As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on July 21, 2005

                                                  Securities Act File No. 333-
                                     Investment Company Act File No. 811-06645

                      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                            Washington, D.C. 20549

                                -------------
                                   FORM N-2
          [X] REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933

                        [ ] PRE-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO.

                       [ ] POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO.
                                    AND/OR
                     [X] REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE
                        INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940

                              [X] AMENDMENT NO. 6
                       (Check appropriate box or boxes)

                                -------------
                    MUNIYIELD CALIFORNIA INSURED FUND, INC.
              (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)
                  
                                -------------
                            800 Scudders Mill Road
                         Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536
                   (Address of Principal Executive Offices)
                  
                                -------------
                                (609) 282-2800
             (Registrant's Telephone Number, Including Area Code)
                  
                                -------------
                              Robert C. Doll, Jr.
                    MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc.
             800 Scudders Mill Road, Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536
       Mailing Address: P.O. Box 9011, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011
                    (Name and Address of Agent for Service)
                  
                                -------------
                                  Copies to:

    Andrew J. Donohue, Esq.                          Frank P. Bruno, Esq.
  FUND ASSET MANAGEMENT, L.P.                   SIDLEY AUSTIN BROWN & WOOD LLP
         P.O. Box 9011                                787 Seventh Avenue
Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011                   New York, New York 10019

                                 -------------
 Approximate date of proposed public offering: As soon as practicable after the
                effective date of this Registration Statement.

                                 -------------
If any of the securities being registered on this form are to be offered on a
delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of
1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"), other than securities offered only in
connection with dividend or interest reinvestment plans, check the following
box. [_]



                                          -------------------------------------
                            CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   Proposed Maximum       Proposed Maximum        Amount of
            Title of Securities                 Amount being      Offering Price Per     Aggregate Offering     Registration
             Being Registered                    Registered            Unit (1)               Price (1)            Fee(2)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                      
Auction Market Preferred Stock...........       1,800 shares            $25,000              $45,000,000          $5,296.50
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



(1) Estimated solely for the purpose of calculating the registration fee.
(2) Transmitted prior to the filing date to the designated lockbox of the
Securities and Exchange Commission at Mellon Bank in Pittsburgh, PA.





The Registrant hereby amends this Registration Statement on such date or dates
as may become necessary to delay its effective date until the Registrant shall
file a further amendment, which specifically states that this Registration
Statement shall thereafter become effective in accordance with Section 8(a) of
the Securities Act of 1933 or until the Registration Statement shall become
effective on such date as the Commission, acting pursuant to said Section
8(a), may determine.


                                      2




The information in this prospectus is not complete and may be changed. We may
not sell these securities until the registration statement filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This prospectus is not an
offer to sell these securities and it is not soliciting an offer to buy these
securities in any state where the offer or sale is not permitted.



                             Subject to Completion
                  Preliminary Prospectus dated July 21, 2005


PROSPECTUS
----------
                                  $45,000,000
                    MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc.
                    Auction Market Preferred Stock ("AMPS")
                            1,800 Shares, Series F
                   Liquidation Preference $25,000 per Share

                            ----------------------

     MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc. is a non-diversified, closed-end
fund. The investment objective of the Fund is to provide shareholders with as
high a level of current income exempt from Federal and California income taxes
as is consistent with its investment policies and prudent investment
management. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing,
as a fundamental policy, at least 80% of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets
(including proceeds from the issuance of any preferred stock) and the proceeds
of any borrowings for investment purposes, in a portfolio of municipal
obligations the interest on which, in the opinion of bond counsel to the
issuer, is excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes
(except that the interest may be includable in taxable income for purposes of
the Federal alternative minimum tax) and exempt from California income taxes.
Under normal market conditions, the Fund invests primarily in a portfolio of
long term municipal obligations that are rated investment grade or, if
unrated, are considered by the Fund's investment adviser to be of comparable
quality. Under normal circumstances and after the investment period following
this offering (not expected to exceed three months), the Fund invests, as a
non-fundamental policy, at least 80% of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets
(including proceeds from the issuance of any preferred stock) and the proceeds
of any borrowings for investment purposes, in municipal obligations that are
covered by insurance guaranteeing the timely payment of principal at maturity
and interest when due. The Fund may invest in certain tax exempt securities
classified as "private activity bonds," as discussed within, that may subject
certain investors in the Fund to an alternative minimum tax. There can be no
assurance that the Fund's investment objective will be realized.

                                                 (continued on following page)

     Certain capitalized terms used herein not otherwise defined in this
prospectus have the meaning provided in the Glossary at the back of this
prospectus.

     Investing in the AMPS involves certain risks that are described in the
"Risk Factors and Special Considerations" section beginning on page [12] of
this prospectus. The minimum purchase amount for the AMPS is $25,000.

                            ----------------------




                                                                        Per Share           Total
                                                                       ------------       --------
                                                                                            
      Public offering price                                               $25,000        $ 45,000,000
      Underwriting discount                                                  $250            $450,000
      Proceeds, before expenses, to the Fund (1)                          $24,750        $ 44,550,000
(1)   The estimated offering expenses payable by the Fund are $[    ].



     The public offering price per share will be increased by the amount of
accumulated dividends, if any, from the date the shares are first issued.

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

     One certificate for the Series F AMPS will be ready for delivery to the
nominee of The Depository Trust Company on or about [ ], 2005.

                            ----------------------

                              Merrill Lynch & Co.

                            ----------------------

                   The date of this prospectus is [ ], 2005.


                                      3



(continued from previous page)

     This prospectus contains information you should know before investing,
including information about risks. Please read it before you invest and keep
it for future reference. The Fund's statement of additional information dated
[ ], 2005 contains further information about the Fund and is incorporated by
reference (legally considered to be part of this prospectus) and the table of
contents of the statement of additional information appears on page [52] of
this prospectus. A copy of the statement of additional information and copies
of the Fund's semi-annual and annual reports may be obtained without charge by
writing to the Fund at its address at 800 Scudders Mill Road, Plainsboro, New
Jersey 08536, or by calling the Fund at (800) 543-6217. In addition, you may
request other information about the Fund or make shareholder inquiries by
calling the Fund toll-free at (800) 543-6217. In addition, the Securities and
Exchange Commission maintains a website (http://sec.gov) that contains the
statement of additional information, material incorporated by reference and
other information regarding registrants that file electronically with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. The Fund does not maintain a website.


                                      4






                                                 TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                                                                       Page
                                                                                                                      -----


                                                                                                                      
Prospectus Summary........................................................................................................6
Risk Factors and Special Considerations..................................................................................12
Financial Highlights.....................................................................................................16
The Fund ................................................................................................................19
Use of Proceeds..........................................................................................................19
Capitalization...........................................................................................................19
Portfolio Composition....................................................................................................19
Investment Objective and Policies........................................................................................20
Other Investment Policies................................................................................................29
Description of AMPS .....................................................................................................32
The Auction..............................................................................................................37
Rating Agency Guidelines.................................................................................................45
Investment Advisory and Management Arrangements..........................................................................46
Taxes   .................................................................................................................47
Description of Capital Stock.............................................................................................48
Custodian................................................................................................................50
Underwriting.............................................................................................................50
Transfer Agent, Dividend Disbursing Agent and Registrar..................................................................51
Accounting Services Provider.............................................................................................51
Legal Matters............................................................................................................51
Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm and Experts................................................................51
Additional Information...................................................................................................51
Table of Contents of Statement of Additional Information.................................................................52
Glossary ................................................................................................................53





                            ----------------------

     Information about the Fund can be reviewed and copied at the Securities
and Exchange Commission's Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. Call
1-202-942-8090 for information on the operation of the public reference room.
This information is also available on the Securities and Exchange Commission's
Internet site at http://www.sec.gov and copies may be obtained upon payment of
a duplicating fee by writing to the Public Reference Section of the Securities
and Exchange Commission, Washington, D.C. 20549-0102.

                            ----------------------

     You should rely only on the information contained in this prospectus. We
have not, and the underwriter has not, authorized any other person to provide
you with different information. If anyone provides you with different or
inconsistent information, you should not rely on it. We are not, and the
underwriter is not, making an offer to sell these securities in any
jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted. You should assume that
the information appearing in this prospectus is accurate only as of the date
on the front cover of this prospectus. Our business, financial condition,
results of operations and prospects may have changed since that date.


                                      5



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                              PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

     This summary is qualified in its entirety by reference to the detailed
information included in this prospectus and the statement of additional
information.




                  
The Fund            MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc. is a non-diversified, closed-end management investment
                    company.

The Offering        The Fund is offering a total of 1,800 shares of Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series F, at a
                    purchase price of $25,000 per share plus accumulated dividends, if any, from the date the
                    shares are first issued. The shares of AMPS are being offered by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner
                    & Smith Incorporated ("Merrill Lynch"), as underwriter.

                    The Series F AMPS will be shares of preferred stock of the Fund that entitle their holders to
                    receive cash dividends at an annual rate that may vary for the successive dividend periods. In
                    general, except as described below, each dividend period for the Series F AMPS following the
                    initial dividend period will be seven days. The applicable dividend for a particular dividend
                    period will be determined by an auction conducted on the business day next preceding the start
                    of that dividend period.

                    Investors and potential investors in shares of Series F AMPS may participate in auctions for
                    the AMPS through their broker-dealers.

                    Generally, AMPS investors will not receive certificates representing ownership of their shares.
                    Ownership of AMPS will be maintained in book-entry form by the securities depository (The
                    Depository Trust Company) or its nominee for the account of the investor's agent member
                    (generally the investor's broker-dealer). The investor's agent member, in turn, will maintain
                    records of such investor's beneficial ownership of AMPS.

Investment          The investment objective of the Fund is to provide shareholders with as high a level of current
Objective and       income exempt from Federal and California income taxes as is consistent with its investment
Policies            policies and prudent investment management. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective
                    by investing, as a fundamental policy, at least 80% of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets
                    (including proceeds from the issuance of any preferred stock) and the proceeds of any
                    borrowings for investment purposes, in a portfolio of municipal obligations issued by or on
                    behalf of the State of California, its political subdivisions, agencies and instrumentalities
                    and by other qualifying issuers, each of which pays interest that, in the opinion of bond
                    counsel to the issuer, is excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes (except
                    that the interest may be includable in taxable income for purposes of the Federal alternative
                    minimum tax) and exempt from California income taxes ("California Municipal Bonds"). The Fund
                    also may invest in municipal obligations issued by or on behalf of states, territories and
                    possessions of the United States and their political subdivisions, agencies or
                    instrumentalities, which pay interest that is excludable from gross income for Federal income
                    tax purposes, in the opinion of bond counsel to the issuer, but is not exempt from California
                    income taxes ("Municipal Bonds"). In general, the Fund does not intend for its investments to
                    earn a large amount of interest income that is (i) includable in gross income for Federal
                    income tax purposes or (ii) not exempt from California income taxes. There can be no assurance
                    that the Fund's investment objective will be realized.

                    Maturity. The average maturity of the Fund's portfolio securities varies from time to time
                    based upon an assessment of economic and market conditions by Fund Asset Management, L.P., the
                    Fund's investment adviser (the "Investment Adviser"). The Fund intends to invest primarily in
                    long term California Municipal Bonds (that is, California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds
                    with maturities of more than ten years). However, the Fund also may invest in intermediate term
                    California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds with maturities of between three years and ten
                    years. The Fund also may invest from time to time in short term California Municipal Bonds and

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                                                         6



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                    Municipal Bonds with maturities of less than three years.

                    Municipal Bond Insurance. Under normal circumstances and after the investment period following
                    the offering (not expected to exceed three months), the Fund invests, as a non-fundamental
                    policy, at least 80% of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets (including proceeds from the
                    issuance of any preferred stock) and the proceeds of any borrowings for investment purposes, in
                    California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds that are covered by insurance guaranteeing the
                    timely payment of principal at maturity and interest when due.

                    Investment Grade Municipal Bonds. Under normal market conditions, the Fund invests primarily in
                    a portfolio of long term California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds that are rated
                    investment grade by one or more nationally recognized statistical rating organizations
                    ("NRSROs") (Baa or higher by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") or BBB or higher by
                    Standard & Poor's ("S&P") or Fitch Ratings ("Fitch")) or in unrated bonds considered by the
                    Investment Adviser to be of comparable quality. In assessing the quality of California
                    Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds, the Investment Adviser takes into account the Municipal
                    Bond insurance as well as the nature of any letters of credit or similar credit enhancement to
                    which particular California Municipal Bonds or Municipal Bonds are entitled and the
                    creditworthiness of the financial institution that provided such Municipal Bond insurance or
                    credit enhancement.

                    Indexed and Inverse Floating Rate Securities. The Fund may invest in securities whose potential
                    returns are directly related to changes in an underlying index or interest rate, known as
                    indexed securities. The return on indexed securities will rise when the underlying index or
                    interest rate rises and fall when the index or interest rate falls. The Fund may also invest in
                    securities whose return is inversely related to changes in an interest rate (inverse floaters).
                    In general, income on inverse floaters will decrease when short term interest rates increase
                    and increase when short term interest rates decrease. Investments in inverse floaters may
                    subject the Fund to the risks of reduced or eliminated interest payments and loss of principal.
                    In addition, certain indexed securities and inverse floaters may increase or decrease in value
                    at a greater rate than the underlying interest rate, which effectively leverages the Fund's
                    investment. As a result, the market value of such securities will generally be more volatile
                    than that of fixed rate, tax exempt securities. Both indexed securities and inverse floaters
                    are derivative securities and can be considered speculative.

                    Hedging Transactions. The Fund may seek to hedge its portfolio against changes in interest
                    rates using options and financial futures contracts or swap transactions. The Fund's hedging
                    transactions are designed to reduce volatility, but come at some cost. For example, the Fund
                    may try to limit its risk of loss from a decline in price of a portfolio security by purchasing
                    a put option. However, the Fund must pay for the option, and the price of the security may not
                    in fact drop. In large part, the success of the Fund's hedging activities depends on its
                    ability to forecast movements in securities prices and interest rates. The Fund is not required
                    to hedge its portfolio and may choose not to do so. The Fund cannot guarantee that any hedging
                    strategies it uses will work.

                    Swap Agreements. The Fund is authorized to enter into swap agreements, which are
                    over-the-counter contracts in which one party agrees to make periodic payments based on the
                    change in the market value of a specific bond, basket of bonds or index in return for periodic
                    payments based on a fixed or variable interest rate or the change in market value of a
                    different bond, basket of bonds or index. Swap agreements may be used to obtain exposure to a
                    bond or market without owning or taking physical custody of securities.

                    Federal Tax Considerations. While exempt interest dividends derived from interest on California
                    Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds are excluded from gross income for Federal income tax
                    purposes, they may be subject to the Federal alternative minimum tax in certain circumstances.
                    Distributions of any capital gain or other taxable income will be taxable to stockholders. The
                    Fund may not be a suitable investment for investors subject to the Federal alternative minimum
                    tax or who would become subject to such tax by investing in the Fund. See "Taxes."

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                                                         7



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Risk Factors        Set forth below is a summary of the main risks of investing in the Fund's Series F AMPS. For a
                    more detailed description of the main risks as well as certain other risks associated with
                    investing in the Fund's Series F AMPS, see "Risk Factors and Special Considerations."

                    o    The credit ratings of the AMPS could be reduced or terminated while an investor holds the
                         AMPS, which could affect liquidity.

                    o    Neither broker-dealers nor the Fund are obligated to purchase shares of AMPS in an auction
                         or otherwise, nor is the Fund required to redeem shares of AMPS in the event of a failed
                         auction.

                    o    If sufficient bids do not exist in an auction, the applicable dividend rate will be the
                         maximum applicable dividend rate, and in such event, owners of AMPS wishing to sell will
                         not be able to sell all, and may not be able to sell any, AMPS in the auction. As a
                         result, investors may not have liquidity of investment.

                    o    As a result of bidding by broker-dealers in an auction, the dividend rate that would apply
                         at the auction may be higher or lower than the rate that would have prevailed had the
                         broker-dealer not bid.

                    o    A broker-dealer may bid in an auction in order to prevent what would otherwise be (i) a
                         failed auction, (ii) an "all-hold" auction, or (iii) an applicable dividend rate that the
                         broker-dealer believes, in its sole discretion, does not reflect the market for the AMPS
                         at the time of the auction.

                    o    The relative buying and selling interest of market participants in AMPS and in the auction
                         rate securities market as a whole will vary over time, and such variations may be affected
                         by, among other things, news relating to the issuer, the attractiveness of alternative
                         investments, the perceived risk of owning the security (whether related to credit,
                         liquidity or any other risk), the tax treatment accorded the instruments, the accounting
                         treatment accorded auction rate securities, including recent clarifications of U.S.
                         generally accepted principles relating to the treatment of auction rate securities,
                         reactions to regulatory actions or press reports, financial reporting cycles and market
                         sentiment generally. Shifts of demand in response to any one or simultaneous particular
                         events cannot be predicted and may be short-lived or exist for longer periods.

                    o    Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated ("Merrill Lynch") has advised the Fund
                         that it and various other broker-dealers and other firms that participate in the auction
                         rate securities market received letters from the staff of the Securities and Exchange
                         Commission last spring. The letters requested that each of these firms voluntarily conduct
                         an investigation regarding its respective practices and procedures in that market.
                         Pursuant to this request, Merrill Lynch conducted its own voluntary review and reported
                         its findings to the Securities and Exchange Commission staff. At the Securities and
                         Exchange Commission staff's request, Merrill Lynch, together with certain other
                         broker-dealers and other firms that participate in the auction rate securities market, is
                         engaging in discussions with the Securities and Exchange Commission staff concerning its
                         inquiry. Neither Merrill Lynch nor the Fund can predict the ultimate outcome of the
                         inquiry or how that outcome will affect the market for the AMPS or the auctions.

                    o    Broker-dealers have no obligation to maintain a secondary trading market in the AMPS
                         outside of auctions and there can be no assurance that a secondary market for the AMPS
                         will develop or, if it does develop, that it will provide holders with a liquid trading
                         market. An increase in the level of interest rates likely will have an adverse effect on
                         the secondary market price of the AMPS, and a selling stockholder may have to sell AMPS
                         between auctions at a price per share of less than $25,000.

                    o    The Fund will issue the AMPS only if the AMPS have received a rating of Aaa from Moody's
                         and AAA from S&P. Under certain circumstances, the Fund may voluntarily terminate
                         compliance with Moody's or S&P guidelines, or both, in which case the AMPS may no longer
                         be rated by Moody's or S&P, as applicable, but will be rated by at least one rating
                         agency.

                    o    The Fund issues shares of AMPS, which generally pay dividends based on short term interest

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                                                         8



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                         rates. The Fund generally will purchase California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds
                         that pay interest at fixed or adjustable rates. If market interest rates rise, this could
                         negatively impact the value of the Fund's investment portfolio, reducing the amount of
                         assets serving as asset coverage for the AMPS. If the asset coverage becomes too low, the
                         Fund may be required to redeem some or all of the shares of AMPS.

                    o    The Fund is registered as a "non-diversified" investment company, the Fund may invest a
                         greater percentage of its assets in a single issuer than a diversified investment company.
                         Since the Fund may invest a relatively high percentage of its assets in a limited number
                         of issuers, the Fund may be more exposed to any single economic, political or regulatory
                         occurrence than a more widely diversified fund. Additionally, the Fund is more exposed to
                         risks affecting issuers of California Municipal Bonds than in a municipal bond fund that
                         invests more widely. 

                    o    The amount of public information available about California Municipal Bonds and Municipal
                         Bonds in the Fund's portfolio is generally less than that for corporate equities or bonds,
                         and the investment performance of the Fund may, therefore, be more dependent on the
                         analytical abilities of the Investment Adviser than the performance of a stock fund or
                         taxable bond fund.

                    o    The Fund invests in California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds, which are subject to
                         interest rate and credit risk. Interest rate risk is the risk that prices of California
                         Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds generally increase when interest rates decline and
                         decrease when interest rates increase. Prices of the longer term securities in which the
                         Fund primarily invests generally change more in response to interest rates than prices of
                         shorter term securities. Credit risk is the risk that the issuer will be unable to pay the
                         interest or principal when due. Changes in an issuer's credit rating or the market's
                         perception of an issuer's creditworthiness may affect the value of the Fund's investment in
                         that issuer.

Investment Adviser  The Investment Adviser provides investment advisory and administrative services to the Fund.
                    For its services, the Fund pays the Investment Adviser a monthly fee at the annual rate of
                    0.50% of the Fund's average weekly net assets (including any proceeds from the issuance of
                    preferred stock).

Dividends and       Dividends on the Series F AMPS will be cumulative from the date the shares are first issued and 
Dividend Periods    payable at the annualized cash dividend rate for the initial dividend period on the initial
                    dividend payment date as follows:
 
                                                                       Initial                         Initial
                                        Initial                       Dividend                        Dividend
                                        Dividend                       Period                          Payment
AMPS Series                               Rate                         Ending                           Date
------------------            ----------------------------  ---------------------------   ----------------------------
Series F                                  [ ]%                        [  ], 2005                       [  ], 2005


                    After the initial dividend period, each dividend period for the Series F AMPS will generally
                    consist of seven days; provided however, that, before any auction, the Fund may decide, subject
                    to certain limitations and only if it gives notice to holders, to declare a special dividend
                    period of up to five years.

                    After the initial dividend period, in the case of dividend periods that are not special
                    dividend periods, dividends generally will be payable on each succeeding Thursday in the case
                    of the Series F AMPS.

                    Dividends for the Series F AMPS will be paid through the securities depository (The Depository
                    Trust Company) on each dividend payment date for the AMPS.

                    For each subsequent dividend period, the auction agent (The Bank of New York) will hold an
                    auction to determine the cash dividend rate on the shares of Series F AMPS.

Determination of    Generally, the applicable dividend rate for any dividend period for the Series F AMPS will not be 

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                                                         9



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Maximum Dividend    more than the maximum applicable rate attributable to such shares. The maximum applicable rate
Rates               will be the higher of (A) the applicable percentage of the reference rate on the auction date
                    or (B) the applicable spread plus the reference rate on the auction date. The reference rate is
                    (A) the higher of the applicable LIBOR Rate (as defined in the Glossary) and the Taxable
                    Equivalent of the Short Term Municipal Bond Rate (as defined in the Glossary) (for a dividend
                    period or special dividend period of 364 or fewer days), or (B) the applicable Treasury Index
                    Rate (as defined in the Glossary) (for a special dividend period of 365 days or more). The
                    maximum applicable rate for the Series F AMPS will depend on the credit rating assigned to the
                    shares, the length of the dividend period and whether or not the Fund has given notification
                    prior to the auction for the dividend period that any taxable income will be included in the
                    dividend on the AMPS for that dividend period. The applicable percentage and applicable spread
                    are as follows:

                                                           
                               Credit Ratings                Applicable     Applicable                    Applicable   
                     ----------------------------------      Percentage     Percentage     Applicable    Spread Over  
                                                            of Reference   of Reference    Spread Over    Reference   
                                                              Rate--No        Rate--      Reference--No     Rate-- 
                        Moody's               S&P           Notification   Notification   Notification   Notification  
                     ----------------   ----------------   --------------  ------------  --------------  --------------
                          Aaa                 AAA               110%           125%           1.10%          1.25%
                       Aa3 to Aa1          AA- to AA+           125%           150%           1.25%          1.50%
                        A3 to A1            A- to A+            150%           200%           1.50%          2.00%
                      Baa3 to Baa1        BBB- to BBB+          175%           250%           1.75%          2.50%
                       Below Baa3          Below BBB-           200%           300%           2.00%          3.00%

                    The applicable percentage and the applicable spread as so determined may be subject to upward
                    but not downward adjustment in the discretion of the Board of Directors of the Fund after
                    consultation with the broker-dealers participating in the auction for the AMPS. 

                    There is no minimum applicable dividend rate for any dividend period.

Other AMPS          The Fund has outstanding 9,200 shares of Auction Market Preferred Stock, each with a
                    liquidation preference of $25,000 per share, plus accumulated but unpaid dividends, for an
                    aggregate initial liquidation preference of $230,000,000 (the "Other AMPS"). The Other AMPS are
                    as follows: 1,800 shares of Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series A; 1,800 shares of Auction
                    Market Preferred Stock, Series B; 1,600 shares of Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series C;
                    2,000 shares of Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series D; and 2,000 shares of Auction Market
                    Preferred Stock, Series E. The Series F AMPS offered hereby rank on a parity with the Other
                    AMPS with respect to dividends and liquidation preference.

Asset Maintenance   Under the Fund's Articles Supplementary creating the Series F AMPS (the "Articles Supplementary"), 
                    the Fund must maintain: 

                    o    asset coverage of the AMPS and Other AMPS as required by the rating agencies rating the
                         AMPS, and

                    o    asset coverage of the AMPS and Other AMPS of at least 200% as required by the Investment
                         Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act").

                    The Fund estimates that, based on the composition of its portfolio at April 30, 2005, asset
                    coverage of the AMPS and Other AMPS as required by the 1940 Act would be approximately [ ]%
                    immediately after the Fund issues the shares of AMPS offered by this prospectus representing
                    approximately [ ]% of the Fund's capital, or approximately [ ]% of the Fund's common stock
                    equity, immediately after the issuance of such AMPS.

Mandatory           If the required asset coverage is not maintained or, when necessary, restored, the Fund
Redemption          must redeem shares of AMPS at the price of $25,000 per share plus accumulated but unpaid 
                    dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared). The provisions of the 1940 Act may
                    restrict the Fund's ability to make such a mandatory redemption.

Optional            The Fund may, at its option, choose to redeem all or some of the shares of AMPS on any dividend 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                                        10



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Redemption          payment date at the price of $25,000 per share, plus accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon 
                   (whether or not earned or declared) plus any applicable premium.

Liquidation         The liquidation preference (that is, the amount the Fund must pay to holders of AMPS if the
Preference          Fund is liquidated) of each share of AMPS will be $25,000, plus an amount equal to accumulated but
                    unpaid dividends (whether or not earned or declared).

Ratings             The AMPS will be issued with a rating of Aaa from Moody's and AAA from S&P.

Voting Rights       The 1940 Act requires that the holders of AMPS and any other preferred stock, including the
                    Other AMPS, voting as a separate class, have the right to elect at least two directors at all
                    times and to elect a majority of the directors at any time when dividends on the AMPS or any
                    other preferred stock, including the Other AMPS, are unpaid for two full years. The Fund's
                    Charter, the 1940 Act and the General Corporation Laws of the State of Maryland require holders
                    of AMPS and any other preferred stock, including the Other AMPS, to vote as a separate class on
                    certain other matters.




------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                      11



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    RISK FACTORS AND SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS

     An investment in the Fund's AMPS should not constitute a complete
investment program.

     Set forth below are the main risks of investing in the Fund's AMPS.

     Investment Considerations. Investors in AMPS should consider the
following factors:

     o    The credit ratings of the AMPS could be reduced or terminated while
          an investor holds the AMPS, which could affect liquidity.

     o    Neither broker-dealers nor the Fund are obligated to purchase shares
          of AMPS in an auction or otherwise, nor is the Fund required to
          redeem shares of AMPS in the event of a failed auction.

     o    If sufficient bids do not exist in an auction, the applicable
          dividend rate will be the maximum applicable dividend rate, and in
          such event, owners of AMPS wishing to sell will not be able to sell
          all, and may not be able to sell any, AMPS in the auction. As a
          result, investors may not have liquidity of investment.

     o    Broker-dealers may submit orders in auctions for the AMPS for their
          own account. If a broker-dealer submits an order for its own account
          in any auction, it may have knowledge of orders placed through it in
          that auction and therefore have an advantage over other bidders, but
          such broker-dealer would not have knowledge of orders submitted by
          other broker-dealers in that auction. As a result of bidding by
          broker-dealers in an auction, the dividend rate that would apply at
          the auction may be higher or lower than the rate that would have
          prevailed had the broker-dealer not bid.

     o    A broker-dealer may bid in an auction in order to prevent what would
          otherwise be (i) a failed auction, (ii) an "all-hold" auction, or
          (iii) an applicable dividend rate that the broker-dealer believes,
          in its sole discretion, does not reflect the market for the AMPS at
          the time of the auction. A broker-dealer may, but is not obligated
          to, advise owners of AMPS that the dividend rate that would apply in
          an "all-hold" auction may be lower than would apply if owners submit
          bids and such advice, if given, may facilitate the submission of
          bids by owners that would avoid the occurrence of an "all-hold"
          auction.

     o    The relative buying and selling interest of market participants in
          AMPS and in the auction rate securities market as a whole will vary
          over time, and such variations may be affected by, among other
          things, news relating to the issuer, the attractiveness of
          alternative investments, the perceived risk of owning the security
          (whether related to credit, liquidity or any other risk), the tax
          treatment accorded the instruments, the accounting treatment
          accorded auction rate securities, including recent clarifications of
          U.S. generally accepted principles relating to the treatment of
          auction rate securities, reactions to regulatory actions or press
          reports, financial reporting cycles and market sentiment generally.
          Shifts of demand in response to any one or simultaneous particular
          events cannot be predicted and may be short-lived or exist for
          longer periods.

     o    Merrill Lynch has advised the Fund that it and various other
          broker-dealers and other firms that participate in the auction rate
          securities market received letters from the staff of the Securities
          and Exchange Commission last spring. The letters requested that each
          of these firms voluntarily conduct an investigation regarding its
          respective practices and procedures in that market. Pursuant to this
          request, Merrill Lynch conducted its own voluntary review and
          reported its findings to the Securities and Exchange Commission
          staff. At the Securities and Exchange Commission staff's request,
          Merrill Lynch, together with certain other broker-dealers and other
          firms that participate in the auction rate securities market, is
          engaging in discussions with the Securities and Exchange Commission
          staff concerning its inquiry. Neither Merrill Lynch nor the Fund can
          predict the ultimate outcome of the inquiry or how that outcome will
          affect the market for the AMPS or the auctions.

     Secondary Market. Broker-dealers have no obligation to maintain a
secondary trading market in the AMPS outside of auctions and there can be no
assurance that a secondary market for the AMPS will develop or, if it does
develop, that it will provide holders with a liquid trading market. The AMPS
will not be registered on any stock exchange or on any automated quotation
system. An increase in the level of interest rates likely will have an adverse
effect on the secondary 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                      12



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
market price of the AMPS, and a selling stockholder may have to sell AMPS
between auctions at a price per share of less than $25,000.

     Rating Agencies. The Fund will issue the AMPS only if the AMPS have
received a rating of Aaa from Moody's and AAA from S&P. As a result of such
ratings the Fund will be subject to guidelines of Moody's, S&P or another
substitute NRSRO that may issue ratings for its preferred stock. These
guidelines may impose asset coverage or portfolio composition requirements
that are more stringent than those imposed by the 1940 Act and may prohibit or
limit the use by the Fund of certain portfolio management techniques or
investments. The Fund does not expect these guidelines to prevent the
Investment Adviser from managing the Fund's portfolio in accordance with the
Fund's investment objective and policies. Also, under certain circumstances,
the Fund may voluntarily terminate compliance with Moody's or S&P's
guidelines, or both, in which case the AMPS may no longer be rated by Moody's
or S&P, as applicable, but will be rated by at least one rating agency.

     California Municipal Bonds. The Fund is more exposed to risks affecting
issuers of California Municipal Bonds than in a municipal bond fund that
invests more widely. California's economy slipped into a recession in early
2001, losing about 341,200 jobs between March 2001 and July 2003. The
recession was concentrated in the State's high-tech sector and,
geographically, in the San Francisco Bay Area. The economy has since
stabilized with 336,000 jobs gained between July 2003 and March 2005 compared
with 341,200 jobs lost between March 2001 and July 2003. Current projections
indicate that the California economy will grow at a rate close to the long-run
average growth of the State economy. A large part of the State's annual budget
is mandated by constitutional guarantees (such as for educational funding and
debt service) and caseload requirements for health and welfare programs, which
adds further pressure on the budget. The May report from the Legislative
Analyst's Office projected a shortfall or "gap" on a budgetary basis of $4.1
billion in fiscal year 2006-07, $4 billion in fiscal year 2007-08, and $3
billion for fiscal year 2008-09. Moody's, S&P and Fitch currently rate the
State of California's general obligation bonds A2, A and A-, respectively. See
Appendix A "Economic and Other Conditions in California" in the statement of
additional information.

     Municipal Bond Insurance. The Fund will be subject to certain investment
restrictions imposed by guidelines of the insurance companies that issue
insurance on the California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds in the Fund's
portfolio. The Fund does not expect these guidelines to prevent the Investment
Adviser from managing the Fund's portfolio in accordance with the Fund's
investment objective and policies.

     Interest Rate Risk and AMPS. The Fund issues shares of AMPS, which
generally pay dividends based on short term interest rates. The Fund generally
will purchase California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds that pay interest
at fixed or adjustable rates. If short term interest rates rise, dividend
rates on the shares of AMPS may rise so that the amount of dividends paid to
the holders of shares of AMPS exceeds the income from the Fund's portfolio
securities. Because income from the Fund's entire investment portfolio (not
just the portion of the portfolio purchased with the proceeds of the AMPS
offering) is available to pay dividends on the shares of AMPS, dividend rates
on the shares of AMPS would need to greatly exceed the Fund's net portfolio
income before the Fund's ability to pay dividends on the shares of AMPS would
be jeopardized. If market interest rates rise, this could negatively impact
the value of the Fund's investment portfolio, reducing the amount of assets
serving as asset coverage for the AMPS. If the asset coverage becomes too low,
the Fund may be required to redeem some or all of the shares of AMPS.

     Non-Diversification. The Fund is registered as a "non-diversified"
investment company. This means that the Fund may invest a greater percentage
of its assets in a single issuer than a diversified investment company. Since
the Fund may invest a relatively high percentage of its assets in a limited
number of issuers, the Fund may be more exposed to any single economic,
political or regulatory occurrence than a more widely diversified fund. Even
as a non-diversified fund, the Fund must still meet the diversification
requirements applicable to regulated investment companies under the Federal
income tax laws.

     Market Risk and Selection Risk. Market risk is the risk that the bond
market will go down in value, including the possibility that the market will
go down sharply and unpredictably. Selection risk is the risk that the
securities that Fund management selects will underperform the bond market, the
relevant indices, or other funds with similar investment objectives and
investment strategies.

     Tax Exempt Securities Market Risk. The amount of public information
available about California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds in the Fund's
portfolio is generally less than that for corporate equities or bonds, and the
investment 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                      13



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
performance of the Fund may, therefore, be more dependent on the analytical
abilities of the Investment Adviser than the performance of a stock fund or
taxable bond fund.

     Interest Rate and Credit Risk. The Fund invests in California Municipal
Bonds and Municipal Bonds, which are subject to interest rate and credit risk.
Interest rate risk is the risk that prices of California Municipal Bonds and
Municipal Bonds generally increase when interest rates decline and decrease
when interest rates increase. Prices of longer term securities generally
change more in response to interest rate changes than prices of shorter term
securities. The Fund's use of leverage by the issuance of preferred stock and
its investment in inverse floating obligations, as discussed below, may
increase interest rate risk. Because market interest rates are currently near
their lowest levels in many years, there is a greater risk that the Fund's
portfolio will decline in value if interest rates increase in the future.
Credit risk is the risk that the issuer will be unable to pay the interest or
principal when due. Changes in an issuer's credit rating or the market's
perception of an issuer's creditworthiness may affect the value of the Fund's
investment in that issuer. The degree of credit risk depends on both the
financial condition of the issuer and the terms of the obligation.

     Set forth below are certain other risks associated with investing in the
Fund's AMPS.

     Call and Redemption Risk. A California Municipal Bond's or Municipal
Bond's issuer may call the bond for redemption before it matures. If this
happens to a California Municipal Bond or Municipal Bond that the Fund holds,
the Fund may lose income and may have to invest the proceeds in California
Municipal Bonds or Municipal Bonds with lower yields.

     Rating Categories. The Fund intends to invest in California Municipal
Bonds and Municipal Bonds that are rated investment grade by S&P, Moody's or
Fitch, or in unrated, California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds that are
considered by the Investment Adviser to possess similar credit
characteristics. Obligations rated in the lowest investment grade category may
have certain speculative characteristics. For example, their prices are more
volatile, economic downturns and financial setbacks may affect their prices
more negatively, and their trading market may be more limited.

     Reinvestment Risk. Reinvestment risk is the risk that income from the
Fund's portfolio will decline if and when the Fund invests the proceeds from
matured, traded or called bonds at market interest rates that are below the
portfolio's current earnings rate. A decline in income could negatively affect
the Fund's yield, return or the market price of the common stock.

     Private Activity Bonds. The Fund may invest in certain tax exempt
securities classified as "private activity bonds." These bonds may subject
certain investors in the Fund to the Federal alternative minimum tax.

     Liquidity of Investments. Certain California Municipal Bonds and
Municipal Bonds in which the Fund invests may lack an established secondary
trading market or may be otherwise considered illiquid. Liquidity of a
security relates to the ability to easily dispose of the security and the
price to be obtained and does not generally relate to the credit risk or
likelihood of receipt of cash at maturity. Illiquid securities may trade at a
discount from comparable, more liquid investments.

     Portfolio Strategies. The Fund may engage in various portfolio strategies
both to seek to increase the return of the Fund and to seek to hedge its
portfolio against adverse effects from movements in interest rates and in the
securities markets. These portfolio strategies include the use of derivatives,
such as indexed securities, inverse floating rate securities, options,
futures, options on futures, interest rate swap transactions and credit
default swaps. Such strategies subject the Fund to the risk that, if the
Investment Adviser incorrectly forecasts market values, interest rates or
other applicable factors, the Fund's performance could suffer. Certain of
these strategies, such as investments in inverse floating rate securities and
credit default swaps, may provide investment leverage to the Fund's portfolio.
The Fund is not required to use derivatives or other portfolio strategies to
seek to increase return or to seek to hedge its portfolio and may choose not
to do so. There can be no assurance that the Fund's portfolio strategies will
be effective. Some of the derivative strategies that the Fund may use to seek
to increase its return are riskier than its hedging transactions and have
speculative characteristics. Such strategies do not attempt to limit the
Fund's risk of loss.

     General Risks Related to Derivatives. Derivatives are financial contracts
or instruments whose value depends on, or is derived from, the value of an
underlying asset, reference rate or index (or relationship between two
indices). The Fund may invest in a variety of derivative instruments for
investment purposes, hedging purposes or to seek to increase its return, such
as options, futures contracts and swap agreements. The Fund may use
derivatives as a substitute for taking a position in 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                      14



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
an underlying security or other asset and/or as part of a strategy designed to
reduce exposure to other risks, such as interest rate risk. The Fund also may
use derivatives to add leverage to the portfolio and/or to hedge against
increases in the Fund's costs associated with the dividend payments on the
preferred stock, including the AMPS. The Fund also may invest in certain
derivative products that pay tax exempt income interest via a trust or
partnership through which the Fund holds interests in one or more underlying
long term municipal securities. The Fund's use of derivative instruments
involves risks different from, and possibly greater than, the risks associated
with investing directly in securities and other traditional investments.
Derivatives are subject to a number of risks such as liquidity risk, interest
rate risk, credit risk, leverage risk and management risk. They also involve
the risk of mispricing or improper valuation and correlation risk (i.e., the
risk that changes in the value of the derivative may not correlate perfectly
with the underlying asset, rate or index). If the Fund invests in a derivative
instrument it could lose more than the principal amount invested. Moreover,
derivatives raise certain tax, legal, regulatory and accounting issues that
may not be presented by investments in California Municipal Bonds and
Municipal Bonds, and there is some risk that certain issues could be resolved
in a manner that could adversely impact the performance of the Fund and/or the
tax exempt nature of the dividends paid by the Fund.

     Also, suitable derivative transactions may not be available in all
circumstances and there can be no assurance that the Fund will engage in these
transactions to reduce exposure to other risks when that would be beneficial.

     Swaps. Swap agreements are types of derivatives. In order to seek to
hedge the value of the Fund's portfolio, to hedge against increases in the
Fund's cost associated with the dividend payments on its outstanding preferred
stock, including the AMPS, or to seek to increase the Fund's return, the Fund
may enter into interest rate or credit default swap transactions. In interest
rate swap transactions, there is a risk that yields will move in the direction
opposite of the direction anticipated by the Fund, which would cause the Fund
to make payments to its counterparty in the transaction that could adversely
affect Fund performance. In addition to the risks applicable to swaps
generally, credit default swap transactions involve special risks because they
are difficult to value, are highly susceptible to liquidity and credit risk,
and generally pay a return to the party that has paid the premium only in the
event of an actual default by the issuer of the underlying obligation (as
opposed to a credit downgrade or other indication of financial difficulty).
The Fund is not required to enter into interest rate or credit default swap
transactions for hedging purposes or to enhance its return and may choose not
to do so.

     Taxability Risk. The Fund intends to minimize the payment of taxable
income to stockholders by investing in California Municipal Bonds, Municipal
Bonds and other tax exempt securities in reliance on an opinion of bond
counsel to the issuer that the interest paid on those securities will be
excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes and exempt from
California income taxes, if applicable. Such securities, however, may be
determined for Federal income tax purposes to pay, or to have paid, taxable
income subsequent to the Fund's acquisition of the securities. In that event,
the Internal Revenue Service may demand that the Fund pay taxes on the
affected interest income, and, if the Fund agrees to do so, the Fund's yield
on its common stock could be adversely affected. A determination that interest
on a security held by the Fund is includable in gross income for Federal
income tax purposes retroactively to its date of issue may, likewise, cause a
portion of prior distributions received by stockholders, including holders of
AMPS, to be taxable to those stockholders in the year of receipt. The Fund
will not pay an Additional Dividend (as defined herein) to a holder of AMPS
under these circumstances.

     Antitakeover Provisions. The Fund's Charter, By-laws and the General
Corporation Law of the State of Maryland include provisions that could limit
the ability of other entities or persons to acquire control of the Fund or to
change the composition of its Board of Directors. Such provisions could limit
the ability of stockholders to sell their shares at a premium over prevailing
market prices by discouraging a third party from seeking to obtain control of
the Fund. See "Description of Capital Stock --- Certain Provisions of the
Charter and By-Laws."

     Market Disruption. The terrorist attacks in the United States on
September 11, 2001 had a disruptive effect on the securities markets, some of
which were closed for a four-day period. The continued threat of similar
attacks, and related events, including U.S. military actions in Iraq and
continued unrest in the Middle East, have led to increased short term market
volatility and may have long term effects on U.S. and world economies and
markets. Similar disruptions of the financial markets could adversely affect
the market prices of the Fund's portfolio securities, interest rates,
auctions, secondary trading, ratings, credit risk, inflation and other factors
relating to the Fund's AMPS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                      15



                             FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

     The following Financial Highlights table is intended to help you
understand the Fund's financial performance for the periods shown. Certain
information reflects financial results for a single share of common stock or
preferred stock of the Fund. The total returns in the table represent the rate
an investor would have earned or lost on an investment in shares of common
stock of the Fund (assuming reinvestment of all dividends). The information
with respect to the fiscal years ended October 31, 1995 to October 31, 2004
has been audited by ____________ whose report for the fiscal year ended
October 31, 2004, along with the financial statements of the Fund, is included
in the Fund's 2004 Annual Report, which is incorporated by reference herein.
The information with respect to the six months ended April 30, 2005 is
unaudited and is included in the Fund's 2005 Semi-Annual Report, which is
incorporated by reference herein. You may obtain a copy of the 2004 Annual
Report and the 2005 Semi-Annual Report at no cost by calling (800) 543-6217
between 8:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Eastern time on any business day.

     The following per share data and ratios have been derived from
information provided in the financial statements.




                           For the Six                                                    For the Year Ended October 31,
                           Months          ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           Ended April
                           30, 2005             2004           2003        2002         2001         2000        1999    
                           (unaudited)     -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
                                           
                                                                                          
                                                                                                 
Increase (Decrease) in
   Net Asset Value
Per Share Operating
   Performance

Net asset value,
   beginning of period        $ 15.23         $ 15.10        $ 15.26      $ 15.44    $ 14.24
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Investment income--net            .48##           .94##          .95##        .95       1.00
Realized and unrealized
   gain (loss) on
   investments--net               .01             .13           (.18)        (.22)      1.21
Dividends and
   distributions to
   Preferred Stock
   shareholders:
   Investment income--net        (.05)           (.06)          (.06)        (.09)      (.20)
   Realized gain on
   investments                  --              --             --         --##         --
In excess of realized
   gain on
   investments--net
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Total from investment
   operations                     .44            1.01            .71          .64       2.01
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Less dividends and
   distributions to
   Common Stock
   shareholders:
   Investment income--net        (.44)           (.88)          (.87)        (.81)      (.81)
Realized gain on
   investments--net             --              --             --            (.01)     --
In excess of realized
   gain on
   investments--net             --              --             --           --       --++
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Capital charge resulting
   from issuance of
   Common Stock
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Total dividends and
   distributions to
   Common Stock
   shareholders                  (.44)           (.88)          (.87)        (.82)      (.81)
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Net asset value, end of
   period                     $ 15.23         $ 15.23        $ 15.10      $ 15.26    $ 15.44
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Market price per share,
   end of period              $ 13.91         $ 13.73        $ 13.82      $ 13.68    $ 14.46
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Total Investment Return**
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 





                           
                           -----------------------------------------------
                           
                               1998        1997       1996        1995
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
                           
                           
                                                   
Increase (Decrease) in
   Net Asset Value
Per Share Operating
   Performance

Net asset value,
   beginning of period     
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Investment income--net     
Realized and unrealized
   gain (loss) on
   investments--net        
Dividends and
   distributions to
   Preferred Stock
   shareholders:
   Investment income--net  
   Realized gain on
   investments             
In excess of realized
   gain on
   investments--net
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Total from investment
   operations              
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Less dividends and
   distributions to
   Common Stock
   shareholders:
   Investment income--net  
Realized gain on
   investments--net        
In excess of realized
   gain on
   investments--net        
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Capital charge resulting
   from issuance of
   Common Stock
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Total dividends and
   distributions to
   Common Stock
   shareholders            
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Net asset value, end of
   period                  
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Market price per share,
   end of period           
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Total Investment Return**
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------


                                      16






                                                                                                 
Based on market price
   per share                     4.59%#          5.93%          7.50%         .20%     12.33%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Based on net asset value
   per share                     3.24%#          7.54%          5.29%        4.68%     14.76%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Ratios Based on Average
   Net Assets of Common
   Stock
Total expenses, net of
   reimbursement and
   excluding
   reorganization
   expenses***                    .94%*           .95%           .94%         .96%      1.06%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Total expenses,
   excluding
   reorganization
   expenses***                    .94%*           .95%           .94%         .96%      1.06%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Total expenses***                 .94%*           .95%           .94%        1.00%      1.06%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Total investment
   income--net***                6.35%*          6.29%          6.20%        6.38%      6.74%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Amount of dividends to
   Preferred Stock
   shareholders                   .70%*           .43%           .37%         .56%      1.36%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Investment income--net,
   to Common Stock
   shareholders                  5.65%*          5.86%          5.83%        5.82%      5.38%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 





                                                   
Based on market price
   per share               
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Based on net asset value
   per share               
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Ratios Based on Average
   Net Assets of Common
   Stock
Total expenses, net of
   reimbursement and
   excluding
   reorganization
   expenses***             
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Total expenses,
   excluding
   reorganization
   expenses***             
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Total expenses***          
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Total investment
   income--net***          
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Amount of dividends to
   Preferred Stock
   shareholders            
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Investment income--net,
   to Common Stock
   shareholders            
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------








                           For the Six                                                    For the Year Ended October 31,
                           Months          ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           Ended April
                           30, 2005             2004           2003        2002         2001         2000        1999    
                           (unaudited)     -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
                                           
                                                                                          
                                                                                                 
Ratios Based on
  Average Net
  Assets of Common
  & Preferred
  Stock***
Total expenses,
  net of
  reimbursement
  and excluding
  reorganization
  expenses
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Total expenses,
  excluding
  reorganization
  expenses
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Total expenses
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Total investment
  income--net
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Ratios Based on
  Average Net
  Assets of
  Preferred Stock
  Dividends to
  Preferred Stock
  shareholders.                  1.59%*           .96%           .85%      1.25%       2.86%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Supplemental Data
  Net assets
  applicable to
  Common Stock,
  end of period                                                        
  (in thousands)             $ 523,389       $ 523,206      $ 518,786    $ 524,485  $ 283,553
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Preferred Stock
  outstanding, end
  of period (in                                                        
  thousands)                 $ 230,000       $ 230,000      $ 230,000    $ 230,000  $ 130,000
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Portfolio turnover              19.99%          68.05%         52.17%       77.13%     59.36%
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 





                           -----------------------------------------------
                           
                               1998        1997       1996        1995
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
                           
                           
                                                   
Ratios Based on            
  Average Net              
  Assets of Common         
  & Preferred              
  Stock***                 
Total expenses,            
  net of                   
  reimbursement            
  and excluding            
  reorganization           
  expenses                 
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Total expenses,                                                           
  excluding                                                               
  reorganization           
  expenses                                                                
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------                                               
Total expenses                                                            
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------                                               
Total investment                                                          
  income--net                                                             
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------                                               
Ratios Based on                                                           
  Average Net              
  Assets of                                                               
  Preferred Stock                                                         
  Dividends to                                                            
  Preferred Stock                                                         
  shareholders.            
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------                                               
Supplemental Data          
  Net assets                                                              
  applicable to                                                           
  Common Stock,            
  end of period                                                           
  (in thousands)                                                          
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------                                               
Preferred Stock            
  outstanding, end                                                        
  of period (in                                                           
  thousands)                                                              
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Portfolio turnover                                                        
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------                                               


                                      17






                                                                                                 
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Leverage:
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Asset coverage per
  $1,000                       $ 3,276         $ 3,275       $ 3,256     $ 3,280     $ 3,181
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Liquidation
  preference per
  share+
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Average market
  value per
  share+###
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Dividends Per
  Share on
  Preferred Stock
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Outstanding+
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Series A--

Investment
  income--net                    $ 184           $ 246         $ 216       $ 359       $ 758
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Series B--
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Investment 
  income--net                    $ 201           $ 238         $ 212       $ 324       $ 700
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Series C--
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Investment 
  income--net                    $ 185           $ 224         $ 204       $ 320       $ 683
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Series D--
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Investment
  income--net                    $ 229           $ 249         $ 242       $ 203          --
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Series E--
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 
Investment
  income--net                    $ 190           $ 236         $ 196       $ 201          --
                           --------------  -------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ------------ ---------- 





                                                    
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Leverage:
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Asset coverage per
  $1,000                   
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Liquidation
  preference per
  share+
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Average market
  value per
  share+###
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Dividends Per
  Share on
  Preferred Stock
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Outstanding+< >
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Series A--

Investment
  income--net              
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Series B--
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Investment 
  income--net              
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Series C--
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Investment 
  income--net              
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Series D--
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Investment
  income--net              
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Series E--
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Investment
  income--net              
                           ----------- ----------- ---------- ------------




--------------------
*    Annualized.
**   Total investment returns based on market value, which can be
     significantly greater or lesser than the net asset value, may result in
     substantially different returns. Total investment returns exclude the
     effects of sales charges.
***  Do not reflect the effect of dividends to Preferred Stock shareholders.
+    Series D and E were issued on February 4, 2002.
++   Amount is less than $(.01) per share.
+++  Certain prior year amounts have been reclassified to conform to current
     year presentation.
#    Aggregate total investment return.
##   Based on average shares outstanding.
###  Based on monthly market value per share.


                                      18



                                   THE FUND

     MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is a
non-diversified, closed-end fund. The Fund was incorporated under the laws of
the State of Maryland on June 3, 1992, and has registered under the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"). The Fund's principal
executive office is located at 800 Scudders Mill Road, Plainsboro, New Jersey
08536, and its telephone number is (609) 282-2800.

     The Board of Directors of the Fund may at any time consider a merger,
consolidation or other form of reorganization of the Fund with one or more
other investment companies advised by Fund Asset Management, L.P. (the
"Investment Adviser") that have similar investment objectives and policies as
the Fund. Any such merger, consolidation or other form of reorganization would
require the prior approval of the Board of Directors and, if the Fund is the
acquired fund, the stockholders of the Fund. See "Description of Capital
Stock--Certain Provisions of the Charter and By-laws."

                                USE OF PROCEEDS

     The net proceeds of this offering will be approximately $[      ] after
payment of offering expenses (estimated to be approximately $[     ]) and the
deduction of the underwriting discount.

     The net proceeds of the offering will be invested in accordance with the
Fund's investment objective and policies within approximately three months
after completion of this offering, depending on market conditions and the
availability of appropriate securities. Pending such investment, it is
anticipated that the proceeds will be invested in short term, tax exempt
securities. See "Investment Objective and Policies."

                                CAPITALIZATION

     The following table sets forth the unaudited capitalization of the Fund
as of April 30, 2005 and as adjusted to give effect to the issuance of the
shares of AMPS offered hereby.




                                                                                         Actual           As Adjusted
                                                                                   -----------------   ------------------

                                                                                                              
Preferred Stock (9,200 shares of Other AMPS authorized, issued and outstanding
     at $25,000 per share liquidation preference, plus accumulated but unpaid
     dividends; 11,000 shares of AMPS and Other AMPS authorized, issued and
     outstanding, as adjusted, at $25,000 per share liquidation preference,
     plus accumulated but unpaid dividends)                                          $ 230,021,150             $
                                                                                   -----------------   ------------------
Common Stock, par value $.10 per share (199,990,800 shares authorized,
     34,361,200 shares issued and outstanding; 199,989,050 shares authorized,
     34,361,200 shares issued and outstanding, as adjusted)                             $3,436,120              $

Paid-in capital in excess of par value                                                 494,824,623

Undistributed investment income--net                                                     6,230,533

Accumulated realized capital losses--net                                               (21,102,366)

Unrealized appreciation--net                                                            40,000,475
                                                                                   -----------------   ------------------
Net assets applicable to outstanding common stock                                     $523,389,385             $
                                                                                   =================   ==================




                             PORTFOLIO COMPOSITION

     As of April 30, 2005, approximately [ ]% of the market value of the
Fund's portfolio was invested in long term and intermediate term municipal
obligations and approximately [ ]% of the market value of the Fund's portfolio
was invested in short term tax exempt securities. The following table sets
forth certain information with respect to the composition of the Fund's long
term municipal obligation investment portfolio as of April 30, 2005.


                                      19



                                    Number of         Value
    Moody's*          S&P*            Issues      (in thousands)     Percent
--------------  -----------------  -------------  ---------------  -----------
     Aaa              AAA                               $                   %
      Aa               AA
      A                A
     Baa              BBB
                                   -------------  ---------------  -----------
    Total                                               $                   %
                                   =============  ===============  ===========

     * Ratings: Using the higher of Moody's or S&P ratings on the Fund's
investments. Moody's rating categories may be modified further by a 1, 2 or 3
in Aa, A, Baa, Ba, B and Caa ratings. S&P rating categories may be modified
further by a plus (+) or minus (-) in AA, A, BBB, BB, B and CCC ratings.

                       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES

     The Fund's investment objective is to provide shareholders with as high a
level of current income exempt from Federal and California income taxes as is
consistent with its investment policies and prudent investment management. The
Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing, as a fundamental
policy, at least 80% of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets (including
proceeds from the issuance of any preferred stock) and the proceeds of any
borrowings for investment purposes, in a portfolio of municipal obligations
issued by or on behalf of the State of California, its political subdivisions,
agencies and instrumentalities and by other qualifying issuers, each of which
pays interest that, in the opinion of bond counsel to the issuer, is
excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes (except that the
interest may be includable in taxable income for purposes of the Federal
alternative minimum tax) and exempt from California income taxes ("California
Municipal Bonds"). The Fund also may invest in municipal obligations issued by
or on behalf of states, territories and possessions of the United States and
their political subdivisions, agencies or instrumentalities, which pay
interest that is excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes,
in the opinion of bond counsel to the issuer, but is not excludable from gross
income for California income tax purposes ("Municipal Bonds"). In general, the
Fund does not intend for its investments to earn a large amount of interest
income that is (i) includable in gross income for Federal income tax purposes
or (ii) not exempt from California income taxes. There can be no assurance
that the Fund's investment objective will be realized. From time to time, the
Fund may realize taxable capital gains. Unless otherwise noted, the term
"Municipal Bonds" also includes California Municipal Bonds.

     The Fund's investment objective and its policy of investing at least 80%
of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets (including proceeds from the issuance
of any preferred stock) and the proceeds of any borrowings for investment
purposes, in California Municipal Bonds are fundamental policies that may not
be changed without the approval of a majority of the outstanding voting
securities of the Fund (as defined in the 1940 Act). Under normal
circumstances and after the investment period following this offering (not
expected to exceed three months), the Fund invests as a non-fundamental
policy, at least 80% of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets (including
proceeds from the issuance of any preferred stock) and the proceeds of any
borrowings for investment purposes, in Municipal Bonds that are covered by
insurance guaranteeing the timely payment of principal at maturity and
interest when due. This is a non-fundamental policy and may be changed by the
Fund's Board of Directors without stockholder approval; provided that
stockholders are given at least 60 days' prior notice of any change as
required by the 1940 Act. There can be no assurance that the Fund's investment
objective will be realized.

     The Fund may invest in certain tax exempt securities classified as
"private activity bonds" (or industrial development bonds, under pre-1986 law)
("PABs") (in general, bonds that benefit non-governmental entities) that may
subject certain investors in the Fund to an alternative minimum tax. See
"Taxes." The percentage of the Fund's total assets invested in PABs will vary
from time to time.

     Under normal market conditions, the Fund expects to invest primarily in a
portfolio of long term Municipal Bonds that are commonly referred to as
"investment grade" securities, which are obligations rated at the time of
purchase within the four highest quality ratings as determined by either
Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") (currently Aaa, Aa, A and Baa),
Standard & Poor's ("S&P") (currently AAA, AA, A and BBB) or Fitch Ratings
("Fitch") (currently AAA, AA, A and BBB). In the case of short term notes, the
investment grade rating categories are SP-1+ through SP-2 for S&P, MIG-1
through MIG-3 for Moody's and F-1+ through F-3 for Fitch. In the case of tax
exempt commercial paper, the investment grade rating categories are A-1+
through A-3 for S&P, Prime-1 through Prime-3 for Moody's and F-1+ through F-3
for Fitch. Obligations ranked in the lowest investment grade rating category
(BBB, SP-2 and A-3 for S&P; Baa, MIG-3 and Prime-3 for Moody's and BBB and F-3
for Fitch), while considered "investment grade," may have certain speculative
characteristics. 


                                      20



There may be sub-categories or gradations indicating relative standing within
the rating categories set forth above. In assessing the quality of Municipal
Bonds with respect to the foregoing requirements, the Investment Adviser takes
into account the Municipal Bond insurance as well as the nature of any letters
of credit or similar credit enhancement to which particular Municipal Bonds
are entitled and the creditworthiness of the financial institution that
provided such Municipal Bond insurance or credit enhancement. Consequently, if
Municipal Bonds are covered by insurance policies issued by insurers whose
claims-paying ability is rated AAA by S&P or Fitch or Aaa by Moody's, the
Investment Adviser may consider such Municipal Bonds to be equivalent to
securities rated AAA- or Aaa-, as the case may be, even though such Municipal
Bonds would generally be assigned a lower rating if the rating were based
primarily upon the credit characteristics of the issuers without regard to the
insurance feature. The insured Municipal Bonds must also comply with the
standards applied by the insurance carriers in determining eligibility for
Municipal Bond insurance. See Appendix B--"Description of Municipal Bond
Ratings" and Appendix C--"Municipal Bond Insurance" to the statement of
additional information. If unrated, such securities will possess
creditworthiness comparable, in the opinion of the Investment Adviser, to
other obligations in which the Fund may invest.

     All percentage and ratings limitations on securities in which the Fund
may invest apply at the time of making an investment and shall not be
considered violated if an investment rating is subsequently downgraded to a
rating that would have precluded the Fund's initial investment in such
security. In the event that the Fund disposes of a portfolio security
subsequent to its being downgraded, the Fund may experience a greater risk of
loss than if such security had been sold prior to such downgrade.

     The net asset value of the shares of common stock of a closed-end
investment company, such as the Fund, which invests primarily in fixed income
securities, changes as the general levels of interest rates fluctuate. When
interest rates decline, the value of a fixed income portfolio can be expected
to rise. Conversely, when interest rates rise, the value of a fixed income
portfolio can be expected to decline. Prices of longer term securities
generally fluctuate more in response to interest rate changes than do shorter
term securities. These changes in net asset value are likely to be greater in
the case of a fund having a leveraged capital structure, such as the Fund.

     The Fund intends to invest primarily in long term Municipal Bonds with
maturities of more than ten years. However, the Fund also may invest in
intermediate term Municipal Bonds with maturities of between three years and
ten years. The Fund also may invest from time to time in short term Municipal
Bonds with maturities of less than three years. The average maturity of the
Fund's portfolio securities will vary based upon the Investment Adviser's
assessment of economic and market conditions. As of April 30, 2005, the
weighted average maturity of the Fund's portfolio was approximately _____
years.

