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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM N-CSR
CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF
REGISTERED MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES
Investment Company Act file number: 811-21786
ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund
(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)
     
7337 E. Doubletree Ranch Rd., Scottsdale, AZ   85258
(Address of principal executive offices)   (Zip code)
The Corporation Trust Company, 1209 Orange
Street, Wilmington, DE 19801

(Name and address of agent for service)
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: 1-800-992-0180
     
Date of fiscal year end:
  February 28
 
   
Date of reporting period:
  August 31, 2010
Item 1. Reports to Stockholders.
The following is a copy of the report transmitted to stockholders pursuant to Rule 30e-1 under the Act (17 CFR 270.30e-1):
 
 


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(ARCH PHOTO)

Semi-Annual Report
 
August 31, 2010
 
ING Global Advantage and
Premium Opportunity Fund
 
 
     (E-DELIVERY LOGO)  E-Delivery Sign-up — details inside
 
This report is submitted for general information to shareholders of the ING Funds. It is not authorized for distribution to prospective shareholders unless accompanied or preceded by a prospectus which includes details regarding the fund’s investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses and other information. This information should be read carefully.
   FUNDS
(ING FUNDS LOGO)
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 EX-99.CERT
 EX-99.906CERT
 
 
 
Go Paperless with E-Delivery!
Sign up now for on-line prospectuses, fund reports, and proxy statements. In less than five minutes, you can help reduce paper mail and lower fund costs.
 
Just go to www.ingfunds.com, click on the E-Delivery icon from the home page, follow the directions and complete the quick 5 Steps to Enroll.
 
You will be notified by e-mail when these communications become available on the internet. Documents that are not available on the internet will continue to be sent by mail.
 
 
PROXY VOTING INFORMATION
 
A description of the policies and procedures that the Fund uses to determine how to vote proxies related to portfolio securities is available: (1) without charge, upon request, by calling Shareholder Services toll-free at (800) 992-0180; (2) on the ING Funds’ website at www.ingfunds.com; and (3) on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Information regarding how the Fund voted proxies related to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 is available without charge on the ING Funds’ website at www.ingfunds.com and on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.
 
QUARTERLY PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS
 
The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. This report contains a summary portfolio of investments for the Fund. The Fund’s Forms N-Q are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. The Fund’s Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, DC, and information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling (800) SEC-0330. The Fund’s Forms N-Q, as well as a complete portfolio of investments, are available without charge upon request from the Fund by calling Shareholder Services toll-free at (800) 992-0180.


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PRESIDENT’S LETTER
 

(PHOTO OF SHAUN P. MATHEWS)

 
Dear Shareholder,
 
ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund (the “Fund”) is a diversified, closed end management investment company whose shares are traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “IGA.” The primary objective of the Fund is to provide a high level of income, with a secondary objective of capital appreciation.
 
The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objectives by investing at least 80% of its managed assets in a diversified global equity portfolio and employing an option strategy of writing index call options equivalent to a significant portion of its equity portfolio. The Fund also hedges most of its foreign currency exposure to reduce volatility of total returns.
 
For the six month period ended August 31, 2010, the Fund made quarterly total distributions of $0.71 per share, all consisting of net investment income. During the six month period, the Fund reduced its quarterly distribution from $0.372 to $0.335 per quarter, commencing with the distribution paid on July 15, 2010.
 
Based on net asset value (“NAV”), the Fund provided a total return of (1.43)% for the six month period ended August 31, 2010.(1) This NAV return reflects a decrease in its NAV from $13.37 on February 28, 2010 to $12.50 on August 31, 2010. Based on its share price, the Fund provided a total return of (4.45)% for the six month period ended August 31, 2010.(2) This share price return reflects a decrease in its share price from $14.30 on February 28, 2010 to $13.12 on August 31, 2010.
 
The global equity markets have witnessed a challenging and turbulent period. Please read the Market Perspective and Portfolio Managers’ Report for more information on the market and the Fund’s performance.
 
At ING Funds our mission is to set the standard in helping our clients manage their financial future. We seek to assist you and your financial advisor by offering a range of global investment solutions. We invite you to visit our website at www.ingfunds.com. Here you will find information on our products and services, including current market data and fund statistics on our open- and closed-end funds. You will see that we offer a broad variety of equity, fixed income and multi-asset funds that aim to fulfill a variety of investor needs.
 
We thank you for trusting ING Funds with your investment assets, and we look forward to serving you in the months and years ahead.
 
Sincerely,
 
(-s- Shaun P. Mathews)
Shaun P. Mathews
President & Chief Executive Officer
ING Funds
October 8, 2010
 
The views expressed in the President’s Letter reflect those of the President as of the date of the letter. Any such views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions and ING Funds disclaim any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied on as investment advice and because investment decisions for an ING Fund are based on numerous factors, may not be relied on as an indication of investment intent on behalf of any ING Fund. Reference to specific company securities should not be construed as recommendations or investment advice. International investing does pose special risks including currency fluctuation, economic and political risks not found in investments that are solely domestic.
 
For more complete information, or to obtain a prospectus for any ING Fund, please call your Investment Professional or the Fund’s Shareholder Service Department at (800) 992-0180 or log on to www.ingfunds.com. The prospectus should be read carefully before investing. Consider the fund’s investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. The prospectus contains this information and other information about the fund. Check with your Investment Professional to determine which funds are available for sale within their firm. Not all funds are available for sale at all firms.
 
(1)   Total investment return at net asset value has been calculated assuming a purchase at net asset value at the beginning of each period and a sale at net asset value at the end of each period and assumes reinvestment of dividends, capital gain distributions and return of capital distributions/allocations, if any, in accordance with the provisions of the Fund’s dividend reinvestment plan.
 
(2)   Total investment return at market value measures the change in the market value of your investment assuming reinvestment of dividends, capital gain distributions and return of capital distributions/allocations, if any, in accordance with the provisions of the Fund’s dividend reinvestment plan.


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Market Perspective:  Six Months Ended August 31, 2010
 
 
Our previous fiscal year ended near the anniversary of March 9, 2009, when global equities in the form of the MSCI World IndexSM measured in local currencies, including net reinvested dividends (“MSCI” for regions discussed below), touched levels last seen six years earlier. From that low point, the index was 58% higher as the new fiscal year started and continued to rise through mid April 2010. But from there a confluence of local and global concerns sent prices on a downward path. For the six months to August 31, 2010 global equities fell 3.35%. (The MSCI World IndexSM fell 3.48% for the six months ended August 31, 2010, measured in U.S. dollars.) In currencies, the dollar gained 7.3% against the euro, but lost 4.7% to the yen and 1.8% against the pound.
 
The 12-month rally in equities had become increasingly edgy. The rescue of failing institutions by governments and central banks in Europe and the U.S., together with unprecedented fiscal and monetary stimulus to counter the ensuing recession, had led to enormous, unsustainable budget deficits. Not only would stimulus programs end, but debt would need to be wound down.
 
Beacons of hope in this rather bleak outlook were the United States and emerging markets, centered on China. The U.S. with its vast, dynamic, flexible economy would surely bounce back most quickly in the developed world and generate global economic activity. Emerging market economies, much more fiscally robust these days, had never suffered much of a financial crisis and recession anyway and were again showing vibrant growth. The demand for capital goods from China might sustain Japan’s export led revival, while in Europe, growth may be tepid but at least the situation was stable.
 
By early May all of these premises were disintegrating, the erosion gathering pace over the summer, as attention lurched from one economic statistic to the next.
 
