John
Hancock Investment Management Services, LLC
Subadvisor
Robeco
Investment Management, Inc.
John Hancock
Disciplined Value Fund
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Portfolio management
Mark E. Donovan, CFA
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David J. Pyle, CFA
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Co-portfolio manager
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Co-portfolio manager
|
|
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Managed the fund since inception
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Managed the fund since 2005
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Purchase and sale of fund shares
The minimum initial investment requirement for Class R6 shares
of the fund is $1 million for all investors other than certain qualified plan investors. There is no minimum initial investment
requirement for such qualified plan investors. There are no subsequent investment requirements. You may redeem shares of the fund
on any business day by mail: Mutual Fund Operations, John Hancock Signature Services, Inc., P.O. Box 55913, Boston, Massachusetts
02205-5913; or for most account types through our Web site: www.jhfunds.com or by telephone: 1-888-972-8696.
Taxes
The fund’s distributions are taxable, and will be taxed
as ordinary income and/or capital gains, unless you are investing through a tax-deferred arrangement, such as a 401(k) plan or
individual retirement account. Withdrawals from such tax-deferred arrangements may be subject to tax at a later date.
© 2013 John Hancock Funds, LLC 340R6SP 7-1-13 SEC file number:
811-21777
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