     For temporary periods or to provide liquidity, the Fund has the authority
to invest as much as 20% of its total assets in tax exempt and taxable money
market obligations with a maturity of one year or less (such short term
obligations being referred to herein as "Temporary Investments"). In addition,
the Fund reserves the right as a defensive measure to invest temporarily a
greater portion of its assets in Temporary Investments, when, in the opinion
of the Investment Adviser, prevailing market or financial conditions warrant.
Taxable money market obligations will yield taxable income. The Fund also may
invest in variable rate demand obligations ("VRDOs") and VRDOs in the form of
participation interests ("Participating VRDOs") in variable rate tax exempt
obligations held by a financial institution. See "Other Investment
Policies--Temporary Investments." The Fund's hedging strategies, which are
described in more detail under "Hedging Transactions--Financial Futures
Transactions and Options," are not fundamental policies and may be modified by
the Board of Directors of the Fund without the approval of the Fund's
stockholders. The Fund is also authorized to invest in indexed and inverse
floating rate obligations for hedging purposes and to seek to enhance return.

     The Fund may invest in securities not issued by or on behalf of a state
or territory or by an agency or instrumentality thereof, if the Fund receives
an opinion of counsel to the issuer that such securities pay interest that is
excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes and, if
applicable, exempt from California income taxes ("Non-Municipal Tax Exempt
Securities"). Non-Municipal Tax Exempt Securities could include trust
certificates, partnership interests or other instruments evidencing interest
in one or more long term municipal securities. Non-Municipal Tax Exempt
Securities also may include securities issued by other investment companies
that invest in Municipal Bonds, to the extent such investments are permitted
by the Fund's investment restrictions and applicable law. Non-Municipal Tax
Exempt Securities are subject to the same risks associated with an investment
in Municipal Bonds as well as many of the risks associated with investments in
derivatives. While the Fund receives opinions of legal counsel to the effect
that the income from the Non-Municipal Tax Exempt Securities in which the Fund
invests is excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes to the
same 


                                      21



extent as the underlying municipal securities, the Internal Revenue Service
("IRS") has not issued a ruling on this subject. Were the IRS to issue an
adverse ruling or take an adverse position with respect to the taxation of
these types of securities, there is a risk that the interest paid on such
securities would be deemed taxable at the Federal level.

     Federal tax legislation has limited the types and volume of bonds the
interest on which qualifies for a Federal income tax exemption. As a result,
this legislation and legislation that may be enacted in the future may affect
the availability of Municipal Bonds for investment by the Fund.

Municipal Bond Insurance

     Under normal circumstances, the Fund invests at least 80% its assets in
Municipal Bonds either (i) insured under an insurance policy obtained by the
issuer thereof or any other party, or (ii) insured under an insurance policy
purchased by the Fund. The Fund seeks to limit its investments to Municipal
Bonds insured under insurance policies issued by insurance carriers that have
total admitted assets (unaudited) of at least $75,000,000 and capital and
surplus (unaudited) of at least $50,000,000 and insurance claims-paying
ability ratings of AAA from S&P or Fitch, or Aaa from Moody's. There can be no
assurance that insurance from insurance carriers meeting these criteria will
be available. See Appendix C to the statement of additional information for a
brief description of insurance claims-paying ability ratings of S&P, Moody's
and Fitch. Currently, it is anticipated that a majority of the insured
Municipal Bonds in the Fund's portfolio will be insured by the following
insurance companies which satisfy the foregoing criteria: Ambac Assurance
Corporation, Financial Guaranty Insurance Company, Financial Security
Assurance and MBIA Insurance Corporation. The Fund also may purchase Municipal
Bonds covered by insurance issued by any other insurance company that
satisfies the foregoing criteria. A majority of insured Municipal Bonds held
by the Fund will be insured under policies obtained by parties other than the
Fund.

     The Fund may purchase, but has no obligation to purchase, separate
insurance policies (the "Policies") from insurance companies meeting the
criteria set forth above that guarantee payment of principal and interest when
due on specified eligible Municipal Bonds that it purchases. A Municipal Bond
will be eligible for coverage if it meets certain requirements of the
insurance company set forth in a Policy. In the event interest or principal of
an insured Municipal Bond is not paid when due, the insurer will be obligated
under its Policy to make such payment not later than 30 days after it has been
notified by, and provided with documentation from, the Fund that such
nonpayment has occurred.

     The Policies will be effective only as to insured Municipal Bonds
beneficially owned by a Fund. In the event of a sale of any Municipal Bonds
held by a Fund, the issuer of the relevant Policy will be liable only for
those payments of interest and principal that are then due and owing. The
Policies will not guarantee the market value of an insured Municipal Bond or
the value of the shares of the Fund.

     The insurer will not have the right to withdraw coverage on securities
insured by its Policies and held by the Fund so long as such securities remain
in the Fund's portfolio. In addition, the insurer may not cancel its Policies
for any reason except failure to pay premiums when due. The Board of Directors
of the Fund reserves the right to terminate any of the Policies if it
determines that the benefits to the Fund of having its portfolio insured under
such Policy are not justified by the expense involved.

     The premiums for the Policies are paid by the Fund and the yield on its
portfolio is reduced thereby. The Investment Adviser estimates that the cost
of the annual premiums for the Policies of the Fund currently range from
approximately .05 of 1% to .40 of 1% of the principal amount of the Municipal
Bonds covered by such Policies. The estimate is based on the expected
composition of the Fund's portfolio of Municipal Bonds. Additional information
regarding the Policies is set forth in Exhibit B to the statement of
additional information. In instances in which a Fund purchases Municipal Bonds
insured under policies obtained by parties other than the Fund, the Fund does
not pay the premiums for such policies; rather, the cost of such policies may
be reflected in the purchase price of the Municipal Bonds.

     It is the intention of the Investment Adviser to retain any insured
securities that are in default or in significant risk of default and to place
a value on the insurance, which ordinarily will be the difference between the
market value of the defaulted security and the market value of similar
securities that are not in default. In certain circumstances, however, the
Investment Adviser may determine that an alternate value for the insurance,
such as the difference between the market value of the defaulted security and
its par value, is more appropriate. The Investment Adviser's ability to manage
the portfolio of the Fund may be limited to the extent it holds defaulted
securities for which market quotations are not generally available, which may
limit its ability in certain circumstances to purchase other Municipal Bonds.
See "Net Asset Value" in the 


                                      22



statement of additional information for a more complete description of the
Fund's method of valuing securities for which market quotations are not
generally available.

     No assurance can be given that insurance with the terms and issued by
insurance carriers meeting the criteria described above will continue to be
available to the Fund. In the event the Board of Directors of the Fund
determines that such insurance is unavailable or that the cost of such
insurance outweighs the benefits to the Fund, the Fund may modify the criteria
for insurance carriers or the terms of the insurance, or may discontinue its
policy of maintaining insurance for all or any of the Municipal Bonds held in
the Fund's portfolio. Although the Investment Adviser periodically reviews the
financial condition of each insurer, there can be no assurance that the
insurers will be able to honor their obligations under all circumstances.

     Municipal Bond insurance reduces financial or credit risk (i.e., the
possibility that the owners of the insured Municipal Bonds will not receive
timely scheduled payments of principal or interest). However, the insured
Municipal Bonds are subject to market risk (i.e., fluctuations in market value
as a result of changes in prevailing interest rates and other market
conditions). See Appendix C--"Municipal Bond Insurance" to the statement of
additional information.

Risk Factors and Special Considerations Relating to California Municipal Bonds

     The Fund ordinarily will invest at least 80% of its total assets in
California Municipal Bonds; therefore, it is more susceptible to factors
adversely affecting issuers of California Municipal Bonds than is a municipal
bond fund that is not concentrated in issuers of California Municipal Bonds to
this degree. California's economy slipped into a recession in early 2001,
losing about 341,200 jobs between March 2001 and July 2003. The recession was
concentrated in the State's high-tech sector and, geographically, in the San
Francisco Bay Area. The economy has since stabilized with 336,000 jobs gained
between July 2003 and March 2005 compared with 341,200 jobs lost between March
2001 and July 2003. Current projections indicate that the California economy
will grow at a rate close to the long-run average growth of the State economy.
A large part of the State's annual budget is mandated by constitutional
guarantees (such as for educational funding and debt service) and caseload
requirements for health and welfare programs, which adds further pressure on
the budget. The May report from the Legislative Analyst's Office projected a
shortfall or "gap" on a budgetary basis of $4.1 billion in fiscal year
2006-07, $4 billion in fiscal year 2007-08, and $3 billion for fiscal year
2008-09. Moody's, S&P and Fitch currently rate the State of California's
general obligation bonds A2, A and A-, respectively. No assurance can be given
that such rating will not be lowered in the future. For a discussion of
economic and other conditions in the State of California, see Appendix
A--"Economic and Other Conditions in California" in the statement of
additional information.

Risk Factors and Special Considerations Relating to Municipal Bonds

     The risks and special considerations involved in investment in Municipal
Bonds vary with the types of instruments being acquired. Investments in
Non-Municipal Tax Exempt Securities may present similar risks, depending on
the particular product. Certain instruments in which the Fund may invest may
be characterized as derivative instruments. See "Description of Municipal
Bonds" and "--Hedging Transactions--Financial Futures Transactions and
Options."

     The value of Municipal Bonds generally may be affected by uncertainties
in the municipal markets as a result of legislation or litigation, including
legislation or litigation that changes the taxation of Municipal Bonds or the
rights of Municipal Bond holders in the event of a bankruptcy. Municipal
bankruptcies are rare, and certain provisions of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code
governing such bankruptcies are unclear. Further, the application of state law
to Municipal Bond issuers could produce varying results among the states or
among Municipal Bond issuers within a state. These uncertainties could have a
significant impact on the prices of the Municipal Bonds in which the Fund
invests.

Description of Municipal Bonds

     Set forth below is a detailed description of the Municipal Bonds and
Temporary Investments in which the Fund may invest. Information with respect
to ratings assigned to tax exempt obligations that the Fund may purchase is
set forth in Appendix B to the statement of additional information.
Obligations are included within the term Municipal Bonds if the interest paid
thereon is excluded from gross income for Federal income tax purposes in the
opinion of bond counsel to the issuer.


                                      23



     Municipal Bonds include debt obligations issued to obtain funds for
various public purposes, including the construction of a wide range of public
facilities, refunding of outstanding obligations and obtaining funds for
general operating expenses and loans to other public institutions and
facilities. In addition, certain types of bonds are issued by or on behalf of
public authorities to finance various privately owned or operated facilities,
including certain facilities for the local furnishing of electric energy or
gas, sewage facilities, solid waste disposal facilities and other specialized
facilities. Other types of PABs, the proceeds of which are used for the
construction, equipment or improvement of privately operated industrial or
commercial facilities, may constitute Municipal Bonds, although the current
Federal tax laws place substantial limitations on the size of such issues. The
interest on Municipal Bonds may bear a fixed rate or be payable at a variable
or floating rate. The two principal classifications of Municipal Bonds are
"general obligation" and "revenue" bonds, which latter category includes PABs.

     The Fund has not established any limit on the percentage of its portfolio
that may be invested in PABs. The Fund may not be a suitable investment for
investors who are already subject to the Federal alternative minimum tax or
who would become subject to the Federal alternative minimum tax as a result of
an investment in the Fund's common stock. See "Taxes."

     General Obligation Bonds. General obligation bonds are secured by the
issuer's pledge of its faith, credit and taxing power for the payment of
principal and interest. The taxing power of any governmental entity may be
limited, however, by provisions of its state constitution or laws, and an
entity's creditworthiness will depend on many factors, including potential
erosion of its tax base due to population declines, natural disasters,
declines in the state's industrial base or inability to attract new
industries, economic limits on the ability to tax without eroding the tax
base, state legislative proposals or voter initiatives to limit ad valorem
real property taxes and the extent to which the entity relies on Federal or
state aid, access to capital markets or other factors beyond the state's or
entity's control. Accordingly, the capacity of the issuer of a general
obligation bond as to the timely payment of interest and the repayment of
principal when due is affected by the issuer's maintenance of its tax base.

     Revenue Bonds. Revenue bonds are payable only from the revenues derived
from a particular facility or class of facilities or, in some cases, from the
proceeds of a special excise tax or other specific revenue sources such as
payments from the user of the facility being financed. Accordingly, the timely
payment of interest and the repayment of principal in accordance with the
terms of the revenue or special obligation bond is a function of the economic
viability of such facility or such revenue source.

     PABs The Fund may purchase PABs. PABs are, in most cases, tax exempt
securities issued by states, municipalities or public authorities to provide
funds, usually through a loan or lease arrangement, to a private entity for
the purpose of financing construction or improvement of a facility to be used
by the entity. Such bonds are secured primarily by revenues derived from loan
repayments or lease payments due from the entity which may or may not be
guaranteed by a parent company or otherwise secured. PABs generally are not
secured by a pledge of the taxing power of the issuer of such bonds.
Therefore, an investor should be aware that repayment of such bonds generally
depends on the revenues of a private entity and be aware of the risks that
such an investment may entail. Continued ability of an entity to generate
sufficient revenues for the payment of principal and interest on such bonds
will be affected by many factors including the size of the entity, capital
structure, demand for its products or services, competition, general economic
conditions, government regulation and the entity's dependence on revenues for
the operation of the particular facility being financed.

     Moral Obligation Bonds. The Fund also may invest in "moral obligation"
bonds, which are normally issued by special purpose public authorities. If an
issuer of moral obligation bonds is unable to meet its obligations, the
repayment of such bonds becomes a moral commitment but not a legal obligation
of the state or municipality in question.

     Municipal Lease Obligations. Also included within the general category of
Municipal Bonds are certificates of participation ("COPs") issued by
government authorities or entities to finance the acquisition or construction
of equipment, land and/or facilities. COPs represent participations in a
lease, an installment purchase contract or a conditional sales contract
(hereinafter collectively called "lease obligations") relating to such
equipment, land or facilities. Although lease obligations do not constitute
general obligations of the issuer for which the issuer's unlimited taxing
power is pledged, a lease obligation is frequently backed by the issuer's
covenant to budget for, appropriate and make the payments due under the lease
obligation. However, certain lease obligations contain "non-appropriation"
clauses which provide that the issuer has no obligation to make lease or
installment purchase payments in future years unless money is appropriated for
such purpose on a yearly basis. Although "non-appropriation" lease obligations
are secured by the leased property, disposition of the property in 


                                      24



the event of foreclosure might prove difficult and the value of the property
may be insufficient to issue lease obligations. Certain investments in lease
obligations may be illiquid.

     Indexed and Inverse Floating Rate Securities. The Fund may invest in
Municipal Bonds (and Non- Municipal Tax Exempt Securities) that yield a return
based on a particular index of value or interest rates. For example, the Fund
may invest in Municipal Bonds that pay interest based on an index of Municipal
Bond interest rates. The principal amount payable upon maturity of certain
Municipal Bonds also may be based on the value of the index. To the extent the
Fund invests in these types of Municipal Bonds, the Fund's return on such
Municipal Bonds will be subject to risk with respect to the value of the
particular index. Interest and principal payable on the Municipal Bonds may
also be based on relative changes among particular indices. Also, the Fund may
invest in so-called "inverse floating obligations" or "residual interest
bonds" on which the interest rates vary inversely with a short term floating
rate (which may be reset periodically by a dutch auction, a remarketing agent,
or by reference to a short term tax exempt interest rate index). The Fund may
purchase synthetically created inverse floating rate bonds evidenced by
custodial or trust receipts. Generally, income on inverse floating rate bonds
will decrease when short term interest rates increase, and will increase when
short term interest rates decrease. Such securities have the effect of
providing a degree of investment leverage, since they may increase or decrease
in value in response to changes, as an illustration, in market interest rates
at a rate which is a multiple (typically two) of the rate at which fixed rate
long term tax exempt securities increase or decrease in response to such
changes. As a result, the market values of such securities will generally be
more volatile than the market values of fixed rate tax exempt securities. To
seek to limit the volatility of these securities, the Fund may purchase
inverse floating obligations with shorter-term maturities or which contain
limitations on the extent to which the interest rate may vary. Certain
investments in such obligations may be illiquid.

     When Issued Securities, Delayed Delivery Securities and Forward
Commitments. The Fund may purchase or sell securities that it is entitled to
receive on a when issued basis. The Fund may also purchase or sell securities
on a delayed delivery basis. The Fund may also purchase or sell securities
through a forward commitment. These transactions involve the purchase or sale
of securities by the Fund at an established price with payment and delivery
taking place in the future. The purchase will be recorded on the date the Fund
enters into the commitment and the value of the securities will thereafter be
reflected in the Fund's net asset value. The Fund enters into these
transactions to obtain what is considered an advantageous price to the Fund at
the time of entering into the transaction. The Fund has not established any
limit on the percentage of its assets that may be committed in connection with
these transactions. When the Fund purchases securities in these transactions,
the Fund segregates liquid securities in an amount equal to the amount of its
purchase commitments.

     There can be no assurance that a security purchased on a when issued
basis will be issued or that a security purchased or sold through a forward
commitment will be delivered. A default by a counterparty may result in the
Fund missing the opportunity of obtaining a price considered to be
advantageous. The value of securities in these transactions on the delivery
date may be more or less than the Fund's purchase price. The Fund may bear the
risk of a decline in the value of the security in these transactions and may
not benefit from an appreciation in the value of the security during the
commitment period.

     Call Rights. The Fund may purchase a Municipal Bond issuer's right to
call all or a portion of such Municipal Bond for mandatory tender for purchase
(a "Call Right"). A holder of a Call Right may exercise such right to require
a mandatory tender for the purchase of related Municipal Bonds, subject to
certain conditions. A Call Right that is not exercised prior to maturity of
the related Municipal Bond will expire without value. The economic effect of
holding both the Call Right and the related Municipal Bond is identical to
holding a Municipal Bond as a non-callable security. Certain investments in
such obligations may be illiquid.

     Yields. Yields on Municipal Bonds are dependent on a variety of factors,
including the general condition of the money market and of the municipal bond
market, the size of a particular offering, the financial condition of the
issuer, the maturity of the obligation and the rating of the issue. The
ability of the Fund to achieve its investment objective is also dependent on
the continuing ability of the issuers of the securities in which the Fund
invests to meet their obligations for the payment of interest and principal
when due. There are variations in the risks involved in holding Municipal
Bonds, both within a particular classification and between classifications,
depending on numerous factors. Furthermore, the rights of owners of Municipal
Bonds and the obligations of the issuer of such Municipal Bonds may be subject
to applicable bankruptcy, insolvency and similar laws and court decisions
affecting the rights of creditors generally and to general equitable
principles, which may limit the enforcement of certain remedies.


                                      25



Hedging Transactions

     The Fund may hedge all or a portion of its portfolio investments against
fluctuations in interest rates through the use of options and certain
financial futures contracts and options thereon. While the Fund's use of
hedging strategies is intended to reduce the volatility of the net asset value
of the Fund's shares of common stock, the net asset value of the Fund's shares
of common stock will fluctuate. No assurance can be given that the Fund's
hedging transactions will be effective. The Fund only may engage in hedging
activities from time to time and may not necessarily be engaging in hedging
activities when movements in interest rates occur. The Fund has no obligation
to enter into hedging transactions and may choose not to do so. Furthermore,
for so long as the AMPS are rated by Moody's and S&P, the Fund's use of
options and certain financial futures and options thereon will be subject to
the limitations described under "Rating Agency Guidelines."

     Financial Futures Transactions and Options. The Fund is authorized to
purchase and sell certain exchange traded financial futures contracts
("financial futures contracts") in order to hedge its investments in Municipal
Bonds against declines in value, and to hedge against increases in the cost of
securities it intends to purchase or to seek to enhance the Fund's return.
However, any transactions involving financial futures or options (including
puts and calls associated therewith) will be in accordance with the Fund's
investment policies and limitations. A financial futures contract obligates
the seller of a contract to deliver and the purchaser of a contract to take
delivery of the type of financial instrument covered by the contract, or in
the case of index-based futures contracts to make and accept a cash
settlement, at a specific future time for a specified price. To hedge its
portfolio, the Fund may take an investment position in a futures contract
which will move in the opposite direction from the portfolio position being
hedged. A sale of financial futures contracts may provide a hedge against a
decline in the value of portfolio securities because such depreciation may be
offset, in whole or in part, by an increase in the value of the position in
the financial futures contracts. A purchase of financial futures contracts may
provide a hedge against an increase in the cost of securities intended to be
purchased because such appreciation may be offset, in whole or in part, by an
increase in the value of the position in the futures contracts.

     Distributions, if any, of net long term capital gains from certain
transactions in futures or options are taxable at long term capital gains
rates for Federal income tax purposes. See "Taxes."

     Futures Contracts. A futures contract is an agreement between two parties
to buy and sell a security or, in the case of an index-based futures contract,
to make and accept a cash settlement for a set price on a future date. A
majority of transactions in futures contracts, however, do not result in the
actual delivery of the underlying instrument or cash settlement, but are
settled through liquidation, i.e., by entering into an offsetting transaction.
Futures contracts have been designed by boards of trade which have been
designated "contracts markets" by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
("CFTC").

     The purchase or sale of a futures contract differs from the purchase or
sale of a security in that no price or premium is paid or received. Instead,
an amount of cash or securities acceptable to the broker and the relevant
contract market, which varies, but is generally about 5% of the contract
amount, must be deposited with the broker. This amount is known as "initial
margin" and represents a "good faith" deposit assuring the performance of both
the purchaser and seller under the futures contract. Subsequent payments to
and from the broker, called "variation margin," are required to be made on a
daily basis as the price of the futures contract fluctuates making the long
and short positions in the futures contract more or less valuable, a process
known as "marking to the market." At any time prior to the settlement date of
the futures contract, the position may be closed out by taking an opposite
position that will operate to terminate the position in the futures contract.
A final determination of variation margin is then made, additional cash is
required to be paid to or released by the broker and the purchaser realizes a
loss or gain. In addition, a nominal commission is paid on each completed sale
transaction.

     The Fund deals in financial futures contracts based on a long term
municipal bond index developed by the Chicago Board of Trade ("CBT") and The
Bond Buyer (the "Municipal Bond Index"). The Municipal Bond Index is comprised
of 40 tax exempt municipal revenue and general obligation bonds. Each bond
included in the Municipal Bond Index must be rated A or higher by Moody's or
S&P and must have a remaining maturity of 19 years or more. Twice a month new
issues satisfying the eligibility requirements are added to, and an equal
number of old issues are deleted from, the Municipal Bond Index. The value of
the Municipal Bond Index is computed daily according to a formula based on the
price of each bond in the Municipal Bond Index, as evaluated by six
dealer-to-dealer brokers.

     The Municipal Bond Index futures contract is traded only on the CBT. Like
other contract markets, the CBT assures performance under futures contracts
through a clearing corporation, a nonprofit organization managed by the
exchange membership which is also responsible for handling daily accounting of
deposits or withdrawals of margin.


                                      26



     The Fund may also purchase and sell financial futures contracts on U.S.
Government securities as a hedge against adverse changes in interest rates as
described below. With respect to U.S. Government securities, currently there
are financial futures contracts based on long term U.S. Treasury bonds, U.S.
Treasury notes, Government National Mortgage Association ("GNMA") Certificates
and three-month U.S. Treasury bills. The Fund may purchase and write call and
put options on futures contracts on U.S. Government securities and purchase
and sell Municipal Bond Index futures contracts in connection with its hedging
strategies.

     The Fund also may engage in other futures contracts transactions such as
futures contracts on other municipal bond indices that may become available if
the Investment Adviser should determine that there is normally a sufficient
correlation between the prices of such futures contracts and the Municipal
Bonds in which the Fund invests to make such hedging appropriate.

     Futures Strategies. The Fund may sell a financial futures contract (i.e.,
assume a short position) in anticipation of a decline in the value of its
investments in Municipal Bonds resulting from an increase in interest rates or
otherwise. The risk of decline could be reduced without employing futures as a
hedge by selling such Municipal Bonds and either reinvesting the proceeds in
securities with shorter maturities or by holding assets in cash. This
strategy, however, entails increased transaction costs in the form of dealer
spreads and typically would reduce the average yield of the Fund's portfolio
securities as a result of the shortening of maturities. The sale of futures
contracts provides an alternative means of hedging against declines in the
value of its investments in Municipal Bonds. As such values decline, the value
of the Fund's positions in the futures contracts will tend to increase, thus
offsetting all or a portion of the depreciation in the market value of the
Fund's Municipal Bond investments that are being hedged. While the Fund will
incur commission expenses in selling and closing out futures positions,
commissions on futures transactions are lower than transaction costs incurred
in the purchase and sale of Municipal Bonds. In addition, the ability of the
Fund to trade in the standardized contracts available in the futures markets
may offer a more effective defensive position than a program to reduce the
average maturity of the portfolio securities due to the unique and varied
credit and technical characteristics of the municipal debt instruments
available to the Fund. Employing futures as a hedge also may permit the Fund
to assume a defensive posture without reducing the yield on its investments
beyond any amounts required to engage in futures trading.

     When the Fund intends to purchase Municipal Bonds, the Fund may purchase
futures contracts as a hedge against any increase in the cost of such
Municipal Bonds resulting from a decrease in interest rates or otherwise, that
may occur before such purchases can be effected. Subject to the degree of
correlation between the Municipal Bonds and the futures contracts, subsequent
increases in the cost of Municipal Bonds should be reflected in the value of
the futures held by the Fund. As such purchases are made, an equivalent amount
of futures contracts will be closed out. Due to changing market conditions and
interest rate forecasts, however, a futures position may be terminated without
a corresponding purchase of portfolio securities.

     Call Options on Futures Contracts. The Fund may also purchase and sell
exchange traded call and put options on financial futures contracts. The
purchase of a call option on a futures contract is analogous to the purchase
of a call option on an individual security. Depending on the pricing of the
option compared to either the futures contract upon which it is based or the
price of the underlying debt securities, it may or may not be less risky than
ownership of the futures contract or underlying debt securities. Like the
purchase of a futures contract, the Fund will purchase a call option on a
futures contract to hedge against a market advance when the Fund is not fully
invested.

     The writing of a call option on a futures contract constitutes a partial
hedge against declining prices of the securities which are deliverable upon
exercise of the futures contract. If the futures price at expiration is below
the exercise price, the Fund will retain the full amount of the option premium
which provides a partial hedge against any decline that may have occurred in
the Fund's portfolio holdings.

     Put Options on Futures Contracts. The purchase of a put option on a
futures contract is analogous to the purchase of a protective put option on
portfolio securities. The Fund will purchase a put option on a futures
contract to hedge the Fund's portfolio against the risk of rising interest
rates.

     The writing of a put option on a futures contract constitutes a partial
hedge against increasing prices of the securities which are deliverable upon
exercise of the futures contract. If the futures price at expiration is higher
than the exercise price, the Fund will retain the full amount of the option
premium which provides a partial hedge against any increase in the price of
Municipal Bonds which the Fund intends to purchase.


                                      27



     The writer of an option on a futures contract is required to deposit
initial and variation margin pursuant to requirements similar to those
applicable to futures contracts. Premiums received from the writing of an
option will be included in initial margin. The writing of an option on a
futures contract involves risks similar to those relating to futures
contracts.

                              ------------------

     Under regulations of the CFTC, the futures trading activity described
herein will not result in the Fund being deemed a "commodity pool" and the
Fund need not be operated by a person registered with the CFTC as a "commodity
pool operator."

     When the Fund purchases a futures contract, or writes a put option or
purchases a call option thereon, an amount of cash, cash equivalents (e.g.,
high grade commercial paper and daily tender adjustable notes) or liquid
securities will be segregated so that the amount so segregated, plus the
amount of initial and variation margin held in the account of its broker,
equals the market value of the futures contracts, thereby ensuring that the
use of such futures contract is unleveraged. It is not anticipated that
transactions in futures contracts will have the effect of increasing portfolio
turnover.

     Risk Factors in Futures Transactions and Options. Investment in futures
contracts involves the risk of imperfect correlation between movements in the
price of the futures contract and the price of the security being hedged. The
hedge will not be fully effective when there is imperfect correlation between
the movements in the prices of two financial instruments. For example, if the
price of the futures contract moves more or less than the price of the hedged
security, the Fund will experience either a loss or gain on the futures
contract which is not completely offset by movements in the price of the
hedged securities. To compensate for imperfect correlations, the Fund may
purchase or sell futures contracts in a greater dollar amount than the hedged
securities if the volatility of the hedged securities is historically greater
than the volatility of the futures contracts. Conversely, the Fund may
purchase or sell fewer futures contracts if the volatility of the price of the
hedged securities is historically less than that of the futures contracts.

     The particular municipal bonds comprising the index underlying the
Municipal Bond Index financial futures contract may vary from the bonds held
by the Fund. As a result, the Fund's ability to hedge effectively all or a
portion of the value of its Municipal Bonds through the use of such financial
futures contracts will depend in part on the degree to which price movements
in the index underlying the financial futures contract correlate with the
price movements of the Municipal Bonds held by the Fund. The correlation may
be affected by disparities in the average maturity, ratings, geographical mix
or structure of the Fund's investments as compared to those comprising the
Municipal Bond Index and general economic or political factors. In addition,
the correlation between movements in the value of the Municipal Bond Index may
be subject to change over time as additions to and deletions from the
Municipal Bond Index alter its structure. The correlation between futures
contracts on U.S. Government securities and the Municipal Bonds held by the
Fund may be adversely affected by similar factors and the risk of imperfect
correlation between movements in the prices of such futures contracts and the
prices of Municipal Bonds held by the Fund may be greater. Municipal Bond
Index futures contracts were approved for trading in 1986. Trading in such
futures contracts may tend to be less liquid than trading in other futures
contracts. The trading of futures contracts also is subject to certain market
risks, such as inadequate trading activity, which could at times make it
difficult or impossible to liquidate existing positions.

     The Fund expects to liquidate a majority of the futures contracts it
enters into through offsetting transactions on the applicable contract market.
There can be no assurance, however, that a liquid secondary market will exist
for any particular futures contract at any specific time. Thus, it may not be
possible to close out a futures position. In the event of adverse price
movements, the Fund would continue to be required to make daily cash payments
of variation margin. In such situations, if the Fund has insufficient cash, it
may be required to sell portfolio securities to meet daily variation margin
requirements at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so. The inability
to close out futures positions also could have an adverse impact on the Fund's
ability to hedge effectively its investments in Municipal Bonds. The liquidity
of a secondary market in a futures contract may be adversely affected by
"daily price fluctuation limits" established by commodity exchanges which
limit the amount of fluctuation in a futures contract price during a single
trading day. Once the daily limit has been reached in the contract, no trades
may be entered into at a price beyond the limit, thus preventing the
liquidation of open futures positions. Prices have in the past moved beyond
the daily limit on a number of consecutive trading days. The Fund will enter
into a futures position only if, in the judgment of the Investment Adviser,
there appears to be an actively traded secondary market for such futures
contracts.


                                      28



     The successful use of transactions in futures and related options also
depends on the ability of the Investment Adviser to forecast correctly the
direction and extent of interest rate movements within a given time frame. To
the extent interest rates remain stable during the period in which a futures
contract or option is held by the Fund or such rates move in a direction
opposite to that anticipated, the Fund may realize a loss on the hedging
transaction which is not fully or partially offset by an increase in the value
of portfolio securities. As a result, the Fund's total return for such period
may be less than if it had not engaged in the hedging transaction.

     Because of low initial margin deposits made upon the opening of a futures
position, futures transactions involve substantial leverage. As a result,
relatively small movements in the price of the futures contracts can result in
substantial unrealized gains or losses. There is also the risk of loss by the
Fund of margin deposits in the event of bankruptcy of a broker with whom the
Fund has an open position in a financial futures contract. Because the Fund
will engage in the purchase and sale of futures contracts for hedging purposes
or to seek to enhance the Fund's return, any losses incurred in connection
therewith should, if the hedging strategy is successful, be offset in whole or
in part by increases in the value of securities held by the Fund or decreases
in the price of securities the Fund intends to acquire.

     The amount of risk the Fund assumes when it purchases an option on a
futures contract is the premium paid for the option plus related transaction
costs. In addition to the correlation risks discussed above, the purchase of
an option on a futures contract also entails the risk that changes in the
value of the underlying futures contract will not be fully reflected in the
value of the option purchased.

                           OTHER INVESTMENT POLICIES

     The Fund has adopted certain other policies as set forth below.

Temporary Investments

     The Fund may invest in short term tax exempt and taxable securities
subject to the limitations set forth above. The tax exempt money market
securities may include municipal notes, municipal commercial paper, municipal
bonds with a remaining maturity of less than one year, variable rate demand
notes and participations therein. Municipal notes include tax anticipation
notes, bond anticipation notes, revenue anticipation notes and grant
anticipation notes. Anticipation notes are sold as interim financing in
anticipation of tax collection, bond sales, government grants or revenue
receipts. Municipal commercial paper refers to short term unsecured promissory
notes generally issued to finance short term credit needs. The taxable money
market securities in which the Fund may invest as Temporary Investments
consist of U.S. Government securities, U.S. Government agency securities,
domestic bank or savings institution certificates of deposit and bankers'
acceptances, short term corporate debt securities such as commercial paper and
repurchase agreements. These Temporary Investments must have a stated maturity
not in excess of one year from the date of purchase. The Fund may not invest
in any security issued by a commercial bank or a savings institution unless
the bank or institution is organized and operating in the United States, has
total assets of at least one billion dollars and is a member of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC"), except that up to 10% of total assets
may be invested in certificates of deposit of smaller institutions if such
certificates are fully insured by the FDIC.

Interest Rate Swap Transactions

     In order to seek to hedge the value of the Fund against interest rate
fluctuations, to hedge against increases in the Fund's costs associated with
the dividend payments on any preferred stock, including the AMPS, or to seek
to increase the Fund's return, the Fund may enter into interest rate swap
transactions such as Municipal Market Data AAA Cash Curve swaps ("MMD Swaps")
or Bond Market Association Municipal Swap Index swaps ("BMA Swaps"). To the
extent that the Fund enters into these transactions, the Fund expects to do so
primarily to preserve a return or spread on a particular investment or portion
of its portfolio as a duration management technique or to protect against any
increase in the price of securities the Fund anticipates purchasing at a later
date. The Fund may enter into these transactions primarily as a hedge or for
duration or risk management rather than as a speculative investment. However,
the Fund also may invest in MMD Swaps and BMA Swaps to seek to enhance return
or gain or to increase the Fund's yield, for example, during periods of steep
interest rate yield curves (i.e., wide differences between short term and long
term interest rates).


                                      29



     The Fund may purchase and sell BMA Swaps in the BMA swap market. In a BMA
Swap, the Fund exchanges with another party their respective commitments to
pay or receive interest (e.g., an exchange of fixed rate payments for floating
rate payments linked to the Bond Market Association Municipal Swap Index).
Because the underlying index is a tax exempt index, BMA Swaps may reduce
cross-market risks incurred by the Fund and increase the Fund's ability to
hedge effectively. BMA Swaps are typically quoted for the entire yield curve,
beginning with a seven day floating rate index out to 30 years. The duration
of a BMA Swap is approximately equal to the duration of a fixed rate Municipal
Bond with the same attributes as the swap (e.g., coupon, maturity, call
feature).

     The Fund also may purchase and sell MMD Swaps, also known as MMD rate
locks. An MMD Swap permits the Fund to lock in a specified municipal interest
rate for a portion of its portfolio to preserve a return on a particular
investment or a portion of its portfolio as a duration management technique or
to protect against any increase in the price of securities to be purchased at
a later date. By using an MMD Swap, the Fund can create a synthetic long or
short position, allowing the Fund to select the most attractive part of the
yield curve. An MMD Swap is a contract between the Fund and an MMD Swap
provider pursuant to which the parties agree to make payments to each other on
a notional amount, contingent upon whether the Municipal Market Data AAA
General Obligation Scale is above or below a specified level on the expiration
date of the contract. For example, if the Fund buys an MMD Swap and the
Municipal Market Data AAA General Obligation Scale is below the specified
level on the expiration date, the counterparty to the contract will make a
payment to the Fund equal to the specified level minus the actual level,
multiplied by the notional amount of the contract. If the Municipal Market
Data AAA General Obligation Scale is above the specified level on the
expiration date, the Fund will make a payment to the counterparty equal to the
actual level minus the specified level, multiplied by the notional amount of
the contract.

     In connection with investments in BMA and MMD Swaps, there is a risk that
municipal yields will move in the opposite direction than anticipated by the
Fund, which would cause the Fund to make payments to its counterparty in the
transaction that could adversely affect the Fund's performance.

     The Fund has no obligation to enter into BMA or MMD Swaps and may not do
so. The net amount of the excess, if any, of the Fund's obligations over its
entitlements with respect to each interest rate swap will be accrued on a
daily basis, and the Fund will segregate liquid securities having an aggregate
net asset value at least equal to the accrued excess.

Credit Default Swap Agreements

     The Fund may enter into credit default swap agreements for hedging
purposes or to seek to increase its return. The credit default swap agreement
may have as reference obligations one or more securities that are not
currently held by the Fund. The protection "buyer" in a credit default
contract may be obligated to pay the protection "seller" an upfront or a
periodic stream of payments over the term of the contract provided that no
credit event on a reference obligation has occurred. If a credit event occurs,
the seller generally must pay the buyer the "par value" (full notional value)
of the swap in exchange for an equal face amount of deliverable obligations of
the reference entity described in the swap, or the seller may be required to
deliver the related net cash amount, if the swap is cash settled. The Fund may
be either the buyer or seller in the transaction. If the Fund is a buyer and
no credit event occurs, the Fund may recover nothing if the swap is held
through its termination date. However, if a credit event occurs, the buyer
generally may elect to receive the full notional value of the swap in exchange
for an equal face amount of deliverable obligations of the reference entity
whose value may have significantly decreased. As a seller, the Fund generally
receives an upfront payment or a fixed rate of income throughout the term of
the swap, which typically is between six months and three years, provided that
there is no credit event. If a credit event occurs, generally the seller must
pay the buyer the full notional value of the swap in exchange for an equal
face amount of deliverable obligations of the reference entity whose value may
have significantly decreased. As the seller, the Fund would effectively add
leverage to its portfolio because, in addition to its total net assets, the
Fund would be subject to investment exposure on the notional amount of the
swap.

     Credit default swap agreements involve greater risks than if the Fund had
invested in the reference obligation directly since, in addition to general
market risks, credit default swaps are subject to illiquidity risk,
counterparty risk and credit risks. The Fund will enter into credit default
swap agreements only with counterparties who are rated investment grade
quality by at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization
at the time of entering into such transaction or whose creditworthiness is
believed by the Investment Adviser to be equivalent to such rating. A buyer
generally also will lose its investment and recover nothing should no credit
event occur and the swap is held to its termination date. If a credit event
were to occur, the value of any deliverable obligation received by the seller,
coupled with the upfront or periodic payments previously received, may be less
than the full notional value it pays to the buyer, resulting in a loss of
value to the seller. The 


                                      30



Fund's obligations under a credit default swap agreement will be accrued daily
(offset against any amounts owing to the Fund). The Fund will at all times
segregate with its custodian in connection with each such transaction liquid
securities or cash with a value at least equal to the Fund's exposure (any
accrued but unpaid net amounts owed by the Fund to any counterparty), on a
marked-to-market basis (as calculated pursuant to requirements of the
Securities and Exchange Commission). Such segregation will ensure that the
Fund has assets available to satisfy its obligations with respect to the
transaction and will avoid any potential leveraging of the Fund's portfolio.
Such segregation will not limit the Fund's exposure to loss.

VRDOs and Participating VRDOs

     VRDOs are tax exempt obligations that contain a floating or variable
interest rate adjustment formula and right of demand on the part of the holder
thereof to receive payment of the unpaid principal balance plus accrued
interest upon a short notice period not to exceed seven days. There is,
however, the possibility that because of default or insolvency the demand
feature of VRDOs and Participating VRDOs may not be honored. The interest
rates are adjustable at intervals (ranging from daily to up to one year) to
some prevailing market rate for similar investments, such adjustment formula
being calculated to maintain the market value of the VRDOs, at approximately
the par value of the VRDOs on the adjustment date. The adjustments typically
are based upon the Public Securities Association Index or some other
appropriate interest rate adjustment index. The Fund may invest in all types
of tax exempt instruments currently outstanding or to be issued in the future
which satisfy its short term maturity and quality standards.

     Participating VRDOs provide the Fund with a specified undivided interest
(up to 100%) of the underlying obligation and the right to demand payment of
the unpaid principal balance plus accrued interest on the Participating VRDOs
from the financial institution upon a specified number of days' notice, not to
exceed seven days. In addition, the Participating VRDO is backed by an
irrevocable letter of credit or guaranty of the financial institution. The
Fund would have an undivided interest in the underlying obligation and thus
participate on the same basis as the financial institution in such obligation
except that the financial institution typically retains fees out of the
interest paid on the obligation for servicing the obligation, providing the
letter of credit and issuing the repurchase commitment. The Fund has been
advised by its counsel that the Fund should be entitled to treat the income
received on Participating VRDOs as interest from tax exempt obligations as
long as the Fund does not invest more than 20% of its total assets in such
investments and certain other conditions are met. It is contemplated that the
Fund will not invest more than 20% of its assets in Participating VRDOs.

     VRDOs that contain an unconditional right of demand to receive payment of
the unpaid principal balance plus accrued interest on a notice period
exceeding seven days may be deemed to be illiquid securities. The Directors
may adopt guidelines and delegate to the Investment Adviser the daily function
of determining and monitoring liquidity of such VRDOs. The Directors, however,
will retain sufficient oversight and will be ultimately responsible for such
determinations.

     The Temporary Investments, VRDOs and Participating VRDOs in which the
Fund may invest will be in the following rating categories at the time of
purchase: MIG-1/VMIG-1 through MIG-3/VMIG-3 for notes and VRDOs and Prime-1
through Prime-3 for commercial paper (as determined by Moody's), SP-1 through
SP-2 for notes and A-1 through A-3 for VRDOs and commercial paper (as
determined by S&P), or F-1 through F-3 for notes, VRDOs and commercial paper
(as determined by Fitch). Temporary Investments, if not rated, must be of
comparable quality in the opinion of the Investment Adviser. In addition, the
Fund reserves the right to invest temporarily a greater portion of its assets
in Temporary Investments for defensive purposes, when, in the judgment of the
Investment Adviser, market conditions warrant.

Repurchase Agreements

     The Fund may invest in securities pursuant to repurchase agreements.
Repurchase agreements may be entered into only with a member bank of the
Federal Reserve System or a primary dealer or an affiliate thereof, in U.S.
Government securities. Under such agreements, the bank or primary dealer or an
affiliate thereof agrees, upon entering into the contract, to repurchase the
security at a mutually agreed upon time and price, thereby determining the
yield during the term of the agreement. This results in a fixed rate of return
insulated from market fluctuations during such period. In repurchase
agreements, the prices at which the trades are conducted do not reflect
accrued interest on the underlying obligations. Such agreements usually cover
short periods, such as under one week. Repurchase agreements may be construed
to be collateralized loans by the purchaser to the seller secured by the
securities transferred to the purchaser. In a repurchase agreement, the Fund
will require the seller to provide additional collateral if the market value
of the securities falls below the repurchase price at any time during the term
of the repurchase agreement. In the event of default by the seller under a


                                      31



repurchase agreement construed to be a collateralized loan, the underlying
securities are not owned by the Fund but only constitute collateral for the
seller's obligation to pay the repurchase price. Therefore, the Fund may
suffer time delays and incur costs or possible losses in connection with the
disposition of the collateral. In the event of a default under such a
repurchase agreement, instead of the contractual fixed rate of return, the
rate of return to the Fund shall be dependent upon intervening fluctuations of
the market value of such security and the accrued interest on the security. In
such event, the Fund would have rights against the seller for breach of
contract with respect to any losses arising from market fluctuations following
the failure of the seller to perform.

     In general, for Federal income tax purposes, repurchase agreements are
treated as collateralized loans secured by the securities "sold." Therefore,
amounts earned under such agreements will not be considered tax exempt
interest. The treatment of purchase and sales contracts is less certain.

Borrowings

     The Fund is authorized to borrow money in amounts of up to 5% of the
value of its total assets at the time of such borrowings; provided, however,
that the Fund is authorized to borrow moneys in amounts of up to 33 ?% of the
value of its total assets at the time of such borrowings to finance the
repurchase of its own common stock pursuant to tender offers or otherwise to
redeem or repurchase shares of preferred stock. Borrowings by the Fund
(commonly known, as with the issuance of preferred stock, as "leveraging")
create an opportunity for greater total return since, for example, the Fund
will not be required to sell portfolio securities to repurchase or redeem
shares but, at the same time, increase exposure to capital risk. In addition,
borrowed funds are subject to interest costs that may offset or exceed the
return earned on the borrowed funds.

                              DESCRIPTION OF AMPS

     Certain of the capitalized terms used herein not otherwise defined in
this prospectus have the meaning provided in the Glossary at the back of this
prospectus.

General

     The Series F AMPS will be shares of preferred stock that entitle their
holders to receive dividends when, as and if declared by the Board of
Directors, out of funds legally available therefor, at a rate per annum that
may vary for the successive Dividend Periods. After the Initial Dividend
Period, each Subsequent Dividend Period for the Series F AMPS generally will
be a 7-Day Dividend Period; provided however, that, prior to any Auction, the
Fund may elect, subject to certain limitations described herein, upon giving
notice to holders thereof, a special dividend period of up to five years (a
"Special Dividend Period"). The Applicable Rate for a particular Dividend
Period will be determined by an Auction conducted on the Business Day before
the start of such Dividend Period. Beneficial Owners and Potential Beneficial
Owners of shares of AMPS may participate in Auctions therefor, although,
except in the case of a Special Dividend Period of more than 28 days,
Beneficial Owners desiring to continue to hold all of their shares of AMPS
regardless of the Applicable Rate resulting from Auctions need not
participate. For an explanation of Auctions and the method of determining the
Applicable Rate, see "The Auction" herein and in the statement of additional
information.

     The Fund has outstanding 9,200 shares of five other series of Auction
Market Preferred Stock, each with a liquidation preference of $25,000 per
share, plus accumulated but unpaid dividends, for an aggregate initial
liquidation preference of $230,000,000 (the "Other AMPS"). The Other AMPS are
as follows: 1,800 shares of Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series A; 1,800
shares of Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series B; 1,600 shares of Auction
Market Preferred Stock, Series C; 2,000 shares of Auction Market Preferred
Stock, Series D; and 2,000 shares of Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series E.
The Series F AMPS offered hereby rank on a parity with the Other AMPS with
respect to dividends and liquidation preference. The terms of the shares of
Other AMPS are substantially the same as the terms of the shares of AMPS
described below.

     The following is a brief description of the terms of the shares of AMPS.
This description does not purport to be complete and is subject to and
qualified in its entirety by reference to the Fund's Charter and Articles
Supplementary of the AMPS, including the provisions thereof establishing the
AMPS. The Fund's Charter and the form of Articles Supplementary 


                                      32



of the AMPS establishing the terms of the AMPS have been filed as exhibits to
the Registration Statement of which this prospectus is a part.

Dividends

     General. The holders of shares of AMPS will be entitled to receive, when,
as and if declared by the Board of Directors of the Fund, out of funds legally
available therefor, cumulative cash dividends on their shares, at the
Applicable Rate determined as set forth below under "Determination of Dividend
Rate," payable on the respective dates set forth below. Dividends on the
shares of AMPS so declared and payable shall be paid (i) in preference to and
in priority over any dividends so declared and payable on the Fund's common
stock, and (ii) to the extent permitted under the Code, and to the extent
available, out of net tax exempt income earned on the Fund's investments.
Generally, dividends on shares of AMPS, to the extent that they are derived
from interest paid on California Municipal Bonds, will be exempt from Federal
income taxes, subject to possible application of the alternative minimum tax
and California income taxes and to the extent that they are derived from
interest paid on Municipal Bonds, will be exempt from Federal income taxes,
subject to possible application of the alternative minimum tax. See "Taxes."

     Dividends on the shares of AMPS will accumulate from the date on which
the Fund originally issues the shares of AMPS (the "Date of Original Issue")
and will be payable on the dates described below. Dividends on shares of AMPS
with respect to the Initial Dividend Period shall be payable on the Initial
Dividend Payment Date. Following the Initial Dividend Payment Date for the
AMPS, dividends on the AMPS will be payable, at the option of the Fund, either
(i) with respect to any 7-Day Dividend Period and any Short Term Dividend
Period of 35 or fewer days, on the day next succeeding the last day thereof or
(ii) with respect to any Short Term Dividend Period of more than 35 days and
with respect to any Long Term Dividend Period, monthly on the first Business
Day of each calendar month during such Short Term Dividend Period or Long Term
Dividend Period and on the day next succeeding the last day thereof (each such
date referred to in clause (i) or (ii) being referred to herein as a "Normal
Dividend Payment Date"), except that if such Normal Dividend Payment Date is
not a Business Day, the Dividend Payment Date shall be the first Business Day
next succeeding such Normal Dividend Payment Date. Thus, following the Initial
Dividend Payment Date for AMPS, dividends generally will be payable (in the
case of Dividend Periods which are not Special Dividend Periods) on each
succeeding Thursday in the case of the Series F AMPS. Although any particular
Dividend Payment Date may not occur on the originally scheduled date because
of the exceptions discussed above, the next succeeding Dividend Payment Date,
subject to such exceptions, will occur on the next following originally
scheduled date. If for any reason a Dividend Payment Date cannot be fixed as
described above, then the Board of Directors shall fix the Dividend Payment
Date. The Board of Directors by resolution prior to authorization of a
dividend by the Board of Directors may change a Dividend Payment Date if such
change does not adversely affect the contract rights of the holders of shares
of AMPS set forth in the Charter. The Initial Dividend Period, 7-Day Dividend
Periods and Special Dividend Periods are hereinafter sometimes referred to as
"Dividend Periods." Each dividend payment date determined as provided above is
hereinafter referred to as a "Dividend Payment Date."

     Prior to each Dividend Payment Date, the Fund is required to deposit with
the Auction Agent sufficient funds for the payment of declared dividends. The
Fund does not intend to establish any reserves for the payment of dividends.

     Each dividend will be paid to the record holder of the AMPS, which holder
is expected to be the nominee of the Securities Depository. See "The
Auction--Securities Depository." The Securities Depository will credit the
accounts of the Agent Members of the Existing Holders in accordance with the
Securities Depository's normal procedures which provide for payment in
same-day funds. The Agent Member of an Existing Holder will be responsible for
holding or disbursing such payments on the applicable Dividend Payment Date to
such Existing Holder in accordance with the instructions of such Existing
Holder. Dividends in arrears for any past Dividend Period may be declared and
paid at any time, without reference to any regular Dividend Payment Date, to
the nominee of the Securities Depository. Any dividend payment made on shares
of AMPS first shall be credited against the earliest declared but unpaid
dividends accumulated with respect to such shares.

     Holders of shares of AMPS will not be entitled to any dividends, whether
payable in cash, property or stock, in excess of full cumulative dividends
except as described below under "--Additional Dividends" in this prospectus
and under "Description of AMPS--Dividends--Non-Payment Period; Late Charge" in
the statement of additional information. No interest will be payable in
respect of any dividend payment or payments on the shares of AMPS that may be
in arrears.

     The amount of cash dividends per share of the AMPS payable (if declared)
on the Initial Dividend Payment Date, and on each Dividend Payment Date of
each 7-Day Dividend Period and each Short Term Dividend Period, shall be


                                      33



computed by multiplying the Applicable Rate for such Dividend Period by a
fraction, the numerator of which will be the number of days in such Dividend
Period or part thereof that such share was outstanding and for which dividends
are payable on such Dividend Payment Date and the denominator of which will be
365, multiplying the amount so obtained by $25,000, and rounding the amount so
obtained to the nearest cent. During any Long Term Dividend Period, the amount
of cash dividends per share of AMPS payable (if declared) on any Dividend
Payment Date shall be computed by multiplying the Applicable Rate for such
Dividend Period by a fraction, the numerator of which will be such number of
days in such part of such Dividend Period that such share was outstanding and
for which dividends are payable on such Dividend Payment Date and the
denominator of which will be 360, multiplying the amount so obtained by
$25,000, and rounding the amount so obtained to the nearest cent.

     Notification of Dividend Period. With respect to each Dividend Period
that is a Special Dividend Period, the Fund, at its sole option and to the
extent permitted by law, by telephonic and written notice (a "Request for
Special Dividend Period") to the Auction Agent and to each Broker-Dealer, may
request that the next succeeding Dividend Period for the AMPS will be a number
of days (other than seven), evenly divisible by seven, and not fewer than
seven nor more than 364 in the case of a Short Term Dividend Period or one
whole year or more but not greater than five years in the case of a Long Term
Dividend Period, specified in such notice, provided that the Fund may not give
a Request for Special Dividend Period (and any such request shall be null and
void) unless, for any Auction occurring after the initial Auction, Sufficient
Clearing Bids were made in the last occurring Auction and unless full
cumulative dividends and any amounts due with respect to redemptions, and any
Additional Dividends payable prior to such date have been paid in full. Such
Request for Special Dividend Period, in the case of a Short Term Dividend
Period, shall be given on or prior to the second Business Day but not more
than seven Business Days prior to an Auction Date for the AMPS and, in the
case of a Long Term Dividend Period, shall be given on or prior to the second
Business Day but not more than 28 days prior to an Auction Date for the AMPS.
Upon receiving such Request for Special Dividend Period, the Broker-Dealers
jointly shall determine whether, given the factors set forth below, it is
advisable that the Fund issue a Notice of Special Dividend Period for the AMPS
as contemplated by such Request for Special Dividend Period and the Optional
Redemption Price of the AMPS during such Special Dividend Period and the
Specific Redemption Provisions and shall give the Fund written notice (a
"Response") of such determination by no later than the second Business Day
prior to such Auction Date. In the event the Response indicates that it is
advisable that the Fund give a notice of a Special Dividend Period for the
AMPS, the Fund, by no later than the second Business Day prior to such Auction
Date may give a notice (a "Notice of Special Dividend Period") to the Auction
Agent, the Securities Depository and each Broker-Dealer. See "Description of
AMPS--Dividends--Notification of Dividend Period" in the statement of
additional information for a detailed description of these procedures.

     Determination of Dividend Rate. The dividend rate on shares of the AMPS
during the period from and including the Date of Original Issue for the Series
F AMPS to but excluding the Initial Dividend Payment Date (the "Initial
Dividend Period") with respect to the Series F AMPS will be the rate per annum
set forth above under "Prospectus Summary--Dividends and Dividend Periods."
Commencing on the Initial Dividend Payment Date for the Series F AMPS, the
Applicable Rate on the Series F AMPS for each Subsequent Dividend Period,
which Subsequent Dividend Period shall be a period commencing on and including
a Dividend Payment Date and ending on and including the calendar day prior to
the next Dividend Payment Date (or calendar day prior to the last Dividend
Payment Date in a Dividend Period if there is more than one Dividend Payment
Date), shall be equal to the rate per annum that results from the Auction with
respect to such Subsequent Dividend Period. The Initial Dividend Period and
Subsequent Dividend Period for the AMPS is referred to herein as a "Dividend
Period." Cash dividends shall be calculated as set forth above under
"Dividends--General."

     Restrictions on Dividends and Other Payments. Under the 1940 Act, the
Fund may not declare dividends or make other distributions on shares of common
stock or purchase any such shares if, at the time of the declaration,
distribution or purchase, as applicable (and after giving effect thereto),
asset coverage (as defined in the 1940 Act) with respect to the outstanding
shares of AMPS (and Other AMPS) would be less than 200% (or such other
percentage as in the future may be required by law). The Fund estimates that,
based on the composition of its portfolio at April 30, 2005, asset coverage
with respect to shares of AMPS would be approximately [ ]% representing
approximately [ ]% of the Fund's capital and [ ]% of the Fund's common stock
equity immediately after the issuance of the shares of AMPS offered hereby.
Under the Code, the Fund, among other things, must distribute at least 90% of
its investment company taxable income each year in order to maintain its
qualification for tax treatment as a regulated investment company. The
foregoing limitations on dividends, distributions and purchases under certain
circumstances may impair the Fund's ability to maintain such qualification.
See "Taxes" in the statement of additional information.


                                      34



     Upon any failure to pay dividends on shares of AMPS for two years or
more, the holders of the shares of AMPS will acquire certain additional voting
rights. See "Voting Rights" below. Such rights shall be the exclusive remedy
of the holders of shares of AMPS upon any failure to pay dividends on shares
of the Fund.

     Additional Dividends. If the Fund retroactively allocates any net capital
gain or other income subject to regular Federal income taxes to shares of AMPS
without having given advance notice thereof to the Auction Agent as described
under "The Auction--Auction Procedures--Auction Date; Advance Notice of
Allocation of Taxable Income; Inclusion of Taxable Income in Dividends" below,
which may only happen when such allocation is made as a result of the
redemption of all or some of the outstanding shares of AMPS or the liquidation
of the Fund (the amount of such allocation referred to herein as a
"Retroactive Taxable Allocation"), the Fund, within 90 days (and generally
within 60 days) after the end of the Fund's fiscal year for which a
Retroactive Taxable Allocation is made, will provide notice thereof to the
Auction Agent and to each holder of shares (initially Cede as nominee of the
Securities Depository) during such fiscal year at such holder's address as the
same appears or last appeared on the stock books of the Fund. The Fund, within
30 days after such notice is given to the Auction Agent, will pay to the
Auction Agent (who then will distribute to such holders of shares of AMPS),
out of funds legally available therefor, an amount equal to the aggregate
Additional Dividend (as defined below) with respect to all Retroactive Taxable
Allocations made to such holders during the fiscal year in question.

     An "Additional Dividend" means payment to a present or former holder of
shares of AMPS of an amount which, when taken together with the aggregate
amount of Retroactive Taxable Allocations made to such holder with respect to
the fiscal year in question, would cause such holder's dividends in dollars
(after Federal and California income tax consequences) from the aggregate of
both the Retroactive Taxable Allocations and the Additional Dividend to be
equal to the dollar amount of the dividends which would have been received by
such holder if the amount of the aggregate Retroactive Taxable Allocations had
been excludable from the gross income of such holder. Such Additional Dividend
shall be calculated (i) without consideration being given to the time value of
money; (ii) assuming that no holder of shares of AMPS is subject to the
Federal alternative minimum tax with respect to dividends received from the
Fund; and (iii) assuming that each Retroactive Taxable Allocation would be
taxable in the hands of each holder of shares of AMPS at the greater of: (a)
the maximum combined marginal regular Federal and California individual income
tax rate applicable to ordinary income or capital gains depending on the
taxable character of the distribution (including any surtax); or (b) the
maximum combined marginal regular Federal and California corporate income tax
rate applicable to ordinary income or capital gains depending on the taxable
character of the distribution (taking into account in both (a) and (b) the
Federal income tax deductibility of state and local taxes paid or incurred but
not any phase out of, or provision limiting, personal exemptions, itemized
deductions, or the benefit of lower tax brackets and assuming the taxability
of Federally tax exempt dividends for corporations for California income tax
purposes). Although the Fund generally intends to designate any Additional
Dividend as an exempt-interest dividend to the extent permitted by applicable
law, it is possible that all or a portion of any Additional Dividend will be
taxable to the recipient thereof. See "Taxes" in the statement of additional
information. The Fund will not pay a further Additional Dividend with respect
to any taxable portion of an Additional Dividend.

     If the Fund does not give advance notice of the amount of taxable income
to be included in a dividend on shares of AMPS in the related Auction, the
Fund may include such taxable income in a dividend on shares of AMPS if it
increases the dividend by an additional amount calculated as if such income
were a Retroactive Taxable Allocation and the additional amount were an
Additional Dividend and notifies the Auction Agent of such inclusion at least
five Business Days prior to the applicable Dividend Payment Date. See "The
Auction-- Auction Procedures--Auction Date; Advance Notice of Allocation of
Taxable Income; Inclusion of Taxable Income in Dividends" below.

Asset Maintenance

     The Fund will be required to satisfy two separate asset maintenance
requirements under the terms of the Articles Supplementary. These requirements
are summarized below.

     1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage. The Fund will be required under the
Articles Supplementary to maintain, with respect to shares of AMPS, as of the
last Business Day of each month in which any shares of AMPS are outstanding,
asset coverage of at least 200% with respect to senior securities that are
stock, including the shares of AMPS and Other AMPS (or such other asset
coverage as in the future may be specified in or under the 1940 Act as the
minimum asset coverage for senior securities that are stock of a closed-end
investment company as a condition of paying dividends on its common stock)
("1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage"). If the Fund fails to maintain 1940 Act AMPS
Asset Coverage and such failure is not cured as 


                                      35



of the last Business Day of the following month (the "1940 Act Cure Date"),
the Fund will be required under certain circumstances to redeem certain of the
shares of AMPS. See "Redemption" below.