In the U.S., the critical housing market seemed to be improving, boosted by tax credits for home buyers. After sliding for more than three years, house prices (based on the S&P/Case-Shiller 20-City Composite Home Price Index), finally showed year-over-year increases from February. But when the credits expired, sales of new and existing homes slumped to multi-year low levels. Prices would surely follow. Unemployment remained stubbornly high, near 10%, barely scratched by new private sector jobs only averaging about 50,000 per month. Gross Domestic Product (“GDP”) growth in the second quarter of 2010 decelerated to 1.6% annualized. In July testimony, Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke referred to an “unusually uncertain” outlook, exactly what investors didn’t want to hear and three weeks later the Federal Open Market Committee formally downgraded its assessment for the U.S. economy. Record low Treasury bond yields in the U.S., Germany and the U.K. in August were compelling evidence to some commentators that developed economies were on the cusp of a second recession.
 
China’s version of a recession was to grow at “only” 9.1% in 2009. In response, the government instructed the banks to expand lending. They did so and first quarter GDP growth rebounded to 11.9%. But inflation picked up and a housing bubble developed. The authorities quickly back-pedaled and repeatedly raised banks’ reserve ratio requirements while tightening the rules on mortgage issuance. Second quarter GDP growth slipped to 10.3% and by the end of August the official Chinese manufacturing purchasing managers suggested the slowest activity in 17 months. The unofficial version compiled by HSBC signaled contraction.
 
In the Eurozone, default on billions of euro of Greece’s maturing bonds loomed. Amid downgrades, ballooning yields, fears of contagion and doubts about the viability of the euro itself, Eurozone countries dithered until, at last in May, finance ministers and the International Monetary Fund agreed on a Financial Stabilization “mechanism” funded with up to €750 billion. The European Central Bank (“ECB”) started buying the worst-affected countries’ sovereign debt, much of it held in the vulnerable European banking system. The new mechanism and positive results from some rather soft stress testing on banks in July seemed to calm nerves. But uncertainty remained: August ended with a gaping 9.48% spread between the yields on Greek and German 10-year bonds.
 
U.S. equities, represented by the S&P 500® Index including dividends, fell 4.04% in the first half of the fiscal year. Early economic data were, on balance, favorable, with stock prices also supported by strong earnings reports. First quarter operating earnings per share for S&P 500® companies were, on average, about 92% above those for the corresponding quarter of 2009. By April 23, 2010 the index was up over 10% and at the high point for 2010, before factors described above drove investor sentiment and the market back down amid surging volatility.
 
In international markets, the MSCI Japan® Index sagged 9.72% for the six months through August. Apparently impressive 1.1% quarterly GDP growth in the first quarter was heavily exports-dependent and gave way to a barely perceptible 0.1% in the second, with domestic demand and consumer prices falling. The MSCI Europe ex UK® Index fell just 0.05%. The sovereign debt trauma subsided after it became clear that the ECB stood behind the banking system, and stress testing on the latter at least revealed no new problems. In the meantime, GDP grew 1.0% in the second quarter. The MSCI UK® Index slipped 0.61%, but excluding BP would have risen about 2%. Having suffered during the sovereign debt crisis due to the U.K.’s own 11% budget deficit, investors seemed to take heart from the newly elected coalition government’s aggressively austere budget that would reduce the deficit to 3.9% by 2015. Supporting this was the return to profit of most banks and second quarter GDP growth of 1.2%.
 
Parentheses denote a negative number.
 
Past performance does not guarantee future results.  The performance quoted represents past performance. Investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate, and shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. The Fund’s performance is subject to change since the period’s end and may be lower or higher than the performance data shown. Please call (800) 992-0180 or log on to www.ingfunds.com to obtain performance data current to the most recent month end.
 
Market Perspective reflects the views of ING’s Chief Investment Risk Officer only through the end of the period, and is subject to change based on market and other conditions.


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Benchmark Descriptions
 
       
Index     Description
MSCI World Indexsm     An unmanaged index that measures the performance of over 1,400 securities listed on exchanges in the U.S., Europe, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the Far East.
       
S&P/Case-Shiller 20-City Composite Home Price Index     A composite index of the home price index for the top 20 Metropolitan Statistical Areas in the United States. The index is published monthly by Standard & Poor’s.
       
S&P 500® Index     An unmanaged index that measures the performance of securities of approximately 500 large-capitalization companies whose securities are traded on major U.S. stock markets.
       
MSCI Japan® Index     A free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure developed market equity performance in Japan.
       
MSCI Europe ex UK® Index     A free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure developed market equity performance in Europe, excluding the UK.
       
MSCI UK® Index     A free float-adjusted market capitalization index that is designed to measure developed market equity performance in the UK.
       
Chicago Board Options Exchange BuyWrite Monthly Index (“CBOE BuyWrite Monthly Index”)     A passive total return index based on selling the near-term, at-the-money S&P 500® Index call option against the S&P 500® stock index portfolio each month, on the day the current contract expires.
       
Morgan Stanley Capital International — Europe, Australasia and Far East® Index (“MSCI EAFE® Index”)     An unmanaged index that measures the performance of securities listed on exchanges in Europe, Australasia and the Far East. It includes the reinvestment of dividends net of withholding taxes, but does not reflect fees, brokerage commissions or other expenses of investing.
       


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ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund
Portfolio Managers’ Report
 

 
Country Allocation
as of August 31, 2010
(as a percent of net assets)
 
           
           
United States
    57 .0%  
           
Japan
    9 .6%  
           
United Kingdom
    8 .4%  
           
Germany
    3 .9%  
           
Australia
    3 .8%  
           
Switzerland
    3 .2%  
           
France
    2 .8%  
           
Netherlands
    2 .3%  
           
Italy
    1 .4%  
           
Spain
    1 .2%  
           
Sweden
    1 .2%  
           
Hong Kong
    1 .0%  
           
Countries less than 1.0%(1)
    4 .7%  
           
Other Assets and Liabilities – Net*
    (0 .5)%  
           
           
Net Assets
    100 .0%  
 
* Includes short-term investments related to ING Institutional Prime Money Market Fund – Class I.
(1) Includes fourteen countries, which each represents less than 1.0% of net assets.
 
Portfolio holdings are subject to change daily.

 
ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund’s (the “Fund”) primary investment objective is to provide a high level of income. Capital appreciation is a secondary investment objective. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objectives by:
 
•  investing at least 80% of its managed assets in a diversified global equity portfolio; and
 
•  utilizing an integrated option writing strategy.
 
The Fund is managed by Paul Zemsky, Vincent Costa, Jody I. Hrazanek, Pranay Gupta, Bas Peeters and Frank van Etten, Portfolio Managers, ING Investment Management Co. — the Sub-Adviser.*
 
Equity Portfolio Construction: Under normal market conditions, the Fund invests in a diversified portfolio of common stocks of companies located in a number of different countries throughout the world, normally in approximately 750-950 common stocks, seeking to reduce the Fund’s exposure to individual stock risk. The Fund normally invests across a broad range of countries (usually 25-30 countries), industries and market sectors, including investments in issuers located in countries with emerging markets.
 
The Fund’s weighting between U.S. and international equities depends on the Sub-Adviser’s ongoing assessment of market opportunities for the Fund. Under normal market conditions, the Fund seeks to maintain a target weighting of 60% in U.S. domestic common stocks and not less than 40% in international (ex-U.S.) common stocks.
 
The Fund’s Integrated Option Strategy: The option strategy of the Fund is designed to seek gains and lower volatility of total returns over a market cycle by writing (selling) index call options on selected indices and/or exchange traded funds (“ETFs”) in an amount equal to approximately 60% to 100% of the value of the Fund’s holdings in common stocks.
 
Writing index call options involves granting the buyer the right to appreciation of the value of an index above at a particular price (the “strike price”) at a particular time. If the purchaser exercises an index call option sold by the Fund, the Fund will pay the purchaser the difference between the cash value of the index and the strike price of the option.
 