     Based upon the composition of the Fund's portfolio at April 30, 2005, the
1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage immediately following the issuance of AMPS
offered hereby (after giving effect to the deduction of the underwriting
discount and offering expenses for the shares of AMPS) will be computed as
follows:

      Value of Fund assets less liabilities                         
       not constituting senior securities              $[     ]          
------------------------------------------------  =  -------------  =   [   ]%
Senior securities representing indebtedness plus       $[     ]
     liquidation value of the shares of AMPS

     AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount. So long as shares of AMPS are outstanding,
the Fund will be required under the Articles Supplementary to maintain as of
the last Business Day of each week (a "Valuation Date") Moody's Eligible
Assets and S&P Eligible Assets each having in the aggregate a Discounted Value
at least equal to the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount. The AMPS Basic
Maintenance Amount includes the sum of (i) the aggregate liquidation value of
AMPS and Other AMPS then outstanding and (ii) certain accrued and projected
payment obligations of the Fund. See "Description of AMPS--Asset
Maintenance--AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount" in the statement of additional
information. If the Fund fails to meet such requirement as of any Valuation
Date and such failure is not cured on or before the sixth Business Day after
such Valuation Date (the "AMPS Basic Maintenance Cure Date"), the Fund will be
required under certain circumstances to redeem certain of the shares of AMPS.
Upon any failure to maintain the required Discounted Value, the Fund will use
its best efforts to alter the composition of its portfolio to reattain a
Discounted Value at least equal to the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount on or
prior to the AMPS Basic Maintenance Cure Date. See "Redemption" herein and in
the statement of additional information.

Redemption

     Optional Redemption. To the extent permitted under the 1940 Act and under
Maryland law, upon giving a Notice of Redemption, as provided in the statement
of additional information, the Fund, at its option, may redeem shares of AMPS,
in whole or in part, out of funds legally available therefor, at the Optional
Redemption Price per share on any Dividend Payment Date; provided that no
share of AMPS may be redeemed at the option of the Fund during (a) the Initial
Dividend Period with respect to such share or (b) a Non-Call Period to which
such share is subject. "Optional Redemption Price" means $25,000 per share of
AMPS plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends (whether or not
earned or declared) to the date fixed for redemption plus any applicable
redemption premium, if any, attributable to the designation of a Premium Call
Period. In addition, holders of AMPS may be entitled to receive Additional
Dividends in the event of redemption of such AMPS to the extent provided
herein. See "Dividends--Additional Dividends." The Fund has the authority to
redeem the AMPS for any reason and may redeem all or part of the outstanding
shares of AMPS if it anticipates that the Fund's leveraged capital structure
will result in a lower rate of return to holders of common stock for any
significant period of time than that obtainable if the common stock were
unleveraged.

     Mandatory Redemption. The Fund will be required to redeem, out of funds
legally available therefor, at the Mandatory Redemption Price per share,
shares of AMPS to the extent permitted under the 1940 Act and Maryland law, on
a date fixed by the Board of Directors, if the Fund fails to maintain Moody's
Eligible Assets and S&P Eligible Assets each with an aggregate Discounted
Value equal to or greater than the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount or to satisfy
the 1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage and such failure is not cured on or before
the AMPS Basic Maintenance Cure Date or the 1940 Act Cure Date (herein
collectively referred to as a "Cure Date"), as the case may be. "Mandatory
Redemption Price" means $25,000 per share of AMPS plus an amount equal to
accumulated but unpaid dividends (whether or not earned or declared) to the
date fixed for redemption. In addition, holders of AMPS may be entitled to
receive Additional Dividends in the event of redemption of such AMPS to the
extent provided herein. See "Dividends--Additional Dividends."

     For a discussion of the allocation procedures to be used if fewer than
all of the outstanding shares of AMPS are to be redeemed and for a discussion
of other redemption procedures, see "Description of AMPS-- Redemption" in the
statement of additional information.


                                      36



Liquidation Rights

     Upon any liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Fund, whether
voluntary or involuntary, the holders of shares of AMPS will be entitled to
receive, out of the assets of the Fund available for distribution to
stockholders, before any distribution or payment is made upon any shares of
common stock or any other capital stock of the Fund ranking junior in right of
payment upon liquidation of AMPS, $25,000 per share together with the amount
of any dividends accumulated but unpaid (whether or not earned or declared)
thereon to the date of distribution, and after such payment the holders of
AMPS will be entitled to no other payments except for Additional Dividends. If
such assets of the Fund shall be insufficient to make the full liquidation
payment on the outstanding shares of AMPS and liquidation payments on any
other outstanding class or series of preferred stock of the Fund ranking on a
parity with the AMPS as to payment upon liquidation, including the Other AMPS,
then such assets will be distributed among the holders of such shares of AMPS
and the holders of shares of such other class or series, including the Other
AMPS, ratably in proportion to the respective preferential amounts to which
they are entitled. After payment of the full amount of liquidation
distribution to which they are entitled, the holders of AMPS will not be
entitled to any further participation in any distribution of assets by the
Fund. A consolidation, merger or share exchange of the Fund with or into any
other entity or entities or a sale, whether for cash, shares of stock,
securities or properties, of all or substantially all or any part of the
assets of the Fund shall not be deemed or construed to be a liquidation,
dissolution or winding up of the Fund.

Voting Rights

     Except as otherwise indicated in this prospectus and the statement of
additional information and except as otherwise required by applicable law,
holders of shares of AMPS will be entitled to one vote per share on each
matter submitted to a vote of stockholders of the Fund and will vote together
with holders of shares of Other AMPS and holders of shares of common stock as
a single class.

     The 1940 Act and the Articles Supplementary require that the holders of
preferred stock, including the AMPS and Other AMPS, voting as a separate
class, have the rights to elect two of the Fund's Directors at all times and
to elect a majority of the Directors at any time that two full years'
dividends on the AMPS (and Other AMPS) are unpaid. The holders of AMPS (and
Other AMPS) will vote as a separate class or classes on certain other matters
as required under the Articles Supplementary, the 1940 Act and Maryland law.
In addition, the Series F AMPS (and Other AMPS) may vote as a separate series
under certain circumstances. See "Description of AMPS--Voting Rights" in the
statement of additional information.

                                  THE AUCTION

     Certain of the capitalized terms used herein not otherwise defined in
this prospectus have the meaning provided in the Glossary at the back of this
prospectus.

General

     Holders of the shares of the Series F AMPS will be entitled to receive
cumulative cash dividends on their shares when, as and if declared by the
Board of Directors of the Fund, out of funds legally available therefor, on
the Initial Dividend Payment Date with respect to the Initial Dividend Period
and, thereafter, on each Dividend Payment Date with respect to a Subsequent
Dividend Period (generally a period of seven days, subject to certain
exceptions set forth under "Description of AMPS--Dividends--General") at the
rate per annum equal to the Applicable Rate for each such Dividend Period.

     The provisions of the Articles Supplementary establishing the terms of
the shares of AMPS offered hereby will provide that the Applicable Rate for
the Series F AMPS for each Dividend Period after the Initial Dividend Period
therefor will be equal to the rate per annum that the Auction Agent advises
has resulted on the Business Day preceding the first day of such Dividend
Period due to implementation of the auction procedures set forth in the
Articles Supplementary (the "Auction Procedures") in which persons determine
to hold or offer to purchase or sell shares of AMPS. The Auction Procedures
are attached as Appendix E to the statement of additional information.

     Each periodic operation of such procedures with respect to the shares of
AMPS is referred to hereinafter as an "Auction." If, however, the Fund should
fail to pay or duly provide for the full amount of any dividend on shares of
AMPS or the redemption price of shares of AMPS called for redemption, the
Applicable Rate for shares of AMPS will be determined 


                                      37



as set forth under "Description of AMPS--Dividends--Non-Payment Period; Late
Charge" in the statement of additional information.

     Auction Agent Agreement. The Fund has entered into an agreement with The
Bank of New York (together with any successor bank or trust company or other
entity entering into a similar agreement with this Fund, the "Auction Agent")
(the "Auction Agent Agreement"), which provides, among other things, that the
Auction Agent will follow the Auction Procedures for the purpose of
determining the Applicable Rate for the AMPS. The Fund will pay the Auction
Agent compensation for its services under the Auction Agent Agreement.

     Broker-Dealer Agreements. The Auction Agent has entered into agreements
with Merrill Lynch and more than twenty other broker-dealers and may enter
into similar agreements (collectively, the "Broker-Dealer Agreements") with
one or more other broker-dealers (collectively, the "Broker-Dealers") selected
by the Fund, which provide for the participation of such Broker-Dealers in
Auctions. Merrill Lynch is an affiliate of the Investment Adviser in that they
share a common parent, Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.

     Securities Depository. The Depository Trust Company initially will act as
the Securities Depository for the Agent Members with respect to the shares of
the Series F AMPS. One or more registered certificates for all of the shares
of the Series F AMPS initially will be registered in the name of Cede, as
nominee of the Securities Depository. The certificate will bear a legend to
the effect that such certificate is issued subject to the provisions
restricting transfers of shares of AMPS to which it relates contained in the
Articles Supplementary. Cede initially will be the holder of record of all
shares of AMPS, and Beneficial Owners will not be entitled to receive
certificates representing their ownership interest in such shares. The
Securities Depository will maintain lists of its participants and will
maintain the positions (ownership interests) of shares of AMPS held by each
Agent Member, whether as the Beneficial Owner thereof for its own account or
as nominee for the Beneficial Owner thereof. Payments made by the Fund to
holders of AMPS will be duly made by making payments to the nominee of the
Securities Depository.

Auction Procedures

     The following is a brief discussion of the procedures to be used in
conducting Auctions. This summary is qualified by reference to the Auction
Procedures set forth in Appendix E to the statement of additional information.
The Settlement Procedures to be used with respect to Auctions are set forth in
Appendix D to the statement of additional information.

     Auction Date; Advance Notice of Allocation of Taxable Income; Inclusion
of Taxable Income in Dividends. An Auction to determine the Applicable Rate
for the shares of the Series F AMPS offered hereby for each Dividend Period
(other than the Initial Dividend Period therefor) will be held on the first
Business Day (as hereinafter defined) preceding the first day of such Dividend
Period, which first day is also a Dividend Payment Date for the preceding
Dividend Period (the date of each Auction being referred to herein as an
"Auction Date"). "Business Day" means a day on which the New York Stock
Exchange (the "NYSE") is open for trading and which is not a Saturday, Sunday
or other day on which banks in the City of New York are authorized or
obligated by law to close. Auctions for shares of the Series F AMPS for
Dividend Periods after the Initial Dividend Period normally will be held every
Wednesday after the preceding Dividend Payment Date, and each subsequent
Dividend Period normally will begin on the following Thursday (also a Dividend
Payment Date). The Auction Date and the first day of the related Dividend
Period for the AMPS (both of which must be Business Days) need not be
consecutive calendar days. For example, in most cases, if the Wednesday that
normally would be an Auction Date for the Series F AMPS is not a Business Day,
then such Auction Date will be the preceding Tuesday and the first day of the
related Dividend Period will continue to be the following Thursday. See
"Description of AMPS--Dividends" for information concerning the circumstances
under which a Dividend Payment Date may fall on a date other than the days
specified above, which may affect the Auction Date.

     Except as noted below, whenever the Fund intends to include any net
capital gain or other income subject to regular Federal income taxes in any
dividend on shares of AMPS, the Fund will notify the Auction Agent of the
amount to be so included at least five Business Days prior to the Auction Date
on which the Applicable Rate for such dividend is to be established. Whenever
the Auction Agent receives such notice from the Fund, in turn it will notify
each Broker-Dealer, who, on or prior to such Auction Date, in accordance with
its Broker-Dealer Agreement, will notify its customers who are Beneficial
Owners and Potential Beneficial Owners believed to be interested in submitting
an Order in the Auction to be held on such Auction Date. The Fund also may
include such income in a dividend on shares of AMPS without giving advance
notice thereof if it increases the dividend by an additional amount calculated
as if such income were a Retroactive Taxable 


                                      38



Allocation and the additional amount were an Additional Dividend; provided
that the Fund will notify the Auction Agent of the additional amounts to be
included in such dividend at least five Business Days prior to the applicable
Dividend Payment Date. See "Description of AMPS--Dividends--Additional
Dividends" above.

     Orders by Beneficial Owners, Potential Beneficial Owners, Existing
Holders and Potential Holders. On or prior to each Auction Date:

          (a) each Beneficial Owner may submit to its Broker-Dealer by
     telephone a:

               (i) Hold Order--indicating the number of outstanding shares, if
          any, of AMPS that such Beneficial Owner desires to continue to hold
          without regard to the Applicable Rate for the next Dividend Period
          for such shares;

               (ii) Bid--indicating the number of outstanding shares, if any,
          of AMPS that such Beneficial Owner desires to continue to hold,
          provided that the Applicable Rate for the next Dividend Period for
          such shares is not less than the rate per annum then specified by
          such Beneficial Owner; and/or

               (iii) Sell Order--indicating the number of outstanding shares,
          if any, of AMPS that such Beneficial Owner offers to sell without
          regard to the Applicable Rate for the next Dividend Period for such
          shares; and

          (b) Broker-Dealers will contact customers who are Potential
     Beneficial Owners of shares of AMPS to determine whether such Potential
     Beneficial Owners desire to submit Bids indicating the number of shares
     of AMPS which they offer to purchase provided that the Applicable Rate
     for the next Dividend Period for such shares is not less than the rates
     per annum specified in such Bids.

     The communication by a Beneficial Owner or Potential Beneficial Owner to
a Broker-Dealer and the communication by a Broker-Dealer, whether or not
acting for its own account, to the Auction Agent of the foregoing information
is hereinafter referred to as an "Order" and collectively as "Orders." A
Beneficial Owner or a Potential Beneficial Owner placing an Order, including a
Broker-Dealer acting in such capacity for its own account, is hereinafter
referred to as a "Bidder" and collectively as "Bidders." Any Order submitted
by a Beneficial Owner or a Potential Beneficial Owner to its Broker-Dealer, or
by a Broker-Dealer to the Auction Agent, prior to the Submission Deadline on
any Auction Date shall be irrevocable.

     In an Auction, a Beneficial Owner may submit different types of Orders
with respect to shares of AMPS then held by such Beneficial Owner, as well as
Bids for additional shares of AMPS. For information concerning the priority
given to different types of Orders placed by Beneficial Owners, see
"Submission of Orders by Broker-Dealers to Auction Agent" below.

     The Maximum Applicable Rate for shares of AMPS will be the higher of (A)
the Applicable Percentage of the Reference Rate or (B) the Applicable Spread
plus the Reference Rate. The Auction Agent will round each applicable Maximum
Applicable Rate to the nearest one-thousandth (0.001) of one percent per
annum, with any such number ending in five ten-thousandths of one percent
being rounded upwards to the nearest one-thousandth (0.001) of one percent.
The Auction Agent will not round the applicable Reference Rate as part of its
calculation of the Maximum Applicable Rate.

     The Maximum Applicable Rate for shares of AMPS will depend on the credit
rating or ratings assigned to such shares. The Applicable Percentage and the
Applicable Spread will be determined based on (i) the lower of the credit
rating or ratings assigned on such date to such shares by Moody's and S&P (or
if Moody's or S&P or both shall not make such rating available, the equivalent
of either or both of such ratings by a Substitute Rating Agency or two
Substitute Rating Agencies or, in the event that only one such rating shall be
available, such rating) and (ii) whether the Fund has provided notification to
the Auction Agent prior to the Auction establishing the Applicable Rate for
any dividend that net capital gain or other taxable income will be included in
such dividend on shares of AMPS as follows:


                                      39






                Credit Ratings                  Applicable           Applicable        Applicable Spread
    ------------------------------------      Percentage of         Percentage of       Over Reference       Applicable Spread
                                            Reference Rate--No         Reference             Rate--No          Over Reference
       Moody' s               S&P              Notification       Rate--Notification      Notification       Rate--Notification
    ----------------    ----------------   --------------------  ---------------------  ------------------  ---------------------
                                                                                                        
         Aaa                  AAA                    110%                  125%                   1.10%                1.25%
     Aa3 to Aa1            AA- to AA+                125%                  150%                   1.25%                1.50%
      A3 to A1              A- to A+                 150%                  200%                   1.50%                2.00%
    Baa3 to Baa1          BBB- to BBB+               175%                  250%                   1.75%                2.50%
     Below Baa3            Below BBB-                200%                  300%                   2.00%                3.00%



There is no minimum Applicable Rate in respect of any Dividend Period.

     The Applicable Percentage and the Applicable Spread as so determined may
be further subject to upward but not downward adjustment in the discretion of
the Board of Directors of the Fund after consultation with the Broker-Dealers,
provided that immediately following any such increase, the Fund would be in
compliance with the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount. The Fund will take all
reasonable action necessary to enable either S&P or Moody's, or both to
provide a rating for the AMPS, subject to the Fund's ability to terminate
compliance with the rating agency guidelines as discussed under "Rating Agency
Guidelines." If either S&P or Moody's, or both, shall not make such a rating
available, and subject to the Fund's ability to terminate compliance with the
rating agency guidelines discussed under "Rating Agency Guidelines," Merrill
Lynch or its affiliates and successors, after obtaining the Fund's approval,
will select another NRSRO (a "Substitute Rating Agency") or two other NRSROs
("Substitute Rating Agencies") to act as a Substitute Rating Agency or
Substitute Rating Agencies, as the case may be.

     Any Bid by a Beneficial Owner specifying a rate per annum higher than the
Maximum Applicable Rate will be treated as a Sell Order, and any Bid by a
Potential Beneficial Owner specifying a rate per annum higher than the Maximum
Applicable Rate will not be considered. See "Determination of Sufficient
Clearing Bids, Winning Bid Rate and Applicable Rate" and "Acceptance and
Rejection of Submitted Bids and Submitted Sell Orders and Allocation of
Shares."

     Neither the Fund nor the Auction Agent will be responsible for a
Broker-Dealer's failure to comply with the foregoing.

     A Broker-Dealer also may hold AMPS in its own account as a Beneficial
Owner. A Broker-Dealer thus may submit Orders to the Auction Agent as a
Beneficial Owner or a Potential Beneficial Owner and therefore participate in
an Auction as an Existing Holder or Potential Holder on behalf of both itself
and its customers. Any Order placed with the Auction Agent by a Broker-Dealer
as or on behalf of a Beneficial Owner or a Potential Beneficial Owner will be
treated in the same manner as an Order placed with a Broker-Dealer by a
Beneficial Owner or a Potential Beneficial Owner. Similarly, any failure by a
Broker-Dealer to submit to the Auction Agent an Order in respect of any AMPS
held by it or its customers who are Beneficial Owners will be treated in the
same manner as a Beneficial Owner's failure to submit to its Broker-Dealer an
Order in respect of AMPS held by it, as described in the next paragraph.
Inasmuch as a Broker-Dealer participates in an Auction as an Existing Holder
or a Potential Holder only to represent the interests of a Beneficial Owner or
Potential Beneficial Owner, whether it be its customers or itself, all
discussion herein relating to the consequences of an Auction for Existing
Holders and Potential Holders also applies to the underlying beneficial
ownership interests represented thereby. For information concerning the
priority given to different types of Orders placed by Existing Holders, see
"Submission of Orders by Broker-Dealers to Auction Agent." Each purchase or
sale in an Auction will be settled on the Business Day next succeeding the
Auction Date at a price per share equal to $25,000. See "Notification of
Results; Settlement" below.

     If one or more Orders covering in the aggregate all of the outstanding
shares of AMPS held by a Beneficial Owner are not submitted to the Auction
Agent prior to the Submission Deadline, either because a Broker-Dealer failed
to contact such Beneficial Owner or otherwise, the Auction Agent shall deem a
Hold Order (in the case of an Auction relating to a Dividend Period which is
not a Special Dividend Period of more than 28 days) and a Sell Order (in the
case of an Auction relating to a Special Dividend Period of more than 28 days)
to have been submitted on behalf of such Beneficial Owner covering the number
of outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Beneficial Owner and not subject to
Orders submitted to the Auction Agent.

     If all of the outstanding shares of AMPS are subject to Submitted Hold
Orders, the Dividend Period next succeeding the Auction automatically shall be
the same length as the immediately preceding Dividend Period, and the
Applicable Rate 


                                      40



for the next Dividend Period for all shares of AMPS of such series will be 60%
of the Reference Rate on the date of the applicable Auction (or 90% of such
rate if the Fund has provided notification to the Auction Agent prior to the
Auction establishing the Applicable Rate for any dividend that net capital
gain or other taxable income will be included in such dividend on shares of
AMPS).

     For the purposes of an Auction, shares of AMPS for which the Fund shall
have given notice of redemption and deposited moneys therefor with the Auction
Agent in trust or segregated in an account at the Fund's custodian bank for
the benefit of holders of AMPS to be redeemed and for payment to the Auction
Agent, as set forth under "Description of AMPS--Redemption" in the statement
of additional information, will not be considered as outstanding and will not
be included in such Auction. Pursuant to the Articles Supplementary of the
Fund, the Fund will be prohibited from reissuing and its affiliates (other
than Merrill Lynch) will be prohibited from transferring (other than to the
Fund) any shares of AMPS they may acquire. Neither the Fund nor any affiliate
of the Fund may submit an Order in any Auction, except that an affiliate of
the Fund that is a Broker-Dealer (i.e., Merrill Lynch) may submit an Order.

     Submission of Orders by Broker-Dealers to Auction Agent. Prior to 1:00
p.m., Eastern time, on each Auction Date, or such other time on the Auction
Date as may be specified by the Auction Agent (the "Submission Deadline"),
each Broker-Dealer will submit to the Auction Agent in writing or through a
mutually acceptable electronic means all Orders obtained by it for the Auction
to be conducted on such Auction Date, designating itself (unless otherwise
permitted by the Fund) as the Existing Holder or Potential Holder in respect
of the shares of AMPS subject to such Orders. Any Order submitted by a
Beneficial Owner or a Potential Beneficial Owner to its Broker-Dealer, or by a
Broker-Dealer to the Auction Agent, prior to the Submission Deadline on any
Auction Date, shall be irrevocable.

     If the rate per annum specified in any Bid contains more than three
figures to the right of the decimal point, the Auction Agent will round such
rate per annum up to the next highest one-thousandth (.001) of 1%.

     If one or more Orders of an Existing Holder are submitted to the Auction
Agent and such Orders cover in the aggregate more than the number of
outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing Holder, such Orders will be
considered valid in the following order of priority:

          (a) any Hold Order will be considered valid up to and including the
     number of outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing Holder,
     provided that if more than one Hold Order is submitted by such Existing
     Holder and the number of shares of AMPS subject to such Hold Orders
     exceeds the number of outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing
     Holder, the number of shares of AMPS subject to each of such Hold Orders
     will be reduced pro rata so that such Hold Orders, in the aggregate, will
     cover exactly the number of outstanding shares of AMPS held by such
     Existing Holder;

          (b) any Bids will be considered valid, in the ascending order of
     their respective rates per annum if more than one Bid is submitted by
     such Existing Holder, up to and including the excess of the number of
     outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing Holder over the number
     of outstanding shares of AMPS subject to any Hold Order referred to in
     clause (a) above (and if more than one Bid submitted by such Existing
     Holder specifies the same rate per annum and together they cover more
     than the remaining number of shares that can be the subject of valid Bids
     after application of clause (a) above and of the foregoing portion of
     this clause (b) to any Bid or Bids specifying a lower rate or rates per
     annum, the number of shares subject to each of such Bids will be reduced
     pro rata so that such Bids, in the aggregate, cover exactly such
     remaining number of outstanding shares); and the number of outstanding
     shares, if any, subject to Bids not valid under this clause (b) shall be
     treated as the subject of a Bid by a Potential Holder; and

          (c) any Sell Order will be considered valid up to and including the
     excess of the number of outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing
     Holder over the sum of the number of shares of AMPS subject to Hold
     Orders referred to in clause (a) above and the number of shares of AMPS
     subject to valid Bids by such Existing Holder referred to in clause (b)
     above; provided that, if more than one Sell Order is submitted by any
     Existing Holder and the number of shares of AMPS subject to such Sell
     Orders is greater than such excess, the number of shares of AMPS subject
     to each of such Sell Orders will be reduced pro rata so that such Sell
     Orders, in the aggregate, will cover exactly the number of shares of AMPS
     equal to such excess.


                                      41



     If more than one Bid of any Potential Holder is submitted in any Auction,
each Bid submitted in such Auction will be considered a separate Bid with the
rate per annum and number of shares of AMPS therein specified.

     Determination of Sufficient Clearing Bids, Winning Bid Rate and
Applicable Rate. Not earlier than the Submission Deadline for each Auction,
the Auction Agent will assemble all Orders submitted or deemed submitted to it
by the Broker-Dealers (each such "Hold Order," "Bid" or "Sell Order" as
submitted or deemed submitted by a Broker-Dealer hereinafter being referred to
as a "Submitted Hold Order," a "Submitted Bid" or a "Submitted Sell Order," as
the case may be, or as a "Submitted Order") and will determine the excess of
the number of outstanding shares of AMPS over the number of outstanding shares
of AMPS subject to Submitted Hold Orders (such excess being referred to as the
"Available AMPS") and whether Sufficient Clearing Bids have been made in such
Auction. Sufficient Clearing Bids will have been made if the number of
outstanding shares of AMPS that are the subject of Submitted Bids of Potential
Holders with rates per annum not higher than the Maximum Applicable Rate
equals or exceeds the number of outstanding shares that are the subject of
Submitted Sell Orders (including the number of shares subject to Bids of
Existing Holders specifying rates per annum higher than the Maximum Applicable
Rate).

     If Sufficient Clearing Bids have been made, the Auction Agent will
determine the lowest rate per annum specified in the Submitted Bids (the
"Winning Bid Rate") which would result in the number of shares subject to
Submitted Bids specifying such rate per annum or a lower rate per annum being
at least equal to the Available AMPS. If Sufficient Clearing Bids have been
made, the Winning Bid Rate will be the Applicable Rate for the next Dividend
Period for all shares of AMPS then outstanding.

     If Sufficient Clearing Bids have not been made (other than because all
outstanding shares of AMPS are the subject of Submitted Hold Orders), the
Dividend Period next following the Auction automatically will be a 7-Day
Dividend Period in the case of the Series F AMPS, and the Applicable Rate for
such Dividend Period will be equal to the Maximum Applicable Rate.

     If Sufficient Clearing Bids have not been made, Beneficial Owners that
have Submitted Sell Orders will not be able to sell in the Auction all, and
may not be able to sell any, shares of AMPS subject to such Submitted Sell
Orders. See "Acceptance and Rejection of Submitted Bids and Submitted Sell
Orders and Allocation of Shares." Thus, under some circumstances, Beneficial
Owners may not have liquidity of investment.

     Acceptance and Rejection of Submitted Bids and Submitted Sell Orders and
Allocation of Shares. Based on the determinations described under
"Determination of Sufficient Clearing Bids, Winning Bid Rate and Applicable
Rate" and subject to the discretion of the Auction Agent to round as described
below, Submitted Bids and Submitted Sell Orders will be accepted or rejected
in the order of priority set forth in the Auction Procedures with the result
that Existing Holders and Potential Holders of AMPS will sell, continue to
hold and/or purchase shares of AMPS as set forth below. Existing Holders that
submit or are deemed to have submitted Hold Orders will continue to hold the
shares of AMPS subject to such Hold Orders.

     If Sufficient Clearing Bids have been made:

          (a) each Existing Holder that placed a Submitted Bid specifying a
     rate per annum higher than the Winning Bid Rate or a Submitted Sell Order
     will sell the outstanding shares of AMPS subject to such Submitted Bid or
     Submitted Sell Order;

          (b) each Existing Holder that placed a Submitted Bid specifying a
     rate per annum lower than the Winning Bid Rate will continue to hold the
     outstanding shares of AMPS subject to such Submitted Bid;

          (c) each Potential Holder that placed a Submitted Bid specifying a
     rate per annum lower than the Winning Bid Rate will purchase the number
     of shares of AMPS subject to such Submitted Bid;

          (d) each Existing Holder that placed a Submitted Bid specifying a
     rate per annum equal to the Winning Bid Rate will continue to hold the
     outstanding shares of AMPS subject to such Submitted Bids, unless the
     number of outstanding shares of AMPS subject to all such Submitted Bids
     of Existing Holders is greater than the excess of the Available AMPS over
     the number of shares of AMPS accounted for in clauses (b) and (c) above,
     in which event 


                                      42



     each Existing Holder with such a Submitted Bid will sell a number of
     outstanding shares of AMPS determined on a pro rata basis based on the
     number of outstanding shares of AMPS subject to all such Submitted Bids
     of such Existing Holders; and

          (e) each Potential Holder that placed a Submitted Bid specifying a
     rate per annum equal to the Winning Bid Rate will purchase any Available
     AMPS not accounted for in clause (b), (c) or (d) above on a pro rata
     basis based on the shares of AMPS subject to all such Submitted Bids of
     Potential Holders.

     If Sufficient Clearing Bids have not been made (other than because all
outstanding shares of AMPS are the subject of Submitted Hold Orders):

          (a) each Existing Holder that placed a Submitted Bid specifying a
     rate per annum equal to or lower than the Maximum Applicable Rate will
     continue to hold the outstanding shares of AMPS subject to such Submitted
     Bid;

          (b) each Potential Holder that placed a Submitted Bid specifying a
     rate per annum equal to or lower than the Maximum Applicable Rate will
     purchase the number of shares of AMPS subject to such Submitted Bid; and

          (c) each Existing Holder that placed a Submitted Bid specifying a
     rate per annum higher than the Maximum Applicable Rate or a Submitted
     Sell Order will sell a number of outstanding shares of AMPS determined on
     a pro rata basis based on the outstanding shares of AMPS subject to all
     such Submitted Bids and Submitted Sell Orders.

     If as a result of the Auction Procedures described above any Existing
Holder would be entitled or required to sell, or any Potential Holder would be
entitled or required to purchase, a fraction of a share of AMPS, the Auction
Agent, in such manner as, in its sole discretion, it shall determine, will
round up or down the number of shares of AMPS being sold or purchased on such
Auction Date so that each share sold or purchased by each Existing Holder or
Potential Holder will be a whole share of AMPS. If any Potential Holder would
be entitled or required to purchase less than a whole share of AMPS, the
Auction Agent, in such manner as, in its sole discretion, it shall determine,
will allocate shares of AMPS for purchase among Potential Holders so that only
whole shares of AMPS are purchased by any such Potential Holder, even if such
allocation results in one or more of such Potential Holders not purchasing any
shares of AMPS.

     Notification of Results; Settlement. The Auction Agent will advise each
Broker-Dealer who submitted a Bid or Sell Order in an Auction whether such Bid
or Sell Order was accepted or rejected in whole or in part and of the
Applicable Rate for the next Dividend Period for the related shares of AMPS by
telephone at approximately 3:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the Auction Date for
such Auction. Each such Broker-Dealer that submitted an Order for the account
of a customer then will advise such customer whether such Bid or Sell Order
was accepted or rejected, will confirm purchases and sales with each customer
purchasing or selling shares of AMPS as a result of the Auction and will
advise each customer purchasing or selling shares of AMPS to give instructions
to its Agent Member of the Securities Depository to pay the purchase price
against delivery of such shares or to deliver such shares against payment
therefor as appropriate. If a customer selling shares of AMPS as a result of
an Auction shall fail to instruct its Agent Member to deliver such shares, the
Broker-Dealer that submitted such customer's Bid or Sell Order will instruct
such Agent Member to deliver such shares against payment therefor. Each
Broker-Dealer that submitted a Hold Order in an Auction on behalf of a
customer also will advise such customer of the Applicable Rate for the next
Dividend Period for the AMPS. The Auction Agent will record each transfer of
shares of AMPS on the record book of Existing Holders to be maintained by the
Auction Agent. In accordance with the Securities Depository's normal
procedures, on the day after each Auction Date, the transactions described
above will be executed through the Securities Depository, and the accounts of
the respective Agent Members at the Securities Depository will be debited and
credited as necessary to effect the purchases and sales of shares of AMPS as
determined in such Auction. Purchasers will make payment through their Agent
Members in same-day funds to the Securities Depository against delivery
through their Agent Members; the Securities Depository will make payment in
accordance with its normal procedures, which now provide for payment in
same-day funds. If the procedures of the Securities Depository applicable to
AMPS shall be changed to provide for payment in next-day funds, then
purchasers may be required to make payment in next day funds. If any Existing
Holder selling shares of AMPS in an Auction fails to deliver such shares, the
Broker-Dealer of any person that was to have purchased shares of AMPS in such
Auction may deliver to such person a number of whole shares of AMPS that is
less than the number of shares that otherwise was to be purchased by such
person. In such event, the number of shares of AMPS to be so delivered will be
determined by such Broker-Dealer. Delivery of such lesser number of shares
will constitute good delivery. Each Broker-Dealer Agreement also will provide
that neither the Fund nor the Auction Agent will have responsibility or
liability with respect to the failure of a Potential Beneficial Owner,
Beneficial Owner or their respective 


                                      43



Agent Members to deliver shares of AMPS or to pay for shares of AMPS purchased
or sold pursuant to an Auction or otherwise.

Broker-Dealers

     General. The Broker-Dealer Agreements provide that a Broker-Dealer may
submit Orders in Auctions for its own account, unless the Fund notifies all
Broker-Dealers that they no longer may do so; provided that Broker-Dealers may
continue to submit Hold Orders and Sell Orders. If a Broker-Dealer submits an
Order for its own account in any Auction of the AMPS, it may have knowledge of
Orders placed through it in that Auction and therefore have an advantage over
other Bidders, but such Broker-Dealer would not have knowledge of Orders
submitted by other Broker-Dealers in that Auction. As a result of bidding by a
Broker-Dealer in an Auction, the Applicable Rate may be higher or lower than
the rate that would have prevailed had the Broker-Dealer not Bid.

     A Broker-Dealer may also Bid in an Auction in order to prevent what would
otherwise be (i) a failed Auction, (ii) an "all-hold" Auction, or (iii) an
Applicable Rate that the Broker-Dealer believes, in its sole discretion, does
not reflect the market for the AMPS at the time of the Auction. A
Broker-Dealer may, but is not obligated to, advise Beneficial Owners of AMPS
that the Applicable Rate that would apply in an "all-hold" Auction (i.e., all
of the outstanding AMPS are subject to Submitted Hold Orders) may be lower
than would apply if Beneficial Owners submit Bids and such advice, if given,
may facilitate the submission of Bids by Beneficial Owners that would avoid
the occurrence of an "all-hold" Auction.

     Commission Inquiries. Merrill Lynch has advised the Fund that it and
various other broker-dealers and other firms that participate in the auction
rate securities market received letters from the staff of the Securities and
Exchange Commission last spring. The letters requested that each of these
firms voluntarily conduct an investigation regarding its respective practices
and procedures in that market. Pursuant to this request, Merrill Lynch
conducted its own voluntary review and reported its findings to the Commission
staff. At the Commission staff's request, Merrill Lynch, together with certain
other broker-dealers and other firms that participate in the auction rate
securities market, is engaging in discussions with the Commission staff
concerning its inquiry. Neither Merrill Lynch nor the Fund can predict the
ultimate outcome of the inquiry or how that outcome will affect the market for
the AMPS or the auctions.

     Fees. The Auction Agent after each Auction will pay a service charge from
funds provided by the Fund to each Broker-Dealer on the basis of the purchase
price of shares of AMPS placed by such Broker-Dealer at such Auction. The
service charge (i) for any 7-Day Dividend Period shall be payable at the
annual rate of 0.25% of the purchase price of the shares of AMPS placed by
such Broker-Dealer in any such Auction and (ii) for any Special Dividend
Period shall be determined by mutual consent of the Fund and any such
Broker-Dealer or Broker-Dealers and shall be based upon a selling concession
that would be applicable to an underwriting of fixed or variable rate
preferred shares with a similar final maturity or variable rate dividend
period, respectively, at the commencement of the Dividend Period with respect
to such Auction. For the purposes of the preceding sentence, shares of AMPS
will be placed by a Broker-Dealer if such shares were (i) the subject of Hold
Orders deemed to have been made by Beneficial Owners that were acquired by
such Beneficial Owners through such Broker-Dealer or (ii) the subject of the
following Orders submitted by such Broker-Dealer: (A) a Submitted Bid of a
Beneficial Owner that resulted in such Beneficial Owner continuing to hold
such shares as a result of the Auction, (B) a Submitted Bid of a Potential
Beneficial Owner that resulted in such Potential Beneficial Owner purchasing
such shares as a result of the Auction or (C) a Submitted Hold Order. A
Broker-Dealer may share a portion of any such fees with non-participating
broker-dealers that submit Orders to the Broker-Dealer for an Auction that are
placed by that Broker-Dealer in such Auction.

     Secondary Trading Market. Broker-Dealers have no obligation to maintain a
secondary trading market in the AMPS outside of Auctions and there can be no
assurance that a secondary market for the AMPS will develop or, if it does
develop, that it will provide holders with a liquid trading market (i.e.,
trading will depend on the presence of willing buyers and sellers and the
trading price is subject to variables to be determined at the time of the
trade by the Broker-Dealers). The AMPS will not be registered on any stock
exchange or on any automated quotation system. An increase in the level of
interest rates, particularly during any Long Term Dividend Period, likely will
have an adverse effect on the secondary market price of the AMPS, and a
selling stockholder may sell AMPS between Auctions at a price per share of
less than $25,000.


                                      44



                           RATING AGENCY GUIDELINES

     Certain of the capitalized terms used herein not otherwise defined in
this prospectus have the meaning provided in the Glossary at the back of this
prospectus.

     The Fund currently intends that, so long as shares of AMPS are
outstanding and the AMPS are rated by Moody's and S&P, the composition of its
portfolio will reflect guidelines established by Moody's and S&P in connection
with the Fund's receipt of a rating for such shares on or prior to their Date
of Original Issue of at least Aaa from Moody's and AAA from S&P. Moody's and
S&P, which are NRSROs, issue ratings for various securities reflecting the
perceived creditworthiness of such securities. The Board of Directors of the
Fund, however, may determine that it is not in the best interest of the Fund
to continue to comply with the guidelines of Moody's or S&P (described below).
If the Fund voluntarily terminates compliance with Moody's or S&P guidelines,
the Fund will no longer be required to maintain a Moody's Discounted Value or
a S&P Discounted Value, as applicable, at least equal to the AMPS Basic
Maintenance Amount. If the Fund voluntarily terminates compliance with Moody's
or S&P guidelines, or both, at the time of termination, it must continue to be
rated by at least one NRSRO.

     The guidelines described below have been developed by Moody's and S&P in
connection with issuances of asset-backed and similar securities, including
debt obligations and variable rate preferred stock, generally on a
case-by-case basis through discussions with the issuers of these securities.
The guidelines are designed to ensure that assets underlying outstanding debt
or preferred stock will be varied sufficiently and will be of sufficient
quality and amount to justify investment-grade ratings. The guidelines do not
have the force of law but have been adopted by the Fund in order to satisfy
current requirements necessary for Moody's and S&P to issue the above
described ratings for shares of AMPS, which ratings generally are relied upon
by institutional investors in purchasing such securities. The guidelines
provide a set of tests for portfolio composition and asset coverage that
supplement (and in some cases are more restrictive than) the applicable
requirements under the 1940 Act. See "Description of AMPS--Asset Maintenance"
herein and in the statement of additional information.

     The Fund intends to maintain a Discounted Value for its portfolio at
least equal to the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount. Moody's and S&P each has
established separate guidelines for determining Discounted Value. To the
extent any particular portfolio holding does not satisfy the applicable rating
agency's guidelines, all or a portion of such holding's value will not be
included in the calculation of Discounted Value (as defined by such rating
agency). The Moody's and S&P guidelines do not impose any limitations on the
percentage of Fund assets that may be invested in holdings not eligible for
inclusion in the calculation of the Discounted Value of the Fund's portfolio.

     Upon any failure to maintain the required Discounted Value, the Fund will
seek to alter the composition of its portfolio to reattain a Discounted Value
at least equal to the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount on or prior to the AMPS
Basic Maintenance Cure Date, thereby incurring additional transaction costs
and possible losses and/or gains on dispositions of portfolio securities. To
the extent any such failure is not cured in a timely manner, shares of AMPS
will be subject to redemption. See "Description of AMPS--Asset Maintenance"
and "Description of AMPS--Redemption" herein and in the statement of
additional information.

     The Fund may, but is not required to, adopt any modifications to these
guidelines that hereafter may be established by Moody's or S&P. Failure to
adopt any such modifications, however, may result in a change in the ratings
described above or a withdrawal of ratings altogether. In addition, any rating
agency providing a rating for the shares of AMPS, at any time, may change or
withdraw any such rating. As set forth in the Articles Supplementary, the
Board of Directors, without stockholder approval, may modify certain
definitions or restrictions that have been adopted by the Fund pursuant to the
rating agency guidelines, provided the Board of Directors has obtained written
confirmation from Moody's and S&P that any such change would not impair the
ratings then assigned by Moody's and S&P to the AMPS.

     As described by Moody's and S&P, a preferred stock rating is an
assessment of the capacity and willingness of an issuer to pay preferred stock
obligations. The ratings on the AMPS are not recommendations to purchase, hold
or sell shares of AMPS, inasmuch as the ratings do not comment as to market
price or suitability for a particular investor, nor do the rating agency
guidelines described above address the likelihood that a holder of shares of
AMPS will be able to sell such shares in an Auction. The ratings are based on
current information furnished to Moody's and S&P by the Fund and the
Investment Adviser and information obtained from other sources. The ratings
may be changed, suspended or withdrawn as a result of 


                                      45



changes in, or the unavailability of, such information. The common stock has
not been rated by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization.

     For additional information concerning the Moody's and S&P ratings
guidelines, see "Rating Agency Guidelines" in the statement of additional
information.

               INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND MANAGEMENT ARRANGEMENTS

     The Investment Adviser, which is owned and controlled by Merrill Lynch &
Co. Inc. ("ML & Co."), a financial services holding company and the parent of
Merrill Lynch, provides the Fund with investment advisory and administrative
services. The Investment Adviser acts as the investment adviser to more than
50 registered investment companies and offers investment advisory services to
individuals and institutional accounts. As of June 30, 2005, the Investment
Adviser and its affiliates, including Merrill Lynch Investment Managers, L.P.
("MLIM"), had a total of approximately $474 billion in investment company and
other portfolio assets under management, including approximately $221 billion
in fixed income assets. This amount includes assets managed by certain
affiliates of the Investment Adviser. The Investment Adviser is a limited
partnership, the partners of which are ML & Co. and Princeton Services. The
principal business address of the Investment Adviser is 800 Scudders Mill
Road, Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536.

     The Investment Advisory Agreement provides that, subject to the oversight
of the Fund's Board of Directors, the Investment Adviser is responsible for
the actual management of the Fund's portfolio. The responsibility for making
decisions to buy, sell or hold a particular security rests with the Investment
Adviser, subject to oversight by the Board of Directors.

     The portfolio manager primarily responsible for the Fund's day-to-day
management is Walter C. O'Connor. Mr. O'Connor has been a portfolio manager
and Managing Director (Municipal Tax-Exempt) of MLIM since 2004, a portfolio
manager and Director (Municipal Tax-Exempt) of MLIM from 1997 to 2004 and a
portfolio manager and Vice President of MLIM from 1993 to 1997 and has over 10
years of experience investing in Municipal Bonds. The Fund's portfolio manager
will consider analyses from various sources, make the necessary investment
decisions, and place orders for transactions accordingly. The statement of
additional information provides additional information about the Fund's
portfolio manager's compensation, other accounts managed by the portfolio
manager, and the portfolio manager's ownership of securities of the Fund.

     For its services, the Fund pays the Investment Adviser a monthly fee at
the annual rate of 0.50% of the Fund's average weekly net assets ("average
weekly net assets" means the average weekly value of the total assets of the
Fund, including the proceeds from the issuance of preferred stock, minus the
sum of (i) accrued liabilities of the Fund, (ii) any accrued and unpaid
interest on outstanding borrowings and (iii) accumulated dividends on shares
of preferred stock). For purposes of this calculation, average weekly net
assets is determined at the end of each month on the basis of the average net
assets of the Fund for each week during the month. The assets for each weekly
period are determined by averaging the net assets at the last business day of
a week with the net assets at the last business day of the prior week. The
liquidation preference of any outstanding preferred stock (other than
accumulated dividends) is not considered a liability in determining the Fund's
average weekly net assets.

     The Investment Advisory Agreement obligates the Investment Adviser to
provide investment advisory services and to pay all compensation of and
furnish office space for officers and employees of the Fund connected with
investment and economic research, trading and investment management of the
Fund, as well as the compensation of all Directors of the Fund who are
affiliated persons of the Investment Adviser or any of its affiliates. The
Fund pays all other expenses incurred in the operation of the Fund, including,
among other things, expenses for legal and auditing services, taxes, costs of
preparing, printing and mailing proxies, listing fees, stock certificates and
stockholder reports, charges of the custodian and the transfer agent, dividend
disbursing agent and registrar, Securities and Exchange Commission fees, fees
and expenses of non-interested Directors, accounting and pricing costs,
insurance, interest, brokerage costs, litigation and other extraordinary or
non-recurring expenses, mailing and other expenses properly payable by the
Fund. Certain accounting services are provided to the Fund by State Street
Bank and Trust Company ("State Street") pursuant to an agreement between State
Street and the Fund. The Fund will pay the costs of these services. In
addition, the Fund will reimburse the Investment Adviser for certain
additional accounting services.


                                      46



                                     TAXES

     To the extent derived from Municipal Bond interest income, dividends on
the AMPS will be excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes
in the hands of holders of such AMPS, subject to the possible application of
the Federal alternative minimum tax and any state or local income taxes.
Interest income from other investments may produce taxable dividends. The Fund
is required to allocate net capital gain and other taxable income, if any,
proportionately among the common stock and AMPS and Other AMPS in accordance
with the current position of the IRS described under the heading "Taxes" in
the statement of additional information. The Fund may notify the Auction Agent
of the amount of any net capital gain or other anticipated taxable income to
be included in any dividend on the AMPS prior to the Auction establishing the
Applicable Dividend Rate for such dividend. The Auction Agent will in turn
notify holders of the AMPS and prospective purchasers. The Fund also may
include such income in a dividend on shares of AMPS without giving advance
notice thereof if it increases the dividend by an additional amount calculated
as if such income were a Retroactive Taxable Allocation and the additional
amount were an Additional Dividend. See "The Auction-- Auction
Procedures--Auction Date; Advance Notice of Allocation of Taxable Income;
Inclusion of Taxable Income in Dividends." The amount of taxable income
allocable to AMPS will depend upon the amount of such income realized by the
Fund and cannot be determined with certainty prior to the end of the Fund's
fiscal year, but it is not generally expected to be significant.

     If the Fund makes a Retroactive Taxable Allocation, it will pay
Additional Dividends to holders of AMPS who are subject to the Retroactive
Taxable Allocation. See "Description of AMPS--Dividends-- Additional
Dividends." The Federal income tax consequences of Additional Dividends under
existing law are uncertain. The Fund intends to treat a holder as receiving a
dividend distribution in the amount of any Additional Dividend only as and
when such Additional Dividend is paid. An Additional Dividend generally will
be designated by the Fund as an exempt-interest dividend except as otherwise
required by applicable law. However, the IRS may assert that all or part of an
Additional Dividend is a taxable dividend either in the taxable year for which
the Retroactive Taxable Allocation is made or in the taxable year in which the
Additional Dividend is paid.

     Generally within 60 days after the end of the Fund's taxable year, the
Fund will tell you the amount of exempt-interest dividends and capital gain
dividends you received during that year. Capital gain dividends are taxable as
long term capital gains to you regardless of how long you have held your
shares.

     The Fund will only purchase a Municipal Bond or Non-Municipal Tax Exempt
Security if it is accompanied by an opinion of counsel to the issuer, which is
delivered on the date of issuance of the security, that the interest paid on
such security is excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes
and is exempt from California income taxes, if applicable. To the extent that
the dividends distributed by the Fund are from interest income that is
excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes, they are exempt
from Federal income tax. There is a possibility that events occurring after
the date of issuance of a security, or after a Fund's acquisition of a
security, may result in a determination that the interest on that security is,
in fact, includable in gross income for Federal income tax purposes
retroactively to its date of issue. Such a determination may cause a portion
of prior distributions received by stockholders, including holders of AMPS, to
be taxable to those stockholders in the year of receipt. The Fund will not pay
an Additional Dividend to a holder of AMPS under these circumstances.

     Because the Fund may from time to time invest a substantial portion of
its portfolio in Municipal Bonds bearing income that could increase an AMPS
holder's tax liability under the Federal alternative minimum tax, the Fund
would not ordinarily be a suitable investment for investors who are subject to
the alternative minimum tax.

     If at any time when AMPS are outstanding the Fund does not meet the asset
coverage requirements of the 1940 Act, the Fund will be required to suspend
distributions to holders of common stock until the asset coverage is restored.
See "Description of AMPS--Dividends--Restrictions on Dividends and Other
Payments" herein and in the statement of additional information. This may
prevent the Fund from meeting certain distribution requirements for
qualification as a RIC. Upon any failure to meet the asset coverage
requirements of the 1940 Act, the Fund, in its sole discretion, may, and under
certain circumstances will be required to, redeem AMPS in order to maintain or
restore the requisite asset coverage and avoid the adverse consequences to the
Fund and its stockholders of failing to qualify as a RIC. See "Description of
AMPS--Redemption" herein and in the statement of additional information. There
can be no assurance, however, that any such action would achieve such
objectives.


                                      47



     By law, your dividends and redemption proceeds will be subject to a
withholding tax if you have not provided a tax identification number or social
security number or if the number you have provided is incorrect.

     This section summarizes some of the consequences of an investment in the
Fund under current Federal income tax laws. It is not a substitute for
personal tax advice. Stockholders are urged to consult their tax advisers
regarding the applicability of any state or local taxes and with specific
questions regarding Federal taxes.

                         DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

     The Fund is authorized to issue 200,000,000 shares of capital stock, all
of which shares initially were classified as common stock, par value $.10 per
share. The Board of Directors is authorized, however, to classify and
reclassify any unissued shares of capital stock into one or more additional or
other classes or series as may be established from time to time by setting or
changing in any one or more respects the designations, preferences, conversion
or other rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends,
qualifications or terms or conditions of redemption of such shares of stock
and pursuant to such classification or reclassification to increase or
decrease the number of authorized shares of any existing class or series. In
this regard, the Board of Directors previously reclassified 9,200 shares of
unissued common stock as Other AMPS and reclassified 1,800 shares of unissued
common stock as AMPS, which are being offered hereby. See "Description of
AMPS" herein and in the statement of additional information.

     The following table shows the amount of (i) capital stock authorized,
(ii) capital stock held by the Fund for its own account and (iii) capital
stock outstanding for each class of authorized securities of the Fund as of
April 30, 2005.




                                                                                                   Amount
                                                                                                   Outstanding
                                                                                                   (Exclusive Of
                                                                                                   Amount Held By
                                                              Amount      Amount Held By Fund      Fund For Its Own
Title of Class                                                Authorized  For Its Own Account      Account)
----------------------------------------------------------  ------------- ----------------------  -------------------
                                                                                                    
Common Stock                                                  199,990,800          - 0 -              34,361,200
Auction Market Preferred Stock
     Series A AMPS                                              1,800              - 0 -                 1,800
     Series B AMPS                                              1,800              - 0 -                 1,800
     Series C AMPS                                              1,600              - 0 -                 1,600
     Series D AMPS                                              2,000              - 0 -                 2,000
     Series E AMPS                                              2,000              - 0 -                 2,000



     The Fund will send unaudited reports at least semi-annually and audited
annual financial statements to all of its stockholders.

Common Stock

     Holders of common stock are entitled to share equally in dividends
declared by the Board of Directors payable to holders of common stock and in
the net assets of the Fund available for distribution to holders of common
stock after payment of the preferential amounts payable to holders of any
outstanding preferred stock. Neither holders of common stock nor holders of
preferred stock have pre-emptive or conversion rights and shares of common
stock are not redeemable. The outstanding shares of common stock are fully
paid and non-assessable.

     Holders of common stock are entitled to one vote for each share held and
will vote with the holders of any outstanding shares of AMPS or other
preferred stock, including the Other AMPS, on each matter submitted to a vote
of holders of common stock, except as described under "Description of
AMPS--Voting Rights" herein and in the statement of additional information.

     Stockholders are entitled to one vote for each share held. The shares of
common stock, AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred stock do not have
cumulative voting rights, which means that the holders of more than 50% of the
shares of common stock, AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred stock voting
for the election of Directors can elect all of the Directors standing for
election by such holders, and, in such event, the holders of the remaining
shares of common stock, AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred stock will
not be able to elect any of such Directors.




                                      48



     So long as any shares of the Fund's preferred stock are outstanding,
including the AMPS and Other AMPS, holders of common stock will not be
entitled to receive any net income of or other distributions from the Fund
unless all accumulated dividends on preferred stock have been paid, and unless
asset coverage (as defined in the 1940 Act) with respect to preferred stock
would be at least 200% after giving effect to such distributions. See
"Description of AMPS--Dividends--Restrictions on Dividends and Other Payments"
herein and in the statement of additional information.

Preferred Stock

     The Fund has issued an aggregate of 9,200 shares of Other AMPS. Under the
Articles Supplementary for the AMPS, the Fund is authorized to issue an
aggregate of 1,800 additional shares of AMPS. The terms of the shares of Other
AMPS are substantially the same as the terms of the shares of AMPS. See
"Description of AMPS." Under the 1940 Act, the Fund is permitted to have
outstanding more than one series of preferred stock as long as no single
series has priority over another series as to the distribution of assets of
the Fund or the payment of dividends. Neither holders of common stock nor
holders of preferred stock have pre-emptive rights to purchase any shares of
AMPS, Other AMPS or any other preferred stock that might be issued. It is
anticipated that the net asset value per share of the AMPS will equal its
original purchase price per share plus accumulated dividends per share.

Certain Provisions of the Charter and By-laws

     The Fund's Charter includes provisions that could have the effect of
limiting the ability of other entities or persons to acquire control of the
Fund or to change the composition of its Board of Directors and could have the
effect of depriving common stockholders of an opportunity to sell their shares
at a premium over prevailing market prices by discouraging a third party from
seeking to obtain control of the Fund. A Director may be removed from office
with or without cause by vote of the holders of at least 66-2/3% of the shares
entitled to vote in an election to fill that directorship. A director elected
by all of the holders of capital stock may be removed only by action of such
holders, and a director elected by the holders of AMPS and any other preferred
stock may be removed only by action of AMPS and any other preferred stock.

     In addition, the Charter requires the favorable vote of the holders of at
least 66-2/3% of the Fund's shares to approve, adopt or authorize the following:

     o    a merger or consolidation or statutory share exchange of the Fund
          with any other corporation;

     o    a sale of all or substantially all of the Fund's assets (other than
          in the regular course of the Fund's investment activities); or

     o    a liquidation or dissolution of the Fund;

unless such action has been approved, adopted or authorized by the affirmative
vote of at least two-thirds of the total number of Directors fixed in
accordance with the By-laws, in which case the affirmative vote of a majority
of the Fund's shares of capital stock is required. The approval, adoption or
authorization of the foregoing also requires the favorable vote of a majority
of the Fund's outstanding shares (as defined in the 1940 Act) of preferred
stock, including the AMPS and Other AMPS, then entitled to be voted, voting as
a separate class.

     In addition, conversion of the Fund to an open-end investment company
would require an amendment to the Fund's Charter. The amendment would have to
be declared advisable by the Board of Directors prior to its submission to
stockholders. Such an amendment would require the favorable vote of the
holders of at least 66-2/3% of the Fund's outstanding shares of capital stock
(including the AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred stock) entitled to be
voted on the matter, voting as a single class (or a majority of such shares if
the amendment was previously approved, adopted or authorized by at least
two-thirds of the total number of Directors fixed in accordance with the
By-laws), and the affirmative vote of a majority of outstanding shares (as
defined in the 1940 Act) of preferred stock of the Fund (including the AMPS
and Other AMPS), voting as a separate class. Such a vote also would satisfy a
separate requirement in the 1940 Act that the change be approved by the
stockholders. Stockholders of an open-end investment company may require the
company to redeem their shares of common stock at any time (except in certain
circumstances as authorized by or under the 1940 Act) at their net asset
value, less such redemption charge, if any, as might be in effect at the time
of a redemption. If the Fund is converted to an open-end investment company,
it could be required to liquidate portfolio securities to meet requests for


                                      49



redemption, and the common stock would no longer be listed on a stock
exchange. Conversion to an open-end investment company would also require
redemption of all outstanding shares of preferred stock (including the AMPS
and Other AMPS) and would require changes in certain of the Fund's investment
policies and restrictions, such as those relating to the issuance of senior
securities, the borrowing of money and the purchase of illiquid securities.

     The Charter and By-laws provide that the Board of Directors has the power
to make, amend, alter or repeal any of the By-laws (except for any By-law
specified not to be altered or repealed by the Board), subject to the
requirements of the 1940 Act. Neither this provision of the Charter, nor any
of the foregoing provisions of the Charter requiring the affirmative vote of
66-2/3% of shares of capital stock of the Fund, can be amended or repealed
except by the vote of such required number of shares.

     The Board of Directors has determined that the 66-2/3% voting requirements
described above, which are greater than the minimum requirements under
Maryland law or the 1940 Act, are in the best interests of stockholders
generally. Reference should be made to the Charter on file with the Securities
and Exchange Commission for the full text of these provisions.

                                   CUSTODIAN

     The Fund's securities and cash are held under a custodian agreement with
State Street Bank and Trust Company, 225 Franklin Street, Boston,
Massachusetts 02110.

                                 UNDERWRITING

     Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated (the "Underwriter")
has agreed, subject to the terms and conditions contained in a purchase
agreement with the Fund and the Investment Adviser, to purchase from the Fund
all of the shares of AMPS offered hereby. The Underwriter has agreed to
purchase all such shares if any are purchased.

     The Fund and the Investment Adviser have agreed to indemnify the
Underwriter against certain liabilities, including liabilities under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or to contribute to payments the
Underwriter may be required to make in respect of those liabilities.

     The Underwriter is offering the shares, subject to prior sale, when, as
and if issued to and accepted by them, subject to approval of legal matters by
its counsel, including the validity of the shares, and other conditions
contained in the purchase agreement, such as the receipt by the Underwriter of
officer's certificates and legal opinions. The Underwriter reserves the right
to withdraw, cancel or modify offers to the public and to reject orders in
whole or in part.

Commissions and Discounts

     The Underwriter has advised the Fund that it proposes initially to offer
the shares of AMPS to the public at the initial public offering price on the
cover page of this prospectus and to dealers at that price less a concession
not in excess of $137.50 per share. There is a sales charge or underwriting
discount of $250 per share, which is equal to 1% of the initial public
offering price per share. After the initial public offering, the public
offering price and concession may be changed. Investors must pay for any AMPS
purchased in the offering on or before [ ], 2005.

     The expenses of the offering, excluding underwriting discount, are
estimated at $[ ] and are payable by the Fund.

Other Relationships

     Merrill Lynch acts in Auctions as a Broker-Dealer as set forth under "The
Auction--General--Broker- Dealer Agreements" and will be entitled to fees for
services as a Broker-Dealer as set forth under "The Auction-- Broker-Dealers."
Merrill Lynch also may provide information to be used in ascertaining the
Reference Rate.

     The Fund also anticipates that Merrill Lynch may from time to time act as
a broker in connection with the execution of its portfolio transactions. See
"Portfolio Transactions" in the statement of additional information. Merrill
Lynch is an affiliate of the Investment Adviser. See "Investment Restrictions"
and "Portfolio Transactions" in the statement of additional information.


                                      50



     The address of the Underwriter is 4 World Financial Center, New York, New
York 10080.

            TRANSFER AGENT, DIVIDEND DISBURSING AGENT AND REGISTRAR

     The transfer agent, dividend disbursing agent and registrar for the
Fund's shares of AMPS and Other AMPS is The Bank of New York, 101 Barclay
Street, New York, New York 10286. The transfer agent, dividend disbursing
agent and registrar for the Fund's shares of common stock is EquiServe, L.P.,
150 Royall Street, Canton, Massachusetts 02021.

                         ACCOUNTING SERVICES PROVIDER

     State Street Bank and Trust Company, 500 College Road East, Princeton,
New Jersey 08540, provides certain accounting services for the Fund.

                                 LEGAL MATTERS

     Certain legal matters in connection with the AMPS offered hereby are
passed on for the Fund and the Underwriter by Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP,
New York, New York 10019.

           INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM AND EXPERTS

     _____________is the Fund's independent registered public accounting firm.
The audited financial statements of the Fund and certain of the information
appearing under the caption "Financial Highlights" included in this prospectus
have been audited by _____________, an independent registered public
accounting firm, for the periods indicated in its report with respect thereto,
and are included in reliance upon such report and upon the authority of such
firm as experts in accounting and auditing _____________has an office at
__________________.

                            ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

     The Fund is subject to the informational requirements of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 and the 1940 Act and in accordance therewith is required
to file reports, proxy statements and other information with the Commission.
Any such reports and other information, including the Fund's Code of Ethics,
can be inspected and copied at the public reference facilities of the
Commission at 100 F Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20549. Information on the
operation of such public reference facilities may be obtained by calling the
Commission at 1-202-942-8090. Copies of such materials can be obtained from
the public reference section of the Commission by writing to 100 F Street,
N.E., Washington, D.C. 20549, at prescribed rates, or by electronic request at
publicinfo@sec.gov. The Commission maintains a Web site at http://www.sec.gov
containing reports and information statements and other information regarding
registrants, including the Fund, that file electronically with the Commission.
Reports, proxy statements and other information concerning the Fund can also
be inspected at the offices of the New York Stock Exchange, 20 Broad Street,
New York, New York 10005.

     Additional information regarding the Fund is contained in the
Registration Statement on Form N-2, including amendments, exhibits and
schedules thereto, relating to such shares filed by the Fund with the
Commission in Washington, D.C. This prospectus does not contain all of the
information set forth in the Registration Statement, including any amendments,
exhibits and schedules thereto. For further information with respect to the
Fund and the shares offered hereby, reference is made to the Registration
Statement. Statements contained in this prospectus as to the contents of any
contract or other document referred to are not necessarily complete and in
each instance reference is made to the copy of such contract or other document
filed as an exhibit to the Registration Statement, each such statement being
qualified in all respects by such reference. A copy of the Registration
Statement may be inspected without charge at the Commission's principal office
in Washington, D.C., and copies of all or any part thereof may be obtained
from the Commission upon the payment of certain fees prescribed by the
Commission.


                                      51



           TABLE OF CONTENTS OF STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

                                                                         Page
                                                                         ----

Investment Objective and Policies                                           3
Investment Restrictions                                                     3
Description of AMPS                                                         5
The Auction                                                                12
Rating Agency Guidelines                                                   12
Directors and Officers                                                     21
Investment Advisory and Management Arrangements                            28
Portfolio Transactions                                                     33
Taxes                                                                      37
Net Asset Value                                                            44
Financial Statements                                                       44
APPENDIX A Economic and Other Conditions in California                    A-1
APPENDIX B Description of Municipal Bond Ratings                          B-1
APPENDIX C Municipal Bond Insurance                                       C-1
APPENDIX D Settlement Procedures                                          D-1
APPENDIX E Auction Procedures                                             E-1


                                      52



                                   GLOSSARY

     "Additional Dividend" has the meaning set forth on page [35] of this
prospectus.

     "Agent Member" means the member of the Securities Depository that will
act on behalf of a Beneficial Owner of one or more shares of AMPS or on behalf
of a Potential Beneficial Owner.

     "AMPS" means the Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series F; with a par
value of $.10 per share and a liquidation preference of $25,000 per share plus
an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not
earned or declared) of the Fund.

     "AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount" has the meaning set forth on page [36] of
this prospectus.

     "AMPS Basic Maintenance Cure Date" has the meaning set forth on page [36]
of this prospectus.

     "AMPS Basic Maintenance Report" has the meaning set forth on page [9] of
the statement of additional information.

     "Anticipation Notes" shall mean the following California Municipal Bonds:
revenue anticipation notes, tax anticipation notes, tax and revenue
anticipation notes, grant anticipation notes and bond anticipation notes.

     "Applicable Percentage" has the meaning set forth on pages [39 to 40] of
this prospectus.

     "Applicable Rate" means the rate per annum at which cash dividends are
payable on shares of AMPS for any Dividend Period.

     "Applicable Spread" has the meaning set forth on page [40] of this
prospectus.

     "Articles Supplementary" means the Articles Supplementary of the Fund
specifying the powers, preferences and rights of the shares of the AMPS.

     "Auction" means a periodic operation of the Auction Procedures.

     "Auction Agent" means The Bank of New York unless and until another
commercial bank, trust company or other financial institution appointed by a
resolution of the Board of Directors of the Fund or a duly authorized
committee thereof enters into an agreement with the Fund to follow the Auction
Procedures for the purpose of determining the Applicable Rate and to act as
transfer agent, registrar, dividend disbursing agent and redemption agent for
the AMPS.

     "Auction Agent Agreement" means the agreement entered into between the
Fund and the Auction Agent, which provides, among other things, that the
Auction Agent will follow the Auction Procedures for the purpose of
determining the Applicable Rate.

     "Auction Date" has the meaning set forth on page [38] of this prospectus.

     "Auction Procedures" means the procedures for conducting Auctions set
forth in Appendix E to the statement of additional information.

     "Available AMPS" has the meaning set forth on page [42] of this
prospectus.

     "Beneficial Owner" means a customer of a Broker-Dealer who is listed on
the records of that Broker- Dealer (or if applicable, the Auction Agent) as a
holder of shares of AMPS or a Broker-Dealer that holds AMPS for its own
account.

     "Bid" has the meaning set forth on page [39] of this prospectus.

     "Bidder" has the meaning set forth on page [39] of this prospectus.


                                      53



     "Board of Directors" or "Board" means the Board of Directors of the Fund.

     "Broker-Dealer" means any broker-dealer, or other entity permitted by law
to perform the functions required of a Broker-Dealer in the Auction
Procedures, that has been selected by the Fund and has entered into a
Broker-Dealer Agreement with the Auction Agent that remains effective.

     "Broker-Dealer Agreement" means an agreement entered into between the
Auction Agent and a Broker- Dealer, including Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
Smith Incorporated, pursuant to which such Broker-Dealer agrees to follow the
Auction Procedures.

     "Business Day" means a day on which the New York Stock Exchange is open
for trading and which is not a Saturday, Sunday or other day on which banks in
The City of New York are authorized or obligated by law to close.

     "California Municipal Bonds" has the meaning set forth on page [20] of
this prospectus.

     "Cede" means Cede & Co., the nominee of DTC, and in whose name the shares
of AMPS initially will be registered.

     "Charter" means the Articles of Incorporation, as amended and
supplemented (including the Articles Supplementary and the Other AMPS Articles
Supplementary), of the Fund.

     "Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

     "Common stock" means the common stock, par value $.10 per share, of the
Fund.

     "Date of Original Issue" means, with respect to each share of AMPS, the
date on which such share first is issued by the Fund.

     "Deposit Securities" means cash and Municipal Bonds rated at least A2
(having a remaining maturity of 12 months or less), P-1, VMIG-1 or MIG-1 by
Moody's or A (having a remaining maturity of 12 months or less), A-1+ or SP-1+
by S&P or A (having a remaining maturity of 12 months or less) or F-1+ by
Fitch.

     "Discount Factor" means a Moody's Discount Factor or an S&P Discount
Factor, as the case may be.

     "Discounted Value" means (i) with respect to an S&P Eligible Asset, the
quotient of the fair market value thereof divided by the applicable S&P
Discount Factor and (ii) with respect to a Moody's Eligible Asset, the lower
of par and the quotient of the fair market value thereof divided by the
applicable Moody's Discount Factor.

     "Dividend Payment Date" has the meaning set forth on page [33] of this
prospectus.

     "Dividend Period" has the meaning set forth on page [33] of this
prospectus.

     "DTC" means The Depository Trust Company.

     "Eligible Assets" means Moody's Eligible Assets or S&P Eligible Assets,
as the case may be.

     "Existing Holder" means a Broker-Dealer or any such other person as may
be permitted by the Fund that is listed as the holder of record of shares of
AMPS in the records of the Auction Agent.

     "Fitch" means Fitch Ratings or its successors.

     "Forward Commitment" has the meaning set forth on page [20] of the
statement of additional information.

     "Fund" means MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc., a Maryland
corporation that is the issuer of the AMPS.


                                      54



     "High Yield Municipal Bonds" means (a) with respect to Moody's (1)
California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds rated Ba1 to B3 by Moody's, (2)
California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds not rated by Moody's, but rated
BB+ to B- by S&P or Fitch, and (3) California Municipal Bonds and Municipal
Bonds not explicitly rated by Moody's, S&P or Fitch, but rated at least the
equivalent of B3 internally by the Investment Adviser, provided that Moody's
reviews and achieves sufficient comfort with the Investment Adviser's internal
credit rating processes, and (b) with respect to S&P (1) California Municipal
Bonds not rated by S&P but rated equivalent to BBB+ or lower by another NRSRO
and (2) California Municipal Bonds rated BB+ or lower by S&P.

     "Hold Order" has the meaning set forth on page [39] of this prospectus.

     "Initial Dividend Payment Date" means the first Dividend Payment Date for
the Series F AMPS.

     "Initial Dividend Period" means the period from and including the Date of
Original Issue to but excluding the Initial Dividend Payment Date for the
Series F AMPS.

     "Initial Margin" means the amount of cash or securities deposited with a
broker as a margin payment at the time of purchase or sale of a financial
futures contract.

     "Inverse Floaters" means trust certificates or other instruments
evidencing interests in one or more California Municipal Bonds or Municipal
Bonds that qualify as (i) S&P Eligible Assets the interest rates on which are
adjusted at short term intervals on a basis that is inverse to the
simultaneous readjustment of the interest rates on corresponding floating rate
trust certificates or other instruments issued by the same issuer, provided
that the ratio of the aggregate dollar amount of floating rate instruments to
inverse floating rate instruments issued by the same issuer does not exceed
one to one at their time of original issuance unless the floating rate
instrument has only one reset remaining until maturity or (ii) Moody's
Eligible Assets the interest rates on which are adjusted at short term
intervals on a basis that is inverse to the simultaneous readjustment of the
interest rates on corresponding floating rate trust certificates or other
instruments issued by the same issuer, provided that (a) such Inverse Floaters
are rated by Moody's with the Investment Adviser having the capability to
collapse (or relink) within seven days as a liquidity enhancement measure, and
(b) the issuer of such Inverse Floaters employs a leverage factor (i.e., the
ratio of underlying capital appreciation bonds or other instruments to
residual long term derivative instruments) of not more than 2:1.

     "Investment Adviser" means Fund Asset Management, L.P.

     "IRS" means the United States Internal Revenue Service.

     "LIBOR Dealer" means Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated
and such other dealer or dealers as the Fund from time to time may appoint or,
in lieu thereof, their respective affiliates and successors.

     "LIBOR Rate," on any Auction Date, means (i) the rate for deposits in
U.S. dollars for the designated Dividend Period, which appears on display page
3750 of Moneyline's Telerate Service ("Telerate Page 3750") (or such other
page as may replace that page on that service, or such other service as may be
selected by the LIBOR Dealer or its successors that are LIBOR Dealers) as of
11:00 a.m., London time, on the day that is the London Business Day preceding
the Auction Date (the "LIBOR Determination Date"), or (ii) if such rate does
not appear on Telerate Page 3750 or such other page as may replace such
Telerate Page 3750, (A) the LIBOR Dealer shall determine the arithmetic mean
of the offered quotations of the Reference Banks to leading banks in the
London interbank market for deposits in U.S. dollars for the designated
Dividend Period in an amount determined by such LIBOR Dealer by reference to
requests for quotations as of approximately 11:00 a.m. (London time) on such
date made by such LIBOR Dealer to the Reference Banks, (B) if at least two of
the Reference Banks provide such quotations, LIBOR Rate shall equal such
arithmetic mean of such quotations, (C) if only one or none of the Reference
Banks provide such quotations, LIBOR Rate shall be deemed to be the arithmetic
mean of the offered quotations that leading banks in The City of New York
selected by the LIBOR Dealer (after obtaining the Fund's approval) are quoting
on the relevant LIBOR Determination Date for deposits in U.S. dollars for the
designated Dividend Period in an amount determined by the LIBOR Dealer (after
obtaining the Fund's approval) that is representative of a single transaction
in such market at such time by reference to the principal London offices of
leading banks in the London interbank market; provided, however, that if one
of the LIBOR Dealers does not quote a rate required to determine the LIBOR
Rate, the LIBOR Rate will be determined on the basis of the quotation or
quotations furnished by any Substitute LIBOR Dealer or Substitute 


                                      55



LIBOR Dealers selected by the Fund to provide such rate or rates not being
supplied by the LIBOR Dealer; provided further, that if the LIBOR Dealer and
Substitute LIBOR Dealers are required but unable to determine a rate in
accordance with at least one of the procedures provided above, the LIBOR Rate
shall be the LIBOR Rate as determined on the previous Auction Date. If the
number of Dividend Period days shall be (i) 7 or more but fewer than 21 days,
such rate shall be the seven-day LIBOR rate; (ii) 21 or more but fewer than 49
days, such rate shall be the one-month LIBOR rate; (iii) 49 or more but fewer
than 77 days, such rate shall be the two-month LIBOR rate; (iv) 77 or more but
fewer than 112 days, such rate shall be the three-month LIBOR rate; (v) 112 or
more but fewer than 140 days, such rate shall be the four-month LIBOR rate;
(vi) 140 or more but fewer than 168 days, such rate shall be the five-month
LIBOR rate; (vii) 168 or more but fewer than 189 days, such rate shall be the
six-month LIBOR rate; (viii) 189 or more but fewer than 217 days, such rate
shall be the seven-month LIBOR rate; (ix) 217 or more but fewer than 252 days,
such rate shall be the eight-month LIBOR rate; (x) 252 or more but fewer than
287 days, such rate shall be the nine-month LIBOR rate; (xi) 287 or more but
fewer than 315 days, such rate shall be the ten-month LIBOR rate; (xii) 315 or
more but fewer than 343 days, such rate shall be the eleven-month LIBOR rate;
and (xiii) 343 or more but fewer than 365 days, such rate shall be the
twelve-month LIBOR rate.

     "London Business Day" means any day on which commercial banks are
generally open for business in London.

     "Long Term Dividend Period" means a Special Dividend Period consisting of
a specified period of one whole year or more but not greater than five years.

     "Mandatory Redemption Price" has the meaning set forth on page [36] of
this prospectus.

     "Marginal Tax Rate" means the maximum marginal regular Federal individual
income tax rate applicable to ordinary income or the maximum marginal regular
Federal corporate income tax rate, whichever is greater.

     "Maximum Applicable Rate" has the meaning set forth on pages [39 to 40]
of this prospectus.

     "Moody's" means Moody's Investors Service, Inc. or its successors.

     "Moody's Discount Factor" has the meaning set forth on pages [16 to 17]
of the statement of additional information.

     "Moody's Eligible Assets" has the meaning set forth on pages [17 to 20]
of the statement of additional information.

     "Moody's Hedging Transactions" has the meaning set forth on page [18] of
the statement of additional information.

     "Moody's Volatility Factor" means 272% as long as there has been no
increase enacted to the Marginal Tax Rate. If such an increase is enacted but
not yet implemented, the Moody's Volatility Factor shall be as follows:

               % Change in                     Moody's Volatility
             Marginal Tax Rate                       Factor
             -----------------                 ------------------

               <=5%                                    292%
               >5% but <=10%                           313%
               >10% but <=15%                          338%
               >15% but <=20%                          364%
               >20% but <=25%                          396%
               >25% but <=30%                          432%
               >30% but <=35%                          472%
               >35% but <=40%                          520%


     Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Moody's Volatility Factor may mean
such other potential dividend rate increase factor as Moody's advises the Fund
in writing is applicable.

     "Municipal Bonds" has the meaning set forth on page [20] of this
prospectus.

     "Municipal Index" has the meaning set forth on page [15] of the statement
of additional information.


                                      56



     "1940 Act" means the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended from time
to time.

     "1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage" has the meaning set forth on page [35] of
this prospectus.

     "1940 Act Cure Date" has the meaning set forth on page [36] of this
prospectus.

     "Non-Call Period" has the meaning set forth under "Specific Redemption
Provisions" below.

     "Non-Payment Period" has the meaning set forth on page [7] of the
statement of additional information.

     "Non-Payment Period Rate" has the meaning set forth on page [7] of the
statement of additional information.

     "Normal Dividend Payment Date" has the meaning set forth on page [33] of
this prospectus.

     "Notice of Revocation" has the meaning set forth on page [6] of the
statement of additional information.

     "Notice of Special Dividend Period" has the meaning set forth on page
[34] of this prospectus.

     "NRSRO" means any nationally recognized statistical rating organization,
as that term is used in Rule 15a3-1 under the Securities and Exchange Act of
1934, as amended, or any successor provisions.

     "Optional Redemption Price" has the meaning set forth on page [36] of
this prospectus.

     "Order" has the meaning set forth on page [39] of this prospectus.

     "Other AMPS" means the Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series A, Auction
Market Preferred Stock, Series B, Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series C,
Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series D, and Auction Market Preferred Stock,
Series E, each with a liquidation preference of $25,000 per share plus an
amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not
earned or declared), of the Fund.

     "Other AMPS Articles Supplementary" means the Articles Supplementary, as
amended and supplemented, of the Fund specifying the powers, preferences and
rights of the shares of the Other AMPS.

     "Policy" means an insurance policy purchased by the Fund which guarantees
the payment of principal and interest on specified Municipal Bonds during the
period in which such Municipal Bonds are owned by the Fund; provided, however,
that, as long as the AMPS are rated by Moody's and S&P, the Fund will not
obtain any Policy unless Moody's and S&P advise the Fund in writing that the
purchase of such Policy will not adversely affect their then-current rating on
the AMPS.

     "Potential Beneficial Owner" means a customer of a Broker-Dealer or a
Broker-Dealer that is not a Beneficial Owner of shares of AMPS but that wishes
to purchase such shares, or that is a Beneficial Owner that wishes to purchase
additional shares of AMPS.

     "Potential Holder" means any Broker-Dealer or any such other person as
may be permitted by the Fund, including any Existing Holder, who may be
interested in acquiring shares of AMPS (or, in the case of an Existing Holder,
additional shares of AMPS).

     "Preferred stock" means preferred stock of the Fund and includes the
AMPS.

     "Premium Call Period" has the meaning set forth under "Specific
Redemption Provisions" below.

     "Receivables for California Municipal Bonds Sold" has the meaning set
forth under the definition of S&P Discount Factor.

     "Receivables for California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds Sold" has
the meaning set forth under the definition of Moody's Discount Factor.


                                      57



     "Reference Banks" means four major banks in the London interbank market
selected by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated or its
affiliates or successors or such other party as the Fund may from time to time
appoint.

     "Reference Rate" means: (i) with respect to a Dividend Period having 364
or fewer days, the higher of the applicable LIBOR Rate and the Taxable
Equivalent of the Short Term Municipal Bond Rate, or (ii) with respect to any
Dividend Period having 365 or more days, the applicable Treasury Index Rate.

     "Request for Special Dividend Period" has the meaning set forth on page
[34] of this prospectus.

     "Response" has the meaning set forth on page [34] of this prospectus.

     "Retroactive Taxable Allocation" has the meaning set forth on page [35]
of this prospectus.

     "Rule 2a-7 Money Market Funds" means investment companies registered
under the 1940 Act that comply with the requirements of Rule 2a-7 thereunder.

     "S&P" means Standard & Poor's or its successors.

     "S&P Discount Factor" has the meaning set forth on page [13] of the
statement of additional information.

     "S&P Eligible Assets" has the meaning set forth on pages [13 to 16] of
the statement of additional information.

     "S&P Hedging Transactions" has the meaning set forth on page [17] of the
statement of additional information.

     "S&P Volatility Factor" means 277% or such other potential dividend rate
increase factor as S&P advises the Fund in writing is applicable.

     "Securities Depository" means The Depository Trust Company and its
successors and assigns or any successor securities depository selected by the
Fund that agrees to follow the procedures required to be followed by such
securities depository in connection with shares of AMPS.

     "Sell Order" has the meaning specified in Subsection 10(b)(i) of the
Auction Procedures.

     "Series F AMPS" means the Auction Market Preferred Stock, Series F, with
a par value of $.10 per share and a liquidation preference of $25,000 per
share plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon
(whether or not earned or declared), of the Fund.

     "7-Day Dividend Period" means a Dividend Period consisting of seven days.

     "Short Term Dividend Period" means a Special Dividend Period consisting
of a specified number of days (other than seven) evenly divisible by seven,
and not fewer than seven days nor more than 364 days.

     "Special Dividend Period" has the meaning set forth on page [32] of this
prospectus.

     "Specific Redemption Provisions" means, with respect to a Special
Dividend Period, either, or any combination of, (i) a period (a "Non-Call
Period") determined by the Board of Directors of the Fund, after consultation
with the Auction Agent and the Broker-Dealers, during which the shares of AMPS
subject to such Dividend Period shall not be subject to redemption at the
option of the Fund and (ii) a period (a "Premium Call Period"), consisting of
a number of whole years and determined by the Board of Directors of the Fund,
after consultation with the Auction Agent and the Broker-Dealers, during each
year of which the shares of AMPS subject to such Dividend Period shall be
redeemable at the Fund's option at a price per share equal to $25,000 plus
accumulated but unpaid dividends plus a premium expressed as a percentage of
$25,000, as determined by the Board of Directors of the Fund after
consultation with the Auction Agent and the Broker-Dealers.

     "Submission Deadline" has the meaning set forth on page [41] of this
prospectus.


                                      58



     "Submitted Bid" has the meaning set forth on page [42] of this
prospectus.

     "Submitted Hold Order" has the meaning set forth on page [42] of this
prospectus.

     "Submitted Order" has the meaning set forth on page [42] of this
prospectus.

     "Submitted Sell Order" has the meaning set forth on page [42] of this
prospectus.

     "Subsequent Dividend Period" means each Dividend Period after the Initial
Dividend Period.

     "Substitute Rating Agency" and "Substitute Rating Agencies" shall mean an
NRSRO or two NRSROs, respectively, selected by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
Smith Incorporated, or its respective affiliates and successors, after
obtaining the Fund's approval, to act as a substitute rating agency or
substitute rating agencies, as the case may be, to determine the credit
ratings of the AMPS.

     "Sufficient Clearing Bids" has the meaning set forth on page [42] of this
prospectus.

     "Taxable Equivalent of the Short Term Municipal Bond Rate" on any date
means 90% of the quotient of (A) the per annum rate expressed on an interest
equivalent basis equal to the Kenny S&P 30-day High Grade Index (the "Kenny
Index") or any successor index, made available for the Business Day
immediately preceding such date but in any event not later than 8:30 a.m.,
Eastern time, on such date by Kenny Information Systems Inc. or any successor
thereto, based upon 30-day yield evaluations at par of bonds the interest on
which is excludable for regular Federal income tax purposes under the Code of
"high grade" component issuers selected by Kenny Information Systems Inc. or
any such successor from time to time in its discretion, which component
issuers shall include, without limitation, issuers of general obligation bonds
but shall exclude any bonds the interest on which constitutes an item of tax
preference under Section 57(a)(5) of the Code, or successor provisions, for
purposes of the "alternative minimum tax," divided by (B) 1.00 minus the
Marginal Tax Rate (expressed as a decimal); provided, however, that if the
Kenny Index is not made so available by 8:30 a.m., Eastern time, on such date
by Kenny Information Systems Inc. or any successor, the Taxable Equivalent of
the Short Term Municipal Bond Rate shall mean the quotient of (A) the per
annum rate expressed on an interest equivalent basis equal to the most recent
Kenny Index so made available for any preceding Business Day, divided by (B)
1.00 minus the Marginal Tax Rate (expressed as a decimal). The Fund may not
utilize a successor index to the Kenny Index unless Moody's and S&P provide
the Fund with written confirmation that the use of such successor index will
not adversely affect the then-current respective Moody's and S&P ratings of
the AMPS.

     "Treasury Bonds" means U.S. Treasury Bonds or Notes.

     "Treasury Index Rate" means the average yield to maturity for actively
traded marketable fixed interest rate U.S. Treasury Securities having the same
number of 30-day periods to maturity as the length of the applicable Dividend
Period, determined, to the extent necessary, by linear interpolation based
upon the yield for such securities having the next shorter and next longer
number of 30-day periods to maturity treating all Dividend Periods with a
length greater than the longest maturity for such securities as having a
length equal to such longest maturity, in all cases based upon data set forth
in the most recent weekly statistical release published by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (currently in H.15(519)); provided,
however, if the most recent such statistical release shall not have been
published during the 15 days preceding the date of computation, the foregoing
computations shall be based upon the average of comparable data as quoted to
the Fund by at least three recognized dealers in U.S. Government Securities
selected by the Fund.

     "U.S. Treasury Securities" means direct obligations of the United States
Treasury that are entitled to the full faith and credit of the United States
government.

     "Valuation Date" has the meaning set forth on page [36] of this
prospectus.

     "Variation Margin" means, in connection with an outstanding futures
contract owned or sold by the Fund, the amount of cash or securities paid to
or received from a broker (subsequent to the Initial Margin payment) from time
to time as the price of such futures contract fluctuates.


                                      59



     "Winning Bid Rate" has the meaning set forth on page [42] of this
prospectus.


                                      60



------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                  $45,000,000
                    MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc.
                    Auction Market Preferred Stock ("AMPS")
                            1,800 Shares, Series F
                   Liquidation Preference $25,000 per Share

                             --------------------

                                  PROSPECTUS

                             --------------------


                              Merrill Lynch & Co.

                              [         ], 2005
                                                                        Code #
------------------------------------------------------------------------------






The information in this statement of additional information is not complete
and may be changed. We may not sell these securities until the registration
statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This
statement of additional information is not an offer to sell these securities
and it is not soliciting an offer to buy these securities in any state where
the offer or sale is not permitted.



                             Subject to Completion
      Preliminary Statement of Additional Information dated July 21, 2005

STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
-----------------------------------

                                  $45,000,000
                    MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc.
                    Auction Market Preferred Stock ("AMPS")
                            1,800 Shares, Series F
                   Liquidation Preference $25,000 per Share

                            ----------------------

     MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc. (the "Fund") is a
non-diversified, closed-end fund. The investment objective of the Fund is to
provide shareholders with as high a level of current income exempt from
Federal and California income taxes as is consistent with its investment
policies and prudent investment management. The Fund seeks to achieve its
investment objective by investing, as a fundamental policy, at least 80% of an
aggregate of the Fund's net assets (including proceeds from the issuance of
any preferred stock), and the proceeds of any borrowings for investment
purposes, in a portfolio of municipal obligations the interest on which, in
the opinion of bond counsel to the issuer, is excludable from gross income for
Federal income tax purposes (except that the interest may be includable in
taxable income for purposes of the Federal alternative minimum tax) and exempt
from California income taxes. Under normal market conditions, the Fund invests
primarily in a portfolio of long term municipal obligations that are rated
investment grade or, if unrated, are considered by the Fund's investment
adviser to be of comparable quality. Under normal circumstances and after the
investment period following the offering (not expected to exceed three
months), the Fund invests, as a non-fundamental policy, at least 80% of an
aggregate of the Fund's net assets (including proceeds from the issuance of
any preferred stock) and the proceeds of any borrowings for investment
purposes, in municipal obligations that are covered by insurance guaranteeing
the timely payment of principal at maturity and interest when due. The Fund
may invest in certain tax exempt securities classified as "private activity
bonds," as discussed within, that may subject certain investors in the Fund to
an alternative minimum tax. There can be no assurance that the Fund's
investment objective will be realized.

     Certain capitalized terms not otherwise defined in this statement of
additional information have the meaning provided in the Glossary included as
part of the prospectus.

     This statement of additional information is not a prospectus, but should
be read in conjunction with the prospectus of the Fund which has been filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission") and can be
obtained, without charge, by calling (800) 543-6217. The prospectus is
incorporated by reference into this statement of additional information, and
this statement of additional information is incorporated by reference into the
prospectus.

                                ---------------
                              Merrill Lynch & Co.
                                ---------------

    The date of this statement of additional information is [     ], 2005.





           TABLE OF CONTENTS OF STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

                                                                          Page
                                                                          ----

Investment Objective and Policies............................................3
Investment Restrictions......................................................3
Description of AMPS..........................................................5
The Auction.................................................................12
Rating Agency Guidelines....................................................12
Directors and Officers......................................................21
Investment Advisory and Management Arrangements.............................28
Portfolio Transactions......................................................33
Taxes     ..................................................................37
Net Asset Value.............................................................44
Financial Statements........................................................44
APPENDIX A  Economic and Other Conditions In California....................A-1
APPENDIX B  Description of Municipal Bond Ratings..........................B-1
APPENDIX C  Municipal Bond Insurance.......................................C-1
APPENDIX D  Settlement Procedures..........................................D-1
APPENDIX E  Auction Procedures.............................................E-1


                                      2



                       INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES

     The Fund's investment objective is to provide shareholders with as high a
level of current income exempt from Federal and California income taxes as is
consistent with its investment policies and prudent investment management. The
Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing, as a fundamental
policy, at least 80% of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets (including
proceeds from the issuance of any preferred stock) and the proceeds of any
borrowings for investment purposes, in a portfolio of municipal obligations
issued by or on behalf of the State of California, its political subdivisions,
agencies and instrumentalities and by other qualifying issuers, each of which
pays interest that in the opinion of bond counsel to the issuer, is excludable
from gross income for Federal income tax purposes (except that the interest
may be includable in taxable income for purposes of the Federal alternative
minimum tax) and exempt from California income taxes ("California Municipal
Bonds"). The Fund also may invest in municipal obligations issued by or on
behalf of states, territories and possessions of the United States and their
political subdivisions, agencies or instrumentalities, which pay interest that
is excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes, in the
opinion of bond counsel to the issuer, but is not exempt from gross income for
California income tax purposes ("Municipal Bonds"). In general, the Fund does
not intend for its investments to earn a large amount of interest income that
is: (i) includable in gross income for Federal income tax purposes or (ii) not
exempt from California income taxes. Unless otherwise noted, the term
"Municipal Bonds" also includes California Municipal Bonds. There can be no
assurance that the Fund's investment objective will be realized. From time to
time, the Fund may realize taxable capital gains.

     The Fund's investment objective and its policy of investing at least 80%
of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets (including proceeds from the issuance
of any preferred stock) and the proceeds of any borrowings for investment
purposes, in California Municipal Bonds are fundamental policies that may not
be changed without the approval of a majority of the outstanding voting
securities of the Fund (as defined in the 1940 Act). Under normal
circumstances and after the investment period following the offering (not
expected to exceed three months), the Fund invests as a non-fundamental
policy, at least 80% of an aggregate of the Fund's net assets (including
proceeds from the issuance of any preferred stock) and the proceeds of any
borrowings for investment purposes, in Municipal Bonds that are covered by
insurance guaranteeing the timely payment of principal at maturity and
interest when due. This is a non-fundamental policy and may be changed by the
Fund's Board of Directors without stockholder approval; provided that
stockholders are given at least 60 days' prior notice of any change as
required by the 1940 Act.

     Reference is made to "Investment Objective and Policies" and "Other
Investment Policies" in the prospectus for information regarding other types
of securities that the Fund may invest in to achieve its objective.

                            INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

     The following are fundamental investment restrictions of the Fund and may
not be changed without the approval of the holders of a majority of the Fund's
outstanding shares of common stock and outstanding shares of AMPS, Other AMPS
and any other preferred stock, voting together as a single class, and a
majority of the outstanding shares of AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred
stock, voting as a separate class (which for this purpose and under the 1940
Act means the lesser of (i) 67% of the shares of each class of capital stock
represented at a meeting at which more than 50% of the outstanding shares of
each class of capital stock are represented or (ii) more than 50% of the
outstanding shares of each class of capital stock). The Fund may not:

          1. Make investments for the purpose of exercising control or
     management.

          2. Purchase securities of other investment companies, except (i) in
     connection with a merger, consolidation, acquisition or reorganization,
     (ii) by purchase of shares of tax-exempt money market funds advised by
     the Investment Adviser or its affiliates (as defined in the 1940 Act) to
     the extent permitted by an exemptive order issued to the Fund by the
     Securities and Exchange Commission, or (iii) by purchase in the open
     market of securities of closed-end investment companies and only if
     immediately thereafter no more than 10% of the Fund's total assets would
     be invested in such securities.

          3. Purchase or sell real estate, real estate limited partnerships,
     commodities or commodity contracts; provided, that the Fund may invest in
     securities secured by real estate or interests therein or issued by
     companies that invest in real estate or interests therein, and the Fund
     may purchase and sell financial futures contracts and options thereon.


                                       3



          4. Issue senior securities other than preferred stock or borrow in
     excess of 5% of its total assets taken at market value; provided,
     however, that the Fund is authorized to borrow moneys in excess of 5% of
     the value of its total assets for the purpose of repurchasing shares of
     common stock or redeeming shares of preferred stock.

          5. Underwrite securities of other issuers except insofar as the Fund
     may be deemed an underwriter under the Securities Act of 1933, as
     amended, in selling portfolio securities.

          6. Make loans to other persons, except that the Fund may purchase
     California Municipal Bonds, Municipal Bonds and other debt securities in
     accordance with its investment objective, policies and limitations.

          7. Purchase any securities on margin, except that the Fund may
     obtain such short-term credit as may be necessary for the clearance of
     purchases and sales of portfolio securities (the deposit or payment by
     the Fund of initial or variation margin in connection with financial
     futures contracts and options thereon is not considered the purchase of a
     security on margin).

          8. Make short sales of securities or maintain a short position or
     invest in put, call, straddle or spread options, except that the Fund may
     write, purchase and sell options and futures on California Municipal
     Bonds, Municipal Bonds, U.S. Government obligations and related indices
     or otherwise in connection with bona fide hedging activities.

          9. Invest more than 25% of its total assets (taken at market value
     at the time of each investment) in securities of issuers in a single
     industry; provided that, for purposes of this restriction, states
     municipalities and their political subdivisions are not considered to be
     part of any industry.

     For purposes of investment restriction (4) above, the Fund may borrow
moneys in excess of 5% of the value of its total assets to the extent
permitted by Section 18 of the 1940 Act or otherwise as permitted by
applicable law for the purpose of repurchasing shares of common stock or
redeeming shares of preferred stock.

     For purposes of investment restriction (9) above, the exception for
states, municipalities and their political subdivisions applies only to
tax-exempt securities issued by such entities.

     Additional investment restrictions adopted by the Fund, which may be
changed by the Board of Directors without stockholder approval, provide that
the Fund may not:

          1. Mortgage, pledge, hypothecate or in any manner transfer, as
     security for indebtedness, any securities owned or held by the Fund
     except as may be necessary in connection with borrowings mentioned in
     investment restriction (4) above or except as may be necessary in
     connection with transactions in financial futures contracts and options
     thereon.

          2. Change its policy of investing, under normal circumstances, at
     least 80% of the Fund's net assets (including assets acquired from the
     sale of preferred stock), plus the amount of any borrowings for
     investment purposes, in California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds
     that are covered by insurance guaranteeing the timely payment of
     principal at maturity and interest when due, unless the Fund provides
     stockholders with at least 60 days' prior written notice of such change.

     If a percentage restriction on the investment or use of assets set forth
above is adhered to at the time a transaction is effected, later changes in
percentage resulting from changing values will not be considered a violation.

     The Fund is classified as non-diversified within the meaning of the 1940
Act, which means that the Fund is not limited by the 1940 Act in the
proportion of its assets that it may invest in securities of a single issuer.
As a non-diversified fund, the Fund's investments are limited, however, in
order to allow the Fund to continue to qualify as a regulated investment
company under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"). See
"Taxes." To qualify, the Fund complies with certain requirements, including
limiting its investments so that at the close of each quarter of the taxable
year (i) not more than 25% of the market value of the Fund's total assets will
be invested in the securities of a single issuer or in qualified publicly
traded partnerships as defined in the Code and (ii) with respect to 50% of the
market value of its total assets, not 


                                       4



more than 5% of the market value of its total assets will be invested in the
securities of a single issuer and the Fund will not own more than 10% of the
outstanding voting securities of a single issuer. For purposes of this
restriction, the Fund will regard each state and each political subdivision,
agency or instrumentality of such state and each multi-state agency of which
such state is a member and each public authority which issues securities on
behalf of a private entity as a separate issuer, except that if the security
is backed only by the assets and revenues of a non-government entity then the
entity with the ultimate responsibility for the payment of interest and
principal may be regarded as the sole issuer. These tax-related limitations
may be changed by the Board of Directors of the Fund to the extent necessary
to comply with changes in the Federal tax requirements. A fund that elects to
be classified as "diversified" under the 1940 Act must satisfy the foregoing
5% and 10% requirements with respect to 75% of its total assets.

     The Investment Adviser of the Fund and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
Smith Incorporated ("Merrill Lynch") are owned and controlled by Merrill Lynch
& Co., Inc. ("ML & Co."). Because of the affiliation of Merrill Lynch with the
Investment Adviser, the Fund is prohibited from engaging in certain
transactions involving Merrill Lynch except pursuant to an exemptive order or
otherwise in compliance with the provisions of the 1940 Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder. Included among such restricted transactions will be
purchases from or sales to Merrill Lynch of securities in transactions in
which it acts as principal. See "Portfolio Transactions."

                              DESCRIPTION OF AMPS

     Certain of the capitalized terms used herein not otherwise defined in
this statement of additional information have the meaning provided in the
Glossary at the back of the prospectus.

     The Series F AMPS will be shares of preferred stock that entitle their
holders to receive dividends when, as and if declared by the Board of
Directors, out of funds legally available therefor, at a rate per annum that
may vary for the successive Dividend Periods. After the Initial Dividend
Period, each Subsequent Dividend Period for the Series F AMPS generally will
be a 7-Day Dividend Period; provided, however, that prior to any Auction, the
Fund may elect, subject to certain limitations described herein, upon giving
notice to holders thereof, a Special Dividend Period. The Applicable Rate for
a particular Dividend Period will be determined by an Auction conducted on the
Business Day before the start of such Dividend Period. Beneficial Owners and
Potential Beneficial Owners of shares of AMPS may participate in Auctions
therefor, although, except in the case of a Special Dividend Period of more
than 28 days, Beneficial Owners desiring to continue to hold all of their
shares of AMPS regardless of the Applicable Rate resulting from Auctions need
not participate. For an explanation of Auctions and the method of determining
the Applicable Rate, see Appendix E--"Auction Procedures."

     Except as otherwise required by law or unless there is no Securities
Depository, all outstanding shares of the Series F AMPS will be represented by
one or more certificates registered in the name of the nominee of the
Securities Depository (initially expected to be Cede), and no person acquiring
shares of AMPS will be entitled to receive a certificate representing such
shares. See Appendix E--"Auction Procedures." As a result, the nominee of the
Securities Depository is expected to be the sole holder of record of the
shares of AMPS. Accordingly, each purchaser of AMPS must rely on (i) the
procedures of the Securities Depository and, if such purchaser is not a member
of the Securities Depository, such purchaser's Agent Member, to receive
dividends, distributions and notices and to exercise voting rights (if and
when applicable) and (ii) the records of the Securities Depository and, if
such purchaser is not a member of the Securities Depository, such purchaser's
Agent Member, to evidence its beneficial ownership of shares of AMPS.

     When issued and sold, the shares of AMPS will have a liquidation
preference of $25,000 per share plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid
dividends (whether or not earned or declared) and will be fully paid and
non-assessable. See "Description of AMPS--Liquidation Rights" in the
prospectus. The shares of AMPS will not be convertible into shares of common
stock or other capital stock of the Fund, and the holders thereof will have no
preemptive rights. The AMPS will not be subject to any sinking fund but will
be subject to redemption at the option of the Fund at the Optional Redemption
Price on any Dividend Payment Date (except during the Initial Dividend Period
and during a Non-Call Period) and, under certain circumstances, will be
subject to mandatory redemption by the Fund at the Mandatory Redemption Price
stated in the prospectus. See "Description of AMPS--Redemption" in the
prospectus.

     The Fund also has outstanding five series of shares of Other AMPS with
terms that are substantially the same as the terms of the shares of AMPS
described herein and in the prospectus. Cede, the nominee of the Securities
Depository, 55 Water Street, New York, New York 10041-0099, is the sole holder
of record of the shares of Other AMPS. The Series F AMPS offered hereby rank
on a parity with the Other AMPS with respect to dividends and liquidation
preference.


                                      5



     In addition to serving as the Auction Agent in connection with the
Auction Procedures described in the prospectus, The Bank of New York also
serves as the transfer agent, registrar, dividend disbursing agent and
redemption agent for the shares of AMPS. The Auction Agent, however, will
serve merely as the agent of the Fund, acting in accordance with the Fund's
instructions, and will not be responsible for any evaluation or verification
of any matters certified to it.

     Except in an Auction, the Fund will have the right (to the extent
permitted by applicable law) to purchase or otherwise acquire any shares of
AMPS so long as the Fund is current in the payment of dividends on AMPS and on
any other capital stock of the Fund ranking on a parity with the AMPS,
including the Other AMPS, with respect to the payment of dividends or upon
liquidation.

     The following supplements the description of the terms of the shares of
AMPS set forth in the prospectus. This description does not purport to be
complete and is subject to and qualified in its entirety by reference to the
Fund's Charter and Articles Supplementary, including the provisions thereof
establishing the AMPS. The Fund's Charter and the form of Articles
Supplementary establishing the terms of the AMPS have been filed as exhibits
to the Registration Statement of which this statement of additional
information is a part.

Dividends

     General. The holders of shares of the Series F AMPS will be entitled to
receive, when, as and if declared by the Board of Directors of the Fund, out
of funds legally available therefor, cumulative cash dividends on their
shares, at the Applicable Rate. Dividends on the shares of AMPS so declared
and payable shall be paid (i) in preference to and in priority over any
dividends so declared and payable on the common stock, and (ii) to the extent
permitted under the Code and to the extent available, out of net tax exempt
income earned on the Fund's investments. Generally, dividends on shares of
AMPS, to the extent that they are derived from interest paid on California
Municipal Bonds, will be exempt from Federal income taxes, subject to possible
application of the alternative minimum tax, and California income taxes, and
to the extent they are derived from interest paid on Municipal Bonds, will be
exempt from Federal income taxes, subject to possible application of the
alternative minimum tax. See "Taxes."

     Notification of Dividend Period. In determining whether the Fund should
issue a Notice of Special Dividend for the AMPS, the Broker-Dealers will
consider (i) existing short term and long term market rates and indices of
such short term and long term rates, (ii) existing market supply and demand
for short term and long term securities, (iii) existing yield curves for short
term and long term securities comparable to the AMPS, (iv) industry and
financial conditions that may affect the AMPS, (v) the investment objective of
the Fund, and (vi) the Dividend Periods and dividend rates at which current
and potential beneficial holders of the AMPS would remain or become beneficial
holders. If the Broker-Dealers shall not give the Fund a Response by such
second Business Day or if the Response states that given the factors set forth
above it is not advisable that the Fund give a Notice of Special Dividend
Period for the AMPS, the Fund may not give a Notice of Special Dividend Period
in respect of such Request for Special Dividend Period. In the event the
Response indicates that it is advisable that the Fund give a Notice of Special
Dividend Period for the AMPS, the Fund, by no later than the second Business
Day prior to such Auction Date, may give a notice (a "Notice of Special
Dividend Period") to the Auction Agent, the Securities Depository and each
Broker-Dealer, which notice will specify (i) the duration of the Special
Dividend Period, (ii) the Optional Redemption Price as specified in the
related Response and (iii) the Specific Redemption Provisions, if any, as
specified in the related Response. The Fund also shall provide a copy of such
Notice of Special Dividend Period to Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
("Moody's") and Standard & Poor's ("S&P"). The Fund shall not give a Notice of
Special Dividend Period, and, if such Notice of Special Dividend Period shall
have been given already, shall give telephonic and written notice of its
revocation (a "Notice of Revocation") to the Auction Agent, each
Broker-Dealer, and the Securities Depository on or prior to the Business Day
prior to the relevant Auction Date if (x) either the 1940 Act AMPS Asset
Coverage is not satisfied or the Fund shall fail to maintain S&P Eligible
Assets and Moody's Eligible Assets each with an aggregate Discounted Value at
least equal to the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount, in each case on the
Valuation Date immediately preceding the Business Day prior to the relevant
Auction Date on an actual basis and on a pro forma basis giving effect to the
proposed Special Dividend Period (using as a pro forma dividend rate with
respect to such Special Dividend Period the dividend rate which the
Broker-Dealers shall advise the Fund is an approximately equal rate for
securities similar to the AMPS with an equal dividend period), (y) sufficient
funds for the payment of dividends payable on the immediately succeeding
Dividend Payment Date have not been segregated in an account at the Fund's
custodian bank or on the books of the Fund by the close of business on the
third Business Day preceding the related Auction Date or (z) the
Broker-Dealers jointly advise the Fund that, after consideration of the
factors listed above, they have concluded that it is advisable to give a
Notice of Revocation. The Fund also shall provide a copy of such Notice of
Revocation to Moody's and 


                                      6



S&P. If the Fund is prohibited from giving a Notice of Special Dividend Period
as a result of the factors enumerated in clause (x), (y) or (z) above or if
the Fund gives a Notice of Revocation with respect to a Notice of Special
Dividend Period for the AMPS, the next succeeding Dividend Period will be a
7-Day Dividend Period. In addition, in the event Sufficient Clearing Bids are
not made in any Auction or an Auction is not held for any reason, the next
succeeding Dividend Period will be a 7-Day Dividend Period, and the Fund may
not again give a Notice of Special Dividend Period (and any such attempted
notice shall be null and void) until Sufficient Clearing Bids have been made
in an Auction with respect to a 7-Day Dividend Period.

     Non-Payment Period; Late Charge. A Non-Payment Period will commence if
the Fund fails to (i) declare, prior to the close of business on the second
Business Day preceding any Dividend Payment Date, for payment on or (to the
extent permitted as described below) within three Business Days after such
Dividend Payment Date to the persons who held such shares as of 12:00 noon,
Eastern time, on the Business Day preceding such Dividend Payment Date, the
full amount of any dividend on shares of AMPS payable on such Dividend Payment
Date or (ii) deposit, irrevocably in trust, in same-day funds, with the
Auction Agent by 12:00 noon, Eastern time, (A) on such Dividend Payment Date
the full amount of any cash dividend on such shares (if declared) payable on
such Dividend Payment Date or (B) on any redemption date for shares of AMPS
called for redemption, the Mandatory Redemption Price per share of such AMPS
or, in the case of an optional redemption, the Optional Redemption Price per
share. Such Non-Payment Period will consist of the period commencing on and
including the aforementioned Dividend Payment Date or redemption date, as the
case may be, and ending on and including the Business Day on which, by 12:00
noon, Eastern time, all unpaid cash dividends and unpaid redemption prices
shall have been so deposited or otherwise shall have been made available to
the applicable holders in same-day funds, provided that a Non-Payment Period
for any AMPS will not end unless the Fund shall have given at least five days'
but no more than 30 days' written notice of such deposit or availability to
the Auction Agent, the Securities Depository and all holders of shares of
AMPS. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the failure by the Fund to deposit funds
as provided for by clause (ii) (A) or (ii) (B) above within three Business
Days after any Dividend Payment Date or redemption date, as the case may be,
in each case to the extent contemplated below, shall not constitute a
"Non-Payment Period."

     The Applicable Rate for each Dividend Period for shares of AMPS,
commencing during a Non-Payment Period, will be equal to the Non-Payment
Period Rate; and each Dividend Period commencing after the first day of, and
during, a Non-Payment Period shall be a 7-Day Dividend Period. Any dividend on
shares of AMPS due on any Dividend Payment Date for such shares (if, prior to
the close of business on the second Business Day preceding such Dividend
Payment Date, the Fund has declared such dividend payable on such Dividend
Payment Date to the persons who held such shares as of 12:00 noon, Eastern
time, on the Business Day preceding such Dividend Payment Date) or redemption
price with respect to such shares not paid to such persons when due may be
paid to such persons in the same form of funds by 12:00 noon, Eastern time, on
any of the first three Business Days after such Dividend Payment Date or due
date, as the case may be, provided that such amount is accompanied by a late
charge calculated for such period of non-payment at the Non-Payment Period
Rate applied to the amount of such non-payment based on the actual number of
days comprising such period divided by 365. In the case of a willful failure
of the Fund to pay a dividend on a Dividend Payment Date or to redeem any
shares of AMPS on the date set for such redemption, the preceding sentence
shall not apply and the Applicable Rate for the Dividend Period commencing
during the Non-Payment Period resulting from such failure shall be the
Non-Payment Period Rate. For the purposes of the foregoing, payment to a
person in same-day funds on any Business Day at any time will be considered
equivalent to payment to that person in New York Clearing House (next-day)
funds at the same time on the preceding Business Day, and any payment made
after 12:00 noon, Eastern time, on any Business Day shall be considered to
have been made instead in the same form of funds and to the same person before
12:00 noon, Eastern time, on the next Business Day.

     The Non-Payment Period Rate initially will be 200% of the applicable
Reference Rate (or 300% of such rate if the Fund has provided notification to
the Auction Agent prior to the Auction establishing the Applicable Rate for
any dividend that net capital gain or other taxable income will be included in
such dividend on shares of AMPS), provided that the Board of Directors of the
Fund shall have the authority to adjust, modify, alter or change from time to
time by resolution or otherwise the initial Non-Payment Period Rate if the
Board of Directors of the Fund determines and Moody's and S&P (and any
Substitute Rating Agency or Substitute Rating Agencies, as the case may be, in
lieu of Moody's or S&P, or both, in the event either or both of such parties
shall not rate the AMPS) advise the Fund in writing that such adjustment,
modification, alteration or change will not adversely affect their then
current ratings on the AMPS.

     Restrictions on Dividends and Other Payments. For so long as any shares
of AMPS are outstanding, the Fund will not declare, pay or set apart for
payment any dividend or other distribution (other than a dividend or
distribution paid in shares of, or options, warrants or rights to subscribe
for or purchase, common stock or other stock, if any, ranking junior to shares
of AMPS as to dividends or upon liquidation) in respect of common stock or any
other stock of the Fund ranking 


                                      7



junior to or on a parity with shares of AMPS as to dividends or upon
liquidation, or call for redemption, redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire for
consideration any shares of common stock or any other such junior stock
(except by conversion into or exchange for stock of the Fund ranking junior to
AMPS as to dividends and upon liquidation) or any such parity stock (except by
conversion into or exchange for stock of the Fund ranking junior to or on a
parity with AMPS as to dividends and upon liquidation), unless (A) immediately
after such transaction, the Fund would have S&P Eligible Assets and Moody's
Eligible Assets each with an aggregate Discounted Value equal to or greater
than the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount, and the 1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage
(see "Asset Maintenance" and "Redemption" below) would be satisfied, (B) full
cumulative dividends on shares of AMPS and shares of the Other AMPS due on or
prior to the date of the transaction have been declared and paid or shall have
been declared and sufficient funds for the payment thereof deposited with the
Auction Agent, (C) any Additional Dividend required to be paid on or before
the date of such declaration or payment has been paid, and (D) the Fund has
redeemed the full number of shares of AMPS required to be redeemed by any
provision for mandatory redemption contained in the Articles Supplementary.

Asset Maintenance

     1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage. The Fund will be required under the
Articles Supplementary to maintain, with respect to shares of AMPS, as of the
last Business Day of each month in which any shares of AMPS are outstanding,
asset coverage of at least 200% with respect to senior securities that are
stock, including the shares of AMPS and Other AMPS (or such other asset
coverage as in the future may be specified in or under the 1940 Act as the
minimum asset coverage for senior securities that are stock of a closed-end
investment company as a condition of paying dividends on its common stock)
("1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage"). If the Fund fails to maintain 1940 Act AMPS
Asset Coverage and such failure is not cured as of the last Business Day of
the following month (the "1940 Act Cure Date"), the Fund will be required
under certain circumstances to redeem certain of the shares of AMPS. See
"Description of AMPS--Redemption" in the prospectus and "--Redemption" below.

     AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount. So long as shares of AMPS are outstanding,
the Fund will be required under the Articles Supplementary as of the last
Business Day of each week (a "Valuation Date") to maintain S&P Eligible Assets
and Moody's Eligible Assets each having in the aggregate a Discounted Value at
least equal to the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount. If the Fund fails to meet
such requirement as of any Valuation Date and such failure is not cured on or
before the sixth Business Day after such Valuation Date (the "AMPS Basic
Maintenance Cure Date"), the Fund will be required under certain circumstances
to redeem certain of the shares of AMPS. See "Description of AMPS--Redemption"
in the prospectus and "--Redemption" below. Upon any failure to maintain the
required Discounted Value, the Fund will use its best efforts to alter the
composition of its portfolio to reattain a Discounted Value at least equal to
the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount on or prior to the AMPS Basic Maintenance
Cure Date.

     The AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount as of any Valuation Date, means the
dollar amount equal to (i) the sum of (A) the product of the number of shares
of AMPS and Other AMPS outstanding on such Valuation Date multiplied by the
sum of $25,000 and any applicable redemption premium attributable to the
designation of a Premium Call Period; (B) the aggregate amount of cash
dividends (whether or not earned or declared) that will have accumulated for
each share of AMPS and Other AMPS outstanding to (but not including) the end
of the current Dividend Period for the AMPS that follows such Valuation Date
in the event the then current Dividend Period for the AMPS will end within 49
calendar days of such Valuation Date or through the 49th day after such
Valuation Date in the event the then current Dividend Period will not end
within 49 calendar days of such Valuation Date; (C) in the event the then
current Dividend Period will end within 49 calendar days of such Valuation
Date, the aggregate amount of cash dividends that would accumulate at the
Maximum Applicable Rate applicable to a Dividend Period of 28 or fewer days on
any shares of AMPS and Other AMPS outstanding from the end of such Dividend
Period through the 49th day after such Valuation Date, multiplied by the
larger of the Moody's Volatility Factor and the S&P Volatility Factor,
determined from time to time by Moody's and S&P, respectively (except that if
such Valuation Date occurs during a Non-Payment Period, the cash dividend for
purposes of calculation would accumulate at the then current Non-Payment
Period Rate); (D) the amount of anticipated expenses of the Fund for the 90
days subsequent to such Valuation Date (including any premiums payable with
respect to a Policy); (E) the amount of current outstanding balances of any
indebtedness that is senior to the AMPS plus interest actually accrued
together with 30 days additional interest on the current outstanding balances
calculated at the current rate; (F) the amount of the Fund's maximum potential
Additional Dividend liability as of such Valuation Date; and (G) any current
liabilities as of such Valuation Date to the extent not reflected in any of
(i)(A) through (i)(F) (including, without limitation, and immediately upon
determination, any amounts due and payable by the Fund's portfolio securities
purchased as of such Valuation Date and any liabilities incurred for the
purpose of clearing securities transactions) less (ii) either (A) the
Discounted Value of any of the Fund's assets, or (B) the 


                                      8



face value of any of the Fund's assets if such assets mature prior to or on
the date of redemption of AMPS or payment of a liability and are either
securities issued or guaranteed by the United States Government or Deposit
Securities, in both cases irrevocably deposited by the Fund for the payment of
the amount needed to redeem shares of AMPS subject to redemption or to satisfy
any of (i)(B) through (i)(G). For Moody's, the Fund shall include as a
liability an amount calculated semi-annually equal to 150% of the estimated
cost of obtaining other insurance guaranteeing the timely payment of interest
on a Moody's Eligible Asset and principal thereof to maturity with respect to
Moody's Eligible Assets that (i) are covered by a Policy which provides the
Fund with the option to obtain such other insurance and (ii) are discounted by
a Moody's Discount Factor determined by reference to the insurance
claims-paying ability rating of the issuer of such Policy.

     The Discount Factors and guidelines for determining the market value of
the Fund's portfolio holdings have been based on criteria established in
connection with rating the AMPS. These factors include, but are not limited
to, the sensitivity of the market value of the relevant asset to changes in
interest rates, the liquidity and depth of the market for the relevant asset,
the credit quality of the relevant asset (for example, the lower the rating of
a debt obligation, the higher the related discount factor) and the frequency
with which the relevant asset is marked to market. In no event shall the
Discounted Value of any asset of the Fund exceed its unpaid principal balance
or face amount as of the date of calculation. The Discount Factor relating to
any asset of the Fund and the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount, the assets
eligible for inclusion in the calculation of the Discounted Value of the
Fund's portfolio and certain definitions and methods of calculation relating
thereto may be changed from time to time by the Fund, without stockholder
approval, but only in the event the Fund receives written confirmation from
S&P, Moody's and any Substitute Rating Agency that any such changes would not
impair the rating then assigned to the shares of AMPS by S&P or Moody's or any
Substitute Rating Agency.

     On or before the seventh Business Day in the case of Moody's and the next
Business Day in the case of S&P after a Valuation Date on which the Fund fails
to maintain S&P Eligible Assets and Moody's Eligible Assets each with an
aggregate Discounted Value equal to or greater than the AMPS Basic Maintenance
Amount, the Fund is required to (i) deliver to Moody's a report with respect
to the calculation of the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount, the value of its
portfolio holdings and the net asset value and market price of the Fund's
common stock as of the date of such failure (an "AMPS Basic Maintenance
Report") and (ii) send S&P an electronic notification of such failure. The
Fund also will deliver an AMPS Basic Maintenance Report as of the 25th day of
each month (or if such day is not a Business Day, as of the next succeeding
Business Day) or as of the last Business Day of the month in which the Fund's
fiscal year ends on or before the seventh Business Day after such day. Within
ten Business Days after delivery of such report relating to the month in which
the Fund's fiscal year ends, the Fund will deliver a letter prepared by the
Fund's independent accountants regarding the accuracy of the calculations made
by the Fund in such AMPS Basic Maintenance Report. If any such letter prepared
by the Fund's independent accountants shows that an error was made in the AMPS
Basic Maintenance Report, the calculation or determination made by the Fund's
independent accountants will be conclusive and binding on the Fund. The Fund
will also (i) provide Moody's with an AMPS Basic Maintenance Report and (ii)
send S&P an electronic notification, as of each Valuation Date on or before
the seventh Business Day in the case of Moody's and the next Business Day in
the case of S&P after such date when the Discounted Value of Moody's Eligible
Assets or S&P Eligible Assets, as the case may be, fails to exceed the AMPS
Basic Maintenance Amount by 10% or more. Also, on or before 5:00 p.m., Eastern
time, on the first Business Day after shares of common stock are repurchased
by the Fund, the Fund will complete and deliver to Moody's an AMPS Basic
Maintenance Report as of the close of business on such date that common stock
is repurchased.

Redemption

     Mandatory Redemption. The number of shares of AMPS to be redeemed will be
equal to the lesser of (a) the minimum number of shares of AMPS the redemption
of which, if deemed to have occurred immediately prior to the opening of
business on the Cure Date, together with all other shares of the preferred
stock subject to redemption or retirement, would result in the Fund having S&P
Eligible Assets and Moody's Eligible Assets each with an aggregate Discounted
Value equal to or greater than the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount or
satisfaction of the 1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage, as the case may be, on such
Cure Date (provided that, if there is no such minimum number of shares the
redemption of which would have such result, all shares of AMPS then
outstanding will be redeemed), and (b) the maximum number of shares of AMPS,
together with all other shares of preferred stock subject to redemption or
retirement, that can be redeemed out of funds expected to be legally available
therefor on such redemption date. In determining the number of shares of AMPS
required to be redeemed in accordance with the foregoing, the Fund shall
allocate the number required to be redeemed which would result in the Fund
having S&P Eligible Assets and Moody's Eligible Assets each with an aggregate
Discounted Value equal to or greater than the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount or
satisfaction of the 1940 Act AMPS Asset Coverage, as the case may be, pro rata
among shares of AMPS, Other AMPS and other preferred stock subject to
redemption pursuant to provisions 


                                      9



similar to those set forth below; provided that, shares of AMPS that may not
be redeemed at the option of the Fund due to the designation of a Non-Call
Period applicable to such shares (A) will be subject to mandatory redemption
only to the extent that other shares are not available to satisfy the number
of shares required to be redeemed and (B) will be selected for redemption in
an ascending order of outstanding number of days in the Non-Call Period (with
shares with the lowest number of days to be redeemed first) and by lot in the
event of shares having an equal number of days in such Non-Call Period. The
Fund is required to effect such a mandatory redemption on a Business Day which
is not later than 30 days after such Cure Date, except that if the Fund does
not have funds legally available for the redemption of all of the required
number of shares of AMPS and other preferred stock that are subject to
mandatory redemption or the Fund otherwise is unable to effect such redemption
on a Business Day which is on or prior to 30 days after such Cure Date, the
Fund will redeem those shares of AMPS that it was unable to redeem on the
earliest practicable date on which it is able to effect such redemption out of
funds legally available therefor.

     Notice of Redemption. If shares of AMPS are to be redeemed, a notice of
redemption will be mailed to each record holder of such shares of AMPS
(initially Cede as nominee of the Securities Depository) and to the Auction
Agent not less than 17 nor more than 60 days prior to the date fixed for the
redemption thereof. Each notice of redemption will include a statement setting
forth: (i) the redemption date, (ii) the redemption price, (iii) the aggregate
number of shares of AMPS to be redeemed, (iv) the place or places where shares
of AMPS are to be surrendered for payment of the redemption price, (v) a
statement that dividends on the shares to be redeemed will cease to accumulate
on such redemption date (except that holders may be entitled to Additional
Dividends) and (vi) the provision of the Articles Supplementary pursuant to
which such shares are being redeemed. The notice also will be published in the
eastern and national editions of The Wall Street Journal. No defect in the
notice of redemption or in the mailing or publication thereof will affect the
validity of the redemption proceedings, except as required by applicable law.

     In the event that less than all of the outstanding shares of AMPS are to
be redeemed, the shares to be redeemed will be selected by lot or such other
method as the Fund shall deem fair and equitable, and the results thereof will
be communicated to the Auction Agent. The Auction Agent will give notice to
the Securities Depository, whose nominee will be the record holder of all
shares of AMPS, and the Securities Depository will determine the number of
shares to be redeemed from the account of the Agent Member of each Existing
Holder. Each Agent Member will determine the number of shares to be redeemed
from the account of each Existing Holder for which it acts as agent. An Agent
Member may select for redemption shares from the accounts of some Existing
Holders without selecting for redemption any shares from the accounts of other
Existing Holders. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if neither the Securities
Depository nor its nominee is the record holder of all of the shares of AMPS,
the particular shares to be redeemed shall be selected by the Fund by lot or
by such other method as the Fund shall deem fair and equitable.