The Fund seeks to generate gains from its portfolio index call option strategy and, to a lesser extent, income from dividends on the common stocks held in the Fund’s portfolio. The extent of call option writing activity depends upon market conditions and the Sub-Adviser’s ongoing assessment of the attractiveness of writing call options on selected indices and/or ETFs. Call options are primarily written in over-the-counter markets with major international banks, broker-dealers and financial institutions. The Fund may also write call options in exchange-listed option markets.
 
The Fund writes call options that are generally short-term (between 10 days and three months until expiration) and at- or near-the-money. The Fund typically maintains its call positions until expiration, but it retains the option to buy back the call options and sell new call options. Lastly, in order to reduce volatility of NAV returns, the Fund employs a policy to hedge major foreign currencies.
 
Performance: Based on net asset value (“NAV”) as of August 31, 2010, the Fund provided a total return of (1.43)% for the six month period. This NAV return reflects a decrease in its NAV from $13.37 on February 28, 2010 to $12.50 on August 31, 2010. Based on its share price as of August 31, 2010, the Fund provided a total return of (4.45)% for the six month period. This share price return reflects a decrease in its share price from $14.30 on February 28, 2010 to $13.12 on August 31, 2010. The S&P 500® Index, the MSCI EAFE® Index and the CBOE BuyWrite Monthly Index returned (4.04)%, (3.04)% and (3.05)%, respectively, for the reporting period. During the period, the Fund made quarterly total distributions of

 
Top Ten Holdings*
as of August 31, 2010
(as a percent of net assets)
 
           
Apple, Inc. 
    1.7   %
Chevron Corp. 
    1.5   %
McDonald’s Corp. 
    1.4   %
Merck & Co., Inc. 
    1.1   %
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. 
    1.0   %
ConocoPhillips
    0.9   %
American Express Co. 
    0.9   %
Altria Group, Inc. 
    0.9   %
3M Co. 
    0.8   %
HSBC Holdings PLC
    0.7   %
 
  Excludes short-term investments related to ING Institutional  
Prime Money Market Fund – Class I.
 
Portfolio holdings are subject to change daily.
 


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ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund
Portfolio Managers’ Report
 
$0.71 per share, all consisting of net investment income. During the six month period, the Fund reduced its quarterly distribution from $0.372 to $0.335 per quarter, commencing with the distribution paid on July 15, 2010. As of August 31, 2010, the Fund had 18,206,643 shares outstanding.
 
Market Review: The equity portfolio of the Fund uses a customized reference index (which is a blend of 60% S&P 500® Index and 40% MSCI EAFE® Index) to reflect the strategic emphasis of the Fund. The period began with positive returns in most equity asset classes in March but worsening fears of global contagion from Greece’s sovereign debt crisis, coupled with growing worries about Europe’s peripheral countries’ debt issues, led to an equity sell-off in May. Concerns eased at the beginning of the second quarter on a combination of better than expected data in Europe, including a successful round of bank stress-tests. Subsequently, both the MSCI EAFE® Index and the S&P 500® Index were only modestly down during the six-month period, returning (3.04)% and (4.04)%, respectively. The blended reference index returned (3.58)% for the period.
 
Equity Portfolio: ING’s International Index Plus strategy is utilized for the international equity portion of the Fund. For the semi-annual review period, the strategy performance was relatively flat versus its reference index, the MSCI EAFE® Index. Stock selection in the consumer discretionary and energy sectors added to performance, while selection in the materials and telecommunications sectors detracted from performance. Sector allocation was a small positive for performance, with a modest overweight of industrials helping the portfolio.
 
The Fund’s U.S. domestic equity component outperformed the S&P 500® Index for the review period. Stock selection in information technology and materials added to the positive performance, while selection within industrials and energy hurt performance. Sector allocation was a positive for the Fund. An underweight of consumer staples and an overweight of industrials helped performance for the period.
 
Option Portfolio: The Fund generates premiums and seeks gains by writing (selling) call options on a basket of market indexes on a portion of the value of the equity portfolio. During the period, the Fund sold short-maturity options on the S&P 500® Index, the DJ Eurostoxx 50 Index, the Nikkei 225 Index and the FTSE 100 Index®. During the reporting period, the call options were sold on a bi-weekly basis with a maturity of approximately four to six weeks. Staggering the option call writing in this way tends to smooth the pay-off of the option overlay program. The strike prices of the traded options were typically sold at the money, with the coverage ratio maintained at approximately 70% throughout the period. Options performance was mixed throughout the period but overall made a contribution to return as the equity market traded up early in the period, sold off in May and then remained volatile through the summer months.
 
The Fund continued its policy of hedging major foreign currencies to reduce volatility of NAV returns. The overall contribution to performance from our hedges was slightly positive this period as most major currencies weakened against the U.S. dollar in the early part of the period but then strengthened in the last few months.
 
Current Strategy & Outlook: The underlying U.S. and EAFE strategies seek to reward investors with sector- and country-diversification close to the S&P 500® and MSCI EAFE® indices, while seeking outperformance through portfolio construction techniques. If the market falls or moves sideways, the premiums generated from our call-writing, dividends and our disciplined equity strategies may make up an important part of the Fund’s total return. If the market rallies, the strategy may generate an absolute positive return, but the upside may be limited as call options will likely be exercised.
 
We continue to believe that the initial stages of global recovery, supported by policy stimulus and by a turn in industrial production, are giving way to a sustainable expansion supported by domestic demand. Individual regions of the world economy are experiencing this transition at different speeds, but it is continuing despite often serious headwinds. Market volatility has declined from early this year, but we expect it to remain somewhat higher than historical levels. We believe this potentially should allow the Fund to continue to earn relatively attractive levels of premiums through its call writing activities.
Effective April 30, 2010, Pranay Gupta was added as a portfolio manager to the Fund and Carl Ghielen was removed as a portfolio manager to the Fund. Effective September 30, 2010, Martin Jansen was removed as a portfolio manager to the Fund.
 
Portfolio holdings and characteristics are subject to change and may not be representative of current holdings and characteristics.
 
Performance data represents past performance and is no guarantee of future results.
 
Past performance is not indicative of future results. The indices do not reflect fees, brokerage commissions, taxes or other expenses of investing. Investors cannot invest directly in an index.


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STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited)
 
         
ASSETS:
       
Investments in securities at value*
  $ 228,916,940  
Short-term investments in affiliates**
    2,243,000  
Cash
    7,523  
Cash collateral for futures
    198,000  
Foreign currencies at value***
    8,569  
Receivables:
       
Investment securities sold
    1,147,248  
Dividends and interest
    686,651  
Unrealized appreciation on forward foreign currency contracts
    213,755  
Prepaid expenses
    656  
         
Total assets
    233,422,342  
         
         
LIABILITIES:
       
Payable for investment securities purchased
    8,186  
Unrealized depreciation on forward foreign currency contracts
    3,535,270  
Payable to affiliates
    46,389  
Payable for trustee fees
    4,991  
Other accrued expenses and liabilities
    133,695  
Written options, at fair valueˆ
    2,037,794  
         
Total liabilities
    5,766,325  
         
NET ASSETS (equivalent to $12.50 per share on 18,206,643 shares outstanding)
  $ 227,656,017  
         
         
NET ASSETS WERE COMPRISED OF:
       
Paid-in capital — shares of beneficial interest at $0.01 par value (unlimited shares authorized)
  $ 276,052,684  
Distributions in excess of net investment income
    (13,533,469 )
Accumulated net realized loss
    (30,267,594 )
Net unrealized depreciation
    (4,595,604 )
         
NET ASSETS
  $ 227,656,017  
         
         
       
* Cost of investments in securities
  $ 232,118,949  
** Cost of short-term investments in affiliates
  $ 2,243,000  
*** Cost of foreign currencies
  $ 8,569  
ˆ Premiums received on written options
  $ 4,063,313  
 
 
See Accompanying Notes to Financial Statements


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STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS for the six months ended August 31, 2010 (Unaudited)
 
         
 
INVESTMENT INCOME:
       
Dividends, net of foreign taxes withheld*(1)
  $ 3,358,795  
Interest, net of foreign taxes withheld*
    8,811  
         
Total investment income
    3,367,606  
         
         
EXPENSES:
       
Investment management fees
    894,271  
Transfer agent fees
    11,829  
Administrative service fees
    119,235  
Shareholder reporting expense
    28,573  
Professional fees
    24,611  
Custody and accounting expense
    67,543  
Trustee fees
    3,720  
Miscellaneous expense
    25,039  
         
Total expenses
    1,174,821  
Net waived and reimbursed fees
    (1,570 )
         
Net expenses
    1,173,251  
         
Net investment income
    2,194,355  
         
         
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS):
       
Net realized gain on:
       
Investments
    14,772,064  
Foreign currency related transactions
    4,548,160  
Futures
    57,680  
Written options
    3,961,284  
         
Net realized gain
    23,339,188  
         
Net change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation on:
       
Investments
    (25,766,293 )
Foreign currency related transactions
    (3,651,703 )
Futures
    (118,983 )
Written options
    1,046,220  
         
Net change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation
    (28,490,759 )
         
Net realized and unrealized loss
    (5,151,571 )
         
Decrease in net assets resulting from operations
  $ (2,957,216 )
         
         
       
* Foreign taxes withheld
  $ 199,824  
(1) Dividends from affiliates
  $ 3,882  
 
 
See Accompanying Notes to Financial Statements


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STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS (Unaudited)
 
                 
    Six Months
   
    Ended
  Year Ended
    August 31,
  February 28,
   
2010
 
2010
 
FROM OPERATIONS:
               
Net investment income
  $ 2,194,355     $ 3,728,829  
Net realized gain (loss)
    23,339,188       (24,315,335 )
Net change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation
    (28,490,759 )     89,653,429  
                 
Increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations
    (2,957,216 )     69,066,923  
                 
                 
FROM DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS:
               
Net investment income
    (12,830,867 )      
Return of capital
          (31,827,194 )
                 
Total distributions
    (12,830,867 )     (31,827,194 )
                 
                 
FROM CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS:
               
Reinvestment of distributions
    1,017,831       2,069,138  
Cost of shares repurchased, net of commissions
          (1,428,482 )
                 
Net increase in net assets resulting from capital share transactions
    1,017,831       640,656  
                 
Net increase (decrease) in net assets
    (14,770,252 )     37,880,385  
                 
                 
NET ASSETS:
               
Beginning of period
    242,426,269       204,545,884  
                 
End of period
  $ 227,656,017     $ 242,426,269  
                 
Distributions in excess of net investment income at end of period
  $ (13,533,469 )   $ (2,896,957 )
                 
 
 
See Accompanying Notes to Financial Statements


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FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS (Unaudited)
 
Selected data for a share of beneficial interest outstanding throughout each year or period.
 
                                                         
        Six Months
  Year
  Year
  Year
  Year
  October 31,
        Ended
  Ended
  Ended
  Ended
  Ended
  2005(1) to
        August 31,
  February 28,
  February 28,
  February 29,
  February 28,
  February 28,
        2010   2010   2009   2008   2007   2006
 
Per Share Operating Performance:
                                                       
Net asset value, beginning of period
    $       13.37       11.29       17.79       21.19       20.24       19.06 (2)
Income (loss) from investment operations:
                                                       
Net investment income
    $       0.12       0.21 *     0.31 *     0.30 *     0.26       0.06 *
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments
    $       (0.28 )     3.64       (4.95 )     (0.73 )     2.55       1.28  
Total from investment operations
    $       (0.16 )     3.85       (4.64 )     (0.43 )     2.81       1.34  
Less distributions from:
                                                       
Net investment income
    $       0.71             0.74             0.04       0.16  
Net realized gains on investments
    $                         2.40       1.54        
Return of capital
    $             1.77       1.12       0.57       0.28        
Total distributions
    $       0.71       1.77       1.86       2.97       1.86       0.16  
Net asset value, end of period
    $       12.50       13.37       11.29       17.79       21.19       20.24  
Market value, end of period
    $       12.96       14.30       10.42       16.73       21.11       18.61  
Total investment return at net asset value(3)
    %       (1.43 )     35.81       (26.96 )     (2.40 )     14.81       7.08  
Total investment return at market value(4)
    %       (4.45 )     57.38       (28.32 )     (7.87 )     24.40       (6.17 )
                                                         
Ratios and Supplemental Data:
                                                       
Net assets, end of period (000’s)
    $       227,656       242,426       204,546       324,275       385,433       365,374  
Ratios to average net assets:
                                                       
Gross expenses prior to expense waiver(5)
    %       0.98       1.01       0.99       0.97       0.95       1.06  
Net expenses after expense waiver(5)(6)
    %       0.98 **     1.00 **     0.99 **     0.97 **     0.95       1.00  
Net investment income after expense waiver(5)(6)
    %       1.84 **     1.61 **     2.01 **     1.45 **     1.29       0.86  
Portfolio turnover rate
    %       90       141       178       194       132       41  
 
 
(1) Commencement of operations.
 
(2) Net asset value at beginning of period reflects the deduction of the sales load of $0.90 per share and offering costs of $0.04 per share paid by the shareholder from the $20.00 offering price.
 
(3) Total investment return at net asset value has been calculated assuming a purchase at net asset value at the beginning of each period and a sale at net asset value at the end of each period and assumes reinvestment of dividends, capital gain distributions and return of capital distributions/allocations, if any, in accordance with the provisions of the dividend reinvestment plan. Total investment return at net asset value is not annualized for periods less than one year.
 
(4) Total investment return at market value measures the change in the market value of your investment assuming reinvestment of dividends, capital gain distributions and return of capital distributions/allocations, if any, in accordance with the provisions of the Fund’s dividend reinvestment plan. Total investment return at market value is not annualized for periods less than one year.
 
(5) Annualized for periods less than one year.
 
(6) The Investment Adviser has agreed to limit expenses, (excluding interest, taxes, brokerage, extraordinary expenses and acquired fund fees and expenses) subject to possible recoupment by ING Investments, LLC within three years of being incurred.
 
* Calculated using average number of shares outstanding throughout the period.
 
** Impact of waiving the advisory fee for the ING Institutional Prime Money Market Fund holding has less than 0.005% impact on the expense ratio and net investment income ratio.
 
 
See Accompanying Notes to Financial Statements


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NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited)
 
NOTE 1 — ORGANIZATION
 
ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund (the “Fund”) is a diversified, closed-end management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). The Fund is organized as a Delaware statutory trust.
 
NOTE 2 — SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
The following significant accounting policies are consistently followed by the Fund in the preparation of its financial statements, and such policies are in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles for investment companies.
 
A. Security Valuation. Investments in equity securities traded on a national securities exchange are valued at the last reported sale price. Securities reported by NASDAQ are valued at the NASDAQ official closing prices. Securities traded on an exchange or NASDAQ for which there has been no sale and equity securities traded in the over-the-counter-market are valued at the mean between the last reported bid and ask prices. All investments quoted in foreign currencies will be valued daily in U.S. dollars on the basis of the foreign currency exchange rates prevailing at that time. Debt securities with more than 60 days to maturity are fair valued using matrix pricing methods determined by an independent pricing service which takes into consideration such factors as yields, maturities, liquidity, ratings and traded prices in similar or identical securities. Investments in open-end mutual funds are valued at the net asset value. Investments in securities of sufficient credit quality maturing in 60 days or less from date of acquisition are valued at amortized cost which approximates fair value.
 