     If the Fund gives notice of redemption, and concurrently or thereafter
deposits in trust with the Auction Agent, or segregates in an account at the
Fund's custodian bank for the benefit of the holders of AMPS to be redeemed
and for payment to the Auction Agent, Deposit Securities (with a right of
substitution) having an aggregate Discounted Value equal to the redemption
payment for the shares of AMPS as to which notice of redemption has been
given, with irrevocable instructions and authority to pay the redemption price
to the record holders thereof, then upon the date of such deposit or, if no
such deposit is made, upon such date fixed for redemption (unless the Fund
shall default in making payment of the redemption price), all rights of the
holders of such shares called for redemption will cease and terminate, except
the right of such holders to receive the redemption price in respect thereof
and any Additional Dividends, but without interest, and such shares no longer
will be deemed to be outstanding. The Fund will be entitled to receive, from
time to time, the interest, if any, earned on such Deposit Securities
deposited with the Auction Agent, and the holders of any shares so redeemed
will have no claim to any such interest. Any funds so deposited which are
unclaimed at the end of one year from such redemption date will be repaid,
upon demand, to the Fund, after which the holders of the shares of AMPS so
called for redemption may look only to the Fund for payment thereof.

     So long as any shares of AMPS are held of record by the nominee of the
Securities Depository (initially Cede), the redemption price for such shares
will be paid on the redemption date to the nominee of the Securities
Depository. The Securities Depository's normal procedures now provide for it
to distribute the amount of the redemption price to Agent Members who, in
turn, are expected to distribute such funds to the persons for whom they are
acting as agent. Notwithstanding the provisions for redemption described
above, no shares of AMPS shall be subject to optional redemption (i) unless
all dividends in arrears on the outstanding shares of AMPS, and all capital
stock of the Fund ranking on a parity with the AMPS with respect to the
payment of dividends or upon liquidation, including the Other AMPS, have been
or are being contemporaneously paid or declared and set aside for payment and
(ii) if redemption thereof would result in the Fund's 


                                      10



failure to maintain Moody's Eligible Assets or S&P Eligible Assets with an
aggregate Discounted Value equal to or greater than the AMPS Basic Maintenance
Amount.

Voting Rights

     In connection with the election of the Fund's directors, holders of
shares of AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred stock, voting separately as
a single class, shall be entitled at all times to elect two of the Fund's
directors, and the remaining directors will be elected by holders of shares of
common stock and shares of AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred stock,
voting together as a single class. In addition, if at any time dividends on
outstanding shares of AMPS shall be unpaid in an amount equal to at least two
full years' dividends thereon or if at any time holders of any shares of
preferred stock, including Other AMPS, are entitled, together with the holders
of AMPS, to elect a majority of the directors of the Fund under the 1940 Act,
then the number of directors constituting the Board of Directors automatically
shall be increased by the smallest number that, when added to the two
directors elected exclusively by the holders of shares of AMPS, Other AMPS and
any other preferred stock as described above, would constitute a majority of
the Board of Directors as so increased by such smallest number, and at a
special meeting of stockholders which will be called and held as soon as
practicable, and at all subsequent meetings at which directors are to be
elected, the holders of shares of AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred
stock, voting as a separate class, will be entitled to elect the smallest
number of additional directors that, together with the two directors that such
holders in any event will be entitled to elect, constitutes a majority of the
total number of directors of the Fund as so increased. The terms of office of
the persons who are directors at the time of that election will continue. If
the Fund thereafter shall pay, or declare and set apart for payment in full,
all dividends payable on all outstanding shares of AMPS and any other
preferred stock, including Other AMPS, for all past Dividend Periods, the
additional voting rights of the holders of shares of AMPS and any other
preferred stock, including Other AMPS, as described above shall cease, and the
terms of office of all of the additional directors elected by the holders of
shares of AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred stock (but not of the
directors with respect to whose election the holders of common stock were
entitled to vote or the two directors the holders of shares of AMPS, Other
AMPS and any other preferred stock have the right to elect in any event) will
terminate automatically.

     The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes entitled to be cast by
holders of outstanding shares of AMPS and any other preferred stock, including
Other AMPS, voting as a separate class, will be required to (i) authorize,
create or issue any class or series of stock ranking prior to the AMPS or any
other series of preferred stock with respect to the payment of dividends or
the distribution of assets on dissolution, liquidation or winding up the
affairs of the Fund, or (ii) amend, alter or repeal the provisions of the
Charter, whether by merger, consolidation or otherwise, so as to adversely
affect any of the contract rights expressly set forth in the Charter of
holders of shares of AMPS or any other preferred stock. To the extent
permitted under the 1940 Act, in the event shares of more than one series of
preferred stock are outstanding, the Fund shall not approve any of the actions
set forth in clause (i) or (ii) which adversely affects the contract rights
expressly set forth in the Charter of a holder of shares of AMPS differently
from those of a holder of shares of any other series of preferred stock
without the affirmative vote of at least a majority of votes entitled to be
cast by holders of the shares of AMPS adversely affected and outstanding at
such time (voting separately as a class). The Board of Directors, however,
without stockholder approval, may amend, alter or repeal any or all of the
various rating agency guidelines described herein in the event the Fund
receives confirmation from the rating agencies that any such amendment,
alteration or repeal would not impair the ratings then assigned to shares of
AMPS. Furthermore, the Board of Directors, without stockholder approval, may
terminate compliance with the Moody's or S&P guidelines as discussed under
"Rating Agency Guidelines" in the prospectus. Unless a higher percentage is
provided for under "Description of Capital Stock--Certain Provisions of the
Charter and By-laws" in the prospectus, the affirmative vote of the holders of
a majority of the outstanding shares of preferred stock (as defined under
"Investment Restrictions"), including AMPS and Other AMPS, entitled to be
cast, voting as a separate class, will be required to approve any plan of
reorganization (including bankruptcy proceedings) adversely affecting such
shares or any action requiring a vote of security holders under Section 13(a)
of the 1940 Act including, among other things, changes in the Fund's
investment objective or changes in the investment policies and restrictions
described as fundamental policies in the prospectus and under "Investment
Restrictions." So long as any shares of AMPS are outstanding, the affirmative
vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of preferred stock
(as defined under "Investment Restrictions"), including AMPS and Other AMPS,
voting together as a single class, will be required to approve any voluntary
application by the Fund for relief under Federal bankruptcy law or any similar
application under state law for so long as the Fund is solvent and does not
foresee becoming insolvent. The class vote of holders of shares of AMPS, Other
AMPS and any other preferred stock described above in each case will be in
addition to a separate vote of the requisite percentage of shares of common
stock and shares of AMPS, Other AMPS and any other preferred stock, voting
together as a single class, necessary to authorize the action in question. An
increase in the number of authorized shares of preferred stock pursuant to the
Charter or the issuance 


                                      11



of additional shares of any series of preferred stock (including AMPS and
Other AMPS) pursuant to the Charter shall not in and of itself be considered
to adversely affect the contract rights of the holders of the AMPS.

     Notwithstanding the foregoing, and except as otherwise required by the
1940 Act, (i) holders of outstanding shares of the AMPS will be entitled as a
series, to the exclusion of the holders of all other securities, including
other preferred stock, common stock and other classes of capital stock of the
Fund, to vote on matters affecting the AMPS that do not materially adversely
affect any of the contract rights of holders of such other securities,
including other preferred stock, common stock and other classes of capital
stock, as expressly set forth in the Charter, and (ii) holders of outstanding
shares of AMPS will not be entitled to vote on matters affecting any other
preferred stock that do not materially adversely affect any of the contract
rights of holders of the AMPS, as expressly set forth in the Charter.

     The foregoing voting provisions will not apply to any shares of AMPS if,
at or prior to the time when the act with respect to which such vote otherwise
would be required shall be effected, such shares shall have been (i) redeemed
or (ii) called for redemption and sufficient funds shall have been deposited
in trust to effect such redemption.

                                  THE AUCTION

Auction Agent Agreement

     The Auction Agent will act as agent for the Fund in connection with
Auctions. In the absence of bad faith or negligence on its part, the Auction
Agent will not be liable for any action taken, suffered or omitted, or for any
error of judgment made, by it in the performance of its duties under the
Auction Agent Agreement, and will not be liable for any error of judgment made
in good faith unless the Auction Agent shall have been negligent in
ascertaining, or failing to ascertain, the pertinent facts. Pursuant to the
Auction Agent Agreement, the Fund is required to indemnify the Auction Agent
for certain losses and liabilities incurred by the Auction Agent without
negligence or bad faith on its part in connection with the performance of its
duties under such agreement.

     The Auction Agent may terminate the Auction Agent Agreement upon notice
to the Fund, which termination may be no earlier than 60 days following
delivery of such notice. If the Auction Agent resigns, the Fund will use its
best efforts to enter into an agreement with a successor Auction Agent
containing substantially the same terms and conditions as the Auction Agent
Agreement. The Fund may terminate the Auction Agent Agreement at any time,
provided that prior to such termination the Fund shall have entered into such
an agreement with respect thereto with a successor Auction Agent.

Broker-Dealer Agreements

     The Auctions require the participation of one or more broker-dealers. A
Broker-Dealer Agreement may be terminated by the Auction Agent or a
Broker-Dealer on five days' notice to the other party, provided that the
Broker-Dealer Agreement with Merrill Lynch may not be terminated without the
prior written consent of the Fund, which consent may not be unreasonably
withheld.

     For the six months ended April 30, 2005 and the fiscal years ended
October 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002, Merrill Lynch, an affiliate of the Investment
Adviser, earned $[ ], $[ ], $[ ] and $[ ], respectively, pursuant to its
Broker-Dealer Agreement with the Fund.

Auction Procedures

     The Auction Procedures are set forth in Appendix E. The Settlement
Procedures to be used with respect to Auctions are set forth in Appendix D.

                           RATING AGENCY GUIDELINES

S&P AAA Rating Guidelines

     The Discounted Value of the Fund's S&P Eligible Assets is calculated on
each Valuation Date. See "Description of AMPS--Asset Maintenance--AMPS Basic
Maintenance Amount." S&P Eligible Assets include cash, Receivables for


                                      12



California Municipal Bonds Sold (as defined below), Rule 2a-7 Money Market
Funds and California Municipal Bonds eligible for consideration under S&P's
current guidelines. For purposes of calculating the Discounted Value of the
Fund's portfolio under current S&P guidelines, the fair market value of
California Municipal Bonds eligible for consideration under such guidelines
must be discounted by the applicable S&P Discount Factor set forth in the
table below. The Discounted Value of a California Municipal Bond eligible for
consideration under S&P guidelines is the fair market value thereof divided by
the S&P Discount Factor. The S&P Discount Factor used to discount a particular
California Municipal Bond will be determined by reference (a) to the rating by
S&P, Moody's or Fitch on such California Municipal Bond or (b) in the event
the California Municipal Bond is insured under a Policy and the terms of the
Policy permit the Fund, at its option, to obtain other permanent insurance
guaranteeing the timely payment of interest on such California Municipal Bond
and principal thereof at maturity, the S&P, Moody's or Fitch insurance
claims-paying ability rating of the issuer of the Policy or (c) in the event
the California Municipal Bond is insured under an insurance policy that
guarantees the timely payment of interest on such California Municipal Bond
and principal thereof at maturity, the S&P, Moody's or Fitch insurance
claims-paying ability rating of the issuer of the insurance policy; provided,
however, for purposes of determining the S&P Discount Factor applicable to
California Municipal Bonds not rated by S&P, the California Municipal Bonds
will carry an S&P rating one full rating category lower than the S&P rating
category that is the equivalent of the rating category in which such
California Municipal Bond is placed by a NRSRO, in accordance with the table
set forth below:




                                                   S&P's Rating Category (1)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  AAA*(2)            AA*              A*              BBB*              BB*              B*              CCC*             NR**
--------------  -------------  --------------  -----------------  ---------------  --------------  ----------------  -------------
                                                                                                        
  159.75%          162.75%          165.75%          168.75%          190.11%          210.11%          230.11%          235.00%



---------------

*    S&P rating.
**   Not rated.
(1)  For California Municipal Bonds of any one issuer rated at least BBB- by
     S&P, or if not rated by S&P, rated at least A- by another NRSRO, 2% is
     added to the applicable S&P Discount Factor for every 1% by which the
     fair market value of such California Municipal Bonds exceeds 5% of the
     aggregate fair market value of the S&P Eligible Assets, but in no event
     greater than 10%; or for any percentage over 5% add 10 percentage points
     to the applicable S&P Discount Factor.
(2)  For zero coupon California Municipal Bonds, the S&P Discount Factor is
     441.80%.

     Notwithstanding the foregoing, (i) the S&P Discount Factor for short-term
California Municipal Bonds will be 115%, so long as such California Municipal
Bonds are rated A-1+ or SP-1+ by S&P and mature or have a demand feature
exercisable in 30 days or less, or 120% so long as such California Municipal
Bonds are rated A-1 or SP-1 by S&P and mature or have a demand feature
exercisable in 30 days or less, or 125% if such California Municipal Bonds are
not rated by S&P but are rated VMIG-1, P-1 or MIG-1 by Moody's or F-1+ by
Fitch; provided, however, such short-term California Municipal Bonds rated by
Moody's or Fitch but not rated by S&P having a demand feature exercisable in
30 days or less must be backed by a letter of credit, liquidity facility or
guarantee from a bank or other financial institution having a short-term
rating of at least A-1+ from S&P and further provided that such short-term
California Municipal Bonds rated by Moody's or Fitch but not rated by S&P may
comprise no more than 50% of short-term California Municipal Bonds that
qualify as S&P Eligible Assets, (ii) the S&P Discount Factor for Rule 2a-7
Money Market Funds will be 110%, (iii) the S&P Discount Factor for Receivables
for California Municipal Bonds Sold that are due in more than five Business
Days from such Valuation Date will be the S&P Discount Factor applicable to
the California Municipal Bonds sold, and (iv) no S&P Discount Factor will be
applied to cash or to Receivables for California Municipal Bonds Sold if such
receivables are due within five Business Days of such Valuation Date.
"Receivables for California Municipal Bonds Sold," for purposes of calculating
S&P Eligible Assets as of any Valuation Date, means the book value of
receivables for California Municipal Bonds sold as of or prior to such
Valuation Date. For purposes of the foregoing, Anticipation Notes rated SP-1
or, if not rated by S&P, rated VMIG-1 by Moody's or F-1+ by Fitch, which do
not mature or have a demand feature exercisable in 30 days and which do not
have a long-term rating, shall be considered to be short-term California
Municipal Bonds.

     The S&P guidelines require certain minimum issue size and impose other
requirements for purposes of determining S&P Eligible Assets. In order to be
considered S&P Eligible Assets, California Municipal Bonds must:


                                      13



     (i)  except for zero coupon California Municipal Bonds rated AAA by S&P
          that mature in 30 years or less, be interest bearing and pay
          interest at least semi-annually;

     (ii) be payable with respect to principal and interest in U.S. dollars;

    (iii) not be subject to a covered call or covered put option written by
          the Fund;

     (iv) except for Inverse Floaters, not be part of a private placement; and

     (v)  except for Inverse Floaters and legally defeased bonds that are
          secured by securities issued or guaranteed by the United States
          Government, be part of an issue with an original issue size of at
          least $10 million or, if of an issue with an original issue size
          below $10 million, is rated at least AA or higher by S&P.

Notwithstanding the foregoing:

     (i) California Municipal Bonds of any one issue type category (as
described below) will be considered S&P Eligible Assets only to the extent the
fair market value of such California Municipal Bonds does not exceed 25% of
the aggregate fair market value of S&P Eligible Assets, except that California
Municipal Bonds falling within the general obligation issue type category will
be considered S&P Eligible Assets to the extent the fair market value of such
California Municipal Bonds does not exceed 50% of the aggregate fair market
value of S&P Eligible Assets. For purposes of the issue type category
requirement described above, California Municipal Bonds will be classified
within one of the following categories: health care issues, housing issues,
educational facilities issues, student loan issues, transportation issues,
industrial development bond issues, electric, gas and combination issues (if
the combination issue includes an electric issue), water and sewer utilities
and combination issues (if the combination issue does not include an electric
issue), irrigation, resource recovery, solid waste and other utilities,
general obligation issues, lease obligations, escrowed bonds and other issues
not falling within one of the aforementioned categories. The general
obligation issue type category includes any issuer that is directly or
indirectly guaranteed by the State of California or its political
subdivisions. Utility issuers are included in the general obligation issue
type category if the issuer is directly or indirectly guaranteed by the State
of California or its political subdivisions;

     (ii) California Municipal Bonds that are escrow bonds or defeased bonds
may compose up to 100% of the aggregate fair market value of S&P Eligible
Assets if such California Municipal Bonds initially are assigned a rating by
S&P in accordance with S&P's legal defeasance criteria or rerated by S&P as
economic defeased escrow bonds and assigned an AAA rating. California
Municipal Bonds may be rated as escrow bonds by another NRSRO or rerated as an
escrow bond and assigned the equivalent of an S&P AAA rating, provided that
such equivalent rated California Municipal Bonds are limited to 50% of the
aggregate fair market value of S&P Eligible Assets and are deemed to have an
AA S&P rating for purposes of determining the S&P Discount Factor applicable
to such California Municipal Bonds. The limitations on California Municipal
Bonds in clause (i) above and clauses (iii) and (iv) below are not applicable
to escrow bonds, however, economically defeased bonds that are either
initially rated or rerated by S&P or another NRSRO and assigned the same
rating level as the issuer of the California Municipal Bonds will remain in
its original issue type category set forth in clause (1) above;

     (iii) California Municipal Bonds that are not rated by any NRSRO may
comprise no more than 10% of S&P Eligible Assets;

     (iv) California Municipal Bonds rated at least BBB- by S&P, or if not
rated by S&P, rated at least A- by another NRSRO, of any one issuer or
guarantor (excluding bond insurers) will be considered S&P Eligible Assets
only to the extent the fair market value of such California Municipal Bonds
does not exceed 10% of the aggregate fair market value of the S&P Eligible
Assets, High Yield Municipal Bonds of any issuer may comprise no more than 5%
of S&P Eligible Assets, and California Municipal Bonds of any one issuer which
are not rated by any NRSRO will be considered S&P Eligible Assets only to the
extent the fair market value of such California Municipal Bonds does not
exceed 5% of the aggregate fair market value of the S&P Eligible Assets. In
the aggregate, the maximum issuer exposure is limited to 10% of the S&P
Eligible Assets; and


                                      14



     (v) California Municipal Bonds not rated by S&P but rated by another
NRSRO will be included in S&P Eligible Assets only to the extent the fair
market value of such Municipal Bonds does not exceed 50% of the aggregate fair
market value of the S&P Eligible Assets.

     The Fund may include Municipal Bonds other than California Municipal
Bonds as S&P Eligible Assets pursuant to guidelines and restrictions to be
established by S&P, provided that S&P advises the Fund in writing that such
action will not adversely affect its then current rating on the AMPS.

     As discussed in the prospectus, the Fund may engage in options or futures
transactions. For so long as any shares of AMPS are rated by S&P, the Fund
will not purchase or sell financial futures contracts, write, purchase or sell
options on financial futures contracts or write put options (except covered
put options) or call options (except covered call options) on portfolio
securities unless it receives written confirmation from S&P that engaging in
such transactions will not impair the ratings then assigned to the shares of
AMPS by S&P, except that the Fund may purchase or sell financial futures
contracts based on the Bond Buyer Municipal Bond Index (the "Municipal Index")
or Treasury Bonds and write, purchase or sell put and call options on such
contracts (collectively, "S&P Hedging Transactions"), subject to the following
limitations:

          (i) the Fund will not engage in any S&P Hedging Transaction based on
     the Municipal Index (other than transactions that terminate a financial
     futures contract or option held by the Fund by the Fund's taking an
     opposite position thereto ("Closing Transactions")), that would cause the
     Fund at the time of such transaction to own or have sold the least of (A)
     more than 1,000 outstanding financial futures contracts based on the
     Municipal Index, (B) outstanding financial futures contracts based on the
     Municipal Index exceeding in number 25% of the quotient of the fair
     market value of the Fund's total assets divided by $1,000 or (C)
     outstanding financial futures contracts based on the Municipal Index
     exceeding in number 10% of the average number of daily traded financial
     futures contracts based on the Municipal Index in the 30 days preceding
     the time of effecting such transaction as reported by The Wall Street
     Journal;

          (ii) the Fund will not engage in any S&P Hedging Transaction based
     on Treasury Bonds (other than Closing Transactions) that would cause the
     Fund at the time of such transaction to own or have sold the lesser of
     (A) outstanding financial futures contracts based on Treasury Bonds
     exceeding in number 50% of the quotient of the fair market value of the
     Fund's total assets divided by $100,000 ($200,000 in the case of the
     two-year United States Treasury Note) or (B) outstanding financial
     futures contracts based on Treasury Bonds exceeding in number 10% of the
     average number of daily traded financial futures contracts based on
     Treasury Bonds in the 30 days preceding the time of effecting such
     transaction as reported by The Wall Street Journal;

          (iii) the Fund will engage in Closing Transactions to close out any
     outstanding financial futures contract that the Fund owns or has sold or
     any outstanding option thereon owned by the Fund in the event (A) the
     Fund does not have S&P Eligible Assets with an aggregate Discounted Value
     equal to or greater than the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount on two
     consecutive Valuation Dates and (B) the Fund is required to pay Variation
     Margin on the second such Valuation Date;

          (iv) the Fund will engage in a Closing Transaction to close out any
     outstanding financial futures contract or option thereon in the month
     prior to the delivery month under the terms of such financial futures
     contract or option thereon unless the Fund holds the securities
     deliverable under such terms; and

          (v) when the Fund writes a financial futures contract or an option
     thereon, it will either maintain an amount of cash, cash equivalents or
     liquid assets in a segregated account with the Fund's custodian, so that
     the amount so segregated plus the amount of Initial Margin and Variation
     Margin held in the account of or on behalf of the Fund's broker with
     respect to such financial futures contract or option equals the fair
     market value of the financial futures contract or option, or, in the
     event the Fund writes a financial futures contract or option thereon that
     requires delivery of an underlying security, it shall hold such
     underlying security in its portfolio.

     For purposes of determining whether the Fund has S&P Eligible Assets with
a Discounted Value that equals or exceeds the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount,
the Discounted Value of cash or securities held for the payment of Initial
Margin or Variation Margin shall be zero and the aggregate Discounted Value of
S&P Eligible Assets shall be reduced by an amount equal to (i) 30% of the
aggregate settlement value, as marked to market, of any outstanding financial
futures contracts 


                                      15



based on the Municipal Index that are owned by the Fund plus (ii) 25% of the
aggregate settlement value, as marked to market, of any outstanding financial
futures contracts based on Treasury Bonds which contracts are owned by the
Fund.

Moody's Aaa Rating Guidelines

     The Discounted Value of the Fund's Moody's Eligible Assets is calculated
on each Valuation Date. See "Description of AMPS--Asset Maintenance--AMPS
Basic Maintenance Amount." Moody's Eligible Assets include cash, Receivables
for California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds Sold (as defined below),
Rule 2a-7 Money Market Funds and California Municipal Bonds or Municipal Bonds
eligible for consideration under Moody's guidelines. For purposes of
calculating the Discounted Value of the Fund's portfolio under current Moody's
guidelines, the fair market value of California Municipal Bonds and Municipal
Bonds eligible for consideration under such guidelines must be discounted by
the applicable Moody's Discount Factor set forth in the table below. The
Discounted Value of a California Municipal Bond or Municipal Bond eligible for
consideration under Moody's guidelines is the lower of par and the quotient of
the fair market value thereof divided by the Moody's Discount Factor. The
Moody's Discount Factor used to discount a particular California Municipal
Bond or Municipal Bond will be determined by reference to (a) the rating by
Moody's, S&P or Fitch on such California Municipal Bond or Municipal Bond or
(b) in the event the Moody's Eligible Asset is insured under a Policy and the
terms of the Policy permit the Fund, at its option, to obtain other insurance
guaranteeing the timely payment of interest on such Moody's Eligible Asset and
principal thereof at maturity, the Moody's, S&P or Fitch insurance
claims-paying ability rating of the issuer of the Policy or (c) in the event
the Moody's Eligible Asset is insured under an insurance policy that
guarantees the timely payment of interest on such Moody's Eligible Asset and
principal thereof at maturity, the Moody's, S&P or Fitch insurance
claims-paying ability rating of the issuer of the insurance policy, in
accordance with the tables set forth below and on the following page:




                                                 Moody's Rating Category (1)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
           Aaa                        Aa                       A                       Baa                   Other (2)
------------------------- ------------------------ ----------------------- ------------------------ --------------------------
                                                                                                              
           151%                      159%                     160%                     173%                     225%



(1)  Ratings assigned by S&P or Fitch are generally accepted by Moody's at
     face value. However, adjustments to face value may be made to particular
     categories of credits for which the S&P and/or Fitch rating does not seem
     to approximate a Moody's rating equivalent. Split rated securities
     assigned by S&P and Fitch will be accepted at the lower of the two
     ratings.

(2)  California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds rated Ba1 to B3 by Moody's
     or, if not rated by Moody's, rated BB+ to B- by S&P or Fitch. In
     addition, California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds not explicitly
     rated by Moody's, S&P or Fitch, but rated at least the equivalent of B3
     internally by the Investment Adviser, provided that Moody's reviews and
     achieves sufficient comfort with the Investment Adviser's internal credit
     rating processes, will be included under "Other" in the table. Unless
     conclusions regarding liquidity risk as well as estimates of both the
     probability and severity of default for the Fund's assets can be derived
     from other sources as well as combined with a number of sources as
     presented by the Fund to Moody's, unrated California Municipal Bonds and
     Municipal Bonds which are rated at least the equivalent of B3 by the
     Investment Adviser internally are limited to 10% of Moody's Eligible
     Assets.




                                                   Moody's Rating Category
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    MIG-1, VMIG-1, P-1 (1)                                          MIG-1, VMIG-1, P-1 (2)
-------------------------------------------------------------  -----------------------------------------------------
                                                                                           
                             100%                                                            136%



-----------------
(1)  Moody's rated California Municipal Bonds or Municipal Bonds that have a
     maturity less than or equal to 49 days and California Municipal Bonds or
     Municipal Bonds not rated by Moody's but rated the equivalent to MIG-1,
     VMIG-1, or P-1 by S&P or Fitch that have a maturity less than or equal to
     49 days.

(2)  Moody's rated California Municipal Bonds or Municipal Bonds that have a
     maturity greater than 49 days and California Municipal Bonds or Municipal
     Bonds not rated by Moody's but rated the equivalent to MIG-1, VMIG-1, or
     P-1 by S&P or Fitch that have a maturity greater than 49 days.

; provided, however, in the event a Moody's Discount Factor applicable to a
Moody's Eligible Asset is determined by reference to an insurance
claims-paying ability rating in accordance with clause (b) or (c), such
Moody's Discount Factor shall be increased by an amount equal to 50% of the
difference between (i) the percentage set forth in the foregoing table 


                                      16



under the applicable rating category and (ii) the percentage set forth in the
foregoing table under the rating category which is one category lower than the
applicable rating category.

     Notwithstanding the foregoing, no Moody's Discount Factor will be applied
to cash or to Receivables for California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds
Sold that are due within five Business Days of such Valuation Date. The
Moody's Discount Factor for Receivables for California Municipal Bonds and
Municipal Bonds Sold that are due within six and 30 Business Days of such
Valuation Date will be the Moody's Discount Factor applicable to the
California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds sold. "Receivables for
California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds Sold," for purposes of
calculating Moody's Eligible Assets as of any Valuation Date, means the book
value of receivables for California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds sold
as of or prior to such Valuation Date if such receivables are due within 30
Business Days of such Valuation Date.

     The Moody's Discount Factor for Inverse Floaters shall be the product of
(x) the percentage determined by reference to the rating on the security
underlying such Inverse Floaters multiplied by (y) 1.25.

     The Moody's Discount Factor for Rule 2a-7 Money Market Funds shall be
110%.

     The Moody's guidelines impose certain requirements as to minimum issue
size, issuer diversification and geographical concentration, as well as other
requirements for purposes of determining whether Municipal Bonds constitute
Moody's Eligible Assets, as set forth in the table below:




                             Minimum Issue Size ($     Maximum Underlying     Maximum Issue Type (%)    Maximum State Allowed
          Rating                   Millions)             Obligor (%) (1)              (1) (3)                (%) (1) (4)
   --------------------    ------------------------  ---------------------   ------------------------  ------------------------
                                                                                                     
           Aaa                         *                       100                      100                      100
            Aa                        10                       20                       60                       60
            A                         10                       10                       40                       40
           Baa                        10                        6                       20                       20
            Ba                        10                        4                       12                       12
            B                         10                        3                       12                       12
        Other (2)                     10                        2                       12                       12



-----------------
*    Not applicable.
(1)  The referenced percentages represent maximum cumulative totals for the
     related rating category and each lower rating category.
(2)  California Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds not rated by Moody's, S&P
     or Fitch, but rated at least the equivalent of B3 internally by the
     Investment Adviser.
(3)  Does not apply to general obligation bonds.
(4)  Does not apply to California Municipal Bonds. Territorial bonds (other
     than those issued by Puerto Rico and counted collectively) are each
     limited to 10% of Moody's Eligible Assets. For diversification purposes,
     Puerto Rico will be treated as a state.

     For purposes of the maximum underlying obligor requirement described
above, any California Municipal Bond or Municipal Bond backed by the guaranty,
letter of credit or insurance issued by a third party will be deemed to be
issued by such third party if the issuance of such third party credit is the
sole determinant of the rating on such Bond. For purposes of the issue type
concentration requirement described above, California Municipal Bonds and
Municipal Bonds will be classified within one of the following categories:
health care issues (teaching and non-teaching hospitals, public and private),
housing issues (single- and multi-family), educational facilities issues
(public and private schools), student loan issues, resource recovery issues,
transportation issues (mass transit, airport and highway bonds), industrial
revenue/pollution control bond issues, utility issues (including water, sewer
and electricity), general obligation issues, lease obligations/certificates of
participation, escrowed bonds and other issues ("Other Issues") not falling
within one of the aforementioned categories (includes special obligations to
crossover, excise and sales tax revenue, recreation revenue, special
assessment and telephone revenue bonds). In no event shall (a) more than 10%
of Moody's Eligible Assets consist of student loan issues, (b) more than 10%
of Moody's Eligible Assets consist of resource recovery issues or (c) more
than 10% of Moody's Eligible Assets consist of Other Issues.


                                      17



     Current Moody's guidelines also require that California Municipal Bonds
and Municipal Bonds constituting Moody's Eligible Assets pay interest in cash,
are publicly rated B3 or higher by Moody's or, if not rated by Moody's, but
rated by S&P or Fitch, are publicly rated at least B- by S&P or Fitch, or if
not explicitly rated by Moody's, S&P or Fitch, be rated at least the
equivalent of B3 internally by the Investment Adviser, provided that Moody's
reviews and achieves sufficient comfort with the Investment Adviser's internal
credit rating processes, not have suspended ratings by Moody's, if an Inverse
Floater be explicitly rated by Moody's, and be part of an issue of California
Municipal Bonds and Municipal Bonds of at least $10,000,000 (except for issues
rated Aaa by Moody's, as provided in the chart above).

     When the Fund sells California Municipal Bonds or Municipal Bond and
agrees to repurchase it at a future date, the Discounted Value of such Bond
will constitute a Moody's Eligible Asset and the amount the Fund is required
to pay upon repurchase of such Bond will count as a liability for purposes of
calculating the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount. For so long as the AMPS are
rated by Moody's, the Fund will not enter into any such reverse repurchase
agreements unless it has received written confirmation from Moody's that such
transactions would not impair the ratings then assigned the AMPS by Moody's.
When the Fund purchases a California Municipal Bond or Municipal Bond and
agrees to sell it at a future date to another party, cash receivable by the
Fund thereby will constitute a Moody's Eligible Asset if the long-term debt of
such other party is rated at least A2 by Moody's and such agreement has a term
of 30 days or less; otherwise the Discounted Value of such Bond will
constitute a Moody's Eligible Asset.

     High Yield Municipal Bonds may comprise no more than 20% of Moody's
Eligible Assets. Unless conclusions regarding liquidity risk as well as
estimates of both the probability and severity of default for the Fund's
assets can be derived from other sources as well as combined with a number of
sources as presented by the Fund to Moody's, unrated High Yield Municipal
Bonds which are rated at least the equivalent of B3 by the Investment Adviser
internally are limited to 10% of Moody's Eligible Assets.

     Inverse Floaters, including primary market and secondary market residual
interest bonds, may constitute no more than 10% of Moody's Eligible Assets.

     Notwithstanding the foregoing, an asset will not be considered a Moody's
Eligible Asset if it is (i) held in a margin account, (ii) subject to any
material lien, mortgage, pledge, security interest or security agreement of
any kind, (iii) held for the purchase of a security pursuant to a Forward
Commitment or (iv) irrevocably deposited by the Fund for the payment of
dividends or redemption.

     For so long as shares of AMPS are rated by Moody's, in managing the
Fund's portfolio, the Investment Adviser will not alter the composition of the
Fund's portfolio if, in the reasonable belief of the Investment Adviser, the
effect of any such alteration would be to cause the Fund to have Moody's
Eligible Assets with an aggregate Discounted Value, as of the immediately
preceding Valuation Date, less than the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount as of
such Valuation Date; provided, however, that in the event that, as of the
immediately preceding Valuation Date, the aggregate Discounted Value of
Moody's Eligible Assets exceeded the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount by 5% or
less, the Investment Adviser will not alter the composition of the Fund's
portfolio in a manner reasonably expected to reduce the aggregate Discounted
Value of Moody's Eligible Assets unless the Fund shall have confirmed that,
after giving effect to such alteration, the aggregate Discounted Value of
Moody's Eligible Assets would exceed the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount.

     For so long as any shares of AMPS are rated by Moody's, the Fund will not
engage in Bond Market Association Municipal Swap Index swap transactions ("BMA
swap transactions"), buy or sell financial futures contracts, write, purchase
or sell call options on financial futures contracts or purchase put options on
financial futures contracts or write call options (except covered call
options) on portfolio securities unless it receives written confirmation from
Moody's that engaging in such transactions would not impair the ratings then
assigned to the shares of AMPS by Moody's, except that the Fund may engage in
BMA swap transactions, purchase or sell exchange-traded financial futures
contracts based on any index approved by Moody's or Treasury Bonds, and
purchase, write or sell exchange-traded put options on such financial futures
contracts, and purchase, write or sell exchange-traded call options on such
financial futures contracts (collectively, "Moody's Hedging Transactions"),
subject to the following limitations:

          (i) the Fund will not engage in any Moody's Hedging Transaction
     based on the Municipal Index (other than Closing Transactions) that would
     cause the Fund at the time of such transaction to own or have sold (A)
     outstanding financial futures contracts based on the Municipal Index
     exceeding in number 10% of the average number of daily traded financial
     futures contracts based on the Municipal Index in the 30 days preceding
     the time of 


                                      18



     effecting such transaction as reported by The Wall Street Journal or (B)
     outstanding financial futures contracts based on the Municipal Index
     having fair market value exceeding 50% of the fair market value of all
     Municipal Bonds constituting Moody's Eligible Assets owned by the Fund
     (other than Moody's Eligible Assets already subject to a Moody's Hedging
     Transaction);

          (ii) the Fund will not engage in any Moody's Hedging Transaction
     based on Treasury Bonds (other than Closing Transactions) that would
     cause the Fund at the time of such transaction to own or have sold (A)
     outstanding financial futures contracts based on Treasury Bonds having an
     aggregate fair market value exceeding 40% of the aggregate fair market
     value of Moody's Eligible Assets owned by the Fund and rated Aa by
     Moody's (or, if not rated by Moody's but rated by S&P, rated AAA by S&P)
     or (B) outstanding financial futures contracts based on Treasury Bonds
     having an aggregate fair market value exceeding 80% of the aggregate fair
     market value of all Municipal Bonds constituting Moody's Eligible Assets
     owned by the Fund (other than Moody's Eligible Assets already subject to
     a Moody's Hedging Transaction) and rated Baa or A by Moody's (or, if not
     rated by Moody's but rated by S&P, rated A or AA by S&P) (for purposes of
     the foregoing clauses (i) and (ii), the Fund shall be deemed to own the
     number of financial futures contracts that underlie any outstanding
     options written by the Fund);

          (iii) the Fund will engage in Closing Transactions to close out any
     outstanding financial futures contract based on the Municipal Index if
     the amount of open interest in the Municipal Index as reported by The
     Wall Street Journal is less than 5,000;

          (iv) the Fund will engage in a Closing Transaction to close out any
     outstanding financial futures contract by no later than the fifth
     Business Day of the month in which such contract expires and will engage
     in a Closing Transaction to close out any outstanding option on a
     financial futures contract by no later than the first Business Day of the
     month in which such option expires;

          (v) the Fund will engage in Moody's Hedging Transactions only with
     respect to financial futures contracts or options thereon having the next
     settlement date or the settlement date immediately thereafter;

          (vi) the Fund (A) will not engage in options and futures
     transactions for leveraging or speculative purposes, except that the Fund
     may engage in an option or futures transaction so long as the combination
     of the Fund's non-derivative positions, together with the relevant option
     or futures transaction, produces a synthetic investment position, or the
     same economic result, that could be achieved by an investment, consistent
     with the Fund's investment objective and policies, in a security that is
     not an option or futures transaction, subject to the Investment Adviser
     periodically demonstrating to Moody's that said economic results are
     achieved, and (B) will not write any call options or sell any financial
     futures contracts for the purpose of hedging the anticipated purchase of
     an asset prior to completion of such purchase;

          (vii) the Fund will not enter into an option or futures transaction
     unless, after giving effect thereto, the Fund would continue to have
     Moody's Eligible Assets with an aggregate Discounted Value equal to or
     greater than the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount; and

          (viii) the Fund will not engage in BMA swap transactions with
     respect to more than 20% of the Fund's net assets; provided that the
     Fund's use of futures will proportionately decrease as the Fund's use of
     BMA swap transactions increases, and vice-versa.

     For purposes of determining whether the Fund has Moody's Eligible Assets
with an aggregate Discounted Value that equals or exceeds the AMPS Basic
Maintenance Amount, the Discounted Value of Moody's Eligible Assets that the
Fund is obligated to deliver or receive pursuant to an outstanding futures
contract or option shall be as follows: (i) assets subject to call options
written by the Fund that are either exchange-traded and "readily reversible"
or that expire within 49 days after the date as of which such valuation is
made shall be valued at the lesser of (A) Discounted Value and (B) the
exercise price of the call option written by the Fund; (ii) assets subject to
call options written by the Fund not meeting the requirements of clause (i) of
this sentence shall have no value; (iii) assets subject to put options written
by the Fund shall be valued at the lesser of (A) the exercise price and (B)
the Discounted Value of the subject security; (iv) futures contracts shall be
valued at the lesser of (A) settlement price and (B) the Discounted Value of
the subject security, provided that, if a contract matures within 49 days
after the date as of which such valuation is made, where the Fund is the
seller the contract may be valued at the settlement price and where the Fund
is the buyer the contract may be valued at the Discounted Value of 


                                      19



the subject securities; and (v) where delivery may be made to the Fund with
any security of a class of securities, the Fund shall assume that it will take
delivery of the security with the lowest Discounted Value.

     For purposes of determining whether the Fund has Moody's Eligible Assets
with an aggregate Discounted Value that equals or exceeds the AMPS Basic
Maintenance Amount, the following amounts shall be subtracted from the
aggregate Discounted Value of the Moody's Eligible Assets held by the Fund:
(i) 10% of the exercise price of a written call option; (ii) the exercise
price of any written put option; (iii) where the Fund is the seller under a
financial futures contract, 10% of the settlement price of the financial
futures contract; (iv) where the Fund is the purchaser under a financial
futures contract, the settlement price of assets purchased under such
financial futures contract; (v) the settlement price of the underlying
financial futures contract if the Fund writes put options on a financial
futures contract; and (vi) 105% of the fair market value of the underlying
financial futures contracts if the Fund writes call options on a financial
futures contract and does not own the underlying contract.

     For so long as any shares of AMPS are rated by Moody's, the Fund will not
enter into any contract to purchase securities for a fixed price at a future
date beyond customary settlement time (other than such contracts that
constitute Moody's Hedging Transactions), except that the Fund may enter into
such contracts to purchase newly-issued securities on the date such securities
are issued ("Forward Commitments"), subject to the following limitations:

          (i) the Fund will maintain in a segregated account with its
     custodian cash, cash equivalents or short term, fixed-income securities
     rated P-1, MIG-1 or VMIG-1 by Moody's and maturing prior to the date of
     the Forward Commitment with a fair market value that equals or exceeds
     the amount of the Fund's obligations under any Forward Commitments to
     which it is from time to time a party or long-term, fixed income
     securities with a Discounted Value that equals or exceeds the amount of
     the Fund's obligations under any Forward Commitment to which it is from
     time to time a party, and

          (ii) the Fund will not enter into a Forward Commitment unless, after
     giving effect thereto, the Fund would continue to have Moody's Eligible
     Assets with an aggregate Discounted Value equal to or greater than the
     AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount.

     For purposes of determining whether the Fund has Moody's Eligible Assets
with an aggregate Discounted Value that equals or exceeds the AMPS Basic
Maintenance Amount, the Discounted Value of all Forward Commitments to which
the Fund is a party and of all securities deliverable to the Fund pursuant to
such Forward Commitments shall be zero.

                              ------------------

     For so long as shares of AMPS are rated by S&P or Moody's, the Fund,
unless it has received written confirmation from S&P and/or Moody's, as the
case may be, that such action would not impair the ratings then assigned to
the AMPS by S&P and/or Moody's, as the case may be, will not (i) borrow money
except for the purpose of clearing transactions in portfolio securities (which
borrowings under any circumstances shall be limited to the lesser of $10
million and an amount equal to 5% of the fair market value of the Fund's
assets at the time of such borrowings and which borrowings shall be repaid
within 60 days and not be extended or renewed and shall not cause the
aggregate Discounted Value of Moody's Eligible Assets and S&P Eligible Assets
to be less than the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount), (ii) engage in short sales
of securities, (iii) lend any securities, (iv) issue any class or series of
stock ranking prior to or on a parity with the AMPS with respect to the
payment of dividends or the distribution of assets upon dissolution,
liquidation or winding up of the Fund, (v) reissue any AMPS previously
purchased or redeemed by the Fund, (vi) merge or consolidate into or with any
other corporation or entity, (vii) change the Fund's pricing service or (viii)
engage in reverse repurchase agreements.

     For as long as the AMPS are rated by S&P, the Fund will not, unless it
has received written confirmation from S&P that such action would not impair
the rating then assigned to the shares of AMPS by S&P, engage in interest rate
swaps, caps and floors, except that the Fund may, without obtaining the
written consent described above, engage in swaps, caps and floors if: (i) the
counterparty to the swap transaction has a short-term rating of A-1 or, if the
counterparty does not have a short-term rating, the counterparty's senior
unsecured long-term debt rating is A- or higher, (ii) the original aggregate
notional amount of the interest rate swap transaction or transactions is not
to be greater than the liquidation preference of the AMPS, (iii) the interest
rate swap transaction will be marked-to-market weekly by the swap
counterparty, (iv) if the Fund fails to maintain an aggregate discounted value
at least equal to the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount on two consecutive
Valuation Dates then the agreement shall terminate immediately, (v) for the
purpose of calculating the Discounted Value of 


                                      20



S&P Eligible Assets, 90% of any positive mark-to-market valuation of the
Fund's rights will be S&P Eligible Assets, 100% of any negative mark-to-market
valuation of the Fund's rights will be included in the calculation of the AMPS
Basic Maintenance Amount, and (vi) the Fund must maintain liquid assets with a
value at least equal to the net amount of the excess, if any, of the Fund's
obligations over its entitlement with respect to each swap. For caps/floors,
the Fund must maintain liquid assets with a value at least equal to the Fund's
obligations with respect to such caps or floors.

                            DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

     The Directors of the Fund consist of eight individuals, seven of whom are
not "interested persons" of the Fund as defined in the 1940 Act (the
"non-interested Directors" or "independent Directors"). The Directors are
responsible for the oversight of the operations of the Fund and perform the
various duties imposed on the directors of investment companies by the 1940
Act.

     Each non-interested Director is a member of the Fund's Audit Committee
(the "Audit Committee"). The principal responsibilities of the Audit Committee
are the appointment, compensation, retention and oversight of the Fund's
independent registered public accounting firm, including the resolution of
disagreements regarding financial reporting between Fund management and such
independent registered public accounting firm. The Audit Committee's
responsibilities include, without limitation, to (i) review with the
independent registered public accounting firm the arrangements for and scope
of annual and special audits and any other services provided by the
independent registered public accounting firm to the Fund; (ii) review with
the independent registered public accounting firm any audit problems or
difficulties encountered during or relating to the conduct of the audit; (iii)
ensure that the independent registered public accounting firm submits on a
periodic basis a formal written statement with respect to their independence,
discuss with the independent registered public accounting firm any
relationships or services that may impact the objectivity and independence of
the Fund's independent registered public accounting firm; and (iv) consider
information and comments of the independent registered public accounting firm
with respect to the Fund's accounting and financial reporting policies,
procedures and internal control over financial reporting and Fund management's
responses thereto. The Board of Directors of the Fund has adopted a written
charter for the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee has retained independent
legal counsel to assist it in connection with these duties. The Audit
Committee met four times during the Fund's fiscal year ended October 31, 2004.

     Ms. Ramo and Messrs. Salomon and London are the members of the Fund's
Nominating Committee (the "Nominating Committee"). The principal
responsibilities of the Nominating Committee are to identify individuals
qualified to serve as non-interested Directors of the Fund and to recommend
its nominees for consideration by the full Board. While the Nominating
Committee is solely responsible for the selection and nomination of the Fund's
non-interested Directors, the Nominating Committee may consider nominations
for the office of the Director made by Fund stockholders in such manner as it
deems appropriate. Fund stockholders who wish to recommend a nominee should
send nominations to the Secretary of the Fund that include biographical
information and set forth the qualifications of the proposed nominee. The
Nominating Committee did not meet during the Fund's fiscal year ended October
31, 2004.

Biographical Information

     Certain biographical and other information relating to the non-interested
Directors of the Fund is set forth below, including their ages, their
principal occupations for at least the last five years, the length of time
served, the total number of portfolios overseen in the complex of funds
advised by the Investment Adviser, Merrill Lynch Investment Managers, L.P.
("MLIM") or their affiliates ("MLIM/FAM-advised funds") and other public
directorships.




                                                                                     Number of
                                    Term of                                       MLIM/FAM-Advised
  Name, Address*    Position(s)   Office** and                                       Funds and
    and Age of       Held with     Length of     Principal Occupation(s) During     Portfolios             Public
     Director        the Fund     Time Served          the Past Five Years           Overseen          Directorships
------------------ ------------- -------------- -------------------------------- ---------------   ------------------
                                                                                    
James H.           Director      Director        Director, The China Business     38 registered    None
Bodurtha                         since 1995      Group, Inc. since 1996 and       investment
(61) ***                         and Co-         Executive Vice President         companies


                                      21



                                                                                     Number of
                                    Term of                                       MLIM/FAM-Advised
  Name, Address*    Position(s)   Office** and                                       Funds and
    and Age of       Held with     Length of     Principal Occupation(s) During     Portfolios             Public
     Director        the Fund     Time Served          the Past Five Years           Overseen          Directorships
------------------ ------------- -------------- -------------------------------- ---------------   ------------------
                                 Chairman        thereof from 1996 to 2003;       consisting of
                                 of the Board    Chairman of the Board,           55 portfolios
                                 since 2005      Berkshire Holding Corporation
                                                 since 1980; Partner, Squire,
                                                 Sanders & Dempsey from 1980 to
                                                 1993.

Kenneth A. Froot   Director      Director        Professor, Harvard University,   38 registered    [None]
(48)                             since 2005      since 1992.                      investment
                                                                                  companies
                                                                                  consisting of
                                                                                  55 portfolios

Joe Grills         Director      Director        Member of the Committee of       38 registered    Kimco Realty
(70) ***                         since 2002      Investment of Employee Benefit   investment       Corporation
                                 and             Assets of the Association of     companies
                                 Co-Chairman     Financial Professionals          consisting of
                                 of the Board    ("CIEBA") since 1986; Member     55 portfolios
                                 since 2005      of CIEBA's Executive Committee
                                                 since 1988 and its Chairman
                                                 from 1991 to 1992; Assistant
                                                 Treasurer of International
                                                 Business Machines Corporation
                                                 ("IBM") and Chief Investment
                                                 Officer of IBM Retirement
                                                 Funds from 1986 to 1993;
                                                 Member of the Investment
                                                 Advisory Committee of the
                                                 State of New York Common
                                                 Retirement Fund since 1989;
                                                 Member of the Investment
                                                 Advisory Committee of the
                                                 Howard Hughes Medical
                                                 Institute from 1997 to 2000;
                                                 Director, Duke University
                                                 Management Company from 1992
                                                 to 2004, Vice Chairman thereof
                                                 from 1998 to 2004, and
                                                 Director Emeritus thereof
                                                 since 2004; Director, LaSalle
                                                 Street Fund from 1995 to 2001;
                                                 Director, Kimco Realty
                                                 Corporation since 1997; Member
                                                 of the Investment Advisory
                                                 Committee of the Virginia
                                                 Retirement System since 1998,
                                                 Vice Chairman thereof from
                                                 2002 to 2005, and Chairman
                                                 thereof since 


                                      22



                                                                                     Number of
                                    Term of                                       MLIM/FAM-Advised
  Name, Address*    Position(s)   Office** and                                       Funds and
    and Age of       Held with     Length of     Principal Occupation(s) During     Portfolios             Public
     Director        the Fund     Time Served          the Past Five Years           Overseen          Directorships
------------------ ------------- -------------- -------------------------------- ---------------   ------------------
                                                 2005; Director,
                                                 Montpelier Foundation since
                                                 1998 and its Vice Chairman
                                                 since 2000; Member of the
                                                 Investment Committee of the
                                                 Woodberry Forest School since
                                                 2000; Member of the Investment
                                                 Committee of the National
                                                 Trust for Historic
                                                 Preservation since 2000.
Herbert I. London  Director      Director        John M. Olin professor of        38 registered    None
(66)                             since 1992      Humanities, New York             investment
                                                 University since 1993 and        companies
                                                 Professor thereof since 1980;    consisting of
                                                 President, Hudson Institute      55 portfolios
                                                 since 1997 and Trustee thereof
                                                 since 1980; Dean, Gallatin
                                                 Division of New York
                                                 University from 1976 to 1993;
                                                 Distinguished Fellow, Herman
                                                 Kahn Chair, Hudson Institute
                                                 from 1984 to 1985; Director,
                                                 Damon Corp. from 1991 to 1995;
                                                 Overseer, Center for Naval
                                                 Analyses from 1983 to 1993;
                                                 Limited Partner, Hypertech LP
                                                 since 1996.
Roberta Cooper     Director      Director        Shareholder, Modrall,            38 registered    None
Ramo  (62) ****                  since 1999      Sperling, Roehl, Harris &        investment
                                                 Sisk, P.A. since 1993;           companies
                                                 President, American Bar          consisting of
                                                 Association from 1995 to 1996    55 portfolios
                                                 and Member of the Board of
                                                 Governors thereof from 1994 to
                                                 1997; Shareholder, Poole,
                                                 Kelly & Ramo, Attorneys at
                                                 Law, P.C. from 1977 to 1993;
                                                 Director, Coopers, Inc. since
                                                 1999; Director of ECMC Group
                                                 (service provider to students,
                                                 schools and lenders) since
                                                 2001; Director, United New
                                                 Mexico Bank (now Wells Fargo)
                                                 from 1983 to 1988; Director,
                                                 First National Bank of New
                                                 Mexico (now Wells Fargo) from
                                                 1975 to 1976.
Robert S.          Director      Director        Principal of STI Management      38 registered    None
Salomon, Jr.                     since 2002      (investment adviser) since       investment
(68)                                             1994; Chairman and CEO of        companies


                                      23



                                                                                     Number of
                                    Term of                                       MLIM/FAM-Advised
  Name, Address*    Position(s)   Office** and                                       Funds and
    and Age of       Held with     Length of     Principal Occupation(s) During     Portfolios             Public
     Director        the Fund     Time Served          the Past Five Years           Overseen          Directorships
------------------ ------------- -------------- -------------------------------- ---------------   ------------------
                                                 Salomon Brothers Asset           consisting of
                                                 Management from 1992 until       55 portfolios
                                                 1995; Chairman of Salomon
                                                 Brothers equity mutual funds
                                                 from 1992 until 1995; regular
                                                 columnist with Forbes Magazine
                                                 from 1992 to 2002; Director of
                                                 Stock Research and U.S. Equity
                                                 Strategist at Salomon Brothers
                                                 from 1975 until 1991; Trustee,
                                                 Commonfund from 1980 to 2001.

Stephen B.         Director      Director        Chairman of  Fernwood            39 registered    None
Swensrud (71)                    since 2002      Associates (investment           investment
                                                 adviser) since 1996;             companies
                                                 Principal, Fernwood Associates   consisting of
                                                 (financial consultants) since    56 portfolios
                                                 1975; Chairman of  R.P.P.
                                                 Corporation (manufacturing
                                                 company) since 1978; Director
                                                 of International Mobile
                                                 Communications, Incorporated
                                                 (telecommunications company),
                                                 since 1998.



-------------------
*    The address of each non-interested Director is P.O. Box 9095, Princeton,
     New Jersey 08543-9095.
**   Each Director serves until his or her successor is elected and qualified,
     until December 31 of the year in which he or she turns 72, or until his
     or her death, resignation, or removal as provided in the Fund's By-Laws
     or Charter.
***  Co-Chair of the Board of Directors and Co-Chair of the Audit Committee.
**** Chair of the Nominating Committee.


     Certain biographical and other information relating to the Director who
is an "interested person" of the Fund as defined in the 1940 Act (the
"interested Director") and the other officers of the Fund is set forth below,
including their ages, their principal occupations for at least the last five
years, the length of time served, the total number of portfolios overseen in
MLIM/FAM-advised funds and public directorships held.


                                      24






                                                                                           Number of          
                                     Term of                                            MLIM/FAM-Advised
                   Position(s)     Office** and                                            Funds and
Name, Address*      Held with     Length of Time   Principal Occupation(s) During the     Portfolios         Public
    and Age         the Fund         Served                 Past Five Years                Overseen       Directorships
----------------  -------------- ---------------   ----------------------------------   ---------------  -----------------
                                                                                          
Robert C. Doll,   President      President and     President of MLIM/FAM advised        125 registered   None
Jr. (50)***       and Director   Director****      funds since 2005; President of       investment
                                 since 2005        MLIM and FAM since 2001; Co-Head     companies
                                                   (Americas Region) FAM and MLIM       consisting of
                                                   from 2000 to 2001 and Senior Vice    164 portfolio
                                                   President thereof from 1999 to
                                                   2001; Director of Princeton
                                                   Services, Inc. ("Princeton
                                                   Services") since 2001; President
                                                   of Princeton Administrators, L.P.
                                                   since 2001; Chief Investment
                                                   Officer of OppenheimerFunds, Inc.
                                                   in 1999 and Executive Vice
                                                   President thereof from 1991 to
                                                   1999.

Kenneth A.        Senior Vice    Senior Vice       Managing Director of MLIM since      38 registered    None
Jacob (53)        President      President since   2000; First Vice President of MLIM   investment
                                 2002              from 1997 to 2000; Vice President    companies
                                                   of MLIM from 1984 to 1997.           consisting of
                                                                                        50 portfolios

John M.           Senior Vice    Senior Vice       Managing Director of MLIM since      39 registered    None
Loffredo (41)     President      President since   2000; First Vice President of MLIM   investment
                                 2001              from 1997 to 2000; Vice President    companies
                                                   of MLIM from 1991 to 1997;           consisting of
                                                   Portfolio Manager with MLIM and      51 portfolios
                                                   FAM since 1997.

Walter C          Vice           Vice President    Managing Director (Municipal         5 registered     None
O'Connor          President      since 2002        Tax-Exempt) of MLIM since 2004;      investment
(42)                                               Director (Municipal Tax-Exempt) of   companies
                                                   MLIM from 1997 to 2004;              consisting of  
                                                   Vice President of MLIM from 1993     5 portfolios  
                                                   to 1997.
Donald C. Burke   Vice           Vice President    First Vice President of FAM and      127 registered   None
(45)              President      since 1994 and    MLIM since 1997 and Treasurer        investment
                  and Treasurer  Treasurer since   thereof since 1999; Senior Vice      companies
                                 1999              President and Treasurer of           consisting of
                                                   Princeton Services since 1999 and    166 portfolios
                                                   Director since 2004; Vice
                                                   President of FAM Distributors,
                                                   Inc. ("FAMD") since 1999; Vice
                                                   President of MLIM and FAM from
                                                   1990 to 1997; Director of Taxation
                                                   of MLIM from 1990 to 2001.


                                      25



                                                                                           Number of          
                                     Term of                                            MLIM/FAM-Advised
                   Position(s)     Office** and                                            Funds and
Name, Address*      Held with     Length of Time   Principal Occupation(s) During the     Portfolios         Public
    and Age         the Fund         Served                 Past Five Years                Overseen       Directorships
----------------  -------------- ---------------   ----------------------------------   ---------------  -----------------
Jeffrey Hiller    Chief          Chief             Chief Compliance Officer of the      128 registered   None
(53)              Compliance     Compliance        MLIM/FAM-advised funds since 2004;   investment
                  Officer        Officer since     First Vice President and Chief       companies
                                 2004              Compliance Officer of MLIM since     consisting of
                                                   2004; Chief Compliance Officer of    167 portfolios
                                                   the IQ Funds since 2004; Global
                                                   Director of Compliance at Morgan
                                                   Stanley Investment Management from
                                                   2002 to 2004; Managing Director
                                                   and Global Director of Compliance
                                                   at Citigroup Asset Management from
                                                   2000 to 2002; Chief Compliance
                                                   Officer at Soros Fund Management
                                                   in 2000; and Chief Compliance
                                                   Officer at Prudential Financial
                                                   from 1995 to 2000; Senior Counsel
                                                   in the Securities and Exchange
                                                   Commission's Division of
                                                   Enforcement in Washington, D.C.
                                                   from 1990 to 1995.

Alice A.          Secretary      Secretary since   Director (Legal Advisory) of MLIM    125 registered   None
Pellegrino (45)                  2004              since 2002; Vice President of MLIM   investment
                                                   from 1999 to 2002; Attorney          companies      
                                                   associated with MLIM since 1997;     consisting of  
                                                   Secretary of FAM, MLIM, FAMD and     164 portfolios 
                                                   Princeton Services since
                                                   2004.



------------------------
*    The address of Mr. Doll and each officer listed is P.O. Box 9011,
     Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011.
**   Elected by and serves at the pleasure of the Board of Directors of the
     Fund.
***  Mr. Doll is an "interested person," as defined in the 1940 Act, of the
     Fund based on his positions with MLIM, FAM, Princeton Services, and
     Princeton Administrators, L.P.
**** As a Director, Mr. Doll serves until his successor is elected and
     qualified or until December 31 of the year in which he turns 72, or until
     his death, resignation, or removal as provided in the Fund's By-Laws or
     Charter.

     In connection with the election of the Fund's Directors, holders of
shares of AMPS, Other AMPS and other preferred stock, voting as a separate
class, are entitled to elect two of the Fund's Directors, and the remaining
Directors are elected by all holders of capital stock, voting as a single
class. Mr. London and Mr. Salomon are the Directors elected by holders of
preferred stock. See "Description of AMPS--Voting Rights."

Share Ownership

     Information relating to each Director's share ownership in the Fund and
in all registered funds in the Merrill Lynch family of funds that are overseen
by the respective Director ("Supervised Merrill Lynch Funds") as of December
31, 2004 is set forth in the chart below.


                                      26






                                          Aggregate Dollar Range of Equity in   Aggregate Dollar Range of Securities
                 Name                                  the Fund                   in Supervised Merrill Lynch Funds
-----------------------------------    ---------------------------------------  --------------------------------------
                                                                                    
Interested Director:                          
      Robert C. Doll, Jr.                                None                               Over $100,000

Non-interested Directors:
      James H. Bodurtha                                  None                               Over $100,000
      Kenneth A. Froot                                   None                                   None
      Joe Grills                                         None                               Over $100,000
      Herbert I. London                                  None                               Over $100,000
      Roberta Cooper Ramo                                None                               Over $100,000
      Robert S. Salomon, Jr.                             None                               Over $100,000
      Stephen B. Swensrud                                None                             $50,001-$100,000



---------
*    For the number of MLIM/FAM-advised funds from which each Director
     receives compensation, see the table above under "Directors and Officers
     -- Biographical Information."

     As of the date of this statement of additional information none of the
Directors and officers of the Fund owned any outstanding shares of common
stock or Other AMPS of the Fund. As of the date of this statement of
additional information, none of the non-interested Directors of the Fund or
their immediate family members owned beneficially or of record any securities
in ML & Co.

Compensation of Directors

     Pursuant to its investment advisory agreement with the Fund (the
"Investment Advisory Agreement"), the Investment Adviser pays all compensation
of officers and employees of the Fund as well as the fees of all Directors of
the Fund who are affiliated persons of ML & Co. or its subsidiaries as well as
such Directors' actual out-of-pocket expenses relating to attendance at
meetings.

     The Fund pays fees to each non-interested Director for service to the
Fund. Each non-interested Director receives an aggregate annual retainer of
$125,000 for his or her services to MLIM/FAM-advised funds, including the
Fund. The portion of the annual retainer allocated to each MLIM/FAM-advised
fund is determined quarterly based on the relative net assets of each fund. In
addition, each non-interested Director receives a fee per in-person Board
meeting attended and per in-person Audit Committee meeting attended. The
annual per meeting fees paid to each non-interested Director aggregate
$100,000 for all MLIM/FAM-advised funds for which that Director serves and are
allocated equally among those funds. Each Co-Chairman of the Audit Committee
receives an additional annual retainer in the amount of $50,000, which is paid
quarterly and allocated to each MLIM/FAM-advised fund for which such
Co-Chairman provides services based on the relative net assets of each such
fund.

     The following table sets forth the compensation paid by the Fund to the
non-interested Directors for the Fund's fiscal year ended October 31, 2004,
and the aggregate compensation paid to them from all registered
MLIM/FAM-advised funds for the calendar year ended December 31, 2004.




                                                                                                      Aggregate
                                                                              Pension or          Compensation From
                                                                          Retirement Benefits      Fund and other
                                                    Compensation From     Accrued as Part of      MLIM/FAM-Advised
                Name of Director                           Fund              Fund Expense             Funds***
------------------------------------------    -------------------------  ---------------------  -----------------------
                                                                                                    
James H. Bodurtha*                                        $4,877                 None                   $250,000
Kenneth A. Froot**                                            -0-                None                         -0-
Joe Grills*                                               $4,877                 None                   $250,000
Herbert I. London                                         $4,359                 None                   $225,000


                                      27



Roberta Cooper Ramo                                       $4,359                 None                   $225,000
Robert S. Salomon, Jr.                                    $4,359                 None                   $225,000
Stephen B. Swensrud                                       $4,359                 None                   $231,000



--------------------------
*    Co-Chair of the Audit Committee.
**   Mr. Froot was elected as a Director of the Fund and certain other
     MLIM/FAM-advised funds effective on June 3, 2005.
***  For the number of MLIM/FAM-advised funds from which each Director
     received compensation see table above under "--Biographical Information."

                INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND MANAGEMENT ARRANGEMENTS

     The Investment Adviser, which is owned and controlled by ML & Co., a
financial services holding company and the parent of Merrill Lynch, provides
the Fund with investment advisory and administrative services. The Investment
Adviser acts as the investment adviser to more than 50 registered investment
companies and offers investment advisory services to individuals and
institutional accounts. As of June 30, 2005, the Investment Adviser and its
affiliates, including MLIM, had a total of approximately $474 billion in
investment company and other portfolio assets under management, including
approximately $221 billion in fixed income assets. This amount includes assets
managed by certain affiliates of the Investment Adviser. The Investment
Adviser is a limited partnership, the partners of which are ML & Co. and
Princeton Services. The principal business address of the Investment Adviser
is 800 Scudders Mill Road, Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536.

     The Investment Advisory Agreement provides that, subject to the oversight
of the Fund's Board of Directors, the Investment Adviser is responsible for
the actual management of the Fund's portfolio. The responsibility for making
decisions to buy, sell or hold a particular security rests with the Investment
Adviser, subject to oversight by the Board of Directors.

     The portfolio manager primarily responsible for the Fund's day-to-day
management is Walter C. O'Connor. Mr. O'Connor has been a portfolio manager
and Managing Director (Municipal Tax-Exempt) of MLIM since 2004, a portfolio
manager and Director (Municipal Tax-Exempt) of MLIM from 1997 to 2004 and a
portfolio manager and Vice President of MLIM from 1993 to 1997 and has over 10
years of experience investing in Municipal Bonds. The Fund's portfolio manager
will consider analyses from various sources, make the necessary investment
decisions, and place orders for transactions accordingly.

     For its services, the Fund pays the Investment Adviser a monthly fee at
the annual rate of 0.50% of the Fund's average weekly net assets ("average
weekly net assets" means the average weekly value of the total assets of the
Fund, including any proceeds from the issuance of preferred stock, minus the
sum of (i) accrued liabilities of the Fund, (ii) any accrued and unpaid
interest on outstanding borrowings and (iii) accumulated dividends on shares
of preferred stock). For purposes of this calculation, average weekly net
assets is determined at the end of each month on the basis of the average net
assets of the Fund for each week during the month. The assets for each weekly
period are determined by averaging the net assets at the last business day of
a week with the net assets at the last business day of the prior week. The
liquidation preference of any outstanding preferred stock (other than
accumulated dividends) is not considered a liability in determining the Fund's
average weekly net assets.

     For the six months ended April 30, 2005 and the fiscal years ended
October 31, 2004, 2003, and 2002, the fees paid by the Fund to the Investment
Adviser pursuant to the Investment Advisory Agreement were $1,871,574,
$3,717,972, $[ ] and $[ ], respectively.

     For the six months ended April 30, 2005 and the fiscal years ended
October 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002, the Investment Adviser reimbursed the Fund
$3,140, $11,573, $[ ] and $[ ], respectively.

     The Investment Advisory Agreement obligates the Investment Adviser to
provide investment advisory services and to pay all compensation of and
furnish office space for officers and employees of the Fund connected with
investment and economic research, trading and investment management of the
Fund, as well as the compensation of all Directors of the Fund who are
affiliated persons of the Investment Adviser or any of its affiliates. The
Fund pays all other expenses incurred in the operation of the Fund, including,
among other things, expenses for legal and auditing services, taxes, costs of
preparing, printing and mailing proxies, listing fees, stock certificates and
stockholder reports, charges of the custodian and the transfer 


                                      28



agent, dividend disbursing agent and registrar, Commission fees, fees and
expenses of non-interested Directors, accounting and pricing costs, insurance,
interest, brokerage costs, litigation and other extraordinary or non-recurring
expenses, mailing and other expenses properly payable by the Fund. Certain
accounting services are provided to the Fund by State Street Bank and Trust
Company ("State Street") pursuant to an agreement between State Street and the
Fund. The Fund will pay the costs of these services. In addition, the Fund
will reimburse the Investment Adviser for certain additional accounting
services.

     The table below shows the amounts paid by the Fund to State Street and to
the Investment Adviser for accounting services for the periods indicated:

                                                           Paid by the Fund to
                                     Paid by the Fund to     the Investment
Period:                                  State Street            Adviser
-------                             ---------------------  -------------------
Six months ended April 30, 2005                             $8,478
Fiscal year ended October 31, 2004                          $14,472
Fiscal year ended October 31, 2003
Fiscal year ended October 31, 2002

     Unless earlier terminated as described below, the Investment Advisory
Agreement will remain in effect from year to year if approved annually (a) by
the Board of Directors of the Fund or by a majority of the outstanding shares
of the Fund and (b) by a majority of the Directors who are not parties to such
contract or interested persons (as defined in the 1940 Act) of any such party.
Such contract is not assignable and may be terminated without penalty on 60
days' written notice at the option of either party thereto or by the vote of
the stockholders of the Fund. The Board of Directors most recently approved
the Investment Advisory Agreement at its meeting on February 22, 2005.

Activities of and Composition of the Board of Directors

     All but one member of the Board of Directors is an independent Director
whose only affiliation with the Investment Adviser or other Merrill Lynch
affiliates is as a Director of the Fund and certain other funds advised by the
Investment Adviser or its affiliates. The Co-chairmen of the Board are also
independent Directors. New Director nominees are chosen as nominees by a
Nominating Committee of independent Directors. All independent Directors also
are members of the Board's Audit Committee and the independent Directors meet
in executive session at each in person Board meeting. The Board and the Audit
Committee meet in person for at least two days each quarter and conduct other
in person and telephone meetings throughout the year, some of which are formal
board meetings, and some of which are informational meetings. The independent
counsel to the independent Directors attends all in person Board and Audit
Committee meetings and other meetings at the independent Directors' request.

Investment Advisory Agreement - Matters Considered by the Board

     Every year, the Board considers approval of the Fund's Investment
Advisory Agreement. The Board assesses the nature, scope and quality of the
services provided to the Fund by the personnel of the Investment Adviser and
its affiliates, including administrative services, shareholder services,
oversight of fund accounting, marketing services and assistance in meeting
legal and regulatory requirements. The Board also receives and assesses
information regarding the services provided to the Fund by certain
unaffiliated service providers.

     At various times throughout the year, the Board also considers a range of
information in connection with its oversight of the services provided by the
Investment Adviser and its affiliates. Among the matters considered are: (a)
fees (in addition to management fees) paid to the Investment Adviser and its
affiliates by the Fund, including fees associated with the auction market
preferred stock; (b) Fund operating expenses paid to third parties; (c) the
resources devoted to and compliance reports relating to the Fund's investment
objective, policies and restrictions, and its compliance with its Code of
Ethics and the Investment Adviser's compliance policies and procedures; and
(d) the nature, cost and character of non-investment management services
provided by the Investment Adviser and its affiliates.

     The Board believes that the Investment Adviser is one of the most
experienced global asset management firms and considers the overall services
provided by the Investment Adviser to be generally of high quality. The Board
also believes 


                                      29



that the Investment Adviser is financially sound and well managed and notes
that the Investment Adviser is affiliated with one of America's largest
financial firms. The Board works closely with the Investment Adviser in
overseeing the Investment Adviser's efforts to achieve good performance. As
part of this effort, the Board discusses portfolio manager effectiveness and,
when performance is not satisfactory, discusses with the Investment Adviser
taking steps such as changing investment personnel.

Annual Consideration of Approval by the Board of Directors

     In the period prior to the Board meeting to consider renewal of the
Investment Advisory Agreement, the Board requests and receives materials
specifically relating to the Fund's Investment Advisory Agreement. These
materials include (a) information compiled by Lipper Inc. ("Lipper") on the
fees and expenses and the investment performance of the Fund as compared to a
comparable group of funds as classified by Lipper; (b) information comparing
market price with its net asset value per share; (c) a discussion by the
Fund's portfolio management team on investment strategies used by the Fund
during its most recent fiscal year; and (d) information on the profitability
to the Investment Adviser and its affiliates of the Investment Advisory
Agreement and other relationships with the Fund. The Board also considers
other matters it deems important to the approval process such as services
related to the valuation and pricing of Fund portfolio holdings, information
related to the status of the Fund's managed dividend program, allocation of
Fund brokerage fees, the Fund's portfolio turnover statistics, and direct and
indirect benefits to the Investment Adviser and its affiliates from their
relationship with the Fund.

Certain Specific Renewal Data

     In connection with the most recent renewal of the Fund's Investment
Advisory Agreement, the independent Directors' and Board's review included the
following:

     Services Provided by the Investment Adviser. The Board reviewed the
nature, extent and quality of services provided by the Investment Adviser,
including the investment advisory services and the resulting performance of
the Fund. The Board focused primarily on the Investment Adviser's investment
advisory services and the Fund's investment performance, having concluded that
the other services provided to the Fund by the Investment Adviser were
satisfactory. The Board compared Fund performance - both including and
excluding the effects of the Fund's fees and expenses - to the performance of
a comparable group of funds, and the performance of a relevant index or
combination of indices. While the Board reviews performance data at least
quarterly, consistent with the Investment Adviser's investment goals, the
Board attaches more importance to performance over relatively long periods of
time, typically three to five years. The Fund's performance after fees and
expenses ranked in the second quartile for the three year period ended October
31, 2003, and in the third quartile for the one and five year periods ended
October 31, 2003. Considering these factors, the Board concluded that the
Fund's performance supported the continuation of the Investment Advisory
Agreement.

     The Investment Adviser's Personnel and Investment Process. The Board
reviews at least annually the Fund's investment objectives and strategies. The
Board discusses with senior management of the Investment Adviser responsible
for investment operations and the senior management of the Investment
Adviser's municipal investing group the strategies being used to achieve the
stated objectives. Among other things, the Board considers the size, education
and experience of the Investment Adviser's investment staff, its use of
technology, and the Investment Adviser's approach to training and retaining
portfolio managers and other research, advisory and management personnel. The
Board also reviews the Investment Adviser's compensation policies and
practices with respect to the Fund's portfolio managers. The Board noted that
the Manager has over twenty-five years experience investing in the types of
investments used by Fund and that Mr. O'Connor, the Fund's portfolio manager,
has over ten years' experience investing in tax exempt fixed income
securities. The Board noted that the Manager and the portfolio manager have a
high level of expertise in managing the types of investments used by the Fund
and concluded that the Fund benefits, and should continue to benefit, from
that expertise; moreover the Investment Adviser and its investment staff have
extensive experience in analyzing and managing the types of investments used
by the Fund. The Board concluded that the Fund benefits from that expertise.

     Management Fees and Other Expenses. The Board reviews the Fund's
contractual management fee rate and actual management fee rate (including
applicable fee waivers) as a percentage of total assets at common asset levels
- the actual rate includes advisory and administrative service fees and the
effects of any fee waivers - compared to the other funds in its Lipper
category. The Board considered information regarding fee waivers provided by
such other funds. It also compares the Fund's total expenses to those of
other, comparable funds. The Board did not consider the services provided to
and the 


                                      30



fees charged by the Investment Adviser to other types of clients with similar
investment mandates because the Investment Adviser advised the Board that it
had no comparable investment mandates from its institutional clients. The
Board noted that the Fund's contractual management fee rate was equal to the
median of its peer group. The Fund's actual management fee rate was higher
than the median. The Board concluded that the Fund's management fee was
reasonable as compared to those of other, comparable funds assuming the waiver
of fees remained in place and as a result the Board determined to review the
comparability of the management fee at its August 2005 meeting.

     Profitability. The Board considers the cost of the services provided to
the Fund by the Investment Adviser, and the Investment Adviser's and its
affiliates' profits in relating to the management and distribution of the Fund
and the MLIM/FAM-advised funds. As part of its analysis, the Board reviewed
the Investment Adviser's methodology in allocating its costs to the management
of the Fund and concluded that there was a reasonable basis for the
allocation. The Board believes the Investment Adviser's profits are reasonable
in relation to the nature and quality of services provided.

     Economies of Scale. The Board noted that because the Fund is a closed-end
fund and assets will not increase significantly, no economies of scale are
realized.

Conclusion

     After the independent Directors deliberated in executive session, the
entire Board, including all of the independent Directors, approved the renewal
of the existing Investment Advisory Agreement until the August 2005 meeting of
the Board, concluding that the advisory fee was reasonable in relation to the
services provided and that a contract renewal was in the best interests of the
shareholders.

Portfolio Manager Information

     The Fund is managed by Walter C. O'Connor.

Other Funds and Accounts Managed by Portfolio Manager as of October 31, 2004





                                      Number of Other Accounts Managed          Number of Accounts and Assets for Which
                                         and Assets by Account Type                Advisory Fee is Performance-Based
                                 -------------------------------------------  ---------------------------------------------
                                                   Other                                         Other
                                   Registered      Pooled                        Registered      Pooled        
 Name of Investment Adviser and    Investment    Investment      Other           Investment    Investment      Other
       Portfolio Manager           Companies      Vehicles      accounts         Companies      Vehicles      accounts
-------------------------------- -------------- ------------- --------------  --------------  -------------  --------------
                                                                                            
Fund Asset Management L.P.
--------------------------
Walter C. O'Connor



     Fund Ownership

     The following table sets forth the dollar range of equity securities of
the Fund beneficially owned by the portfolio manager(s) as of the date of this
prospectus.

               Portfolio Manager                     Dollar Range
               ----------------------------  ---------------------------

               Walter C. O'Connor

Portfolio Manager Compensation

     Portfolio Manager Compensation

     The Portfolio Manager Compensation Program of MLIM and its affiliates,
including the Investment Adviser, is critical to MLIM's ability to attract and
retain the most talented asset management professionals. This program ensures
that compensation is aligned with maximizing investment returns and it
provides a competitive pay opportunity for competitive performance.


                                      31



     Compensation Program

     The elements of total compensation for MLIM and its affiliates portfolio
managers are base salary, annual performance-based cash and stock compensation
(cash and stock bonus) and other benefits. MLIM has balanced these components
of pay to provide portfolio managers with a powerful incentive to achieve
consistently superior investment performance. By design, portfolio manager
compensation levels fluctuate -- both up and down -- with the relative
investment performance of the portfolios that they manage.

     Base Salary

     Under the MLIM approach, like that of many asset management firms, base
salaries represent a relatively small portion of a portfolio manager's total
compensation. This approach serves to enhance the motivational value of the
performance-based (and therefore variable) compensation elements of the
compensation program.

     Performance-Based Compensation

     MLIM believes that the best interests of investors are served by
recruiting and retaining exceptional asset management talent and managing
their compensation within a consistent and disciplined framework that
emphasizes pay for performance in the context of an intensely competitive
market for talent. To that end, MLIM and its affiliates portfolio manager
incentive compensation is based on a formula of compensation program. MLIM
formulaic portfolio manager compensation program includes: investment
performance relative to a subset of general closed-end, leveraged, municipal
debt funds over 1-, 3- and 5-year performance periods and a measure of
operational efficiency. If a portfolio manager tenure is less than 5-years,
performance periods will reflect time in position. Portfolio managers are
compensated based on products they manage. A discretionary element of
portfolio manager compensation may include consideration of: financial
results, expense control, profit margins, strategic planning and
implementation, quality of client service, market share, corporate reputation,
capital allocation, compliance and risk control, leadership, workforce
diversity, supervision, technology and innovation. MLIM and its affiliates
also consider the extent to which individuals exemplify and foster ML & Co.'s
principles of client focus, respect for the individual, teamwork, responsible
citizenship and integrity. All factors are considered collectively by MLIM
management.

     Cash Bonus

     Performance-based compensation is distributed to portfolio managers in a
combination of cash and stock. Typically, the cash bonus, when combined with
base salary, represents more than 60% of total compensation for portfolio
managers.

     Stock Bonus

     A portion of the dollar value of the total annual performance-based bonus
is paid in restricted shares of ML & Co. stock. Paying a portion of annual
bonuses in stock puts compensation earned by a portfolio manager for a given
year "at risk" based on the company's ability to sustain and improve its
performance over future periods. The ultimate value of stock bonuses is
dependent on future ML & Co. stock price performance. As such, the stock bonus
aligns each portfolio manager's financial interests with those of the ML & Co.
shareholders and encourages a balance between short-term goals and long-term
strategic objectives. Management strongly believes that providing a
significant portion of competitive performance-based compensation in stock is
in the best interests of investors and shareholders. This approach ensures
that portfolio managers participate as shareholders in both the "downside
risk" and "upside opportunity" of the company's performance. Portfolio
managers therefore have a direct incentive to protect ML & Co.'s reputation
for integrity.

     Other Compensation Programs

     Portfolio managers who meet relative investment performance and financial
management objectives during a performance year are eligible to participant in
a deferred cash program. Awards under this program are in the form of deferred
cash that may be benchmarked to a menu of MLIM mutual funds (including their
own fund) during a five-year vesting period. The deferred cash program aligns
the interests of participating portfolio managers with the investment results
of MLIM products and promotes continuity of successful performance teams.


                                      32



     Other Benefits

     Portfolio managers are also eligible to participate in broad-based plans
offered generally to employees of ML & Co. and its affiliates, including
broad-based retirement, 401(k), health, and other employee benefit plans.

Potential Material Conflicts of Interest

     Real, potential or apparent conflicts of interest may arise when a
portfolio manager has day-to-day portfolio management responsibilities with
respect to more than one fund or account, including the following:

     Certain investments may be appropriate for the Fund and also for other
clients advised by the Investment. Adviser and its affiliates, including other
client accounts managed by the Fund's portfolio management team. Investment
decisions for the Fund and other clients are made with a view to achieving
their respective investment objectives and after consideration of such factors
as their current holdings, availability of cash for investment and the size of
their investments generally. Frequently, a particular security may be bought
or sold for only one client or in different amounts and at different times for
more than one but less than all clients. Likewise, because clients of the
Investment Adviser and its affiliates may have differing investment
strategies, a particular security may be bought for one or more clients when
one or more other clients are selling the security. The investment results for
the Fund may differ from the results achieved by other clients of the
Investment Adviser and its affiliates and results among clients may differ. In
addition, purchases or sales of the same security may be made for two or more
clients on the same day. In such event, such transactions will be allocated
among the clients in a manner believed by the Investment Adviser and its
affiliates to be equitable to each. The Investment Adviser will not determine
allocations based on whether it receives a performance based fee from the
client. In some cases, the allocation procedure could have an adverse effect
on the price or amount of the securities purchased or sold by the Fund.
Purchase and sale orders for the Fund may be combined with those of other
clients of the Investment Adviser and its affiliates in the interest of
achieving the most favorable net results to the Fund.

     To the extent that the Fund's portfolio management team has
responsibilities for managing accounts in addition to the Fund, a portfolio
manager will need to divide his time and attention among relevant accounts.

     In some cases, a real, potential or apparent conflict may also arise
where (i) the Investment Adviser may have an incentive, such as a performance
based fee, in managing one account and not with respect to other accounts it
manages or (ii) where a member of the Fund's portfolio management team owns an
interest in one fund or account he or she manages and not another.

Code of Ethics

     The Fund's Board of Directors approved a Code of Ethics under Rule 17j-1
of the 1940 Act that covers the Fund and the Investment Adviser. The Code of
Ethics establishes procedures for personal investing and restricts certain
transactions. Employees subject to the Code of Ethics may invest in securities
for their personal investment accounts, including securities that may be
purchased or held by the Fund.

Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures

     The Fund's Board of Directors has delegated to the Investment Adviser
authority to vote all proxies relating to the Fund's portfolio securities. The
Investment Adviser has adopted policies and procedures ("Proxy Voting
Procedures") with respect to the voting of proxies related to the portfolio
securities held in the account of one or more of its clients, including the
Fund. Pursuant to these Proxy Voting Procedures, the Investment Adviser's
primary objective when voting proxies is to make proxy voting decisions solely
in the best interests of the Fund and its stockholders, and to act in a manner
that the Investment Adviser believes is most likely to enhance the economic
value of the securities held by the Fund. The Proxy Voting Procedures are
designed to ensure that the Investment Adviser considers the interests of its
clients, including the Fund, and not the interests of the Investment Adviser,
when voting proxies and that real (or perceived) material conflicts that may
arise between the Investment Adviser's interest and those of the Investment
Adviser's clients are properly addressed and resolved.


                                      33



     In order to implement the Proxy Voting Procedures, the Investment Adviser
has formed a Proxy Voting Committee (the "Proxy Committee"). The Proxy
Committee is comprised of the Investment Adviser's Chief Investment Officer
(the "CIO"), one or more other senior investment professionals appointed by
the CIO, portfolio managers and investment analysts appointed by the CIO and
any other personnel the CIO deems appropriate. The Proxy Committee will also
include two non-voting representatives from the Investment Adviser's Legal
department appointed by the Investment Adviser's General Counsel. The Proxy
Committee's membership shall be limited to full-time employees of the
Investment Adviser. No person with any investment banking, trading, retail
brokerage or research responsibilities for the Investment Adviser's affiliates
may serve as a member of the Proxy Committee or participate in its decision
making (except to the extent such person is asked by the Proxy Committee to
present information to the Proxy Committee, on the same basis as other
interested knowledgeable parties not affiliated with the Investment Adviser
might be asked to do so). The Proxy Committee determines how to vote the
proxies of all clients, including the Fund, that have delegated proxy voting
authority to the Investment Adviser and seeks to ensure that all votes are
consistent with the best interests of those clients and are free from
unwarranted and inappropriate influences. The Proxy Committee establishes
general proxy voting policies for the Investment Adviser and is responsible
for determining how those policies are applied to specific proxy votes, in
light of each issuer's unique structure, management, strategic options and, in
certain circumstances, probable economic and other anticipated consequences of
alternate actions. In so doing, the Proxy Committee may determine to vote a
particular proxy in a manner contrary to its generally stated policies. In
addition, the Proxy Committee will be responsible for ensuring that all
reporting and recordkeeping requirements related to proxy voting are
fulfilled.

     The Proxy Committee may determine that the subject matter of a recurring
proxy issue is not suitable for general voting policies and requires a
case-by-case determination. In such cases, the Proxy Committee may elect not
to adopt a specific voting policy applicable to that issue. The Investment
Adviser believes that certain proxy voting issues require investment analysis
- such as approval of mergers and other significant corporate transactions -
akin to investment decisions, and are, therefore, not suitable for general
guidelines. The Proxy Committee may elect to adopt a common position for the
Investment Adviser on certain proxy votes that are akin to investment
decisions, or determine to permit the portfolio manager to make individual
decisions on how best to maximize economic value for the Fund (similar to
normal buy/sell investment decisions made by such portfolio managers). While
it is expected that the Investment Adviser will generally seek to vote proxies
over which the Investment Adviser exercises voting authority in a uniform
manner for all the Investment Adviser's clients, the Proxy Committee, in
conjunction with the Fund's portfolio manager, may determine that the Fund's
specific circumstances require that its proxies be voted differently.

     To assist the Investment Adviser in voting proxies, the Proxy Committee
has retained Institutional Shareholder Services ("ISS"). ISS is an independent
adviser that specializes in providing a variety of fiduciary-level
proxy-related services to institutional investment managers, plan sponsors,
custodians, consultants, and other institutional investors. The services
provided to the Investment Adviser by ISS include in-depth research, voting
recommendations (although the Investment Adviser is not obligated to follow
such recommendations), vote execution, and recordkeeping. ISS will also assist
the Fund in fulfilling its reporting and recordkeeping obligations under the
1940 Act.

     The Investment Adviser's Proxy Voting Procedures also address special
circumstances that can arise in connection with proxy voting. For instance,
under the Proxy Voting Procedures, the Investment Adviser generally will not
seek to vote proxies related to portfolio securities that are on loan,
although it may do so under certain circumstances. In addition, the Investment
Adviser will vote proxies related to securities of foreign issuers only on a
best efforts basis and may elect not to vote at all in certain countries where
the Proxy Committee determines that the costs associated with voting generally
outweigh the benefits. The Proxy Committee may at any time override these
general policies if it determines that such action is in the best interests of
the Fund.

     From time to time, the Investment Adviser may be required to vote proxies
in respect of an issuer where an affiliate of the Investment Adviser (each, an
"Affiliate"), or a money management or other client of the Investment Adviser,
including investment companies for which the Investment Adviser provides
management advisory, administrative and/or other services (each, a "Client")
is involved. The Proxy Voting Procedures and the Investment Adviser's
adherence to those procedures are designed to address such conflicts of
interest. The Proxy Committee intends to strictly adhere to the Proxy Voting
Procedures in all proxy matters, including matters involving Affiliates and
Clients. If, however, an issue representing a non-routine matter that is
material to an Affiliate or a widely known Client is involved such that the
Proxy Committee does not reasonably believe it is able to follow its
guidelines (or if the particular proxy matter is not addressed by the
guidelines) and vote impartially, the Proxy Committee may, in its discretion
for the purposes of ensuring that an independent determination is 


                                      34



reached, retain an independent fiduciary to advise the Proxy Committee on how
to vote or to cast votes on behalf of the Investment Adviser's clients.

     In the event that the Proxy Committee determines not to retain an
independent fiduciary, or it does not follow the advice of such an independent
fiduciary, the Proxy Committee may pass the voting power to a subcommittee,
appointed by the CIO (with advice from the Secretary of the Proxy Committee),
consisting solely of Proxy Committee members selected by the CIO. The CIO
shall appoint to the subcommittee, where appropriate, only persons whose job
responsibilities do not include contact with the Client and whose job
evaluations would not be affected by the Investment Adviser's relationship
with the Client (or failure to retain such relationship). The subcommittee
shall determine whether and how to vote all proxies on behalf of the
Investment Adviser's clients or, if the proxy matter is, in their judgment,
akin to an investment decision, to defer to the applicable portfolio managers,
provided that, if the subcommittee determines to alter the Investment
Adviser's normal voting guidelines or, on matters where the Investment
Adviser's policy is case-by-case, does not follow the voting recommendation of
any proxy voting service or other independent fiduciary that may be retained
to provide research or advice to the Investment Adviser on that matter, no
proxies relating to the Client may be voted unless the Secretary, or in the
Secretary's absence, the Assistant Secretary of the Proxy Committee concurs
that the subcommittee's determination is consistent with the Investment
Adviser's fiduciary duties.

     In addition to the general principles outlined above, the Investment
Adviser has adopted voting guidelines with respect to certain recurring proxy
issues that are not expected to involve unusual circumstances. These policies
are guidelines only, and the Investment Adviser may elect to vote differently
from the recommendation set forth in a voting guideline if the Proxy Committee
determines that it is in the Fund's best interest to do so. In addition, the
guidelines may be reviewed at any time upon the request of a Proxy Committee
member and may be amended or deleted upon the vote of a majority of Proxy
Committee members present at a Proxy Committee meeting at which there is a
quorum.

     The Investment Adviser has adopted specific voting guidelines with
respect to the following proxy issues:

     o    Proposals related to the composition of the board of directors of
          issuers other than investment companies. As a general matter, the
          Proxy Committee believes that a company's board of directors (rather
          than stockholders) is most likely to have access to important,
          nonpublic information regarding a company's business and prospects,
          and is therefore best-positioned to set corporate policy and oversee
          management. The Proxy Committee, therefore, believes that the
          foundation of good corporate governance is the election of
          qualified, independent corporate directors who are likely to
          diligently represent the interests of stockholders and oversee
          management of the corporation in a manner that will seek to maximize
          stockholder value over time. In individual cases, the Proxy
          Committee may look at a nominee's number of other directorships,
          history of representing stockholder interests as a director of other
          companies or other factors, to the extent the Proxy Committee deems
          relevant.

     o    Proposals related to the selection of an issuer's independent
          auditors. As a general matter, the Proxy Committee believes that
          corporate auditors have a responsibility to represent the interests
          of stockholders and provide an independent view on the propriety of
          financial reporting decisions of corporate management. While the
          Proxy Committee will generally defer to a corporation's choice of
          auditor, in individual cases, the Proxy Committee may look at an
          auditors' history of representing stockholder interests as auditor
          of other companies, to the extent the Proxy Committee deems
          relevant.

     o    Proposals related to management compensation and employee benefits.
          As a general matter, the Proxy Committee favors disclosure of an
          issuer's compensation and benefit policies and opposes excessive
          compensation, but believes that compensation matters are normally
          best determined by an issuer's board of directors, rather than
          stockholders. Proposals to "micro-manage" an issuer's compensation
          practices or to set arbitrary restrictions on compensation or
          benefits will, therefore, generally not be supported.

     o    Proposals related to requests, principally from management, for
          approval of amendments that would alter an issuer's capital
          structure. As a general matter, the Proxy Committee will support
          requests that enhance the rights of common stockholders and oppose
          requests that appear to be unreasonably dilutive.


                                      35



     o    Proposals related to requests for approval of amendments to an
          issuer's charter or by-laws. As a general matter, the Proxy
          Committee opposes poison pill provisions.

     o    Routine proposals related to requests regarding the formalities of
          corporate meetings.

     o    Proposals related to proxy issues associated solely with holdings of
          investment company shares. As with other types of companies, the
          Proxy Committee believes that a fund's board of directors (rather
          than its stockholders) is best-positioned to set fund policy and
          oversee management. However, the Proxy Committee opposes granting
          boards of directors authority over certain matters, such as changes
          to a fund's investment objective, that the Investment Company Act
          envisions will be approved directly by stockholders.

     o    Proposals related to limiting corporate conduct in some manner that
          relates to the stockholder's environmental or social concerns. The
          Proxy Committee generally believes that annual stockholder meetings
          are inappropriate forums for discussion of larger social issues, and
          opposes stockholder resolutions "micro-managing" corporate conduct
          or requesting release of information that would not help a
          stockholder evaluate an investment in the corporation as an economic
          matter. While the Proxy Committee is generally supportive of
          proposals to require corporate disclosure of matters that seem
          relevant and material to the economic interests of stockholders, the
          Proxy Committee is generally not supportive of proposals to require
          disclosure of corporate matters for other purposes.

     Information about how the Fund voted proxies relating to securities held
by the Fund's portfolio during the most recent 12 month period ended June 30
is available without charge (i) at www.mutualfunds.ml.com, and (ii) the
Commission's website at www.sec.gov.

                            PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

     Subject to policies established by the Board of Directors, the Investment
Adviser is primarily responsible for the execution of the Fund's portfolio
transactions and the allocation of brokerage. The Fund has no obligation to
deal with any dealer or group of dealers in the execution of transactions in
portfolio securities of the Fund. Where possible, the Fund deals directly with
the dealers who make a market in the securities involved except in those
circumstances where better prices and execution are available elsewhere. It is
the policy of the Fund to obtain the best results in conducting portfolio
transactions for the Fund, taking into account such factors as price
(including the applicable dealer spread or commission), the size, type and
difficulty of the transaction involved, the firm's general execution and
operations facilities and the firm's risk in positioning the securities
involved. The cost of portfolio securities transactions of the Fund primarily
consists of dealer or underwriter spreads and brokerage commissions. While
reasonable competitive spreads or commissions are sought, the Fund will not
necessarily be paying the lowest spread or commission available on any
particular transaction.

     Subject to obtaining the best net results, dealers who provide
supplemental investment research (such as quantitative and modeling
information assessments and statistical data and provide other similar
services) to the Investment Adviser may receive orders for transactions by the
Fund. Information so received will be in addition to and not in lieu of the
services required to be performed by the Investment Adviser under the
Investment Advisory Agreement and the expense of the Investment Adviser will
not necessarily be reduced as a result of the receipt of such supplemental
information. Supplemental investment research obtained from such dealers might
be used by the Investment Adviser in servicing all of its accounts and such
research might not be used by the Investment Adviser in connection with the
Fund.

     The Fund invests in securities traded in the over-the-counter markets,
and the Fund intends to deal directly with dealers who make markets in the
securities involved, except in those circumstances where better execution is
available elsewhere. Under the 1940 Act, except as permitted by exemptive
order, persons affiliated with the Fund, including Merrill Lynch, are
prohibited from dealing with the Fund as principal in the purchase and sale of
securities. Since transactions in the over-the-counter market usually involve
transactions with dealers acting as principals for their own accounts, the
Fund does not deal with Merrill Lynch and its affiliates in connection with
such principal transactions except that, pursuant to exemptive orders obtained
by the Investment Adviser, the Fund may engage in principal transactions with
Merrill Lynch in high quality, short term, tax exempt securities. See
"Investment Restrictions." However, affiliated persons of the Fund, including
Merrill Lynch, may serve as its brokers in certain over-the-counter
transactions conducted on an agency basis. In addition, the Fund 


                                      36



has received an exemptive order, under which it may purchase investment grade
Municipal Bonds through group orders from an underwriting syndicate of which
Merrill Lynch is a member subject to conditions set forth in such order (the
"Group Order Exemptive Order"). A group order is an order for securities held
in an underwriting syndicate for the account of all members of the syndicate,
and in proportion to their respective participation in the syndicate.

     The Fund also may purchase tax exempt debt instruments in individually
negotiated transactions with the issuers. Because an active trading market may
not exist for such securities, the prices that the Fund may pay for these
securities or receive on their resale may be lower than that for similar
securities with a more liquid market.

     Certain court decisions have raised questions as to the extent to which
investment companies should seek exemptions under the 1940 Act in order to
seek to recapture underwriting and dealer spreads from affiliated entities.
The Fund's Board of Directors has considered all factors deemed relevant and
has made a determination not to seek such recapture at this time. The Fund's
Board of Directors will reconsider this matter from time to time.

     Securities held by the Fund may also be held by, or be appropriate
investments for, other funds or investment advisory clients for which the
Investment Adviser or its affiliates act as an adviser. Because of different
investment objectives or other factors, a particular security may be bought
for an advisory client when other clients are selling the same security. If
purchases or sales of securities by the Investment Adviser for the Fund or
other funds for which it acts as investment adviser or for other advisory
clients arise for consideration at or about the same time, transactions in
such securities will be made, insofar as feasible, for the respective funds
and clients in a manner deemed equitable to all. Transactions effected by the
Investment Adviser (or its affiliates) on behalf of more than one of its
clients during the same period may increase the demand for securities being
purchased or the supply of securities being sold, causing an adverse effect on
price.

     Section 11(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 generally prohibits
members of the U.S. national securities exchanges from executing exchange
transactions for their affiliates and institutional accounts that they manage
unless the member (i) has obtained prior express authorization from the
account to effect such transactions, (ii) at least annually furnishes the
account with a statement setting forth the aggregate compensation received by
the member in effecting such transactions, and (iii) complies with any rules
the Commission has prescribed with respect to the requirements of clauses (i)
and (ii). To the extent Section 11(a) would apply to Merrill Lynch acting as a
broker for the Fund in any of its portfolio transactions executed on any such
securities exchange of which it is a member, appropriate consents have been
obtained from the Fund and annual statements as to aggregate compensation will
be provided to the Fund.

Portfolio Turnover

     Generally, the Fund does not purchase securities for short term trading
profits. However, the Fund may dispose of securities without regard to the
time they have been held when such actions, for defensive or other reasons,
appear advisable to the Investment Adviser. While it is not possible to
predict turnover rates with any certainty, at present it is anticipated that
the Fund's annual portfolio turnover rate, under normal circumstances, should
be less than 100%. (The portfolio turnover rate is calculated by dividing the
lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for the particular fiscal
year by the monthly average of the value of the portfolio securities owned by
the Fund during the particular fiscal year. For purposes of determining this
rate, all securities whose maturities at the time of acquisition are one year
or less are excluded.) A high portfolio turnover rate results in greater
transaction costs, which are borne directly by the Fund and may have certain
tax consequences for stockholders.

     For the six months ended April 30, 2005 and the fiscal years ended
October 31, 2004 and 2003, the Fund's portfolio turnover rates were 19.99%,
68.05% and 52.17%, respectively.

                                     TAXES

     The Fund has elected to qualify for the special tax treatment afforded
regulated investment companies ("RICs") under the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended (the "Code"). As long as it so qualifies, in any taxable year
in which it distributes at least 90% of its taxable net income and 90% of its
tax exempt net income (see below), the Fund (but not its stockholders) will
not be subject to Federal income tax to the extent that it distributes its net
investment income and net realized capital gains. The Fund intends to
distribute substantially all of such income. If, in any taxable year, the Fund
fails to 


                                      37



qualify as a RIC under the Code, it would be taxed in the same manner as an
ordinary corporation and all distributions from earnings and profits (as
determined under U.S. Federal income tax principles) to its stockholders would
be taxable as ordinary dividend income eligible for the maximum 15% tax rate
for non-corporate shareholders and the dividends-received deduction for
corporate shareholders. However, the Fund's distributions derived from income
on tax exempt obligations, as defined herein, would no longer qualify for
treatment as exempt interest.

     The Code requires a RIC to pay a nondeductible 4% excise tax to the
extent the RIC does not distribute, during each calendar year, 98% of its
ordinary income, determined on a calendar year basis, and 98% of its capital
gains, determined, in general, on an October 31 year-end, plus certain
undistributed amounts from previous years. The required distributions,
however, are based only on the taxable income of a RIC. The excise tax,
therefore, generally will not apply to the tax exempt income of a RIC, such as
the Fund, that pays exempt-interest dividends.

     The Internal Revenue Service (the "IRS"), in a revenue ruling, held that
certain auction rate preferred stock would be treated as stock for Federal
income tax purposes. The terms of the AMPS are substantially similar, but not
identical, to the auction rate preferred stock discussed in the revenue
ruling, and in the opinion of Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP, counsel to the
Fund, the shares of AMPS will constitute stock of the Fund and distributions
with respect to shares of AMPS (other than distributions in redemption of
shares of AMPS subject to Section 302(b) of the Code) will constitute
dividends to the extent of the Fund's current and accumulated earnings and
profits as calculated for Federal income tax purposes. Nevertheless, it is
possible that the IRS might take a contrary position, asserting, for example,
that the shares of AMPS constitute debt of the Fund. If this position were
upheld, the discussion of the treatment of distributions below would not
apply. Instead, distributions by the Fund to holders of shares of AMPS would
constitute taxable interest income, whether or not they exceeded the earnings
and profits of the Fund, would be included in full in the income of the
recipient and would be taxed as ordinary income. Counsel believes that such a
position, if asserted by the IRS, would be unlikely to prevail.

     The Fund will only purchase a Municipal Bond or Non-Municipal Tax-Exempt
Security if it is accompanied by an opinion of counsel to the issuer, which is
delivered on the date of issuance of the security, that the interest paid on
such security is excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes
(i.e., "tax-exempt") and is exempt from California income taxes, if
applicable. The Fund intends to qualify to pay "exempt-interest dividends" as
defined in Section 852(b)(5) of the Code. Under such section if, at the close
of each quarter of its taxable year, at least 50% of the value of its total
assets consists of obligations that pay interest which is excludable from
gross income for Federal income tax purposes ("tax exempt obligations") under
Section 103(a) of the Code (relating generally to obligations of a state or
local governmental unit), the Fund shall be qualified to pay exempt-interest
dividends to its stockholders. Exempt-interest dividends are dividends or any
part thereof paid by the Fund that are attributable to interest on tax exempt
obligations and designated by the Fund as exempt-interest dividends in a
written notice mailed to the Fund's stockholders within 60 days after the
close of its taxable year. To the extent that the dividends distributed to the
Fund's stockholders are derived from interest income exempt from tax under
Code Section 103(a) and are properly designated as exempt-interest dividends,
they will be excludable from a stockholder's gross income for Federal tax
purposes. Exempt-interest dividends are included, however, in determining the
portion, if any, of a person's social security and railroad retirement
benefits subject to Federal income taxes. Each stockholder is advised to
consult a tax adviser with respect to whether exempt-interest dividends retain
the exclusion under Code Section 103(a) if such stockholder would be treated
as a "substantial user" or "related person" under Code Section 147(a) with
respect to property financed with the proceeds of an issue of "industrial
development bonds" or "private activity bonds," if any, held by the Fund.

     To the extent that the Fund's distributions are derived from interest on
its taxable investments or from an excess of net short-term capital gains over
net long-term capital losses ("ordinary income dividends"), such distributions
are considered ordinary income for Federal income tax purposes. Distributions
by the Fund, whether from exempt-interest income, ordinary income or capital
gains, are not eligible for the dividends received deduction allowed to
corporations under the Code or the reduced tax rates available to
non-corporate shareholders. Distributions, if any, from an excess of net
long-term capital gains over net short-term capital losses derived from the
sale of securities or from certain transactions in futures or options and
swaps ("capital gain dividends") are taxable as long-term capital gains for
Federal income tax purposes, regardless of the length of time the stockholder
has owned Fund shares and, for California income tax purposes, are treated as
capital gains that are taxed at ordinary income tax rates. Generally not later
than 60 days after the close of its taxable year, the Fund will provide its
stockholders with a written notice designating the amounts of any
exempt-interest dividends and capital gain dividends. If the Fund pays a
dividend in January which was declared in the previous October, November or
December to stockholders of record on a specified date in one of such months,
then such dividend will be treated for tax purposes as being paid by the Fund
and received by its stockholders on December 31 of the year in which such
dividend was declared.


                                      38



     All or a portion of the Fund's gain from the sale or redemption of tax
exempt obligations purchased at a market discount will be treated for Federal
income tax purposes as ordinary income rather than capital gain. This rule may
increase the amount of ordinary income dividends received by stockholders.
Distributions in excess of the Fund's earnings and profits will first reduce
the adjusted tax basis of a holder's shares and, after such adjusted tax basis
is reduced to zero, will constitute capital gains to such holder (assuming the
shares are held as a capital asset). The sale or exchange of AMPS could result
in capital gain or loss to holders of AMPS who hold their shares as capital
assets. Generally, a stockholder's gain or loss will be long-term capital gain
or loss if the shares have been held for more than one year. Any loss upon the
sale or exchange of Fund shares held for six months or less will be disallowed
to the extent of any exempt-interest dividends received by the stockholder. In
addition, any such loss that is not disallowed under the rule stated above
will be treated as long-term capital loss to the extent of any capital gain
dividends received by the stockholder.

     If you borrow money to buy the Fund's AMPS, you may not be permitted to
deduct the interest on that loan. Under Federal income tax rules, the Fund's
AMPS may be treated as having been bought with borrowed money even if the
purchase cannot be traced directly to borrowed money. Stockholders should
consult their own tax advisers regarding the impact of an investment in AMPS
upon the deductibility of interest payable by the stockholder.

     The IRS has taken the position in a revenue ruling that if a RIC has two
or more classes of shares, it may designate distributions made to each class
in any year as consisting of no more than such class's proportionate share of
particular types of income, including exempt-interest income and net long-term
capital gains. A class's proportionate share of a particular type of income is
determined according to the percentage of total dividends paid by the RIC
during such year that was paid to such class. Thus, the Fund is required to
allocate a portion of its net capital gain and other taxable income to the
shares of AMPS and Other AMPS of each series. Accordingly, the Fund intends to
designate dividends paid to the Series F AMPS and Other AMPS as tax exempt
interest, capital gains or other taxable income, as applicable, in proportion
to each series' share of total dividends paid during the year. The Fund may
notify the Auction Agent of the amount of any net capital gain and other
taxable income to be included in any dividend on shares of AMPS prior to the
Auction establishing the Applicable Rate for such dividend. The Fund also may
include such income in a dividend on shares of AMPS without giving advance
notice thereof if it increases the dividend by an additional amount calculated
as if such income were a Retroactive Taxable Allocation and the additional
amount were an Additional Dividend, provided that the Fund will notify the
Auction Agent of the additional amounts to be included in such dividend prior
to the applicable Dividend Payment Date. See "The Auction--Auction
Procedures--Auction Date; Advance Notice of Allocation of Taxable Income;
Inclusion of Taxable Income in Dividends" in the prospectus. Except for the
portion of any dividend that it informs the Auction Agent will be treated as
capital gains or other taxable income, the Fund anticipates that the dividends
paid on the shares of AMPS will constitute exempt-interest dividends. The
amount of net capital gain and ordinary income allocable to shares of AMPS
(the "taxable distribution") will depend upon the amount of such gains and
income realized by the Fund and the total dividends paid by the Fund on shares
of common stock and shares of the series of AMPS during a taxable year, but
the taxable distribution generally is not expected to be significant.

     If the Fund makes a Retroactive Taxable Allocation, it will pay
Additional Dividends to holders of AMPS who are subject to the Retroactive
Taxable Allocation. See "Description of AMPS--Dividends--Additional Dividends"
in the prospectus. The Federal income tax consequences of Additional Dividends
under existing law are uncertain. The Fund intends to treat a holder as
receiving a dividend distribution in the amount of any Additional Dividend
only as and when such Additional Dividend is paid. An Additional Dividend
generally will be designated by the Fund as an exempt-interest dividend except
as otherwise required by applicable law. However, the IRS may assert that all
or part of an Additional Dividend is a taxable dividend either in the taxable
year for which the Retroactive Taxable Allocation is made or in the taxable
year in which the Additional Dividend is paid.

     In the opinion of Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP, counsel to the Fund,
under current law the manner in which the Fund intends to allocate items of
tax exempt income, net capital gain and other taxable income among shares of
common stock and shares of AMPS will be respected for Federal income tax
purposes. However, the tax treatment of Additional Dividends may affect the
Fund's calculation of each class's allocable share of capital gains and other
taxable income. In addition, there is currently no direct guidance from the
IRS or other sources specifically addressing whether the Fund's method for
allocating tax exempt income, net capital gain and other taxable income, if
any, among shares of common stock and shares of AMPS will be respected for
Federal income tax purposes, and it is possible that the IRS could disagree
with counsel's opinion and attempt to reallocate the Fund's net capital gain
or other taxable income. In the event of a reallocation, some of the dividends
identified by the Fund as exempt-interest dividends to holders of shares of
AMPS may be recharacterized as additional capital gains or other taxable
income. In the event of such recharacterization, the Fund would 


                                      39



not be required to make payments to such stockholders to offset the tax effect
of such reallocation. In addition, a reallocation may cause the Fund to be
liable for income tax and excise tax on any reallocated taxable income. Sidley
Austin Brown & Wood LLP has advised the Fund that, in its opinion, if the IRS
were to challenge in court the Fund's allocations of income and gain, the IRS
would be unlikely to prevail. A holder should be aware, however, that the
opinion of Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP represents only its best legal
judgment and is not binding on the IRS or the courts.

     The Code subjects interest received on certain otherwise tax exempt
securities to a Federal alternative minimum tax. The Federal alternative
minimum tax applies to interest received on PABs issued after August 7, 1986.
PABs are bonds that, although tax exempt, are used for purposes other than
those performed by governmental units and that benefit non-governmental
entities (e.g., bonds used for industrial development or housing purposes).
Income received on such bonds is classified as an item of "tax preference,"
which could subject certain investors in such bonds, including stockholders of
the Fund, to an increased Federal alternative minimum tax. The Fund intends to
purchase such PABs and will report to stockholders at the close of the
calendar year-end the portion of its dividends declared during the year which
constitutes an item of tax preference for Federal alternative minimum tax
purposes. The Code further provides that corporations are subject to a Federal
alternative minimum tax based, in part, on certain differences between taxable
income as adjusted for other tax preferences and the corporation's "adjusted
current earnings," which more closely reflect a corporation's economic income.
Because an exempt-interest dividend paid by the Fund will be included in
adjusted current earnings, a corporate stockholder may be required to pay a
Federal alternative minimum tax on exempt-interest dividends paid by the Fund.

     The Fund may invest in instruments the return on which includes
nontraditional features such as indexed principal or interest payments
("nontraditional instruments"). These instruments may be subject to special
tax rules under which the Fund may be required to accrue and distribute income
before amounts due under the obligations are paid. In addition, it is possible
that all or a portion of the interest payments on such nontraditional
instruments could be recharacterized as taxable ordinary income.

     The Fund may engage in interest rate and credit default swaps. The
Federal income tax rules governing the taxation of swaps are not entirely
clear and may require the Fund to treat payments received under such
arrangements as ordinary income and to amortize payments under certain
circumstances. Because payments received by the Fund in connection with swap
transactions will be taxable rather than tax exempt, they may result in
increased taxable distributions to stockholders.

     Certain transactions entered into by the Fund are subject to complex
Federal income tax provisions that may, among other things, (a) affect the
character of gains and losses realized, (b) disallow, suspend or otherwise
limit the allowance of certain losses or deductions, and (c) accelerate the
recognition of income. Operation of these tax rules could, therefore, affect
the character, amount and timing of distributions and result in increased
taxable distributions to stockholders. Special tax rules also will require the
Fund to mark-to-market certain types of positions in its portfolio (i.e.,
treat them as sold on the last day of the taxable year), and may result in the
recognition of income without a corresponding receipt of cash. The Fund
intends to monitor its transactions, make appropriate tax elections and make
appropriate entries in its books and records to lessen the effect of these tax
rules and avoid any possible disqualification for the special treatment
afforded RICs under the Code.

     The Fund's ability to distribute dividends exempt from Federal income tax
depends on the exclusion from gross income of the interest income that it
receives on the securities in which it invests. The Fund will only purchase
Municipal Bonds and Non-Municipal Tax Exempt Securities if they are
accompanied by an opinion of counsel to the issuer, which is delivered on the
date of issuance of that security, that interest on such securities is
excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes and exempt from
California income taxes, if applicable (the "tax exemption opinion").

     Events occurring after the date of issuance of the Municipal Bonds and
Non-Municipal Tax Exempt Securities in which the Fund invests, however, may
cause the interest on such securities to be includable in gross income for
Federal income tax purposes. For example, the Code establishes certain
requirements, such as restrictions as to the investment of the proceeds of the
issue, limitations as to the use of proceeds of such issue and the property
financed by such proceeds, and the payment of certain excess earnings to the
Federal government, that must be met after the issuance of securities for
interest on such securities to remain excludable from gross income for Federal
income tax purposes. The issuers and the conduit borrowers of the Municipal
Bonds or Non-Municipal Tax Exempt Securities generally covenant to comply with
such requirements, and the tax exemption opinion generally assumes continuing
compliance with such requirements. Failure to comply with these continuing
requirements, however, may cause the interest on such securities to be
includable in gross income for Federal income tax purposes retroactive to
their date of issue.


                                      40



     In addition, the IRS has an ongoing enforcement program that involves the
audit of tax exempt bonds to determine whether an issue of bonds satisfies all
of the requirements that must be met for interest on such bonds to be
excludable from gross income for Federal income tax purposes. From time to
time, some of the securities held by the Fund may be the subject of such an
audit by the IRS, and the IRS may determine that the interest on such
securities is includable in gross income for Federal income tax purposes,
either because the IRS has taken a legal position adverse to the conclusion
reached by counsel to the issuer in the tax exemption opinion or as a result
of an action taken or not taken after the date of issue of such obligation. If
a Municipal Bond or Non-Municipal Tax Exempt Security in which the Fund
invests is determined to pay taxable interest subsequent to the Fund's
acquisition of such security, the IRS may demand that the Fund pay Federal
income taxes on the affected interest income. If the Fund agrees to do so, the
Fund's yield on its common stock could be adversely affected. A determination
that interest on a security held by the Fund is includable in gross income for
Federal income tax purposes retroactively to its date of issue may, likewise,
cause a portion of prior distributions received by stockholders, including
holders of AMPS, to be taxable to those stockholders in the year of receipt.
The Fund will not pay an Additional Dividend to a holder of AMPS under these
circumstances.

     If at any time when shares of AMPS are outstanding the Fund does not meet
the asset coverage requirements of the 1940 Act, the Fund will be required to
suspend distributions to holders of common stock until the asset coverage is
restored. See "Description of AMPS--Dividends--Restrictions on Dividends and
Other Payments" and in the prospectus. This may prevent the Fund from
distributing at least 90% of its net income, and may, therefore, jeopardize
the Fund's qualification for taxation as a RIC. If the Fund were to fail to
qualify as a RIC, some or all of the distributions paid by the Fund would be
fully taxable for Federal income tax purposes. Upon any failure to meet the
asset coverage requirements of the 1940 Act, the Fund, in its sole discretion,
may, and under certain circumstances will be required to, redeem shares of
AMPS in order to maintain or restore the requisite asset coverage and avoid
the adverse consequences to the Fund and its stockholders of failing to
qualify as a RIC. See "Description of AMPS--Redemption" herein and in the
prospectus. There can be no assurance, however, that any such action would
achieve such objectives.

     As noted above, the Fund must distribute annually at least 90% of its net
taxable and tax exempt interest income. A distribution will only be counted
for this purpose if it qualifies for the dividends paid deduction under the
Code. Additional preferred stock that the Fund has authority to issue may
raise an issue as to whether distributions on such preferred stock are
"preferential" under the Code and therefore not eligible for the dividends
paid deduction. The Fund intends to issue preferred stock that counsel advises
will not result in the payment of a preferential dividend. If the Fund
ultimately relies on a legal opinion with regard to such preferred stock,
there is no assurance that the IRS would agree that dividends on the preferred
stock are not preferential. If the IRS successfully disallowed the dividends
paid deduction for dividends on the preferred stock, the Fund could lose the
benefit of the special treatment afforded RICs under the Code. In this case,
dividends paid by the Fund would not be exempt from Federal income taxes.
Additionally, the Fund would be subject to Federal income tax, including the
alternative minimum tax.

     Under certain Code provisions, some stockholders may be subject to a
withholding tax on ordinary income dividends, capital gain dividends and
redemption payments ("backup withholding"). Backup withholding may also be
required on distributions paid by the Fund, unless it reasonably estimates
that at least 95% of its distributions during the taxable year are comprised
of exempt-interest dividends. Generally, stockholders subject to backup
withholding will be those for whom no certified taxpayer identification number
is on file with the Fund or who, to the Fund's knowledge, have furnished an
incorrect number. When establishing an account, an investor must certify under
penalty of perjury that such number is correct and that such investor is not
otherwise subject to backup withholding. Backup withholding is not an
additional tax. Any amount withheld generally may be allowed as a refund or a
credit against a stockholder's Federal income tax liability, provided that the
required information is timely forwarded to the IRS.

     The Fund is generally not an appropriate investment for retirement plans,
other entities that are not subject to tax and foreign stockholders.

State and Local Taxes

     The exemption from Federal income tax for exempt-interest dividends, and
from Federal income tax and California income taxes for California
exempt-interest distributions derived from interest or gains on California
Municipal Bonds (if certain requirements are met), does not necessarily result
in an exemption for such distributions under the income or other tax laws of
any state or local taxing authority. Stockholders are advised to consult their
own tax advisers concerning state and local matters.


                                      41



     In some states, the portion of any exempt-interest dividend that is
derived from interest received by a RIC on its holdings of that state's
securities and its political subdivisions and instrumentalities is exempt from
that state's income tax. Therefore, the Fund will report annually to its
stockholders the percentage of interest income earned by the Fund during the
preceding year on tax exempt obligations indicating, on a state-by-state
basis, the source of such income.

     The foregoing is a general and abbreviated summary of the applicable
provisions of the Code and Treasury Regulations presently in effect. For the
complete provisions, reference should be made to the pertinent Code sections
and the Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder. The Code and the Treasury
Regulations are subject to change by legislative, judicial or administrative
action either prospectively or retroactively.

     Stockholders are urged to consult their tax advisers regarding specific
questions as to Federal, state, local or foreign taxes.

                             CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

     The investment activities of the Investment Adviser, Merrill Lynch and
other affiliates of Merrill Lynch for their own accounts and other accounts
they manage may give rise to conflicts of interest that could disadvantage the
Fund and its stockholders. The Investment Adviser has adopted written policies
and procedures that, collectively, address investment activities of, and other
arrangements involving, the Investment Adviser that may give rise to such
conflicts of interest.

     Merrill Lynch, as a diversified global financial services firm, is
involved with a broad spectrum of financial services and asset management
activities. Certain of Merrill Lynch's affiliates that are not service
providers to the Fund engage in a broad range of activities over which the
Investment Adviser has no control or ability to exercise oversight. Although
there are no formal written policies and procedures that cover all potential
or actual conflicts of interest, Merrill Lynch has established a number of
committees and related policies and procedures that are designed to identify,
analyze and/or resolve such conflicts of interest. No assurance can be given
that Merrill Lynch will be able to identify each conflict of interest or that
each identified conflict of interest will be resolved in favor of the Fund.

     Merrill Lynch and its affiliates, including, without limitation, the
Investment Adviser and its advisory affiliates may have proprietary interests
in, and may manage or advise with respect to, accounts or funds (including
separate accounts and other funds and collective investment vehicles) that
have investment objectives similar to those of the Fund and/or that engage in
transactions in the same types of securities and instruments as the Fund.
Merrill Lynch and its affiliates are also major participants in, among others,
the options, swaps, and equities markets, in each case both on a proprietary
basis and for the accounts of customers. As such, Merrill Lynch and its
affiliates are actively engaged in transactions in the same securities and
instruments in which the Fund invests. Such activities could affect the prices
and availability of the securities and instruments in which the Fund invests,
which could have an adverse impact on the Fund's performance. Such
transactions, particularly in respect of most proprietary accounts or customer
accounts, will be executed independently of the Fund's transactions and thus
at prices or rates that may be more or less favorable than those obtained by
the Fund.

     The results of the Fund's investment activities may differ significantly
from the results achieved by the Investment Adviser and its affiliates for its
proprietary accounts or other accounts (including investment companies or
collective investment vehicles) managed or advised by the Investment Adviser.
It is possible that the Investment Adviser and its affiliates and such other
accounts will achieve investment results that are substantially more or less
favorable than the results achieved by the Fund. Moreover, it is possible that
the Fund will sustain losses during periods in which the Investment Adviser
and its affiliates achieve significant profits on their trading for
proprietary or other accounts. The opposite result is also possible.

     From time to time, the Fund's activities may also be restricted because
of regulatory restrictions applicable to Merrill Lynch and its affiliates,
and/or their internal policies designed to comply with such restrictions. As a
result, there may be periods, for example, when the Investment Adviser, and/or
its affiliates, will not initiate or recommend certain types of transactions
in certain securities or instruments with respect to which the Investment
Adviser and/or its affiliates are performing services or when position limits
have been reached.

     In connection with its management of the Fund, the Investment Adviser may
have access to certain fundamental analysis and proprietary technical models
developed by Merrill Lynch. The Investment Adviser will not be under any


                                      42



obligation, however, to effect transactions on behalf of the Fund in
accordance with such analysis and models. In addition, neither Merrill Lynch
nor any of its affiliates will have any obligation to make available any
information regarding their proprietary activities or strategies, or the
activities or strategies used for other accounts managed by them, for the
benefit of the management of the Fund and it is not anticipated that the
Investment Adviser will have access to such information for the purpose of
managing the Fund. The proprietary activities or portfolio strategies of
Merrill Lynch and its affiliates or the activities or strategies used for
accounts managed by them or other customer accounts could conflict with the
transactions and strategies employed by the Investment Adviser in managing the
Fund.

     In addition, certain principals and certain employees of the Investment
Adviser are also principals or employees of Merrill Lynch or its affiliated
entities. As a result, the performance by these principals and employees of
their obligations to such other entities may be a consideration of which
investors in the Fund should be aware.