Securities for which valuations are not readily available from an independent pricing service may be valued by brokers which use prices provided by market makers or estimates of fair market value obtained from yield data relating to investments or securities with similar characteristics.
 
Securities and assets for which market quotations are not readily available (which may include certain restricted securities that are subject to limitations as to their sale) are valued at their fair values as defined by the 1940 Act, and as determined in good faith by or under the supervision of the Fund’s Board of Trustees (“Board”), in accordance with methods that are specifically authorized by the Board. Securities traded on exchanges, including foreign exchanges, which close earlier than the time that the Fund calculates its net asset value (“NAV”) may also be valued at their fair values, as defined by the 1940 Act, and as determined in good faith by or under the supervision of the Board, in accordance with methods that are specifically authorized by the Board. The value of a foreign security traded on an exchange outside the United States is generally based on its price on the principal foreign exchange where it trades as of the time the Fund determines its NAV or if the foreign exchange closes prior to the time the Fund determines its NAV, the most recent closing price of the foreign security on its principal exchange. Trading in certain non-U.S. securities may not take place on all days on which the NYSE Euronext (“NYSE”) is open. Further, trading takes place in various foreign markets on days on which the NYSE is not open. Consequently, the calculation of the Fund’s NAV may not take place contemporaneously with the determination of the prices of securities held by the Fund in foreign securities markets. Further, the value of the Fund’s assets may be significantly affected by foreign trading on days when a shareholder cannot purchase or redeem shares of the Fund. In calculating the Fund’s NAV, foreign securities denominated in foreign currency are converted to U.S. dollar equivalents. If an event occurs after the time at which the market for foreign securities held by the Fund closes but before the time that the Fund’s NAV is calculated, such event may cause the closing price on the foreign exchange to not represent a readily available reliable market value quotation for such securities at the time the Fund determines its NAV. In such a case, the Fund will use the fair value of such securities as determined under the Fund’s valuation procedures. Events after the close of trading on a foreign market that could require the Fund to fair value some or all of its foreign securities include, among others, securities trading in the U.S. and other markets, corporate announcements, natural and other disasters, and political and other events. Among other elements of analysis in the determination of a security’s fair value, the Board has authorized the use of one or more independent research services to assist with such determinations. An independent research service may use statistical analyses and quantitative models to help determine fair value as of the time the Fund calculates its NAV. There can be no assurance that such models accurately reflect the behavior of the applicable markets or the effect of the behavior of such markets on the fair value of securities, or that such markets will continue to behave in a fashion that is consistent with such models. Unlike the closing price of a security on an


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NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
NOTE 2 — SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued)
 
exchange, fair value determinations employ elements of judgment. Consequently, the fair value assigned to a security may not represent the actual value that the Fund could obtain if it were to sell the security at the time of the close of the NYSE. Pursuant to procedures adopted by the Board, the Fund is not obligated to use the fair valuations suggested by any research service, and valuation recommendations provided by such research services may be overridden if other events have occurred or if other fair valuations are determined in good faith to be more accurate. Unless an event is such that it causes the Fund to determine that the closing prices for one or more securities do not represent readily available reliable and market value quotations at the time the Fund determines its NAV, events that occur between the time of the close of the foreign market on which they are traded and the close of regular trading on the NYSE will not be reflected in the Fund’s NAV.
 
Options that are traded over-the-counter will be valued using one of three methods: (1) dealer quotes; (2) industry models with objective inputs; or (3) by using a benchmark arrived at by comparing prior-day dealer quotes with the corresponding change in the underlying security. Exchange traded options will be valued using the last reported sale. If no last sale is reported, exchange traded options will be valued using an industry accepted model such as “Black Scholes.” Options on currencies purchased by the Fund are valued using industry models with objective inputs.
 
Fair value is defined as the price that the Fund would receive to sell an asset or pay to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. Each investment asset or liability of the Fund is assigned a level at measurement date based on the significance and source of the inputs to its valuation. Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities are classified as “Level 1,” inputs other than quoted prices for an asset or liability that are observable are classified as “Level 2” and unobservable inputs, including the sub-adviser’s judgment about the assumptions that a market participant would use in pricing an asset or liability are classified as “Level 3.” The inputs used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risks associated with investing in those securities. Short-term securities of sufficient credit quality which are valued at amortized cost, which approximates fair value, are generally considered to be Level 2 securities under applicable accounting rules. A table summarizing the Fund’s investments under these levels of classification is included following the Summary Portfolio of Investments.
 
For the six months ended August 31, 2010, there have been no significant changes to the fair valuation methodologies.
 
B. Security Transactions and Revenue Recognition. Security transactions are recorded on the trade date. Realized gains or losses on sales of investments are calculated on the identified cost basis. Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis. Premium amortization and discount accretion are determined using the effective yield method. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, or in the case of some foreign dividends, when the information becomes available to the Fund.
 
C. Foreign Currency Translation. The books and records of the Fund are maintained in U.S. dollars. Any foreign currency amounts are translated into U.S. dollars on the following basis:
 
  (1)  Market value of investment securities, other assets and liabilities — at the exchange rates prevailing at the end of the day.
 
  (2)  Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and expenses — at the rates of exchange prevailing on the respective dates of such transactions.
 
Although the net assets and the market values are presented at the foreign exchange rates at the end of the day, the Fund does not isolate the portion of the results of operations resulting from changes in foreign exchange rates on investments from the fluctuations arising from changes in market prices of securities held. Such fluctuations are included with the net realized and unrealized gains or losses from investments. For securities, which are subject to foreign withholding tax upon disposition, liabilities are recorded on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities for the estimated tax withholding based on the securities current market value. Upon disposition, realized gains or losses on such securities are recorded net of foreign withholding tax. Reported net realized foreign exchange gains or losses arise from sales of foreign currencies, currency gains or losses realized between the trade and settlement dates on securities transactions, the difference between the amounts of dividends, interest, and foreign withholding taxes recorded on the Fund’s books and the U.S. dollar equivalent of the amounts actually received or paid.


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NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
NOTE 2 — SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued)
 
Net unrealized foreign exchange gains and losses arise from changes in the value of assets and liabilities other than investments in securities at period end, resulting from changes in the exchange rate. Foreign security and currency transactions may involve certain considerations and risks not typically associated with investing in U.S. companies and U.S. government securities. These risks include, but are not limited to, revaluation of currencies and future adverse political and economic developments which could cause securities and their markets to be less liquid and prices more volatile than those of comparable U.S. companies and U.S. government securities.
 
D. Distributions to Shareholders. The Fund intends to make quarterly distributions from its cash available for distribution, which consists of the Fund’s dividends and interest income after payment of Fund expenses, net option premiums and net realized and unrealized gains on investments. At least annually, the Fund intends to distribute all or substantially all of its net realized capital gains. Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Distributions are determined annually in accordance with federal tax principles, which may differ from U.S. generally accepted accounting principles for investment companies.
 
The tax treatment and characterization of the Fund’s distributions may vary significantly from time to time depending on whether the Fund has gains or losses on the call options written on its portfolio versus gains or losses on the equity securities in the portfolio. Each quarter, the Fund will provide disclosures with distribution payments made that estimate the percentages of that distribution that represent net investment income, other income or capital gains, and return of capital, if any. The final composition of the tax characteristics of the distributions cannot be determined with certainty until after the end of the Fund’s tax year, and will be reported to shareholders at that time. A significant portion of the Fund’s distributions may constitute a return of capital. The amount of quarterly distributions will vary, depending on a number of factors. As portfolio and market conditions change, the rate of dividends on the common shares will change. There can be no assurance that the Fund will be able to declare a dividend in each period.
 
E. Federal Income Taxes. It is the policy of the Fund to comply with the requirements of subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code that are applicable to regulated investment companies and to distribute substantially all of its net investment income and any net realized capital gains to its shareholders. Therefore, a federal income tax or excise tax provision is not required. Management has considered the sustainability of the Fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years in making this determination. No capital gain distributions shall be made until the capital loss carryforwards have been fully utilized or expire.
 
F. Use of Estimates. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of increases and decreases in net assets from operations during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
G. Risk Exposures and the use of Derivative Instruments. The Fund’s investment objectives permit the Fund to enter into various types of derivatives contracts, including, but not limited to, forward foreign currency exchange contracts, futures and purchased and written options. In doing so, the Fund will employ strategies in differing combinations to permit it to increase or decrease the level of risk, or change the level or types of exposure to market risk factors. This may allow the Fund to pursue its objectives more quickly and efficiently, than if it were to make direct purchases or sales of securities capable of affecting a similar response to market factors.
 
Market Risk Factors. In pursuit of its investment objectives, the Fund may seek to use derivatives to increase or decrease its exposure to the following market risk factors:
 
Credit Risk. Credit risk relates to the ability of the issuer to meet interest and principal payments, or both, as they come due. In general, lower-grade, higher-yield bonds are subject to credit risk to a greater extent than lower-yield, higher-quality bonds.
 
Equity Risk. Equity risk relates to the change in value of equity securities as they relate to increases or decreases in the general market.
 
Foreign Exchange Rate Risk. Foreign exchange rate risk relates to the change in U.S. dollar value of a security held that is denominated in a foreign currency. The U.S. dollar value of a foreign currency


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NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
NOTE 2 — SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued)
 
denominated security will decrease as the dollar appreciates against the currency, while the U.S. dollar value will increase as the dollar depreciates against the currency.
 
Interest Rate Risk. Interest rate risk refers to the fluctuations in value of fixed-income securities resulting from the inverse relationship between price and yield. For example, an increase in general interest rates will tend to reduce the market value of already issued fixed-income investments, and a decline in general interest rates will tend to increase their value. In addition, debt securities with longer duration, which tend to have higher yields, are subject to potentially greater fluctuations in value from changes in interest rates than obligations with shorter duration.
 
Risks of Investing in Derivatives. The Fund’s use of derivatives can result in losses due to unanticipated changes in the market risk factors and the overall market. In instances where the Fund is using derivatives to decrease, or hedge, exposures to market risk factors for securities held by the Fund, there are also risks that those derivatives may not perform as expected resulting in losses for the combined or hedged positions.
 
The use of these strategies involves certain special risks, including a possible imperfect correlation, or even no correlation, between price movements of derivative instruments and price movements of related investments. While some strategies involving derivative instruments can reduce the risk of loss, they can also reduce the opportunity for gain or even result in losses by offsetting favorable price movements in related investments or otherwise, due to the possible inability of the Fund to purchase or sell a portfolio security at a time that otherwise would be favorable or the possible need to sell a portfolio security at a disadvantageous time because the Fund is required to maintain asset coverage or offsetting positions in connection with transactions in derivative instruments. Additional associated risks from investing in derivatives also exist and potentially could have significant effects on the valuation of the derivative and the Fund. Associated risks are not the risks that the Fund is attempting to increase or decrease exposure to, per its investment objectives, but are the additional risks from investing in derivatives. Examples of these associated risks are liquidity risk, which is the risk that the Fund will not be able to sell the derivative in the open market in a timely manner, and counterparty credit risk, which is the risk that the counterparty will not fulfill its obligation to the Fund. Associated risks can be different for each type of derivative and are discussed by each derivative type in the following notes.
 
Counterparty Credit Risk and Credit Related Contingent Features. Certain derivative positions are subject to counterparty credit risk, which is the risk that the counterparty will not fulfill its obligation to the Fund. The Fund’s derivative counterparties are financial institutions who are subject to market conditions that may weaken their financial position. The Fund intends to enter into financial transactions with counterparties that it believes to be creditworthy at the time of the transaction. To reduce this risk, the Fund generally enters into master netting arrangements, established within the Fund’s International Swap and Derivatives Association, Inc. (“ISDA”) Master Agreements (“Master Agreements”). These agreements are with select counterparties and they govern transactions, including certain over-the-counter (“OTC”) derivative and forward foreign currency contracts, entered into by the Fund and the counterparty. The Master Agreements maintain provisions for general obligations, representations, agreements, collateral, and events of default or termination. The occurrence of a specified event of termination may give a counterparty the right to terminate all of its contracts and affect settlement of all outstanding transactions under the applicable Master Agreement.
 
The Fund may also enter into collateral agreements with certain counterparties to further mitigate OTC derivative and forward foreign currency contracts. Subject to established minimum levels, collateral is generally determined based on the net aggregate unrealized gain or loss on contracts with a certain counterparty. Collateral pledged to the Fund is held in a segregated account by a third-party agent and can be in the form of cash or debt securities issued by the U.S. government or related agencies.
 
The Fund’s maximum risk of loss from counterparty credit risk on OTC derivatives is generally the aggregate unrealized gain in excess of any collateral pledged by the counterparty to the Fund. For purchased OTC options, the Fund bears the risk of loss in the amount of the premiums paid and the change in market value of the options should the counterparty not perform under the contracts. The


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Table of Contents

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
NOTE 2 — SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued)
 
Fund did not enter into any purchased OTC options during the six months ended August 31, 2010.
 
The Fund has credit related contingent features that if triggered would allow its derivatives counterparties to close out and demand payment or additional collateral to cover their exposure from the Fund. Credit related contingent features are established between the Fund and its derivatives counterparties to reduce the risk that the Fund will not fulfill its payment obligations to its counterparties. These triggering features include, but are not limited to, a percentage decrease in the Fund’s net assets and or a percentage decrease in the Fund’s NAV, which could cause the Fund to accelerate payment of any net liability owed to the counterparty. The contingent features are established within the Fund’s Master Agreements.
 
Written options by the Fund do not give rise to counterparty credit risk, as written options obligate the Fund to perform and not the counterparty. As of August 31, 2010, the total value of written OTC call options subject to Master Agreements in a net liability position was $2,037,794. If a contingent feature had been triggered, the Fund could have been required to pay this amount in cash to its counterparties. The Fund did not hold or post collateral for its open written OTC call options at year end.
 
H. Forward Foreign Currency Contracts and Futures Contracts. The Fund may enter into forward foreign currency contracts primarily to hedge against foreign currency exchange rate risks on its non-U.S. dollar denominated investment securities. When entering into a forward foreign currency contract, the Fund agrees to receive or deliver a fixed quantity of foreign currency for an agreed-upon price on an agreed future date. These contracts are valued daily and the Fund’s net equity therein, representing unrealized gain or loss on the contracts as measured by the difference between the forward foreign exchange rates at the dates of entry into the contracts and the forward rates at the reporting date, is included in the statement of assets and liabilities. Realized and unrealized gains and losses on forward foreign currency contracts are included on the Statement of Operations. These instruments involve market and/or credit risk in excess of the amount recognized in the statement of assets and liabilities. Risks arise from the possible inability of counterparties to meet the terms of their contracts and from movement in currency and securities values and interest rates.
 
During the six months ended August 31, 2010, the Fund used forward foreign currency contracts to hedge its investments in non-U.S. dollar denominated equity securities in an attempt to decrease the volatility of the Fund’s NAV.
 
During the six months ended August 31, 2010, the Fund had average contract amounts on forward foreign currency contracts to buy and sell of $1,742,873 and $94,874,450, respectively.
 