     The Investment Adviser may enter into transactions and invest in
securities and instruments on behalf of the Fund in which customers of Merrill
Lynch (or, to the extent permitted by the SEC, Merrill Lynch) serve as the
counterparty, principal or issuer. In such cases, such party's interests in
the transaction will be adverse to the interests of the Fund, and such party
may have no incentive to assure that the Fund obtains the best possible prices
or terms in connection with the transactions. In addition, the purchase,
holding and sale of such investments by the Fund may enhance the profitability
of Merrill Lynch. Merrill Lynch and its affiliates may also create, write or
issue derivative instruments for customers of Merrill Lynch or its affiliates,
the underlying securities or instruments of which may be those in which the
Fund invests or which may be based on the performance of the Fund. The Fund
may, subject to applicable law, purchase investments that are the subject of
an underwriting or other distribution by Merrill Lynch or its affiliates and
may also enter into transactions with other clients of Merrill Lynch or its
affiliates where such other clients have interests adverse to those of the
Fund. At times, these activities may cause departments of Merrill Lynch or its
affiliates to give advice to clients that may cause these clients to take
actions adverse to the interests of the Fund. To the extent affiliated
transactions are permitted, the Fund will deal with Merrill Lynch and its
affiliates on an arms-length basis.

     The Fund will be required to establish business relationships with its
counterparties based on the Fund's own credit standing. Neither Merrill Lynch
nor its affiliates will have any obligation to allow their credit to be used
in connection with the Fund's establishment of its business relationships, nor
is it expected that the Fund's counterparties will rely on the credit of
Merrill Lynch or any of its affiliates in evaluating the Fund's
creditworthiness.

     It is also possible that, from time to time, Merrill Lynch or any of its
affiliates, may, although they are not required to, purchase, hold or sell
shares of the Fund.

     It is possible that the Fund may invest in securities of companies with
which Merrill Lynch has or is trying to develop investment banking
relationships as well as securities of entities in which Merrill Lynch makes a
market. The Fund also may invest in securities of companies that Merrill Lynch
provides or may someday provide research coverage. Such investments could
cause conflicts between the interests of the Fund and the interests of other
Merrill Lynch clients. In providing services to the Fund, the Investment
Adviser is not permitted to obtain or use material non-public information
acquired by any division, department or affiliate of Merrill Lynch in the
course of these activities. In addition, from time to time, Merrill Lynch's
activities may limit the Fund's flexibility in purchases and sales of
securities. When Merrill Lynch is engaged in an underwriting or other
distribution of securities of an entity, the Investment Adviser may be
prohibited from purchasing or recommending the purchase of certain securities
of that entity for the Fund.

     The Investment Adviser, its affiliates, and its directors, officers and
employees, may buy and sell securities or other investments for their own
accounts, and may have conflicts of interest with respect to investments made
on behalf of the Fund. As a result of differing trading and investment
strategies or constraints, positions may be taken by directors, officers and
employees and affiliates of the Investment Adviser that are the same,
different from or made at different times than positions taken for the Fund.
To lessen the possibility that the Fund will be adversely affected by this
personal trading, each of the Fund and the Investment Adviser has adopted a
Code of Ethics in compliance with Section 17(j) of the 1940 Act that restricts
securities trading in the personal accounts of investment professionals and
others who normally come into possession of information regarding the Fund's
portfolio transactions.

     The Investment Adviser and its affiliates will not purchase securities or
other property from, or sell securities or other property to, the Fund, except
that the Fund may, in accordance with rules adopted under the 1940 Act, engage
in transactions with accounts that are affiliated with the Fund as a result of
common officers, directors, or investment advisers. 


                                      43



These transactions would be effected in circumstances in which the Investment
Adviser determined that it would be appropriate for the Fund to purchase and
another client to sell, or the Fund to sell and another client to purchase,
the same security or instrument on the same day.

     Present and future activities of Merrill Lynch and its affiliates,
including of the Investment Adviser, in addition to those described in this
section, may give rise to additional conflicts of interest.

                                NET ASSET VALUE

     Net asset value per share of common stock is determined Monday through
Friday as of the close of business on the NYSE (generally, the NYSE closes at
4:00 p.m., Eastern time), on each business day during which the NYSE is open
for trading. For purposes of determining the net asset value of a share of
common stock, the value of the securities held by the Fund plus any cash or
other assets (including interest accrued but not yet received) minus all
liabilities (including accrued expenses) and the aggregate liquidation value
of any outstanding shares of preferred stock is divided by the total number of
shares of common stock outstanding at such time. Expenses, including the fees
payable to the Investment Adviser, are accrued daily.

     The Municipal Bonds and other portfolio securities in which the Fund
invests are traded primarily in over-the-counter ("OTC") municipal bond and
money markets and are valued at the last available bid price for long
positions and at the last available ask price for short positions in the OTC
market or on the basis of yield equivalents as obtained from one or more
dealers or pricing services approved by the Directors. One bond is the "yield
equivalent" of another bond when, taking into account market price, maturity,
coupon rate, credit rating and ultimate return of principal, both bonds will
theoretically produce an equivalent return to the bondholder. Financial
futures contracts and options thereon, which are traded on exchanges, are
valued at their settlement prices as of the close of such exchanges.
Short-term investments with a remaining maturity of 60 days or less are valued
on an amortized cost basis, which approximates market value, unless the
Investment Adviser believes that this method no longer produces fair
valuations. Repurchase agreements will be valued at cost plus accrued
interest. The value of swaps, including interest rate swaps, caps and floors,
will be determined by obtaining dealer quotations. Repurchase agreements will
be valued at cost plus accrued interest. Securities and assets for which
market quotations are not readily available are valued at fair value as
determined in good faith by or under the direction of the Directors, including
valuations furnished by a pricing service retained by the Fund, which may use
a matrix system for valuations. The procedures of the pricing service and its
valuations are reviewed by the officers of the Fund under the general
supervision of the Directors.

     The Fund makes available for publication the net asset value of its
shares of common stock determined as of the last business day each week.
Currently, the net asset values of shares of publicly traded closed-end
investment companies investing in debt securities are published in Barron's,
the Monday edition of The Wall Street Journal and the Monday and Saturday
editions of The New York Times.

                             FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

     The Fund's audited financial statements for the fiscal year ended October
31, 2004, together with the report of ____________ thereon, are incorporated
in this statement of additional information by reference to its 2004 Annual
Report. The Fund's unaudited financial statements for the six months ended
April 30, 2005 are incorporated in this statement of additional information by
reference to its 2005 Semi-Annual Report. You may request a copy of the Annual
Report and the Semi-Annual Report at no charge by calling (800) 543-6217
between 8:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Eastern time on any business day.


                                      44



                                  APPENDIX A

                  ECONOMIC AND OTHER CONDITIONS IN CALIFORNIA

     The following information is a brief summary of factors affecting the
economy of the State of California and does not purport to be a complete
description of such factors. Other factors will affect issuers. The summary is
based primarily upon publicly available offering statements relating to debt
offerings of State and local issuers and other demographic information;
however, it has not been updated. The Fund has not independently verified this
information.

General Economic Conditions

     The economy of the State of California (referred to herein as the "State"
or "California") is the largest among the 50 states and is one of the largest
in the world, having major components in high technology, trade,
entertainment, agriculture, manufacturing, tourism, construction and services.
California's economy slipped into a recession in early 2001, losing 341,200
jobs between March 2001 and July 2003. The recession was concentrated in the
State's high-tech sector and, geographically in the San Francisco Bay Area.
The economy has since stabilized with 336,000 jobs gained between July 2003
and March 2005. Current projections indicate that the California economy will
grow at a rate close to the long-run average growth of the State economy.

     California's July 1, 2004 population of over 36 million represented over
12 percent of the total United States population. California's population is
concentrated in metropolitan areas. As of the April 1, 2000 census, 97 percent
of the State's population resided in the 25 Metropolitan Statistical Areas in
the State. As of July 1, 2004, the 5-county Los Angeles area accounted for 49
percent of the State's population with over 17.0 million residents and the
11-county San Francisco Bay Area represented 20 percent of the State's
population with a population of over 7.0 million.

     California total personal income grew by 6.1 percent in 2004, after
growing by only 3.1 percent in 2003. The corresponding gains for wage and
salary income were 6.1 percent and 2.1 percent. Statewide taxable sales were
8.5 percent higher in 2004 than in 2003; a year earlier the gain was 4.3
percent. California exports increased by 17 percent in 2004 and were about 5
percent higher in the first quarter of 2005 than a year earlier. Exports of
computer and electronic products, transportation equipment, and machinery
(except electrical) accounted for about three quarters of the gain in total
exports in 2004 but only 10 percent of the total gain in the first quarter of
2005. The average level of nonfarm payroll employment was 1.0 percent higher
in 2004 than in 2003 and 1.6 percent higher in the first quarter of 2005 than
a year earlier. The State unemployment rate was 5.4 percent in March 2005,
down from 6.0 percent in December 2004 and 6.4 percent in March 2004. The
national unemployment rate in March 2005 was 5.2 percent.

     Residential and private nonresidential construction rose in the State in
2004. Residential construction fell slightly in the first quarter of 2005,
however. Total new residential units permitted were up 8.4 percent in 2004 but
down 4.1 percent in the first quarter of 2005 from a year earlier. The
valuation of private nonresidential building permits rose by 12.7 percent in
2004 and 7.2 percent in the first quarter of 2005.

     Existing home sales were up 3.8 percent and median prices were up 21.4
percent in the State in 2004. In March 2005, the median price of existing
homes sold was $495,400, 15.7 percent higher than a year earlier. Sales were
up 7.5 percent from a year earlier.

     The 2005-06 May Revision (defined herein) projects U.S. output growth
will slow somewhat in 2005 and again in 2006. California personal income
growth is expected to slow somewhat in 2005 before increasing slightly in
2006.

Prior Fiscal Years' Financial Results

     The combination of resurging exports, a strong stock market, and a
sharp-growing economy in 1999 and early 2000 resulted in strong growth in
General Fund revenues during fiscal year 1999-00. Since early 2001 the State
has faced severe financial challenges, which may continue for several years.
Currently, both the nation and the State are experiencing an economic
downturn.


                                     A-1



     2003-04 Fiscal Year Budget. After months of negotiation between Governor
Davis and the Legislature, the Fiscal Year 2003-04 Budget Act (the "2003
Budget Act") was adopted by the Legislature on July 29, 2003, along with a
number of implementing measures, and signed by Governor Davis on August 2,
2003. The 2003 Budget Act largely reflected the proposals contained in the May
Revision to the 2003-04 Budget, including the issuance of economic recovery
bonds to address the estimated $10.675 billion budget deficit accumulated
through June 30, 2003. The 2003 Budget Act rejected the proposed "realignment"
of certain health and social services programs (to be funded from $1.7 billion
of personal and tobacco tax increases), and, instead, increased reliance upon
fund shifts and transfers and additional (non-tax) revenues sources.

     Under the 2003 Budget Act, General Fund revenues were projected to
increase 3.3 percent, from $70.9 billion in Fiscal Year 2002-03 to $73.3
billion in Fiscal Year 2003-04. The revenue projections incorporated a 4
percent increase in State tax revenues, reflecting a correspondingly moderate
growth in the State's economy which the State Department of Finance believed
to be reasonable.

Current State Budget

     Background. The 2004-05 Governor's Budget (the "2004-05 Governor's
Budget"), released on January 9, 2004, reported that, in the absence of
corrective actions to change existing policies, operating deficits, estimated
at $14 billion for fiscal year 2004-05, would continue to be incurred. The May
Revision released on May 13, 2004 (the "2004-05 May Revision"), projected a
June 30, 2005 General Fund reserve of $998 million, up $363 million from the
2004-05 Governor's Budget projections. The increase in the reserve was the
result of a $2.229 billion increase in prior year adjustments, a $245 million
increase in revenues (over both fiscal years 2003-04 and 2004- 05), a $1
billion reduction in the sale of economic recovery bonds and a $1.112 billion
increase in expenditures (over both fiscal years 2003-04 and 2004-05).

     Fiscal Year 2004-2005 Budget Act. After months of negotiations between
the Governor and the Legislature, the Fiscal Year 2004-05 Budget Act (the
"2004 Budget Act") was adopted by the Legislature on July 29, 2004, along with
a number of implementing measures, and signed by the Governor on July 31,
2004. In approving the budget, the Governor vetoed $116 million in
appropriations (including $80 million in General Fund appropriations). The
2004 Budget Act largely reflects the proposals contained in the 2004-05 May
Revision, including the use of $2 billion of proceeds of the economic recovery
bonds issued in fiscal year 2003-04.

     Under the 2004 Budget Act, General Fund revenues are projected to
increase 3.6 percent, from $74.6 billion in fiscal year 2003-04 (which
includes approximately $2.3 billion in tobacco securitization bond proceeds)
to $77.3 billion in fiscal year 2004-05. The revenue projections assume a
continuing rebound in California's economy as reflected in several key
indicators. Excluding the impact of the economic recovery bonds, General Fund
expenditures are estimated to increase by 6.7 percent, from $75.6 billion in
fiscal year 2003-04 to $80.7 billion in fiscal year 2004-05. The June 30, 2005
reserve is projected to be $768 million, compared to an estimated June 30,
2004 reserve of $2.198 billion.

     In summary, the 2004 Budget Act addressed a projected $13.9 billion
budget shortfall through expenditure cuts ($4.0 billion or 28.7 percent), cost
avoidance ($4.4 billion or 31.7 percent), fund shifts ($1.6 billion or 11.2
percent), loans or borrowing ($2.1 billion or 15.4 percent), and transfers and
other revenue ($1.8 billion or 13.0 percent).

     The 2004 Budget Act contains the following major components:

     1. Rebasing Proposition 98 Minimum Funding Guarantee -- The level of
Proposition 98 appropriations is to be reset at a level approximately $2
billion less than would otherwise be required for fiscal year 2004- 05
pursuant to legislation relating to the 2004 Budget Act.

     2. Higher Education -- A new fee policy for higher education is
implemented whereby future undergraduate and graduate level fee increases are
tied to increases in per-capita personal income, with flexibility to increase
fees by not more than an average of 10 percent a year over the next three
years. Under the fee policy, graduate fees may increase at rates in excess of
undergraduate fees until a 50 percent differential is achieved. In fiscal year
2004-05, fees are increased 14 percent for undergraduates and 20 percent for
graduate students (25 percent for California State University graduate
students majoring in non-teacher preparation programs). The new long-term
policy is designed to ensure that public university students are protected
from future dramatic fee increases as a consequence of declines in General
Fund resources. The 2004 Budget Act includes $750 million in various spending
reductions for higher education from otherwise mandated levels.


                                     A-2



     3. Health and Human Services -- While the Administration has proposed
major reforms of the Medi-Cal program, any such reforms are expected to take
at least one year to implement. As a result, the 2004 Budget Act does not
include any savings attributed to Medi-Cal redesign. Other strategies
independent of the Medi-Cal redesign have been included in the 2004 Budget
Act, such as the implementation of Medi-Cal rate increases for county
organized health systems and pharmacy reimbursement realignment. In addition,
increased work incentives under the State's Welfare program are proposed. The
budget includes $992 million in reductions in various social service programs
from otherwise mandated levels. Based on updated projections of caseload and
cost-per-basis, these savings are now estimated to be $1 billion in fiscal
year 2004-05.

     4. Pension Reform -- The 2004 Budget Act eliminates State contributions
to California Public Employees' Retirement System ("CalPERS") on behalf of new
State employees for the first two years of employment. In addition, the 2004
Budget Act assumes the issuance of $929 million pension obligation bonds to
cover a portion of the State's required contributions to CalPERS in fiscal
year 2004-05. The State no longer assumes that the pension bonds will be
issued in fiscal year 2004- 05.

     5. Substantially Reduced External Borrowings -- As stated, the 2004
Budget Act assumes the issuance of $929 million in pension obligation bonds to
pay a portion of the pension obligations in fiscal year 2004-05. In addition,
approximately $2 billion of economic recovery bond proceeds will be deposited
in the Deficit Recovery Fund and will be used to offset fiscal year 2004-05
General Fund expenditures. In contrast, in fiscal year 2003-04, aggregate
borrowings to address current expenses and accumulated deficits are estimated
at $11.5 billion, including $2.3 billion of tobacco securitization proceeds
and $9.2 billion of economic recovery proceeds (representing approximately
$11.254 billion of total bond proceeds, less $2.012 billion deposited into the
Deficit Recovery Fund for application in fiscal year 2004-05).

     6. Tax Relief -- The 2004 Budget Act reflects the elimination of the
vehicle license fee ("VLF") offset program beginning in fiscal year 2004-05.

     7. Indian Gaming -- The 2004 Budget Act includes $300 million in revenues
as a result of the renegotiation of tribal gaming compacts and the negotiation
of new compacts with tribes that wish to expand gaming activities. The 2004
Budget Act authorizes the State to sell an additional revenue stream received
from payments made by certain Indian tribes to secure up to $1.5 billion of
securities, the proceeds of which will be used by the State to repay prior
transportation loans. Pending litigation relating to the Indian gaming
compacts could also affect these additional revenues and securities issuance.

     8. Other Revenue Enhancements and Expenditure Reductions -- The 2004
Budget Act includes: (i) $1.206 billion in savings for the suspension of the
transfer of sales tax on gasoline from the General Fund to the Transportation
Investment Fund; (ii) $450 million in savings from deposits of punitive damage
awards used to offset General Fund costs in fiscal year 2004-05; (iii) $206
million for spending reductions that would result from changes in the
correctional system; and (iv) $150 million of additional savings pursuant to
Control Section 4.10 of the 2004 Budget Act (which gives the Department of
Finance the authority to reduce appropriations in certain circumstances).
Current budget projections assume no savings from punitive damages.

     2005-06 Governor's Budget and 2005-06 May Revision. The 2005-06
Governor's Budget (the "2005-06 Governor's Budget"), released on January 10,
2005, reported that, in the absence of corrective actions to change existing
policies, budget deficits, after funding a $500 million reserve, would be
estimated at $9.1 billion in fiscal year 2005-06 and would continue to be
incurred. On May 13, 2005, the Governor released the May Revision to the
2005-06 Governor's Budget (the "2005-06 May Revision"), which provides updated
revenue and economic forecasts and revised budget proposals. The 2005-06 May
Revision projects a June 30, 2006 General Fund reserve of $1.415 billion, up
$915 million from the 2005-06 Governor's Budget projections. This reserve
includes a $900 million set aside for refunds and to account for accelerated
payment of tax amnesty related revenue. The 2005-06 Governor's Budget (as
updated by the 2005-06 May Revision) proposes various corrective actions that
result in a balanced budget and also revises various revenue and expenditure
estimates for fiscal year 2004-05.

     The 2005-06 May Revision projects to end fiscal year 2005-06 with a
$1.415 billion reserve. General Fund revenues and transfers for fiscal year
2005-06 are projected at $83.9 billion, an increase of $4.4 billion compared
with revised estimates for fiscal year 2004-05. The 2005-06 May Revision,
among other assumptions, reflects an increase in major revenues of $4.504
billion, or 5.9 percent, due to improved economic forecast.


                                     A-3



     General Fund expenditures for fiscal year 2005-06 are projected at $88.5
billion, an increase of $6.5 billion, or 8 percent, compared with revised
estimates for fiscal year 2004-05. This reflects a total of $3.8 billion of
General Fund policy expenditure solutions, spending reductions from the level
of expenditures that would have been required to comply with the Constitution
and State law, federal government mandates, court order, and to provide for
cost of living adjustments and growth in enrollment, caseload, and population.

     The 2005-06 Governor's Budget (as updated by the 2005-06 May Revision)
contains the following major components:

     1. Proposition 98 -- General Fund expenditures are proposed to increase
by $2.555 billion, or 7.5 percent. This reflects increases in the Proposition
98 guaranteed funding level resulting from increases in General Fund revenues
in fiscal year 2005-06, adjusted for changes in local revenues. This also
reflects a decision not to appropriate the $1.8 billion in 2004-05 and $1.9
billion in 2005-06 that would otherwise have been required were the
Proposition 98 guarantee allowed to run next year as though the 2004-05
suspension had not occurred.

     2. Higher Education -- The 2005-06 Governor's Budget marks the first year
of funding for the Higher Education Compact under this Administration. The
Compact was signed in Spring 2004 with both University of California and
California State University to provide funding stability and preserve
educational quality over the next six fiscal years in exchange for improved
accountability in a variety of key student performance measures. 

     3. Health and Human Services -- Expenditures for Health and Human
Services Programs are proposed to increase by $1.8 billion over revised
2004-05 levels. This increase consists of caseload and other workload
increases totaling $2.7 billion, offset by $900 million in savings from major
policy changes to close the budget gap. Approximately $903 million of savings
are projected to be achieved through several Department of Social Services
proposals. In addition, Medi-Cal savings of $260 million is projected to be
achieved primarily by replacing General Fund support with new federal funds
for certain prenatal care services. Policy decisions that increased
expenditures for other Health and Human Services Programs partially offset
some of those savings.

     4. Pension Initiatives -- The 2005-06 Governor's Budget includes reduced
expenditures from proposed changes to the pension system. These include a
projected $296 million of savings from two proposals: (i) all state employees,
as their contracts expire, will be required to fund one-half of the future
cost of retirement rather than approximately one-fourth of the amounts, and
(ii) state employees will be allowed to opt out of CalPERS, and the State
would augment their salaries by one-half the actuarial normal cost. The
achievement of these savings is subject to collective bargaining negotiations.
The reforms also include a projected $469 million of savings from California
State Teachers' Retirement System ("CalSTRS"), achieved by shifting the
State's contribution to the Defined Benefit Program to the school districts or
the covered employees. The 2005-06 Governor's Budget also assumes the issuance
of pension obligation bonds as described below.

     5. External Borrowings -- The 2005-06 Governor's Budget assumed the
issuance of $800 million pension obligation bonds, yielding a net benefit to
the General Fund of $765 million, to cover a portion of the State's required
contributions to CalPERS in fiscal year 2005-06. The 2005-06 May Revision has
adjusted that estimate downward to $560 million, with a net benefit to the
General Fund of $525 million. Of that amount, $252 million is reflected as a
revenue transfer and $308 million as savings. The 2005-06 Governor's Budget
assumes no pension obligation bonds proceeds for fiscal year 2004-05. The
2005-06 Governor's Budget had anticipated the issuance of $1.683 billion of
additional economic recovery bonds for use in fiscal year 2005-06 but the
2005-06 May Revision eliminates this issuance. As a consequence, approximately
$3.7 billion of additional economic recovery bonds will remain authorized but
unissued. Although the 2005-06 Governor's Budget anticipated issuance of $464
million of judgment bonds to finance the pending settlement of Paterno v.
State of California, subsequent developments have led to the removal of this
proposal from the 2005-06 May Revision. The State now anticipates that it will
discharge the largest of the three stipulated judgments (in the amount of $428
million) arising from this litigation though an annual payment of $42.8
million per year, for ten years, plus interest. The 2005-06 Governor's Budget
includes the first year's payment (in the amount of $67 million) of this ten
year payout, as well as $36 million to fully discharge the other two
stipulated judgments arising from this litigation.

     6. Other Revenue Enhancements and Expenditure Reductions -- The 2005-06
Governor's Budget, adjusted by the 2005-06 May Revision, includes: (i) $268
million in savings from the suspension of most mandates in fiscal year
2005-06; (ii) $882 million from a variety of proposals to increase revenues
without tax increases; and (iii) $91.2 million in additional savings from
reducing state operations budgets for departments within the Administration.
The 2005-06 May Revision 


                                     A-4



eliminates the proposed suspension of the transfer of $1.3 billion of
Proposition 42 sales tax funds to the Transportation Investment Fund; these
funds will now be transferred and available for transportation purposes.

     LAO Assessment. In its "Overview of the 2005-06 May Revision", released
on May 13, 2005, the Legislative Analyst's Office (the "LAO") found "sensible"
the Governor's use of the estimated $4 billion of new funds generated by an
improved economic outlook to reducing debt and restoring Proposition 42
transportation funding. However, the LAO stated that the basic fiscal picture
for the State had not changed dramatically from its earlier assessment; the
LAO reiterated its forecasts of budget shortfalls of about $4.1 billion in
fiscal year 2006-07, $4 billion in fiscal year 2007-08 and then $3 billion for
fiscal year 2008-09.

     Moreover, the LAO continued to express caution about the reliability of
certain revenue and savings proposals incorporated into the 2005-06 Governor's
Budget, including (i) approximately $408 million of employee benefit
compensation savings (which are dependent upon successful collective
bargaining), (ii) approximately $469 million related to the shift in CalSTRS's
retirement costs from the State to school districts (which could require the
rebenching of the Proposition 98 funding guarantee); (iii) the impact of the a
recent state Superior Court decision that found that last year's suspension of
a $500 million payment to CalSTRS by the State to be illegal; and (iv)
approximately $525 million of additional revenue from the issuance of pension
bonds (which are being challenged in court). The LAO also projected that
revenues during the second half of the current fiscal year (2004-05) would be
$600 million less than as projected in the 2005-06 May Revision, although the
LAO stated their forecast of revenues for the 2005-06 budget year is similar
to the Governor's revised estimate.

     Publications from the LAO can be read in full by accessing the LAO's
website (www.lao.ca.gov) or by contacting the LAO at (916) 445-4656.

     Complete text of the 2004 Budget Act, the 2005-06 Governor's Budget and
the 2005-06 May Revision may be found at the website of the Department of
Finance, www.dof.ca.gov, under the heading "California Budget."

Future Budgets

     It cannot be predicted what actions will be taken in the future by the
State Legislature and the Governor to deal with changing State revenues and
expenditures. The State budget will be affected by national and State economic
conditions and other factors.

Ratings

     Currently, the following ratings for the State of California general
obligation bonds have been received from Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
("Moody's"), Standard & Poor's, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
("S&P") and Fitch, Inc. ("Fitch"):

      ------------------- ------------------ -------------------------
      Fitch               Moody's            S&P
      ------------------- ------------------ -------------------------
      A-                  A2                 A
      ------------------- ------------------ -------------------------


     These ratings apply to the State only and are not indicative of the
ratings assigned to local governments, such as counties, cities, school
districts and other local agencies.

     Any explanation of the significance of such ratings may be obtained only
from the rating agency furnishing such ratings. There is no assurance that
such ratings will continue for any given period of time or that they will not
be revised downward or withdrawn entirely if, in the judgment of the
particular rating agency, circumstances so warrant.

Repayment of Energy Loans


                                     A-5



     The Department of Water Resources of the State ("DWR") borrowed $6.1
billion from the General Fund of the State for DWR's power supply program
between January and June 2001. DWR issued approximately $11.25 billion in
revenue bonds in several series and in the fall of 2002 used the net proceeds
of the revenue bonds to repay outstanding loans from banks and commercial
lenders in the amount of approximately $3.5 billion and a loan from the
General Fund in the amount of $6.1 billion plus accrued interest of
approximately $500 million.

     The cost of the loans from the General Fund and the banks and commercial
lenders that financed DWR's power supply program costs during 2001 exceeded
DWR's revenues from the sale of electricity. Since that time, the power supply
program has become self-supporting, and no additional loans from the General
Fund are authorized. As of January 1, 2003, the DWR's authority to enter into
new power purchase contracts terminated, and the three major investor-owned
electric utilities (the "IOUs") resumed responsibility for obtaining
electricity for their customers.

     The general purpose of the power supply program has been to provide to
customers of the IOUs the portion of their power not provided by the IOUs. The
primary source of money to pay debt service on the DWR revenue bonds is
revenues derived from customers of the IOUs resulting from charges set by the
California Public Utilities Commission. The DWR revenue bonds are not a debt
or liability of the State and do not directly or indirectly or contingently
obligate the State to levy or to pledge any form of taxation whatever therefor
or to make any appropriation for their payment.

Local Governments

     The primary units of local government in California are the counties,
ranging in population from 1,200 (Alpine) to approximately 10 million (Los
Angeles). Counties are responsible for providing many basic services,
including indigent healthcare, welfare, jails and public safety in
unincorporated areas. There are also 478 incorporated cities and thousands of
special districts formed for education, utility and other services. The fiscal
condition of local governments has been constrained since the enactment of
"Proposition 13" in 1978, which reduced and limited the future growth of
property taxes and limited the ability of local governments to impose "special
taxes" (those devoted to a specific purpose) without two-thirds voter
approval. Proposition 218, another initiative constitutional amendment enacted
in 1996, further limited the ability of local governments to raise taxes, fees
and other exactions. Counties, in particular, have had fewer options to raise
revenues than many other local governmental entities, and have been required
to maintain many services.

     In the aftermath of Proposition 13, the State provided aid to local
governments from the General Fund to make up some of the loss of property tax
moneys, including taking over the principal responsibility for funding local
K-12 schools and community colleges. During the recession of the early 1990s,
the Legislature eliminated most of the remaining components of the
post-Proposition 13 aid to local government entities other than K-12 schools
and community colleges, by requiring cities and counties to transfer some of
their property tax revenues to school districts. However, the Legislature also
provided additional funding sources (such as sales taxes) and reduced certain
mandates for local services funded by cities and counties.

     The 2004 Budget Act, related legislation and the enactment of Senate
Constitutional Amendment No. 4 (described below) will dramatically change the
State-local fiscal relationship. These constitutional and statutory changes
implement an agreement negotiated between the Governor and local government
officials (the "State-local agreement") in connection with the 2004 Budget
Act. One change relates to the reduction of the VLF rate from 2 percent to
0.65 percent of the market value of the vehicle. In order to protect local
governments, which have previously received all VLF revenues, the reduction in
VLF revenue to cities and counties from this rate change will be replaced by
an increase in the amount of property tax they receive. Under the State-local
agreement and implementing legislation, for fiscal years 2004-05 and 2005-06
only, the replacement property taxes that cities and counties receive will be
reduced by $700 million. In future years, local governments will receive the
full value of the VLF revenue. Also for these two fiscal years, redevelopment
agencies will be required to shift $250 million, and special districts to
shift $350 million, in property tax revenues they would otherwise receive to
schools.

     As part of the State-local agreement, Senate Constitutional Amendment No.
4 was enacted by the Legislature and subsequently approved by the voters as
Proposition 1A at the November 2004 election. Senate Constitutional Amendment
No. 4 ("SCA 4") amends the State Constitution to, among other things, reduce
the Legislature's authority over local government revenue sources by placing
restrictions on the State's access to local governments' property, sales, and
vehicle license fee revenues as of November 3, 2004. Beginning with fiscal
year 2008-09, the State will be able to borrow up to 8 percent of local
property tax revenues, but only if the Governor proclaims such action is
necessary due to a severe State fiscal hardship, two-thirds of both houses of
the Legislature approves the borrowing and the amount borrowed is required to
be paid 


                                     A-6



back within three years. The State also will not be able to borrow from local
property tax revenues for more than 2 fiscal years within a period of 10
fiscal years, and only if previous borrowings have been repaid. In addition,
the State cannot reduce the local sales tax rate or restrict the authority of
the local governments to impose or change the distribution of the statewide
local sales tax. SCA 4 also prohibits the State from mandating activities on
cities, counties or special districts without providing for the funding needed
to comply with the mandates. Beginning in fiscal year 2005-06, if the State
does not provide funding for the activity that has been determined to be
mandated, the requirement on cities, counties or special districts to abide by
the mandate would be suspended. In addition, SCA 4 expands the definition of
what constitutes a mandate to encompass State action that transfers to cities,
counties and special districts financial responsibility for a required program
for which the State previously had partial or complete responsibility. The
State mandate provisions of SCA 4 do not apply to schools or community
colleges or to mandates relating to employee rights.

     Welfare. The entire Statewide welfare system was changed in response to
the change in federal welfare law in 1996. Under the revised basic State
welfare system, California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids
("CalWORKs"), counties are given flexibility to develop their own plans,
consistent with State law, to implement Welfare-to-Work and to administer many
of its elements and their costs for administrative and support services are
capped at 1996-1997 levels. Counties are also given financial incentives if,
at the individual county level or statewide, the CalWORKs program produces
savings associated with specified Welfare-to-Work outcomes. Under CalWORKs,
counties will still be required to provide "general assistance" aid to certain
persons who cannot obtain welfare from other programs. The Personal
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-193,
the "Law") fundamentally reformed the nation's welfare system. The Law
included, among other things, provisions to convert Aid to Families with
Dependent Children, an entitlement program, to Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families ("TANF"), a block grant program with lifetime time limits on TANF
recipients, work requirements and other changes.

     Caseload under CalWORKs is continuing to flatten after many consecutive
years of decline. The revised CalWORKs caseload projections are 491,700 cases
in fiscal year 2004-05 and 483,500 cases in fiscal year 2005-06. This
represents a major decline in caseload from the rapid growth of the early
1990s, when caseload peaked at 921,000 cases in fiscal year 1994-95. Since
CalWORKs' inception in January 1998, caseload has declined by over 34 percent,
and the number of working recipients has increased from less than 20 percent
in 1996 to nearly 50 percent in 2003.

     California will continue to meet, but not exceed, the federally-required
$2.7 billion combined State and county maintenance of effort ("MOE")
requirement in fiscal years 2004-05 and 2005-06. In an effort to keep program
expenditures within the TANF Block Grant and TANF MOE amounts, the 2005-06 May
Revision proposes to (1) eliminate the statutory requirement to provide an
automatic annual grant cost-of-living adjustment; (2) implement a new
incentive system that sets aside TANF Block Grant funds in 2005-06 for
allocation to counties in 2006-07 who meet specific CalWORKs program outcomes
(see TANF reserve discussion below); and (3) reduce grants by 6.5 percent to
align benefit levels better with TANF programs in other states. These and
other smaller CalWORKs program reductions are projected to result in savings
totaling $468.5 million. Of this savings, $312.5 million is General Fund
savings in other programs which is achieved by using federal TANF Block Grant
funds to offset eligible General Fund expenditures in other departments.

     The 2005-06 May Revision to the 2005-06 Governor's Budget includes total
CalWORKs-related expenditures of $6.7 billion for fiscal year 2004-05 and $6.8
billion for fiscal year 2005-06, which includes an augmentation of $191.9
million in each year for employment services to enable recipients to move off
of aid and into sustainable employment. The 2005-06 May Revision includes a
TANF reserve of $254.5 million, which is available for unanticipated needs in
any program for which TANF Block Grant funds are appropriated, including
CalWORKs benefits, employment services, county administration, and child care
costs. This reserve may be needed for such pressures as litigation or the cost
of increased participation rate requirements that have been proposed at the
federal level with the reauthorization of the TANF program. Of the $254.5
million in the reserve, $30 million is set aside as an incentive for counties
who meet specific CalWORKs program outcomes in 2005-06.

     Authorization for the TANF program currently ends September 30, 2005
(having been extended several times from its original September 30, 2002
expiration date). For the TANF program to continue, the U.S. Congress must
pass, and the President must sign, legislation reauthorizing the program prior
to that date. While Congress and the President will consider several key
policy changes, federal reauthorization legislation introduced to date would
significantly increase the work participation rate requirements. One proposal
would increase work participation rate requirements by 5 percent annually from
the current statutory rate of 50 percent to 70 percent in federal fiscal year
2010. The State would need to make substantial 


                                     A-7



investments in child care and employment services in order to meet the
increased work participation rate requirements if this proposal was adopted.
Failure to meet these increased requirements could result in significant
federal penalties.

     Trial Courts. Historically, funding for the State's trial court system
was divided between the State and the counties. In 1997, legislation
consolidated the trial court funding at the State level in order to streamline
the operation of the courts, provide a dedicated revenue source and relieve
fiscal pressure on the counties. The State's trial court system will receive
approximately $2 billion and $2.2 billion in State resources in fiscal years
2004-05 and 2005-06, respectively, and $475 million in resources from the
counties in each fiscal year.

Tobacco Settlement Revenue Bonds

     In 1998 the State signed a settlement agreement with the four major
cigarette manufacturers. Under the settlement agreement, the cigarette
manufacturers agreed to make payments to the State in perpetuity, which
payments amount to approximately $25 billion (subject to adjustments) over the
first 25 years. Under a separate Memorandum of Understanding, half of the
payments made by the cigarette manufacturers will be paid to the State and
half to local governments (all counties and the cities of San Diego, Los
Angeles, San Francisco and San Jose). The specific amount to be received by
the State and local governments is subject to adjustment. Details in the
settlement agreement allow reduction of the manufacturers' payments for
decreases in cigarette shipment volumes by the settling manufacturers,
payments owed to certain "Previously Settled States" and certain types of
offsets for disputed payments, among other things. However, settlement
payments are adjusted upward each year by at least 3 percent for inflation,
compounded annually.

     Chapter 414, Statutes of 2002, enacted Government Code Sections 63049 to
63049.5 (the "Tobacco Securitization Law"), which authorized the issuance of
revenue bonds secured by the tobacco settlement revenues received by the State
beginning in the 2003-04 fiscal year. An initial sale of 56.57 percent of the
State's tobacco settlement revenues producing $2.5 billion in proceeds was
completed in January 2003.

     A second sale of the remaining 43.43 percent of the State's tobacco
settlement revenues, which produced $2.264 billion in proceeds, was completed
in September 2003. Chapter 225, Statutes of 2003, amended the Tobacco
Securitization Law to require the Governor to request an appropriation in the
annual Budget Act to pay debt service and other related costs of the tobacco
settlement revenue bonds secured by the second (and only the second) sale of
tobacco settlement revenues when such tobacco settlement revenues are
insufficient therefor. The Legislature is not obligated to make any such
requested appropriation.

     Tobacco settlement revenue bonds are neither general nor legal
obligations of the State or any of its political subdivisions and neither the
faith and credit nor the taxing power nor any other assets or revenues of the
State or of any political subdivision is or shall be pledged to the payment of
any such bonds.

Constitutional and Statutory Limitations; Future Initiatives; Pending Litigation

     Constitutional and Statutory Limitations. Article XIII A of the
California Constitution (which resulted from the voter-approved Proposition 13
in 1978) limits the taxing powers of California public agencies. Article XIII
A provides that the maximum ad valorem tax on real property cannot exceed one
percent of the "full cash value" of the property and effectively prohibits the
levying of any other ad valorem tax on real property for general purposes.
However, on June 3, 1986, Proposition 46, an amendment to Article XIII A, was
approved by the voters of the State of California, creating a new exemption
under Article XIII A permitting an increase in ad valorem taxes on real
property in excess of 1 percent for bonded indebtedness approved by two-thirds
of the voters voting on the proposed indebtedness.

     On November 7, 2000, voters approved Proposition 39 called the "Smaller
Classes, Safer Schools and Financial Accountability Act" (the "Smaller Classes
Act"). Effective upon its passage, the Smaller Classes Act allows an
alternative means of seeking voter approval for bonded indebtedness by 55
percent of the vote, rather than the two-thirds majority required under the
California Constitution. The reduced 55 percent voter requirement applies only
to bonds of school and community college districts.

     Article XIII B of the California Constitution limits the amount of
appropriations of the State and of the local governments to the amount of
appropriations of the entity for the prior year, adjusted for changes in the
cost of living, population and the services that local governments have
financial responsibility for providing. To the extent that the revenues 


                                     A-8



of the State and/or local governments exceed their appropriations, the excess
revenues must be rebated to the public either directly or through a tax
decrease. Expenditures for voter-approved debt service costs are not included
in the appropriations limit.

     Because of the complexities of Article XIII B, the ambiguities and
possible inconsistencies in its terms, the applicability of its exceptions and
exemptions and the impossibility of predicting future appropriations, the Fund
cannot predict the impact of this or related legislation on the bonds in the
Fund's portfolios. Other Constitutional amendments affecting State and local
taxes and appropriations have been proposed from time to time. If any such
initiatives are adopted, the State could be pressured to provide additional
financial assistance to local governments or appropriate revenues as mandated
by such initiatives, potentially reducing resources available for other State
programs, especially to the extent the Article XIII B spending limit would
restrain the State's ability to fund such programs by raising taxes.

     At the November 8, 1988 general election, California voters approved an
initiative known as Proposition 98. Proposition 98 changed State funding of
public education below the university level and the operation of the State
appropriations limit, primarily by guaranteeing K-14 schools a minimum share
of General Fund revenues. Proposition 98 permits the Legislature by two-thirds
vote of both houses, with the Governor's concurrence, to suspend the K-14
schools' minimum funding formula for a one-year period. Proposition 98 also
contains provisions transferring certain State tax revenues in excess of the
Article XIII B limit to K-14 schools.

     On November 5, 1996 voters approved Proposition 218 called the "Right to
Vote on Taxes Act" which incorporates Articles XIII C and XIII D into the
California Constitution. Those provisions enact limitations on the ability of
local government agencies to impose or raise various taxes, fees, charges and
assessments without voter approval. In addition, Article XIII C clarifies the
right of local voters to reduce taxes, fees, assessments, or charges through
local initiatives. Proposition 218 does not affect the State or its ability to
levy or collect taxes.

     At the November 1998 election, voters approved Proposition 2. This
proposition requires the General Fund to repay loans made from certain
transportation special accounts (such as the State Highway Account) at least
once per fiscal year, or up to 30 days after adoption of the annual budget
act. Since the General Fund may reborrow from the transportation accounts soon
after the annual repayment is made the proposition is not expected to have any
adverse impact on the State's cash flow.

     The voters of California adopted a statutory initiative ("Proposition
62") at the November 4, 1986 election. Proposition 62 generally (1) requires
that any tax for general governmental purposes imposed by local governmental
entities be approved by resolution or ordinance adopted by two-thirds vote of
the governmental agency's legislative body and by a majority of the electorate
of the governmental entity and (2) requires that any special tax (defined as
taxes levied for other than general governmental purposes) imposed by a local
governmental entity be approved by a two-thirds vote of the voters within that
jurisdiction.

     Various provisions of Proposition 62 were declared unconstitutional at
the appellate court level. On September 28, 1995, however, the California
Supreme Court, in Santa Clara County Local Transportation Authority v.
Guardino, upheld the constitutionality of the portion of Proposition 62
requiring voter approval as a condition precedent to the imposition of taxes
by a local government.

     On June 4, 2001, in Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association v. City of La
Habra, the California Supreme Court held that a local governmental entity's
continued imposition and collection of a tax subject to the requirements of
Proposition 62, without voter approval was a continuous violation of
Proposition 62 and that the validity of a tax measure may be challenged within
the statutory period after any collection of the tax, regardless of whether
more than three years had passed since the tax measure was adopted. Thus, each
time an unconstitutional tax is collected, the statute of limitations is
triggered again. As a result of this ruling, absent the application of a
different statute of limitations, a tax originally imposed in violation of
Proposition 62 requirements is potentially subject to court challenge within
three years of its collection. Various local governments may be subject to
challenge under the La Habra ruling.

     Future Initiatives. Articles XIII A, XIII B, XIII C and XIII D and
Propositions 2, 39, 62 and 98 were each adopted as measures that qualified for
the ballot pursuant to the State's initiative process. From time to time,
other initiative measures could be adopted that could affect revenues of the
State or public agencies within the State. Pending Litigation. The State of
California is a party to numerous legal proceedings, many of which normally
occur in governmental operations. Information regarding some of the more
significant litigation pending against the State would ordinarily be included
in various public 


                                     A-9



documents issued thereby, such as the official statements prepared in
connection with the issuance of general obligation bonds of California. Such
official statements may be obtained by contacting the California's State
Treasurer's Office at 800-900-3873 or at www.treasurer.ca.gov.


                                     A-10



                                  APPENDIX B

                          RATINGS OF MUNICIPAL BONDS

                     DESCRIPTION OF MUNICIPAL BOND RATINGS

Description of Moody's Municipal Bond Ratings

Aaa     Issuers or issues rated Aaa demonstrate the strongest creditworthiness
        relative to other US municipal or tax-exempt issuers or issues.

Aa      Issuers or issues rated Aa demonstrate very strong creditworthiness
        relative to other US municipal or tax-exempt issuers or issues.

A       Issuers or issues rated A present above-average creditworthiness
        relative to other US municipal or tax-exempt issuers or issues.

Baa     Issuers or issues rated Baa represent average creditworthiness
        relative to other US municipal or tax- exempt issuers or issues.

Ba      Issuers or issues rated Ba demonstrate below-average creditworthiness
        relative to other US municipal or tax-exempt issuers or issues.

B       Issuers or issues rated B demonstrate weak creditworthiness relative
        to other US municipal or tax- exempt issuers or issues.

Caa     Issuers or issues rated Caa demonstrate very weak creditworthiness
        relative to other US municipal or tax-exempt issuers or issues.

Ca      Issuers or issues rated Ca demonstrate extremely weak creditworthiness
        relative to other US municipal or tax-exempt issuers or issues.

C       Issuers or issues rated C demonstrate the weakest creditworthiness
        relative to other US municipal or tax-exempt issuers or issues.

Note: Moody's applies numerical modifiers 1, 2, and 3 in each generic rating
classification from Aa through Caa. The modifier 1 indicates that the
obligation ranks in the higher end of its generic rating category; the
modifier 2 indicates a mid-range ranking; and the modifier 3 indicates a
ranking in the lower end of that generic rating category.

Description of Moody's Municipal Short-Term Debt Ratings

MIG 1   This designation denotes superior credit quality. Excellent protection
        is afforded by established cash flows, highly reliable liquidity
        support, or demonstrated broad-based access to the market for
        refinancing.

MIG 2   This designation denotes strong credit quality. Margins of protection
        are ample, although not as large as in the preceding group.

MIG 3   This designation denotes acceptable credit quality. Liquidity and
        cash-flow protection may be narrow, and market access for refinancing
        is likely to be less well-established.

SG      This designation denotes speculative-grade credit quality. Debt
        instruments in this category may lack sufficient margins of
        protection.


                                     B-1



Description of Moody's U.S. Municipal Demand Obligation Ratings

     In the case of variable rate demand obligations (VRDOs), a two-component
rating is assigned; a long or short-term debt rating and a demand obligation
rating. The first element represents Moody's evaluation of the degree of risk
associated with scheduled principal and interest payments. The second element
represents Moody's evaluation of the degree of risk associated with the
ability to receive purchase price upon demand ("demand feature"), using a
variation of the MIG rating scale, the Variable Municipal Investment Grade or
VMIG rating.

     When either the long- or short-term aspect of a VRDO is not rated, that
piece is designated NR, e.g., Aaa/NR or NR/VMIG 1.

     VMIG rating expirations are a function of each issue's specific
structural or credit features.

VMIG 1  This designation denotes superior credit quality. Excellent protection
        is afforded by the superior short-term credit strength of the
        liquidity provider and structural and legal protections that ensure
        the timely payment of purchase price upon demand.

VMIG 2  This designation denotes strong credit quality. Good protection is
        afforded by the strong short-term credit strength of the liquidity
        provider and structural and legal protections that ensure the timely
        payment of purchase price upon demand.

VMIG 3  This designation denotes acceptable credit quality. Adequate
        protection is afforded by the satisfactory short-term credit strength
        of the liquidity provider and structural and legal protections that
        ensure the timely payment of purchase price upon demand.

SG      This designation denotes speculative-grade credit quality. Demand
        features rated in this category may be supported by a liquidity
        provider that does not have an investment grade short-term rating or
        may lack the structural and/or legal protections necessary to ensure
        the timely payment of purchase price upon demand.


Description of Moody's Short-Term Ratings

     Moody's Commercial Paper ratings are opinions of the ability of issuers
to honor short-term financial obligations not having an original maturity in
excess of thirteen months. Moody's employs the following three designations,
all judged to be investment grade, to indicate the relative repayment capacity
of rated issuers:

P-1     Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-1 have a superior
        ability to repay short-term debt obligations.

P-2     Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-2 have a strong
        ability to repay short-term debt obligations.

P-3     Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-3 have an acceptable
        ability to repay short-term obligations.

NP      Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Not Prime do not fall
        within any of the Prime rating categories.


Description of Standard & Poor's, a Division of The McGraw-Hill Companies,
Inc. ("Standard & Poor's"), Debt Ratings

     A Standard & Poor's issue credit rating is a current opinion of the
creditworthiness of an obligor with respect to a specific financial
obligation, a specific class of financial obligations or a specific program.
It takes into consideration the creditworthiness of guarantors, insurers, or
other forms of credit enhancement on the obligation.

     The issue credit rating is not a recommendation to purchase, sell or hold
a financial obligation, inasmuch as it does not comment as to market price or
suitability for a particular investor.


                                     B-2



     The issue credit ratings are based on current information furnished by
the obligors or obtained by Standard & Poor's from other sources Standard &
Poor's considers reliable. Standard & Poor's does not perform an audit in
connection with any rating and may, on occasion, rely on unaudited financial
information. The ratings may be changed, suspended, or withdrawn as a result
of changes in, or unavailability of, such information, or based on other
circumstances.

     The issue credit ratings are based, in varying degrees, on the following
considerations:

     I.   Likelihood of payment--capacity and willingness of the obligor as to
          the timely payment of interest and repayment of principal in
          accordance with the terms of the obligation;

     II.  Nature of and provisions of the obligation;

     III. Protection afforded to, and relative position of, the obligation in
          the event of bankruptcy, reorganization or other arrangement under
          the laws of bankruptcy and other laws affecting creditors' rights.

Long Term Issue Credit Ratings

AAA     An obligation rated "AAA" has the highest rating assigned by Standard
        & Poor's. Capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation
        is extremely strong.

AA      An obligation rated "AA" differs from the highest rated issues only in
        small degree. The Obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment
        on the obligation is very strong.

A       An obligation rated "A" is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse
        effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than debt
        in higher-rated categories. However, the obligor's capacity to meet
        its financial commitment on the obligation is still strong.

BBB     An obligation rated "BBB" exhibits adequate protection parameters.
        However, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are
        more likely to lead to a weakened capacity of the obligor to meet its
        financial commitment on the obligation.

BB      An obligation rated "BB," "B," "CCC," "CC" and "C" are regarded as
B       having significant speculative characteristics. "BB" indicates the
CCC     least degree of speculation and "C" the highest degree of speculation.
CC      While such debt will likely have some quality and protective
C       characteristics, these may be outweighed by large uncertainties or
        major risk exposures to adverse conditions.

D       An obligation rated "D" is in payment default. The "D" rating category
        is used when payments on an obligation are not made on the date due
        even if the applicable grace period has not expired, unless Standard &
        Poor's believes that such payments will be made during such grace
        period. The "D" rating also will be used upon the filing of a
        bankruptcy petition or the taking of similar action if payments on an
        obligation are jeopardized.

c       The 'c' subscript is used to provide additional information to
        investors that the bank may terminate its obligation to purchase
        tendered bonds if the long term credit rating of the issuer is below
        an investment-grade level and/or the issuer's bonds are deemed
        taxable.

p       The letter 'p' indicates that the rating is provisional. A provisional
        rating assumes the successful completion of the project financed by
        the debt being rated and indicates that payment of debt service
        requirements is largely or entirely dependent upon the successful,
        timely completion of the project. This rating, however, while
        addressing credit quality subsequent to the completion of the project,
        makes no comment on the likelihood of or the risk of default upon
        failure of such completion. The investor should exercise his own
        judgment with respect to such likelihood and risk.


                                     B-3



*       Continuance of the ratings is contingent upon Standard & Poor's
        receipt of an executed copy of the escrow agreement or closing
        documentation confirming investments and cash flows.

r       This symbol is attached to the ratings of instruments with significant
        noncredit risks. It highlights risks to principal or volatility of
        expected returns which are not addressed in the credit rating.

N.R.    This indicates that no rating has been requested, that there is
        insufficient information on which to base a rating, or that Standard &
        Poor's does not rate a particular obligation as a matter of policy.

Plus (+) or Minus (-): The ratings from "AA" to "CCC" may be modified by the
addition of a plus or minus sign to show relative standing within the major
rating categories.

Description of Standard & Poor's Short-Term Issue Credit Ratings

     A Standard & Poor's short-term issue credit rating is a current
assessment of the likelihood of timely payment of debt having an original
maturity of no more than three years. Ratings are graded into several
categories, ranging from "A-1" for the highest-quality obligations to "D" for
the lowest. These categories are as follows:

A-1     A short-term obligation rated "A-1" is rated in the highest category
        by Standard & Poor's. The obligor's capacity to meet its financial
        commitment on the obligation is strong. Within this category, certain
        obligations are designated with a plus sign (+). This indicates that
        the obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment on these
        obligations is extremely strong.

A-2     A short-term obligation rated "A-2" is somewhat more susceptible to
        the adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic
        conditions than obligations in higher rating categories. However, the
        obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation
        is satisfactory.

A-3     A short-term obligation rated "A-3" exhibits adequate protection
        parameters. However, adverse economic conditions or changing
        circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity of the
        obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

B       A short-term obligation rated "B" is regarded as having significant
        speculative characteristics. The obligor currently has the capacity to
        meet its financial commitment on the obligation; however, it faces
        major ongoing uncertainties which could lead to the obligor's
        inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitment on the
        obligation.

C       A short-term obligation rated "C" is currently vulnerable to
        nonpayment and is dependent upon favorable business, financial and
        economic conditions for the obligor to meet its financial commitment
        on the obligation.

D       A short-term obligation rated "D" is in payment default. The "D"
        rating category is used when interest payments or principal payments
        are not made on the date due even if the applicable grace period has
        not expired, unless Standard & Poor's believes that such payments will
        be made during such grace period. The "D" rating will also be used
        upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of a similar
        action if payments on an obligation are jeopardized.

c       The "c" subscript is used to provide additional information to
        investors that the bank may terminate its obligation to purchase
        tendered bonds if the long term credit rating of the issuer is below
        an investment-grade level and/or the issuer's bonds are deemed
        taxable.

p       The letter "p" indicates that the rating is provisional. A provisional
        rating assumes the successful completion of the project financed by
        the debt being rated and indicates that payment of debt service
        requirements is largely or entirely dependent upon the successful,
        timely completion of the project. This rating, however, while
        addressing credit quality subsequent to completion of the project,
        makes no 


                                     B-4



        comment on the likelihood of or the risk of default upon failure of
        such completion. The investor should exercise his own judgment with
        respect to such likelihood and risk.

*       Continuance of the ratings is contingent upon Standard & Poor's
        receipt of an executed copy of the escrow agreement or closing.

r       The "r" highlights derivative, hybrid, and certain other obligations
        that Standard & Poor's believes may experience high volatility or high
        variability in expected returns as a result of noncredit risks.
        Examples of such obligations are securities with principal or interest
        return indexed to equities, commodities, or currencies; certain swaps
        and options, and interest-only and principal-only mortgage securities.
        The absence of an "r" symbol should not be taken as an indication that
        an obligation will exhibit no volatility or variability in total
        return.

     A short-term issue credit rating is not a recommendation to purchase or
sell a security. The ratings are based on current information furnished to
Standard & Poor's by the issuer or obtained by Standard & Poor's from other
sources it considers reliable. The ratings may be changed, suspended, or
withdrawn as a result of changes in, or unavailability of, such information.

     A Standard & Poor's note rating reflects the liquidity factors and market
access risks unique to notes. Notes due in three years or less will likely
receive a note rating. Notes maturing beyond three years will most likely
receive a long term debt rating. The following criteria will be used in making
that assessment.

     --Amortization schedule--the larger the final maturity relative to other
maturities, the more likely it will be treated as a note.

     --Source of payment--the more dependent the issue is on the market for
its refinancing, the more likely it will be treated as a note.

     Note rating symbols are as follows:

SP-1    Strong capacity to pay principal and interest. An issue determined to
        possess a very strong capacity to pay debt service is given a plus (+)
        designation.

SP-2    Satisfactory capacity to pay principal and interest with some
        vulnerability to adverse financial and economic changes over the term
        of the notes.

SP-3    Speculative capacity to pay principal and interest.

Description of Fitch Ratings' ("Fitch") Investment Grade Bond Ratings

     Fitch investment grade bond ratings provide a guide to investors in
determining the credit risk associated with a particular security. The rating
represents Fitch's assessment of the issuer's ability to meet the obligations
of a specific debt issue or class of debt in a timely manner.

     The rating takes into consideration special features of the issue, its
relationship to other obligations of the issuer, the current and prospective
financial condition and operating performance of the issuer and any guarantor,
as well as the economic and political environment that might affect the
issuer's future financial strength and credit quality.

     Fitch ratings do not reflect any credit enhancement that may be provided
by insurance policies or financial guarantees unless otherwise indicated.

     Bonds carrying the same rating are of similar but not necessarily
identical credit quality since the rating categories do not fully reflect
small differences in the degrees of credit risk.


                                     B-5



     Fitch ratings are not recommendations to buy, sell, or hold any security.
Ratings do not comment on the adequacy of market price, the suitability of any
security for a particular investor, or the tax exempt nature or taxability of
payments made in respect of any security.

     Fitch ratings are based on information obtained from issuers, other
obligors, underwriters, their experts, and other sources Fitch believes to be
reliable. Fitch does not audit or verify the truth or accuracy of such
information. Ratings may be changed, suspended, or withdrawn as a result of
changes in, or the unavailability of, information or for other reasons.

AAA     Bonds considered to be investment grade and of the highest credit
        quality. The obligor has an exceptionally strong ability to pay
        interest and repay principal, which is unlikely to be affected by
        reasonably foreseeable events.

AA      Bonds considered to be investment grade and of very high credit
        quality. The obligor's ability to pay interest and repay principal is
        very strong, although not quite as strong as bonds rated "AAA."
        Because bonds rated in the "AAA" and "AA" categories are not
        significantly vulnerable to foreseeable future developments, short
        term debt of these issuers is generally rated "F-1+."

A       Bonds considered to be investment grade and of high credit quality.
        The obligor's ability to pay interest and repay principal is
        considered to be strong, but may be more vulnerable to adverse changes
        in economic conditions and circumstances than bonds with higher
        ratings.

BBB     Bonds considered to be investment grade and of satisfactory-credit
        quality. The obligor's ability to pay interest and repay principal is
        considered to be adequate. Adverse changes in economic conditions and
        circumstances, however, are more likely to have adverse impact on
        these bonds, and therefore impair timely payment. The likelihood that
        the ratings of these bonds will fall below investment grade is higher
        than for bonds with higher ratings.

Plus (+) or Minus (-): Plus and minus signs are used with a rating symbol to
indicate the relative position of a credit within the rating category. Plus
and minus signs, however, are not used in the "AAA" category.

Description of Fitch's Speculative Grade Bond Ratings

     Fitch speculative grade bond ratings provide a guide to investors in
determining the credit risk associated with a particular security. The ratings
("BB" to "C") represent Fitch's assessment of the likelihood of timely payment
of principal and interest in accordance with the terms of obligation for bond
issues not in default. For defaulted bonds, the rating ("DDD" to "D") is an
assessment of the ultimate recovery value through reorganization or
liquidation. The rating takes into consideration special features of the
issue, its relationship to other obligations of the issuer, the current and
prospective financial condition and operating performance of the issuer and
any guarantor, as well as the economic and political environment that might
affect the issuer's future financial strength.

     Bonds that have the rating are of similar but not necessarily identical
credit quality since rating categories cannot fully reflect the differences in
degrees of credit risk.

BB      Bonds are considered speculative. The obligor's ability to pay
        interest and repay principal may be affected over time by adverse
        economic changes. However, business and financial alternatives can be
        identified which could assist the obligor in satisfying its debt
        service requirements.

B       Bonds are considered highly speculative. While bonds in this class are
        currently meeting debt service requirements, the probability of
        continued timely payment of principal and interest reflects the
        obligor's limited margin of safety and the need for reasonable
        business and economic activity throughout the life of the issue.

CCC     Bonds have certain identifiable characteristics which, if not
        remedied, may lead to default. The ability to meet obligations
        requires an advantageous business and economic environment.


                                     B-6



CC      Bonds are minimally protected. Default in payment of interest and/or
        principal seems probable over time.

C       Bonds are in imminent default in payment of interest or principal.

D       Bonds are in default on interest and/or principal payments. Such bonds
DD      are extremely speculative and should be valued on the basis of their
DDD     ultimate recovery value in liquidation or reorganization of the
        obligor. "DDD" represents the highest potential for recovery on these
        bonds, and "D" represents the lowest potential for recovery.

Plus (+) or Minus (-): Plus and minus signs are used with a rating symbol to
indicate the relative position of a credit within the rating category. Plus
and minus signs, however, are not used in the "DDD," "DD," or "D" categories.

Description of Fitch's Short Term Ratings

     Fitch's short term ratings apply to debt obligations that are payable on
demand or have original maturities of up to three years, including commercial
paper, certificates of deposit, medium-term notes, and investment notes.

     The short term rating places greater emphasis than a long term rating on
the existence of liquidity necessary to meet the issuer's obligations in a
timely manner.

     Fitch short term ratings are as follows:

F-1+          Exceptionally Strong Credit Quality. Issues assigned this rating
              are regarded as having the strongest degree of assurance for
              timely payment.

F-1           Very Strong Credit Quality. Issues assigned this rating reflect
              an assurance of timely payment only slightly less in degree than
              issues rated "F-1+."

F-2           Good Credit Quality. Issues assigned this rating have a
              satisfactory degree of assurance for timely payment, but the
              margin of safety is not as great as for issues assigned "F-1+"
              and "F-1" ratings.

F-3           Fair Credit Quality. Issues assigned this rating have
              characteristics suggesting that the degree of assurance for
              timely payment is adequate; however, near-term adverse changes
              could cause these securities to be rated below investment grade.

F-S           Weak Credit Quality. Issues assigned this rating have
              characteristics suggesting a minimal degree of assurance for
              timely payment and are vulnerable to near-term adverse changes
              in financial and economic conditions.