The Fund may enter into futures contracts involving foreign currency, interest rates, securities and securities indices. The Fund intends to limit its use of futures contracts and futures options to “bona fide hedging” transactions, as such term is defined in applicable regulations, interpretations and practice. A futures contract obligates the seller of the contract to deliver and the purchaser of the contract to take delivery of the type of foreign currency, financial instrument or security called for in the contract at a specified future time for a specified price. Upon entering into such a contract, the Fund is required to deposit and maintain as collateral such initial margin as required by the exchange on which the contract is traded. Pursuant to the contract, the Fund agrees to receive from or pay to the broker an amount equal to the daily fluctuations in the value of the contract. Such receipts or payments are known as variation margin and are recorded as unrealized gains or losses by the Fund. When the contract is closed, the Fund records a realized gain or loss equal to the difference between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was closed.
 
Futures contracts are exposed to the market risk factor of the underlying financial instrument. During the six months ended August 31, 2010, the Fund has purchased futures contracts on various equity indexes to increase exposure to equity risk. Additional associated risks of entering into futures contracts include the possibility that there may be an illiquid market where the Fund is unable to liquidate the contract or enter into an offsetting position and, if used for hedging purposes, the risk that the price of the contract will correlate imperfectly with the prices of the Fund’s securities. With futures, there is minimal counterparty credit risk to the Fund since futures are exchange traded and the exchange’s clearinghouse, as counterparty to all exchange traded futures, guarantees the futures against default.


14


Table of Contents

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
NOTE 2 — SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued)
 
 
During the six months ended August 31, 2010, the Fund had an average notional value of $3,955,640 on purchased futures contracts.
 
I. Options Contracts. The Fund may purchase put and call options and may write (sell) put options and covered call options. The premium received by the Fund upon the writing of a put or call option is included in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as a liability which is subsequently marked-to-market until it is exercised or closed, or it expires. The Fund will realize a gain or loss upon the expiration or closing of the option contract. When an option is exercised, the proceeds on sales of the underlying security for a written call option or purchased put option or the purchase cost of the security for a written put option or a purchased call option is adjusted by the amount of premium received or paid. The risk in writing a call option is that the Fund gives up the opportunity for profit if the market price of the security increases and the option is exercised. The risk in buying an option is that the Fund pays a premium whether or not the option is exercised. Risks may also arise from an illiquid secondary market or from the inability of counterparties to meet the terms of the contract.
 
The Fund generates premiums and seeks gains by writing OTC call options on indices on a portion of the value of the equity portfolio. Please refer to Note 6 for the volume of written option activity during the six months ended August 31, 2010.
 
J. Indemnifications. In the normal course of business, the Fund may enter into contracts that provide certain indemnifications. The Fund’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is dependent on future claims that may be made against the Fund and, therefore, cannot be estimated; however, based on experience, management considers the risk of loss from such claims remote.
 
NOTE 3 — INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATIVE FEES
 
ING Investments, LLC (“ING Investments” or the “Investment Adviser”), an Arizona limited liability company, is the Investment Adviser of the Fund. The Fund pays the Investment Adviser for its services under the investment management agreement (“Management Agreement”), a fee, payable monthly, based on an annual rate of 0.75% of the Fund’s average daily managed assets. For purposes of the Management Agreement, managed assets are defined as the Fund’s average daily gross asset value, minus the sum of the Fund’s accrued and unpaid dividends on any outstanding preferred shares and accrued liabilities (other than liabilities for the principal amount of any borrowings incurred, commercial paper or notes issued by the Fund and the liquidation preference of any outstanding preferred shares). As of August 31, 2010, there were no preferred shares outstanding.
 
The Investment Adviser entered into a sub-advisory agreement (“Sub-Advisory Agreement”) with ING IM. Subject to policies as the Board or the Investment Adviser might determine, ING IM manages the Fund’s assets in accordance with the Fund’s investment objectives, policies and limitations.
 
ING Funds are permitted to invest end-of-day cash balances into ING Institutional Prime Money Market Fund. Investment management fees paid by the Fund will be reduced by an amount equal to the management fees paid indirectly to the ING Institutional Prime Money Market Fund with respect to assets invested by the Fund. For the six months ended August 31, 2010, the Fund waived $1,570 of such management fees. These fees are not subject to recoupment.
 
ING Funds Services, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, (the “Administrator”) serves as Administrator to the Fund. The Fund pays the Administrator for its services a fee based on an annual rate of 0.10% of the Fund’s average daily managed assets. The Investment Adviser, ING IM, and the Administrator are indirect, wholly-owned subsidiaries of ING Groep N.V. (“ING Groep”). ING Groep is a global financial institution of Dutch origin offering banking, investments, life insurance and retirement services.
 
ING Groep has adopted a formal restructuring plan that was approved by the European Commission in November 2009 under which the ING life insurance businesses, including the retirement services and investment management businesses, which include the Investment Adviser and its affiliates, would be divested by ING Groep by the end of 2013. While there can be no assurance that it will be carried out, the restructuring plan presents certain risks, including uncertainty about the effect on the businesses of the ING entities that service the Fund and potential termination of the Fund’s existing advisory agreement, which may trigger the need for shareholder approval of new agreements.


15


Table of Contents

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
NOTE 3 — INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATIVE FEES (continued)
 
The Investment Adviser has entered into a written expense limitation agreement (“Expense Limitation Agreement”) with the Fund under which it will limit the expenses of the Fund, excluding interest, taxes, leverage expenses, and extraordinary expenses (and acquired fund fees and expenses) to 1.00% of average daily managed assets. The Investment Adviser may at a later date recoup from the Fund fees waived and other expenses assumed by the Investment Adviser during the previous 36 months, but only if, after such recoupment, the Fund’s expense ratio does not exceed the percentage described above. The Expense Limitation Agreement is contractual and shall renew automatically for one-year terms unless ING Investments or the Fund provides written notice of the termination within 90 days of the end of the then current term or upon written termination of the Management Agreement.
 
Waived and reimbursed fees and any recoupment by the Investment Adviser of such waived and reimbursed fees are reflected on the accompanying Statement of Operations for the Fund.
 
As of August 31, 2010, the amounts of waived and reimbursed fees that are subject to possible recoupment by the Investment Adviser, and the related expiration dates are as follows:
 
             
August 31,    
2011   2012   2013   Total
 
$  —   $13,763   $11,424   $25,187
 
NOTE 4 — OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATED AND RELATED PARTIES
 
As of August 31, 2010, the Fund had the following amounts recorded as payable to affiliates on the accompanying Statement of Assets and Liabilities:
 
         
Accrued
       
Investment
  Accrued
   
Management
  Administrative
   
Fees   Fees   Total
 
$26,745   $19,644   $46,389
 
The Fund has adopted a Retirement Policy (“Policy”) covering independent trustees of the Trust who were trustees on or before May 9, 2007, and who will have served as an independent trustee for at least five years as of the date of their retirement (as that term is defined in the Policy). Benefits under the Policy are based on an annual rate as defined in the Policy.
 
The Fund has adopted a Deferred Compensation Plan (the “Plan”), which allows eligible non-affiliated trustees as described in the Plan to defer the receipt of all or a portion of the trustees fees payable. Amounts deferred are treated as though invested in various “notional” funds advised by ING Investments until distribution in accordance with the Plan.
 
NOTE 5 — PURCHASES AND SALES OF INVESTMENT SECURITIES
 
The cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investments for the six months ended August 31, 2010, excluding short-term securities, were $212,752,818 and $209,077,816, respectively.
 