D             Default. Issues assigned this rating are in actual or imminent
              payment default.

LOC           The symbol "LOC" indicates that the rating is based on a letter
              of credit issued by a commercial bank.

NR            Indicates that Fitch does not rate the specific issue.

Conditional   A conditional rating is premised on the successful completion of
              a project or the occurrence of a specific event.

Suspended     A rating is suspended when Fitch deems the amount of information
              available from the issuer to be inadequate for rating purposes.

Withdrawn     A rating will be withdrawn when an issue matures or is called or
              refinanced and, at Fitch's discretion, when an issuer fails to
              furnish proper and timely information.

FitchAlert    Ratings are placed on FitchAlert to notify investors of an
              occurrence that is likely to result in a rating change and the
              likely direction of such change. These are designated as
              "Positive," indicating a potential upgrade, 


                                     B-7



              "Negative," for potential downgrade, or "Evolving," where
              ratings may be raised or lowered. FitchAlert is relatively short
              term, and should be resolved within 12 months.

Ratings Outlook: An outlook is used to describe the most likely direction of
any rating change over the intermediate term. It is described as "Positive" or
"Negative." The absence of a designation indicates a stable outlook.


                                     B-8



                                  APPENDIX C

                           MUNICIPAL BOND INSURANCE

     Set forth below is further information with respect to the insurance
policies (the "Policies") that MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc. (the
"Fund") may obtain from several insurance companies with respect to insured
Municipal Bonds held by the Fund. The Fund has no obligation to obtain any
such Policies, and the terms of any Policies actually obtained may vary
significantly from the terms discussed below.

     In determining eligibility for insurance, insurance companies will apply
their own standards. These standards correspond generally to the standards
such companies normally use in establishing the insurability of new issues of
Municipal Bonds and are not necessarily the criteria that would be used in
regard to the purchase of such bonds by the Fund. The Policies do not insure
(i) municipal securities ineligible for insurance and (ii) municipal
securities no longer owned by the Fund.

     The Policies do not guarantee the market value of the insured Municipal
Bonds or the value of the shares of the Fund. In addition, if the provider of
an original issuance insurance policy is unable to meet its obligations under
such policy or if the rating assigned to the insurance claims-paying ability
of any such insurer deteriorates, the insurance company will not have any
obligation to insure any issue held by the Fund that is adversely affected by
either of the above described events. In addition to the payment of premium,
the policies may require that the Fund notify the insurance company as to all
Municipal Bonds in a Fund's portfolio and permit the insurance company to
audit their records. The insurance premiums will be payable monthly by a Fund
in accordance with a premium schedule to be furnished by the insurance company
at the time the Policies are issued. Premiums are based upon the amounts
covered and the composition of the portfolio.

     The Fund will seek to utilize insurance companies that have insurance
claims-paying ability ratings of AAA from Standard & Poor's ("S&P") or Fitch
Ratings ("Fitch") or Aaa from Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's"). No
assurance can be given, however, that insurance from insurance carriers
meeting these criteria will be at all times available.

     An S&P insurance claims-paying ability rating is an assessment of an
operating insurance company's financial capacity to meet obligations under an
insurance policy in accordance with the terms. An insurer with an insurance
claims-paying ability rating of AAA has the highest rating assigned by S&P.
Capacity to honor insurance contracts is considered by S&P to be extremely
strong and highly likely to remain so over a long period of time. A Fitch
insurance claims-paying ability rating provides an assessment of an insurance
company's financial strength and, therefore, its ability to pay policy and
contract claims under the terms indicated. An insurer with an insurance
claims-paying ability rating of AAA has the highest rating assigned by Fitch.
The ability to pay claims is adjudged by Fitch to be extremely strong for
insurance companies with this highest rating. In the opinion of Fitch,
foreseeable business and economic risk factors should not have any material
adverse impact on the ability of these insurers to pay claims. In Fitch's
opinion, profitability, overall balance sheet strength, capitalization and
liquidity are all at very secure levels and are unlikely to be affected by
potential adverse underwriting, investment or cyclical events. A Moody's
insurance claims-paying ability rating is an opinion of the ability of an
insurance company to repay punctually senior policyholder obligations and
claims. An insurer with an insurance claims-paying ability rating of Aaa is
considered by Moody's to be of the best quality. In the opinion of Moody's,
the policy obligations of an insurance company with an insurance claims-paying
ability rating of Aaa carry the smallest degree of credit risk and, while the
financial strength of these companies is likely to change, such changes as can
be visualized are most unlikely to impair the company's fundamentally strong
position.

     An insurance claims-paying ability rating of S&P, Fitch or Moody's does
not constitute an opinion on any specific contract in that such an opinion can
only be rendered upon the review of the specific insurance contract.
Furthermore, an insurance claims-paying ability rating does not take into
account deductibles, surrender or cancellation penalties or the timeliness of
payment; nor does it address the ability of a company to meet nonpolicy
obligations (i.e., debt contracts).

     The assignment of ratings by S&P, Fitch or Moody's to debt issues that
are fully or partially supported by insurance policies, contracts or
guarantees is a separate process from the determination of claims-paying
ability ratings. The likelihood of a timely flow of funds from the insurer to
the trustee for the bondholders is a key element in the rating determination
for such debt issues.


                                     C-1



                                  APPENDIX D

                             SETTLEMENT PROCEDURES

     The following summary of Settlement Procedures sets forth the procedures
expected to be followed in connection with the settlement of each Auction and
will be incorporated by reference in the Auction Agent Agreement and each
Broker-Dealer Agreement. Nothing contained in this Appendix D constitutes a
representation by the Fund that in each Auction each party referred to herein
actually will perform the procedures described herein to be performed by such
party. Capitalized terms used herein shall have the respective meanings
specified in the Glossary in the prospectus or this Appendix D hereto, as the
case may be.

          (a) On each Auction Date, the Auction Agent shall notify by
     telephone or through the Auction Agent's Processing System the
     Broker-Dealers that participated in the Auction held on such Auction Date
     and submitted an Order on behalf of any Beneficial Owner or Potential
     Beneficial Owner of:

               (i) the Applicable Rate fixed for the next succeeding Dividend
          Period;

               (ii) whether Sufficient Clearing Bids existed for the
          determination of the Applicable Rate;

               (iii) if such Broker-Dealer (a "Seller's Broker-Dealer")
          submitted a Bid or a Sell Order on behalf of a Beneficial Owner, the
          number of shares, if any, of AMPS to be sold by such Beneficial
          Owner;

               (iv) if such Broker-Dealer (a "Buyer's Broker-Dealer")
          submitted a Bid on behalf of a Potential Beneficial Owner, the
          number of shares, if any, of AMPS to be purchased by such Potential
          Beneficial Owner;

               (v) if the aggregate number of shares of AMPS to be sold by all
          Beneficial Owners on whose behalf such Broker-Dealer submitted a Bid
          or a Sell Order exceeds the aggregate number of shares of AMPS to be
          purchased by all Potential Beneficial Owners on whose behalf such
          Broker-Dealer submitted a Bid, the name or names of one or more
          Buyer's Broker-Dealers (and the name of the Agent Member, if any, of
          each such Buyer's Broker-Dealer) acting for one or more purchasers
          of such excess number of shares of AMPS and the number of such
          shares to be purchased from one or more Beneficial Owners on whose
          behalf such Broker-Dealer acted by one or more Potential Beneficial
          Owners on whose behalf each of such Buyer's Broker-Dealers acted;

               (vi) if the aggregate number of shares of AMPS to be purchased
          by all Potential Beneficial Owners on whose behalf such
          Broker-Dealer submitted a Bid exceeds the aggregate number of shares
          of AMPS to be sold by all Beneficial Owners on whose behalf such
          Broker-Dealer submitted a Bid or a Sell Order, the name or names of
          one or more Seller's Broker-Dealers (and the name of the Agent
          Member, if any, of each such Seller's Broker-Dealer) acting for one
          or more sellers of such excess number of shares of AMPS and the
          number of such shares to be sold to one or more Potential Beneficial
          Owners on whose behalf such Broker-Dealer acted by one or more
          Beneficial Owners on whose behalf each of such Seller's
          Broker-Dealers acted; and

               (vii) the Auction Date of the next succeeding Auction with
          respect to the AMPS.

          (b) On each Auction Date, each Broker-Dealer that submitted an Order
     on behalf of any Beneficial Owner or Potential Beneficial Owner shall:

               (i) in the case of a Broker-Dealer that is a Buyer's
          Broker-Dealer, instruct each Potential Beneficial Owner on whose
          behalf such Broker-Dealer submitted a Bid that was accepted, in
          whole or in part, to instruct such Potential Beneficial Owner's
          Agent Member to pay to such Broker-Dealer (or its Agent Member)
          through the Securities Depository the amount necessary to purchase
          the number of shares 


                                      D-1



          of AMPS to be purchased pursuant to such Bid against receipt of such
          shares and advise such Potential Beneficial Owner of the Applicable
          Rate for the next succeeding Dividend Period;

               (ii) in the case of a Broker-Dealer that is a Seller's
          Broker-Dealer, instruct each Beneficial Owner on whose behalf such
          Broker-Dealer submitted a Sell Order that was accepted, in whole or
          in part, or a Bid that was accepted, in whole or in part, to
          instruct such Beneficial Owner's Agent Member to deliver to such
          Broker-Dealer (or its Agent Member) through the Securities
          Depository the number of shares of AMPS to be sold pursuant to such
          Order against payment therefor and advise any such Beneficial Owner
          that will continue to hold shares of AMPS of the Applicable Rate for
          the next succeeding Dividend Period;

               (iii) advise each Beneficial Owner on whose behalf such
          Broker-Dealer submitted a Hold Order of the Applicable Rate for the
          next succeeding Dividend Period;

               (iv) advise each Beneficial Owner on whose behalf such
          Broker-Dealer submitted an Order of the Auction Date for the next
          succeeding Auction; and

               (v) advise each Potential Beneficial Owner on whose behalf such
          Broker-Dealer submitted a Bid that was accepted, in whole or in
          part, of the Auction Date for the next succeeding Auction.

          (c) On the basis of the information provided to it pursuant to (a)
     above, each Broker-Dealer that submitted a Bid or a Sell Order on behalf
     of a Potential Beneficial Owner or a Beneficial Owner shall, in such
     manner and at such time or times as in its sole discretion it may
     determine, allocate any funds received by it pursuant to (b)(i) above and
     any shares of AMPS received by it pursuant to (b)(ii) above among the
     Potential Beneficial Owners, if any, on whose behalf such Broker-Dealer
     submitted Bids, the Beneficial Owners, if any, on whose behalf such
     Broker-Dealer submitted Bids that were accepted or Sell Orders, and any
     Broker-Dealer or Broker-Dealers identified to it by the Auction Agent
     pursuant to (a)(v) or (a)(vi) above.

          (d) On each Auction Date:

               (i) each Potential Beneficial Owner and Beneficial Owner shall
          instruct its Agent Member as provided in (b)(i) or (ii) above, as
          the case may be;

               (ii) each Seller's Broker-Dealer which is not an Agent Member
          of the Securities Depository shall instruct its Agent Member to (A)
          pay through the Securities Depository to the Agent Member of the
          Beneficial Owner delivering shares to such Broker-Dealer pursuant to
          (b)(ii) above the amount necessary to purchase such shares against
          receipt of such shares, and (B) deliver such shares through the
          Securities Depository to a Buyer's Broker-Dealer (or its Agent
          Member) identified to such Seller's Broker-Dealer pursuant to (a)(v)
          above against payment therefor; and

               (iii) each Buyer's Broker-Dealer which is not an Agent Member
          of the Securities Depository shall instruct its Agent Member to (A)
          pay through the Securities Depository to a Seller's Broker-Dealer
          (or its Agent Member) identified pursuant to (a)(vi) above the
          amount necessary to purchase the shares to be purchased pursuant to
          (b)(i) above against receipt of such shares, and (B) deliver such
          shares through the Securities Depository to the Agent Member of the
          purchaser thereof against payment therefor.

          (e) On the day after the Auction Date:

               (i) each Bidder's Agent Member referred to in (d)(i) above
          shall instruct the Securities Depository to execute the transactions
          described in (b)(i) or (ii) above, and the Securities Depository
          shall execute such transactions;

               (ii) each Seller's Broker-Dealer or its Agent Member shall
          instruct the Securities Depository to execute the transactions
          described in (d)(ii) above, and the Securities Depository shall
          execute such transactions; and


                                     D-2



               (iii) each Buyer's Broker-Dealer or its Agent Member shall
          instruct the Securities Depository to execute the transactions
          described in (d)(iii) above, and the Securities Depository shall
          execute such transactions.

          (f) If a Beneficial Owner selling shares of AMPS in an Auction fails
     to deliver such shares (by authorized book-entry), a Broker-Dealer may
     deliver to the Potential Beneficial Owner on behalf of which it submitted
     a Bid that was accepted a number of whole shares of AMPS that is less
     than the number of shares that otherwise was to be purchased by such
     Potential Beneficial Owner. In such event, the number of shares of AMPS
     to be so delivered shall be determined solely by such Broker-Dealer.
     Delivery of such lesser number of shares shall constitute good delivery.
     Notwithstanding the foregoing terms of this paragraph (f), any delivery
     or non-delivery of shares which shall represent any departure from the
     results of an Auction, as determined by the Auction Agent, shall be of no
     effect unless and until the Auction Agent shall have been notified of
     such delivery or non-delivery in accordance with the provisions of the
     Auction Agent Agreement and the Broker-Dealer Agreements.


                                     D-3



                                  APPENDIX E

                              AUCTION PROCEDURES

     The following procedures will be set forth in provisions of the Articles
Supplementary relating to the AMPS, and will be incorporated by reference in
the Auction Agent Agreement and each Broker-Dealer Agreement. The terms not
defined below are defined in the prospectus or in the Glossary in the
prospectus. Nothing contained in this Appendix E constitutes a representation
by the Fund that in each Auction each party referred to herein actually will
perform the procedures described herein to be performed by such party.

Paragraph 10(a) Certain Definitions.

     As used in this Paragraph 10, the following terms shall have the
following meanings, unless the context otherwise requires:

               (i) "AMPS" shall mean the shares of AMPS being auctioned
          pursuant to this Paragraph 10.

               (ii) "Auction Date" shall mean the first Business Day preceding
          the first day of a Dividend Period.

               (iii) "Available AMPS" shall have the meaning specified in
          Paragraph 10(d)(i) below.

               (iv) "Bid" shall have the meaning specified in Paragraph
          10(b)(i) below.

               (v) "Bidder" shall have the meaning specified in Paragraph
          10(b)(i) below.

               (vi) "Hold Order" shall have the meaning specified in Paragraph
          10(b)(i) below.

               (vii) "Maximum Applicable Rate" for any Dividend Period will be
          the higher of the Applicable Percentage of the Reference Rate or the
          Applicable Spread plus the Reference Rate. The Applicable Percentage
          and the Applicable Spread will be determined based on (i) the lower
          of the credit rating or ratings assigned on such date to such shares
          by Moody's and S&P (or if Moody's or S&P or both shall not make such
          rating available, the equivalent of either or both of such ratings
          by a Substitute Rating Agency or two Substitute Rating Agencies or,
          in the event that only one such rating shall be available, such
          rating) and (ii) whether the Fund has provided notification to the
          Auction Agent prior to the Auction establishing the Applicable Rate
          for any dividend that net capital gains or other taxable income will
          be included in such dividend on shares of AMPS as follows:




                                                Applicable
               Credit Ratings                   Percentage           Applicable           Applicable             Applicable
  ----------------------------------------     of Reference          Percentage           Spread Over            Spread Over
                                                  Rate--No           of Reference       Reference Rate--No        Reference
       Moody's                 S&P             Notification       Rate--Notification      Notification       Rate--Notification
  ------------------    ------------------  ------------------  ----------------------  ------------------  --------------------
                                                                                                     
         Aaa                   AAA                 110%                 125%                 1.10%                1.25%
     Aa3 to Aa1            AA- to AA+              125%                 150%                 1.25%                1.50%
      A3 to A1              A- to A+               150%                 200%                 1.50%                2.00%
    Baa3 to Baa1          BBB- to BBB+             175%                 250%                 1.75%                2.50%
     Below Baa3            Below BBB-              200%                 300%                 2.00%                3.00%



     The Applicable Percentage and the Applicable Spread as so determined may
be further subject to upward but not downward adjustment in the discretion of
the Board of Directors of the Fund after consultation with the Broker-Dealers,
provided that immediately following any such increase the Fund would be in
compliance with the AMPS Basic Maintenance Amount. Subject to the provisions
of paragraph 12 of the Articles Supplementary entitled "Termination of Rating
Agency Provisions," the Fund shall take all reasonable action necessary to
enable S&P and Moody's to provide a rating for the 


                                     E-1



AMPS. If either S&P or Moody's shall not make such a rating available or if
neither S&P nor Moody's shall make such a rating available, subject to the
provisions of paragraph 12 of the Articles Supplementary entitled "Termination
of Rating Agency Provisions," Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith
Incorporated or its affiliates and successors, after obtaining the Fund's
approval, shall select a NRSRO or two NRSROs to act as a Substitute Rating
Agency or Substitute Rating Agencies, as the case may be.

               (viii) "Order" shall have the meaning specified in Paragraph
          10(b)(i) below.

               (ix) "Sell Order" shall have the meaning specified in Paragraph
          10(b)(i) below.

               (x) "Submission Deadline" shall mean 1:00 p.m., Eastern time,
          on any Auction Date or such other time on any Auction Date as may be
          specified by the Auction Agent from time to time as the time by
          which each Broker-Dealer must submit to the Auction Agent in writing
          all Orders obtained by it for the Auction to be conducted on such
          Auction Date.

               (xi) "Submitted Bid" shall have the meaning specified in
          Paragraph 10(d)(i) below.

               (xii) "Submitted Hold Order" shall have the meaning specified
          in Paragraph 10(d)(i) below.

               (xiii) "Submitted Order" shall have the meaning specified in
          Paragraph 10(d)(i) below.

               (xiv) "Submitted Sell Order" shall have the meaning specified
          in Paragraph 10(d)(i) below.

               (xv) "Sufficient Clearing Bids" shall have the meaning
          specified in Paragraph 10(d)(i) below.

               (xvi) "Winning Bid Rate" shall have the meaning specified in
          Paragraph 10(d)(i) below.

Paragraph 10(b) Orders by Beneficial Owners, Potential Beneficial Owners,
Existing Holders And Potential Holders.

     (i) Unless otherwise permitted by the Fund, Beneficial Owners and
Potential Beneficial Owners may only participate in Auctions through their
Broker-Dealers. Broker-Dealers will submit the Orders of their respective
customers who are Beneficial Owners and Potential Beneficial Owners to the
Auction Agent, designating themselves as Existing Holders in respect of shares
subject to Orders submitted or deemed submitted to them by Beneficial Owners
and as Potential Holders in respect of shares subject to Orders submitted to
them by Potential Beneficial Owners. A Broker-Dealer may also hold shares of
AMPS in its own account as a Beneficial Owner. A Broker-Dealer may thus submit
Orders to the Auction Agent as a Beneficial Owner or a Potential Beneficial
Owner and therefore participate in an Auction as an Existing Holder or
Potential Holder on behalf of both itself and its customers. On or prior to
the Submission Deadline on each Auction Date:

          (A) each Beneficial Owner may submit to its Broker-Dealer
     information as to:

               (1) the number of outstanding shares, if any, of AMPS held by
          such Beneficial Owner which such Beneficial Owner desires to
          continue to hold without regard to the Applicable Rate for the next
          succeeding Dividend Period;

               (2) the number of outstanding shares, if any, of AMPS held by
          such Beneficial Owner which such Beneficial Owner desires to
          continue to hold, provided that the Applicable Rate for the next
          succeeding Dividend Period shall not be less than the rate per annum
          specified by such Beneficial Owner; and/or

               (3) the number of outstanding shares, if any, of AMPS held by
          such Beneficial Owner which such Beneficial Owner offers to sell
          without regard to the Applicable Rate for the next succeeding
          Dividend Period; and

          (B) each Broker-Dealer, using a list of Potential Beneficial Owners
     that shall be maintained in good faith for the purpose of conducting a
     competitive Auction, shall contact Potential Beneficial Owners, including
     Persons that are not Beneficial Owners, on such list to determine the
     number of outstanding shares, if any, of AMPS which 


                                     E-2



     each such Potential Beneficial Owner offers to purchase, provided that
     the Applicable Rate for the next succeeding Dividend Period shall not be
     less than the rate per annum specified by such Potential Beneficial
     Owner.

     For the purposes hereof, the communication by a Beneficial Owner or
Potential Beneficial Owner to a Broker-Dealer, or the communication by a
Broker-Dealer acting for its own account to the Auction Agent, of information
referred to in clause (A) or (B) of this Paragraph 10(b)(i) is hereinafter
referred to as an "Order" and each Beneficial Owner and each Potential
Beneficial Owner placing an Order, including a Broker-Dealer acting in such
capacity for its own account, is hereinafter referred to as a "Bidder"; an
Order containing the information referred to in clause (A)(1) of this
Paragraph 10(b)(i) is hereinafter referred to as a "Hold Order"; an Order
containing the information referred to in clause (A)(2) or (B) of this
Paragraph 10(b)(i) is hereinafter referred to as a "Bid"; and an Order
containing the information referred to in clause (A)(3) of this Paragraph
10(b)(i) is hereinafter referred to as a "Sell Order." Inasmuch as a
Broker-Dealer participates in an Auction as an Existing Holder or a Potential
Holder only to represent the interests of a Beneficial Owner or Potential
Beneficial Owner, whether it be its customers or itself, all discussion herein
relating to the consequences of an Auction for Existing Holders and Potential
Holders also applies to the underlying beneficial ownership interests
represented.

          (ii) (A) A Bid by an Existing Holder shall constitute an irrevocable
     offer to sell:

               (1) the number of outstanding shares of AMPS specified in such
          Bid if the Applicable Rate determined on such Auction Date shall be
          less than the rate per annum specified in such Bid; or

               (2) such number or a lesser number of outstanding shares of
          AMPS to be determined as set forth in Paragraph 10(e)(i)(D) if the
          Applicable Rate determined on such Auction Date shall be equal to
          the rate per annum specified therein; or

               (3) a lesser number of outstanding shares of AMPS to be
          determined as set forth in Paragraph 10(e)(ii)(C) if such specified
          rate per annum shall be higher than the Maximum Applicable Rate and
          Sufficient Clearing Bids do not exist.

          (B) A Sell Order by an Existing Holder shall constitute an
     irrevocable offer to sell:

               (1) the number of outstanding shares of AMPS specified in such
          Sell Order, or

               (2) such number or a lesser number of outstanding shares of
          AMPS to be determined as set forth in Paragraph 10(e)(ii)(C) if
          Sufficient Clearing Bids do not exist.

          (C) A Bid by a Potential Holder shall constitute an irrevocable
     offer to purchase:

               (1) the number of outstanding shares of AMPS specified in such
          Bid if the Applicable Rate determined on such Auction Date shall be
          higher than the rate per annum specified in such Bid; or

               (2) such number or a lesser number of outstanding shares of
          AMPS to be determined as set forth in Paragraph 10(e)(i)(E) if the
          Applicable Rate determined on such Auction Date shall be equal to
          the rate per annum specified therein.

Paragraph 10(c) Submission of Orders by Broker-Dealers to Auction Agent.

     (i) Each Broker-Dealer shall submit in writing or through a mutually
acceptable electronic means to the Auction Agent prior to the Submission
Deadline on each Auction Date all Orders obtained by such Broker-Dealer,
designating itself (unless otherwise permitted by the Fund) as an Existing
Holder in respect of shares subject to Orders submitted or deemed submitted to
it by Beneficial Owners and as a Potential Holder in respect of shares subject
to Orders submitted to it by Potential Beneficial Owners, and specifying with
respect to each Order:

          (A) the name of the Bidder placing such Order (which shall be the
     Broker-Dealer unless otherwise permitted by the Fund);


                                     E-3



          (B) the aggregate number of outstanding shares of AMPS that are the
     subject of such Order;

          (C) to the extent that such Bidder is an Existing Holder

               (1) the number of outstanding shares, if any, of AMPS subject
          to any Hold Order placed by such Existing Holder;

               (2) the number of outstanding shares, if any, of AMPS subject
          to any Bid placed by such Existing Holder and the rate per annum
          specified in such Bid; and

               (3) the number of outstanding shares, if any, of AMPS subject
          to any Sell Order placed by such Existing Holder; and

          (D) to the extent such Bidder is a Potential Holder, the rate per
     annum specified in such Potential Holder's Bid.

     (ii) If any rate per annum specified in any Bid contains more than three
figures to the right of the decimal point, the Auction Agent shall round such
rate up to the next highest one-thousandth (.001) of 1%.

     (iii) If an Order or Orders covering all of the outstanding shares of
AMPS held by an Existing Holder are not submitted to the Auction Agent prior
to the Submission Deadline, the Auction Agent shall deem a Hold Order (in the
case of an Auction relating to a Dividend Period which is not a Special
Dividend Period of more than 28 days) and a Sell Order (in the case of an
Auction relating to a Special Dividend Period of more than 28 days) to have
been submitted on behalf of such Existing Holder covering the number of
outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing Holder and not subject to
Orders submitted to the Auction Agent.

     (iv) If one or more Orders on behalf of an Existing Holder covering in
the aggregate more than the number of outstanding shares of AMPS held by such
Existing Holder are submitted to the Auction Agent, such Orders shall be
considered valid as follows and in the following order of priority:

          (A) any Hold Order submitted on behalf of such Existing Holder shall
     be considered valid up to and including the number of outstanding shares
     of AMPS held by such Existing Holder; provided that if more than one Hold
     Order is submitted on behalf of such Existing Holder and the number of
     shares of AMPS subject to such Hold Orders exceeds the number of
     outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing Holder, the number of
     shares of AMPS subject to each of such Hold Orders shall be reduced pro
     rata so that such Hold Orders, in the aggregate, cover exactly the number
     of outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing Holder;

          (B) any Bids submitted on behalf of such Existing Holder shall be
     considered valid, in the ascending order of their respective rates per
     annum if more than one Bid is submitted on behalf of such Existing
     Holder, up to and including the excess of the number of outstanding
     shares of AMPS held by such Existing Holder over the number of shares of
     AMPS subject to any Hold Order referred to in Paragraph 10(c)(iv)(A)
     above (and if more than one Bid submitted on behalf of such Existing
     Holder specifies the same rate per annum and together they cover more
     than the remaining number of shares that can be the subject of valid Bids
     after application of Paragraph 10(c)(iv)(A) above and of the foregoing
     portion of this Paragraph 10(c)(iv)(B) to any Bid or Bids specifying a
     lower rate or rates per annum, the number of shares subject to each of
     such Bids shall be reduced pro rata so that such Bids, in the aggregate,
     cover exactly such remaining number of shares); and the number of shares,
     if any, subject to Bids not valid under this Paragraph 10(c)(iv)(B) shall
     be treated as the subject of a Bid by a Potential Holder; and

          (C) any Sell Order shall be considered valid up to and including the
     excess of the number of outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing
     Holder over the number of shares of AMPS subject to Hold Orders referred
     to in Paragraph 10(c)(iv)(A) and Bids referred to in Paragraph
     10(c)(iv)(B); provided that if more than one Sell Order is submitted on
     behalf of any Existing Holder and the number of shares of AMPS subject to
     such Sell Orders is greater than such excess, the number of shares of
     AMPS subject to each of such Sell Orders shall be reduced pro rata so
     that such Sell Orders, in the aggregate, cover exactly the number of
     shares of AMPS equal to such excess.


                                     E-4



     (v) If more than one Bid is submitted on behalf of any Potential Holder,
each Bid submitted shall be a separate Bid with the rate per annum and number
of shares of AMPS therein specified.

     (vi) Any Order submitted by a Beneficial Owner or a Potential Beneficial
Owner to its Broker-Dealer, or by a Broker-Dealer to the Auction Agent, prior
to the Submission Deadline on any Auction Date shall be irrevocable.

Paragraph 10(d) Determination of Sufficient Clearing Bids, Winning Bid Rate
and Applicable Rate.

     (i) Not earlier than the Submission Deadline on each Auction Date, the
Auction Agent shall assemble all Orders submitted or deemed submitted to it by
the Broker-Dealers (each such Order as submitted or deemed submitted by a
Broker-Dealer being hereinafter referred to individually as a "Submitted Hold
Order," a "Submitted Bid" or a "Submitted Sell Order," as the case may be, or
as a "Submitted Order") and shall determine:

          (A) the excess of the total number of outstanding shares of AMPS
     over the number of outstanding shares of AMPS that are the subject of
     Submitted Hold Orders (such excess being hereinafter referred to as the
     "Available AMPS");

          (B) from the Submitted Orders whether the number of outstanding
     shares of AMPS that are the subject of Submitted Bids by Potential
     Holders specifying one or more rates per annum equal to or lower than the
     Maximum Applicable Rate exceeds or is equal to the sum of:

               (1) the number of outstanding shares of AMPS that are the
          subject of Submitted Bids by Existing Holders specifying one or more
          rates per annum higher than the Maximum Applicable Rate, and

               (2) the number of outstanding shares of AMPS that are subject
          to Submitted Sell Orders (if such excess or such equality exists
          (other than because the number of outstanding shares of AMPS in
          clauses (1) and (2) above are each zero because all of the
          outstanding shares of AMPS are the subject of Submitted Hold
          Orders), such Submitted Bids by Potential Holders hereinafter being
          referred to collectively as "Sufficient Clearing Bids"); and

          (C) if Sufficient Clearing Bids exist, the lowest rate per annum
     specified in the Submitted Bids (the "Winning Bid Rate") that if:

               (1) each Submitted Bid from Existing Holders specifying the
          Winning Bid Rate and all other submitted Bids from Existing Holders
          specifying lower rates per annum were rejected, thus entitling such
          Existing Holders to continue to hold the shares of AMPS that are the
          subject of such Submitted Bids, and

               (2) each Submitted Bid from Potential Holders specifying the
          Winning Bid Rate and all other Submitted Bids from Potential Holders
          specifying lower rates per annum were accepted, thus entitling the
          Potential Holders to purchase the shares of AMPS that are the
          subject of such Submitted Bids, would result in the number of shares
          subject to all Submitted Bids specifying the Winning Bid Rate or a
          lower rate per annum being at least equal to the Available AMPS.

     (ii) Promptly after the Auction Agent has made the determinations
pursuant to Paragraph 10(d)(i), the Auction Agent shall advise the Fund of the
Maximum Applicable Rate and, based on such determinations, the Applicable Rate
for the next succeeding Dividend Period as follows:

          (A) if Sufficient Clearing Bids exist, that the Applicable Rate for
     the next succeeding Dividend Period shall be equal to the Winning Bid
     Rate;

          (B) if Sufficient Clearing Bids do not exist (other than because all
     of the outstanding shares of AMPS are the subject of Submitted Hold
     Orders), that the Applicable Rate for the next succeeding Dividend Period
     shall be equal to the Maximum Applicable Rate; or


                                     E-5



          (C) if all of the outstanding shares of AMPS are the subject of
     Submitted Hold Orders, the Dividend Period next succeeding the Auction
     automatically shall be the same length as the immediately preceding
     Dividend Period and the Applicable Rate for the next succeeding Dividend
     Period shall be equal to 60% of the Reference Rate (or 90% of such rate
     if the Fund has provided notification to the Auction Agent prior to
     establishing the Applicable Rate for any dividend that net capital gain
     or other taxable income will be included in such dividend on shares of
     AMPS) on the date of the Auction.

Paragraph 10(e) Acceptance and Rejection of Submitted Bids and Submitted Sell
Orders and Allocation of Shares.

     Based on the determinations made pursuant to Paragraph 10(d)(i), the
Submitted Bids and Submitted Sell Orders shall be accepted or rejected and the
Auction Agent shall take such other action as set forth below:

          (i) If Sufficient Clearing Bids have been made, subject to the
     provisions of Paragraph 10(e)(iii) and Paragraph 10(e)(iv), Submitted
     Bids and Submitted Sell Orders shall be accepted or rejected in the
     following order of priority and all other Submitted Bids shall be
     rejected:

               (A) the Submitted Sell Orders of Existing Holders shall be
          accepted and the Submitted Bid of each of the Existing Holders
          specifying any rate per annum that is higher than the Winning Bid
          Rate shall be accepted, thus requiring each such Existing Holder to
          sell the outstanding shares of AMPS that are the subject of such
          Submitted Sell Order or Submitted Bid;

               (B) the Submitted Bid of each of the Existing Holders
          specifying any rate per annum that is lower than the Winning Bid
          Rate shall be rejected, thus entitling each such Existing Holder to
          continue to hold the outstanding shares of AMPS that are the subject
          of such Submitted Bid;

               (C) the Submitted Bid of each of the Potential Holders
          specifying any rate per annum that is lower than the Winning Bid
          Rate shall be accepted;

               (D) the Submitted Bid of each of the Existing Holders
          specifying a rate per annum that is equal to the Winning Bid Rate
          shall be rejected, thus entitling each such Existing Holder to
          continue to hold the outstanding shares of AMPS that are the subject
          of such Submitted Bid, unless the number of outstanding shares of
          AMPS subject to all such Submitted Bids shall be greater than the
          number of outstanding shares of AMPS ("Remaining Shares") equal to
          the excess of the Available AMPS over the number of outstanding
          shares of AMPS subject to Submitted Bids described in Paragraph
          10(e)(i)(B) and Paragraph 10(e)(i)(C), in which event the Submitted
          Bids of each such Existing Holder shall be accepted, and each such
          Existing Holder shall be required to sell outstanding shares of
          AMPS, but only in an amount equal to the difference between (1) the
          number of outstanding shares of AMPS then held by such Existing
          Holder subject to such Submitted Bid and (2) the number of shares of
          AMPS obtained by multiplying (x) the number of Remaining Shares by
          (y) a fraction the numerator of which shall be the number of
          outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing Holder subject to
          such Submitted Bid and the denominator of which shall be the sum of
          the numbers of outstanding shares of AMPS subject to such Submitted
          Bids made by all such Existing Holders that specified a rate per
          annum equal to the Winning Bid Rate; and

               (E) the Submitted Bid of each of the Potential Holders
          specifying a rate per annum that is equal to the Winning Bid Rate
          shall be accepted but only in an amount equal to the number of
          outstanding shares of AMPS obtained by multiplying (x) the
          difference between the Available AMPS and the number of outstanding
          shares of AMPS subject to Submitted Bids described in Paragraph
          10(e)(i)(B), Paragraph 10(e)(i)(C) and Paragraph 10(e)(i)(D) by (y)
          a fraction the numerator of which shall be the number of outstanding
          shares of AMPS subject to such Submitted Bid and the denominator of
          which shall be the sum of the number of outstanding shares of AMPS
          subject to such Submitted Bids made by all such Potential Holders
          that specified rates per annum equal to the Winning Bid Rate.

          (ii) If Sufficient Clearing Bids have not been made (other than
     because all of the outstanding shares of AMPS are subject to Submitted
     Hold Orders), subject to the provisions of Paragraph 10(e)(iii),
     Submitted Orders 


                                     E-6



     shall be accepted or rejected as follows in the following order of
     priority and all other Submitted Bids shall be rejected:

               (A) the Submitted Bid of each Existing Holder specifying any
          rate per annum that is equal to or lower than the Maximum Applicable
          Rate shall be rejected, thus entitling such Existing Holder to
          continue to hold the outstanding shares of AMPS that are the subject
          of such Submitted Bid;

               (B) the Submitted Bid of each Potential Holder specifying any
          rate per annum that is equal to or lower than the Maximum Applicable
          Rate shall be accepted, thus requiring such Potential Holder to
          purchase the outstanding shares of AMPS that are the subject of such
          Submitted Bid; and

               (C) the Submitted Bids of each Existing Holder specifying any
          rate per annum that is higher than the Maximum Applicable Rate shall
          be accepted and the Submitted Sell Orders of each Existing Holder
          shall be accepted, in both cases only in an amount equal to the
          difference between (1) the number of outstanding shares of AMPS then
          held by such Existing Holder subject to such Submitted Bid or
          Submitted Sell Order and (2) the number of shares of AMPS obtained
          by multiplying (x) the difference between the Available AMPS and the
          aggregate number of outstanding shares of AMPS subject to Submitted
          Bids described in Paragraph 10(e)(ii)(A) and Paragraph 10(e)(ii)(B)
          by (y) a fraction the numerator of which shall be the number of
          outstanding shares of AMPS held by such Existing Holder subject to
          such Submitted Bid or Submitted Sell Order and the denominator of
          which shall be the number of outstanding shares of AMPS subject to
          all such Submitted Bids and Submitted Sell Orders.

          (iii) If, as a result of the procedures described in Paragraph
     10(e)(i) or Paragraph 10(e)(ii), any Existing Holder would be entitled or
     required to sell, or any Potential Holder would be entitled or required
     to purchase, a fraction of a share of AMPS on any Auction Date, the
     Auction Agent shall, in such manner as in its sole discretion it shall
     determine, round up or down the number of shares of AMPS to be purchased
     or sold by any Existing Holder or Potential Holder on such Auction Date
     so that each outstanding share of AMPS purchased or sold by each Existing
     Holder or Potential Holder on such Auction Date shall be a whole share of
     AMPS.

          (iv) If, as a result of the procedures described in Paragraph
     10(e)(i), any Potential Holder would be entitled or required to purchase
     less than a whole share of AMPS on any Auction Date, the Auction Agent,
     in such manner as in its sole discretion it shall determine, shall
     allocate shares of AMPS for purchase among Potential Holders so that only
     whole shares of AMPS are purchased on such Auction Date by any Potential
     Holder, even if such allocation results in one or more of such Potential
     Holders not purchasing any shares of AMPS on such Auction Date.

          (v) Based on the results of each Auction, the Auction Agent shall
     determine, with respect to each Broker-Dealer that submitted Bids or Sell
     Orders on behalf of Existing Holders or Potential Holders, the aggregate
     number of the outstanding shares of AMPS to be purchased and the
     aggregate number of outstanding shares of AMPS to be sold by such
     Potential Holders and Existing Holders and, to the extent that such
     aggregate number of outstanding shares to be purchased and such aggregate
     number of outstanding shares to be sold differ, the Auction Agent shall
     determine to which other Broker-Dealer or Broker-Dealers acting for one
     or more purchasers such Broker-Dealer shall deliver, or from which other
     Broker-Dealer or Broker-Dealers acting for one or more sellers such
     Broker-Dealer shall receive, as the case may be, outstanding shares of
     AMPS.

Paragraph 10(f) Miscellaneous.

     The Fund may interpret the provisions of this Paragraph 10 to resolve any
inconsistency or ambiguity, remedy any formal defect or make any other change
or modification that does not substantially adversely affect the rights of
Beneficial Owners of AMPS. A Beneficial Owner or an Existing Holder (A) may
sell, transfer or otherwise dispose of shares of AMPS only pursuant to a Bid
or Sell Order in accordance with the procedures described in this Paragraph 10
or to or through a Broker-Dealer, provided that in the case of all transfers
other than pursuant to Auctions such Beneficial Owner or Existing Holder, its
Broker-Dealer, if applicable, or its Agent Member advises the Auction Agent of
such transfer and (B) except as otherwise required by law, shall have the
ownership of the shares of AMPS held by it maintained in book entry form by
the Securities Depository in the account of its Agent Member, which in turn
will maintain records of such Beneficial Owner's beneficial ownership. Neither
the Fund nor any affiliate (other than Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith
Incorporated) 


                                     E-7



shall submit an Order in any Auction. Any Beneficial Owner that is an
affiliate (other than Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated)
shall not sell, transfer or otherwise dispose of shares of AMPS to any person
other than the Fund. All of the outstanding shares of AMPS of a series shall
be represented by a single certificate registered in the name of the nominee
of the Securities Depository unless otherwise required by law or unless there
is no Securities Depository. If there is no Securities Depository, at the
Fund's option and upon its receipt of such documents as it deems appropriate,
any shares of AMPS may be registered in the Stock Register in the name of the
Beneficial Owner thereof and such Beneficial Owner thereupon will be entitled
to receive certificates therefor and required to deliver certificates thereof
or upon transfer or exchange thereof.


                                     E-8



                           PART C. OTHER INFORMATION

Item 25. Financial Statements And Exhibits.

  (1)        Financial Statements

  Part       Financial Highlights for each of the fiscal years in the
  A:         ten-year period ended October 31, 2004 and the six months ended
             April 30, 2005.

  Part       Schedule of Investments of the Fund as of October 31, 2004.*
  B:         
             Statement of Net Assets of the Fund as of October 31, 2004.*

             Statement of Operations of the Fund for the fiscal year ended
             October 31, 2004.*

             Statements of Changes in Net Assets of the Fund for the fiscal
             years ended October 31, 2003 and October 31, 2004.* 

             Financial Highlights for each of the fiscal years in the 
             five-year period ended October 31, 2004.*

             Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm.*

             Statement of Investments of the Fund as of April 30, 2005**

             Statement of Net Assets of the Fund as of April 30, 2005**

             Statement of Operations of the Fund for the six months ended
             April 30, 2005**

             Statement of Changes in Net Assets of the Fund for the six months
             ended April 30, 2005** 

             Financial Highlights of the Fund for the six months ended 
             April 30, 2005 and each of the fiscal years in the five-year 
             period ended October 31, 2005**


 ----------
*      Incorporated by reference to the Registrant's Annual Report to 
Shareholders for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2004 filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission ("Commission") on December 28, 2004
pursuant to Rule 30b2-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended
("1940 Act").
**     Incorporated by reference to the Registrant's Semi-Annual Report to
Stockholders for the six month period ended April 30, 2005 filed with the
Commission on June 30, 2005 pursuant to Rule 30b2-1 under the 1940 Act.


Exhibits        Description
--------        -----------

  (a)(1)        Articles of Incorporation of the Registrant. (a)
  (a)(2)        Articles of Amendment to the Articles of Incorporation of the
                Registrant. 
  (a)(3)        Articles Supplementary creating Registrant's Series A and
                Series B Auction Market Preferred Stock (the "Series A AMPS"
                and "Series B AMPS", respectively). (a)
  (a)(4)        Articles Supplementary creating additional Series A AMPS and
                Series B AMPS.
  (a)(5)        Articles of Amendment to Articles Supplementary creating
                additional Series A AMPS and Series B AMPS.
  (a)(6)        Articles of Amendment to Articles Supplementary creating
                Registrant's Series A AMPS and Series B AMPS.


                                     C-1



  (a)(7)        Articles Supplementary creating Registrant's Series C Auction
                Market Preferred Stock (the "Series C AMPS"). (a)
  (a)(8)        Articles of Amendment to Articles Supplementary creating
                Registrant's Series C AMPS.
  (a)(9)        Form of Articles Supplementary creating Registrant's Series D
                and Series E Auction Market Preferred Stock (the "Series D
                AMPS" and "Series E AMPS", respectively, and collectively with
                the Series A AMPS, Series B AMPS and Series C AMPS, the "Other
                AMPS"). (a)
  (a)(10)       Form of Articles Supplementary creating Series F Auction
                Market Preferred Stock (the "AMPS").
  (b)           By-laws of the Registrant. (a)
  (c)           Not applicable.
  (d)(1)        Portions of the Articles of Incorporation, By-laws and
                Articles Supplementary of the Registrant defining the rights
                of holders of shares of the Registrant. (b)
  (d)(2)        Form of specimen certificate for the AMPS of the Registrant.
  (e)           Form of Automatic Dividend Reinvestment Plan.
  (f)           Not applicable.
  (g)(1)        Form of Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant
                and Fund Asset Management, L.P. ("FAM" or the "Investment
                Adviser"). (a)
  (h)(1)        Form of Purchase Agreement between the Registrant and Merrill
                Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated ("Merrill Lynch")
                relating to the AMPS.
  (h)(2)        Form of Merrill Lynch Standard Dealer Agreement.(c) 
  (i)           Not applicable.
  (j)           Form of Custodian Agreement between the Registrant and State
                Street Bank and Trust Company ("State Street"). (d)
  (k)(l)        Form of Transfer Agency and Service Agreement between the
                Registrant and EquiServe Trust Company, N.A. and EquiServe
                L.P. (e)
  (k)(2)        Form of Administrative Services Agreement between the
                Registrant and State Street. (f) 
  (k)(4)        Form of Auction Agent Agreement between the Registrant and The
                Bank of New York. 
  (k)(5)        Form of Broker-Dealer Agreement.
  (k)(6)        Form of Letter of Representations.
  (l)           Opinion and Consent of Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP.*
  (m)           Not applicable.
  (n)           Consent of ______________, independent auditors for the 
                Registrant.*
  (o)           Not applicable.
  (p)           Not applicable.
  (q)           Not applicable.
  (r)           Code of Ethics.(g)
  -----------


                                     C-2



  (a)           Filed or refiled on November 9, 2001, as an Exhibit to
                Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Registrant's Registration
                Statement on Form N-14 (File No. 333-70642) (the "N-14
                Registration Statement").
  (b)           Reference is made to Article V, Article VI (sections 2, 3, 4,
                5, and 6), Article VII, Article VIII, Article X, Article XII
                and Article XIII of the Registrant's Articles of
                Incorporation, previously filed as Exhibit (1)(a) to
                Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the N-14 Registration
                Statement; to Article II, Article III (sections 1, 2, 3, 5 and
                17), Article VI, Article VII, Article XII, Article XIII and
                Article XIV of the Registrant's By- laws, filed as Exhibit (b)
                to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the N-14 Registration
                Statement; and to the Forms of Articles Supplementary and the
                Forms of Articles of Amendment filed as Exhibits (a)(2),
                (a)(3), (a)(4), (a)(5), (a)(6), (a)(7), (a)(8), (a)(9) and
                (a)(10) to this Registration Statement. 
  (c)           Incorporated by reference to Exhibit (h)(2) to Pre-Effective
                Amendment No. 3 to the Registration Statement on Form N-2 of
                Preferred Income Strategies Fund, Inc. (File No. 333-102712),
                filed on March 25, 2003. 
  (d)           Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 7 to Post-Effective
                Amendment No. 10 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of
                Merrill Lynch Municipal Bond Fund of Merrill Lynch Multi-State
                Municipal Series Trust (File No. 53-48873), filed on October
                30, 2001.
  (e)           Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 13 to Pre-Effective
                Amendment No. 2 to the Registration Statement on Form N-14 of
                Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc. (File No. 333-10193) filed on
                December 31, 2002.
  (f)           Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 8(d) to Post-Effective
                Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of
                Merrill Lynch Focus Twenty Fund, Inc. (File No. 333-89775)
                filed on March 20, 2001.
  (g)           Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 15 to Pre-Effective
                Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of
                Merrill Lynch Inflation Protected Fund (File No. 333-110936),
                filed on January 22, 2004. 
  *             To be provided by amendment.


Item 26. Marketing Arrangements.

     See Exhibits (h)(1) and (2).

Item 27. Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution.

     The following table sets forth the estimated expenses to be incurred in
connection with the offering described in this Registration Statement:

Registration fees                                            $5,297
Printing (other than stock certificates)                     *
Legal fees and expenses                                      *
Rating Agency Fees                                           *
Miscellaneous                                                *
                                                             ----------------
         Total                                               $*
                                                             ================

-------------
*     To be provided by amendment.

Item 28. Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control with Registrant.

     The Registrant is not controlled by, or under common control with, any
person.


                                     C-3



Item 29. Number of Holders of Securities.

                                                                  Number of
                                                               Record Holders
                                                                    At
                   Title of Class                                      , 2005
----------------------------------------------------        ------------------
Common Stock, $.10 par value
Preferred Stock


Item 30. Indemnification.

     Reference is made to Section 2-418 of the General Corporation Law of the
State of Maryland, Article V of the Registrant's Articles of Incorporation,
Article VI of the Registrant's By-laws and Section 6 of the Purchase
Agreement, which provide for indemnification.

     Article VI of the By-laws provides that each officer and director of the
Registrant shall be indemnified by the Registrant to the full extent permitted
under the Maryland General Corporation Law, except that such indemnity shall
not protect any such person against any liability to the Registrant or any
stockholder thereof to which such person would otherwise be subject by reason
of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of
the duties involved in the conduct of his or her office. Absent a court
determination that an officer or director seeking indemnification was not
liable on the merits or guilty of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross
negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of his
or her office, the decision by the Registrant to indemnify such person must be
based upon the reasonable determination of independent legal counsel or the
vote of a majority of a quorum of non-party independent directors, after
review of the facts, that such officer or director is not guilty of willful
misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties
involved in the conduct of his or her office.

     Each officer and director of the Registrant claiming indemnification
within the scope of Article VI of the By-laws shall be entitled to advances
from the Registrant for payment of the reasonable expenses incurred by him or
her in connection with proceedings to which he or she is a party in the manner
and to the full extent permitted under the Maryland General Corporation Law;
provided, however, that the person seeking indemnification shall provide to
the Registrant a written affirmation of his or her good faith belief that the
standard of conduct necessary for indemnification by the Registrant has been
met and a written undertaking to repay any such advance, if it ultimately
should be determined that the standard of conduct has not been met, and
provided further that at least one of the following additional conditions is
met: (i) the person seeking indemnification shall provide a security in form
and amount acceptable to the Registrant for his or her undertaking; (ii) the
Registrant is insured against losses arising by reason of the advance; or
(iii) a majority of a quorum of non-party independent directors, or
independent legal counsel in a written opinion shall determine, based on a
review of facts readily available to the Registrant at the time the advance is
proposed to be made, that there is reason to believe that the person seeking
indemnification will ultimately be found to be entitled to indemnification.

     The Registrant may purchase insurance on behalf of an officer or director
protecting such person to the full extent permitted under the Maryland General
Corporation Law from liability arising from his or her activities as officer
or director of the Registrant. The Registrant, however, may not purchase
insurance on behalf of any officer or director of the Registrant that protects
or purports to protect such person from liability to the Registrant or to its
stockholders to which such officer or director would otherwise be subject by
reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless
disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of his or her office.

     In Section 7 of the Purchase Agreement relating to the securities being
offered hereby, the Registrant agrees to indemnify Merrill Lynch and each
person, if any, who controls Merrill Lynch within the meaning of the
Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933 Act") against certain types of civil
liabilities arising in connection with the Registration Statement or
Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information.

     Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the 1933 Act may
be provided to directors, officers and controlling persons of the Registrant
and Merrill Lynch, pursuant to the foregoing provisions or otherwise, the
Registrant has 


                                     C-4



been advised that, in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission,
such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the 1933 Act and
is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification
against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Registrant of expenses
incurred or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the
Registrant in connection with any successful defense of any action, suit or
proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in
connection with the securities being registered, the Registrant will, unless
in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling
precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether
such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the 1933
Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

Item 31. Business And Other Connections Of The Investment Adviser.

     FAM (the "Investment Adviser"), acts as the investment adviser for a
number of affiliated open-end and closed-end registered investment companies.

     Merrill Lynch Investment Managers, L.P. ("MLIM"), acts as the investment
adviser for a number of affiliated open-end and closed-end registered
investment companies, and also acts as sub-adviser to certain other
portfolios.

     The address of each of these registered investment companies is P.O. Box
9011, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011, except that the address of Merrill
Lynch Funds for Institutions Series is One Financial Center, 23rd Floor,
Boston, Massachusetts 02111-2665.

     The address of the Investment Adviser, MLIM, Princeton Services, Inc.
("Princeton Services") and Princeton Administrators, L.P. ("Princeton
Administrators") is also P.O. Box 9011, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011. The
address of FAM Distributors, Inc. ("FAMD") is P.O. Box 9081, Princeton, New
Jersey 08543-9081. The address of Merrill Lynch and Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.
("ML & Co.") is World Financial Center, North Tower, 250 Vesey Street, New
York, New York 10080.

     Set forth below is a list of each executive officer and partner of the
Investment Adviser indicating each business, profession, vocation or
employment of a substantial nature in which each such person or entity has
been engaged for the past two years for his, her or its own account or in the
capacity of director, officer, employee, partner or Director. Mr. Burke is
Vice President and Treasurer of all or substantially all of the investment
companies advised by FAM or its affiliates, and Mr. Doll is an officer of one
or more of such companies.





                                        Position(s) with                     Other Substantial Business,
             Name                      Investment Adviser                 Profession, Vocation Or Employment
------------------------------   -----------------------------   ----------------------------------------------------
                                                           
ML & Co.                         Limited Partner                 Financial Services Holding Company; Limited Partner
                                                                 of MLIM

Princeton Services               General Partner                 General Partner of MLIM

Robert C. Doll, Jr.              President                       President of MLIM; Co-Head (Americas Region) of
                                                                 MLIM from 2000 to 2004; Senior Vice President of
                                                                 MLIM from 1999 to 2000; Director of Princeton
                                                                 Services; Chief Investment Officer of
                                                                 OppenheimerFunds, Inc. in 1999 and Executive Vice
                                                                 President thereof from 1991 to 1999

Donald C. Burke                  First Vice President and        First Vice President and Treasurer of MLIM; Senior
                                 Treasurer                       Vice President, Treasurer and Director of Princeton
                                                                 Services; Vice President of FAMD

Andrew J. Donohue                General Counsel                 First Vice President and General Counsel of MLIM;
                                                                 Senior Vice President and Director of Princeton


                                     C-5




                                        Position(s) with                     Other Substantial Business,
             Name                      Investment Adviser                 Profession, Vocation Or Employment
------------------------------   -----------------------------   ----------------------------------------------------
                                                                 Services; President and Director of FAMD

Alice A. Pellegrino              Secretary                       Secretary of MLIM, Princeton Services and FAMD




Item 32. Location of Account and Records.

     All accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by
Section 31(a) of the 1940 Act, and the Rules promulgated thereunder are
maintained at the offices of the Registrant (800 Scudders Mill Road,
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536), its Investment Adviser (800 Scudders Mill Road,
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536), its custodian, The Bank of New York (100 Church
Street, New York, New York 10286), and its transfer agents, EquiServe, L.P.
(150 Royall Street, Canton, Massachusetts 02021) and The Bank of New York (101
Barclay Street, New York, New York 10286).

Item 33. Management Services.

     Not applicable.

Item 34. Undertakings.

     (1) The Registrant undertakes to suspend the offering of the shares of
preferred stock covered hereby until it amends its prospectus contained herein
if (1) subsequent to the effective date of this Registration Statement, its
net asset value per share of preferred stock declines more than 10% from its
net asset value per share of preferred stock as of the effective date of this
Registration Statement, or (2) its net asset value per share of preferred
stock increases to an amount greater than its net proceeds as stated in the
prospectus contained herein.

     (2) Not applicable.

     (3) Not applicable.

     (4) Not applicable

     (5) The Registrant undertakes that:

          (a) For purposes of determining any liability under the 1933 Act,
     the information omitted from the form of prospectus filed as part of this
     Registration Statement in reliance upon Rule 430A and contained in the
     form of prospectus filed by the registrant pursuant to Rule 497(h) under
     the 1933 Act shall be deemed to be part of this Registration Statement as
     of the time it was declared effective.

          (b) For the purpose of determining any liability under the 1933 Act,
     each post-effective amendment that contains a form of prospectus shall be
     deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities
     offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall
     be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

     (6) The Registrant undertakes to send by first-class mail or other means
designed to ensure equally prompt delivery, within two business days of
receipt of a written or oral request, any statement of additional information.


                                     C-6



                                  SIGNATURES

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this
Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized, in the Township of Plainsboro, State of New Jersey,
on the 21st day of July, 2005.

                                     MUNIYIELD CALIFORNIA INSURED FUND, INC.
                                     (Registrant)

                                      By: /s/ DONALD C. BURKE 
                                         ---------------------
                                      Donald C. Burke
                                      Vice President and Treasurer

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Registration Statement has been signed below by the following person in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.




              Signatures                                      Title                                   Date
-----------------------------------      ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------
                                                                                           
ROBERT C. DOLL, JR.*                     President (Principal Executive Officer) and
--------------------                     Director
(Robert C. Doll, Jr.)                   

DONALD C. BURKE*                         Vice President and Treasurer  (Principal
----------------                         Financial and Accounting Officer)
(Donald C. Burke)                       

JAMES H. BODURTHA*                       Director
------------------
(James H. Bodurtha)

_____________________                    Director
(Kenneth A. Froot)

JOE GRILLS*                              Director
-----------
(Joe Grills)

HERBERT I. LONDON*                       Director
------------------
(Herbert I. London)

ROBERTA COOPER RAMO*                     Director
--------------------
(Roberta Cooper Ramo)

STEPHEN B. SWENSRUD*                     Director
--------------------
(Stephen B. Swensrud)

ROBERT S. SALOMON, JR.*                  Director
-----------------------
(Robert S. Salomon, Jr.)

*By /s/ DONALD C. BURKE                                                                          July 21, 2005
-----------------------
(Donald C. Burke, Attorney-in-Fact)



                                     C-7



                               POWER OF ATTORNEY

     The undersigned, Robert C. Doll, Jr., Donald C. Burke, James H. Bodurtha,
Joe Grills, Herbert I. London, Roberta Cooper Ramo, Robert S. Salomon, Jr. and
Stephen B. Swensrud, the Directors/Trustees and/or the Officers of each of the
registered investment companies listed below, hereby authorize Robert C. Doll,
Jr., Andrew J. Donohue, Donald C. Burke, Michael G. Clark and Alice A.
Pellegrino or any of them, as attorney-in-fact, to sign on his or her behalf
in the capacities indicated any Registration Statement or amendment thereto
(including post-effective amendments) for or on behalf of each of the
following registered investment companies and to file the same, with all
exhibits thereto, with the Securities and Exchange Commission: Apex Municipal
Fund, Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund III,
Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund V, Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund VI, Inc.;
Fund Asset Management Master Trust; Master Focus Twenty Trust; Master Large
Cap Series Trust; Mercury Funds II; Merrill Lynch California Municipal Series
Trust; Merrill Lynch Focus Value Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Fundamental Growth
Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Investment Managers Funds, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Large
Cap Series Funds, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Multi-State Municipal Series Trust;
Merrill Lynch Retirement Reserves Money Fund of Merrill Lynch Retirement
Series Trust; Merrill Lynch Short Term U.S. Government Fund, Inc.; Merrill
Lynch U.S. Government Mortgage Fund; Merrill Lynch Variable Series Funds,
Inc.; Merrill Lynch World Income Fund, Inc.; MuniAssets Fund, Inc.;
MuniHoldings California Insured Fund, Inc.; MuniHoldings Insured Fund II,
Inc.; MuniInsured Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Arizona Fund, Inc.; MuniYield
California Fund, Inc.; MuniYield California Insured Fund, Inc.; MuniYield
Florida Fund; MuniYield Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Insured Fund, Inc.; MuniYield
Michigan Insured Fund II, Inc.; MuniYield New Jersey Fund, Inc.; MuniYield New
York Insured Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Quality Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Quality Fund
II, Inc.; Summit Cash Reserves Fund of Financial Institutions Series Trust;
and The Asset Program, Inc.

Dated:  February 23, 2005




                                                                 
          /s/ Robert C. Doll, Jr.                                          /s/ Donald C. Burke
---------------------------------------------                   -------------------------------------------
            Robert C. Doll, Jr.                                              Donald C. Burke
       (President/Principal Executive                              (Vice President/Treasurer/Principal
         Officer/Director/Trustee)                                    Financial and Accounting Officer)


           /s/ James H. Bodurtha                                              /s/ Joe Grills
---------------------------------------------                   -------------------------------------------
             James H. Bodurtha                                                  Joe Grills
             (Director/Trustee)                                             (Director/Trustee)


           /s/ Herbert I. London                                          /s/ Robert Cooper Ramo
---------------------------------------------                   -------------------------------------------
             Herbert I. London                                              Robert Cooper Ramo
             (Director/Trustee)                                             (Director/Trustee)


         /s/ Robert S. Salomon, Jr.                                      /s/ Stephen B. Swensrud
---------------------------------------------                   -------------------------------------------
           Robert S. Salomon, Jr.                                          Stephen B. Swensrud
             (Director/Trustee)                                             (Director/Trustee)




                                      C-8



                                 EXHIBIT INDEX


Exhibits     Description
--------     -----------

 (a)(2)      Articles of Amendment to the Articles of Incorporation of the
             Registrant. 
 (a)(4)      Articles Supplementary creating additional Series A AMPS and 
             Series B AMPS. 
 (a)(5)      Articles of Amendment to Articles Supplementary creating 
             additional Series A AMPS and Series B AMPS.
 (a)(6)      Articles of Amendment to Articles Supplementary creating
             Registrant's Series A AMPS and Series B AMPS.
 (a)(8)      Articles of Amendment to Articles Supplementary creating
             Registrant's Series C AMPS. 
 (a)(10)     Form of Articles Supplementary creating Series F Auction Market 
             Preferred Stock (the "AMPS"). 
 (d)(2)      Form of specimen certificate for the AMPS of the Registrant.
 (e)         Form of Automatic Dividend Reinvestment Plan.
 (h)(1)      Form of Purchase Agreement between the Registrant and Merrill
             Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated ("Merrill Lynch") 
             relating to the AMPS.
 (k)(4)      Form of Auction Agent Agreement between the Registrant and The 
             Bank of New York. 
 (k)(5)      Form of Broker-Dealer Agreement. 
 (k)(6)      Form of Letter of Representations.


                                     C-9