NOTE 6 — TRANSACTIONS IN WRITTEN OPTIONS
 
Transactions in written OTC call options on indices were as follows:
 
                 
    Number of
  Premiums
    Contracts   Received
 
Balance at 02/28/10
    303,167     $ 3,337,062  
Options Written
    1,973,295       24,898,900  
Options Expired
    (1,046,109 )     (12,538,509 )
Options Exercised
           
Options Terminated in Closing Purchase Transactions
    (930,404 )     (11,634,140 )
                 
Balance at 08/31/10
    299,949     $ 4,063,313  
                 
 
NOTE 7 — CONCENTRATION OF INVESTMENT RISKS
 
All mutual funds involve risk — some more than others — and there is always the chance that you could lose money or not earn as much as you hope. The Fund’s risk profile is largely a factor of the principal securities in which it invests and investment techniques that it uses. For more information regarding the types of securities and investment techniques that may be used by the Fund and its corresponding risks, see the Fund’s most recent Prospectus and/or the Statement of Additional Information.
 
Foreign Securities and Emerging Markets. The Fund makes significant investments in foreign securities and may invest up to 20% of its managed assets in securities issued by companies located in countries with emerging markets. Investments in foreign securities may entail risks not present in domestic investments. Since investments in securities are denominated in foreign currencies, changes in the relationship of these foreign currencies to the U.S. dollar can significantly affect the value of the investments and earnings of the Fund. Foreign investments may also


16


Table of Contents

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
NOTE 7 — CONCENTRATION OF INVESTMENT RISKS (continued)
 
subject the Fund to foreign government exchange restrictions, expropriation, taxation or other political, social or economic developments, as well as from movements in currency, security value and interest rate, all of which could affect the market and/or credit risk of the investments. The risks of investing in foreign securities can be intensified in the case of investments in issuers located in countries with emerging markets.
 
Leverage. Although the Fund has no current intention to do so, the Fund is authorized to utilize leverage through the issuance of preferred shares and/or borrowings, including the issuance of debt securities. In the event that the Fund determines in the future to utilize investment leverage, there can be no assurance that such a leveraging strategy will be successful during any period in which it is employed.
 
NOTE 8 — CAPITAL SHARES
 
Transactions in capital shares and dollars were as follows:
 
                 
    Six Months
  Year
    Ended
  Ended
    August 31,
  February 28,
   
2010
 
2010
 
Number of Shares
               
Reinvestment of distributions
    77,133       158,337  
Shares repurchased
          (153,044 )
                 
Net increase in shares outstanding
    77,133       5,293  
                 
$
               
Reinvestment of distributions
  $ 1,017,831     $ 2,069,138  
Shares repurchased, net of commissions
          (1,428,482 )
                 
Net increase
  $ 1,017,831     $ 640,656  
                 
 
Share Repurchase Program
 
Effective December 2008, the Board authorized an open-market share repurchase program pursuant to which the Fund could purchase, over the period ended December 31, 2009, up to 10% of its stock, in open-market transactions. There was no assurance that the Fund would purchase shares at any particular discount level or in any particular amounts. The share repurchase program sought to enhance shareholder value by purchasing shares trading at a discount from their NAV per share, in an attempt to reduce or eliminate the discount or to increase the NAV per share of the applicable remaining shares of the Fund.
 
For the year ended February 28, 2010, the Fund repurchased 153,044 shares, representing approximately 0.8% of the Fund’s outstanding shares for a net purchase price of $1,428,482 (including commissions of $4,591). Shares were repurchased at a weighted-average discount from NAV per share of 14.25% and a weighted-average price per share of $9.30.
 
NOTE 9 — FEDERAL INCOME TAXES
 
The amount of distributions from net investment income and net realized capital gains are determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations, which may differ from U.S. generally accepted accounting principles for investment companies. These book/tax differences may be either temporary or permanent. Permanent differences are reclassified within the capital accounts based on their federal tax-basis treatment; temporary differences are not reclassified. Key differences include the treatment of short-term capital gains, foreign currency transactions, income from passive foreign investment corporations and wash sale deferrals. Distributions in excess of net investment income and/or net realized capital gains for tax purposes are reported as return of capital.
 
Dividends paid by the Fund from net investment income and distributions of net realized short-term capital gains are, for federal income tax purposes, taxable as ordinary income to shareholders.
 
The tax composition of dividends and distributions in the current period will not be determined until after the Fund’s tax year-end of December 31, 2010. The tax composition of dividends and distributions as of the Fund’s most recent tax year-end was as follows:
 
     
Return
of Capital
Tax Year Ended
December 31, 2009
 
$ 31,827,194  
 
The tax-basis components of distributable earnings and the expiration dates of the capital loss carryforwards which may be used to offset future realized capital gains for federal income tax purposes as of the tax year ended December 31, 2009 were:
 
                     
Unrealized
  Capital Loss
  Expiration
Appreciation
  Carryforwards   Date
 
$ 22,207,261     $ (6,687,204 )     2016  
          (47,317,406 )     2017  
                     
        $ (54,004,610 )        
                     


17


Table of Contents

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
NOTE 9 — FEDERAL INCOME TAXES (continued)
 
The Fund’s major tax jurisdictions are federal and Arizona. The earliest tax year that remains subject to examination by these jurisdictions is 2005.
 
As of August 31, 2010, no provision for income tax is required in the Fund’s financial statements as a result of tax positions taken on federal and state income tax returns for open tax years. The Fund’s federal and state income and federal excise tax returns for tax years for which the applicable statutes of limitations have not expired are subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service and state department of revenue.
 
NOTE 10 — SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
 
Dividends: Subsequent to August 31, 2010, the Fund made a distribution of:
 
             
Per Share Amount
 
Declaration Date
 
Payable Date
 
Record Date
 
$0.335
  9/20/2010   10/15/2010   10/15/2010
 
Each quarter, the Fund will provide disclosures with distribution payments made that estimate the percentages of that distribution that represent net investment income, capital gains, and return of capital, if any. At the Fund’s tax year end, the Fund may re-characterize payments over the course of the year across ordinary income, capital gains, and return of capital, if any. A significant portion of the quarterly distribution payments made by the Fund may constitute a return of capital.
 
The Fund has evaluated events occurring after the balance sheet date (subsequent events) to determine whether any subsequent events necessitated adjustment to or disclosure in the financial statements. Other than the above, no such subsequent events were identified.


18


Table of Contents

SUMMARY PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
ING Global Advantage and Premium
Opportunity Fund
as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited)
 
                             
 
            Percent
                of Net
Shares       Value   Assets
 
 
 
COMMON STOCK: 95.3%
             
            Australia: 3.5%
  33,599         BHP Billiton Ltd.   $ 1,114,747       0.5  
 
 
            Other Securities     6,790,622       3.0  
 
 
                  7,905,369       3.5  
             
            Austria: 0.1%
            Other Securities     268,544       0.1  
 
 
             
            Barbados: 0.0%
            Other Securities     23,520       0.0  
 
 
             
            Belgium: 0.7%
            Other Securities     1,574,613       0.7  
 
 
             
            Bermuda: 0.0%
            Other Securities     34,029       0.0  
 
 
             
            Denmark: 0.6%
            Other Securities     1,394,995       0.6  
 
 
             
            Finland: 0.8%
            Other Securities     1,832,832       0.8  
 
 
             
            France: 2.8%
            Other Securities     6,356,403       2.8  
 
 
             
            Germany: 3.4%
  12,088         Siemens AG     1,095,752       0.5  
 
 
            Other Securities     6,593,005       2.9  
 
 
                  7,688,757       3.4  
             
            Greece: 0.2%
            Other Securities     531,581       0.2  
 
 
             
            Hong Kong: 0.9%
            Other Securities     1,958,908       0.9  
 
 
             
            Israel: 0.4%
            Other Securities     803,647       0.4  
 
 
             
            Italy: 1.4%
            Other Securities     3,263,808       1.4  
 
 
             
            Japan: 9.5%
  28,900         Toyota Motor Corp.     980,456       0.4  
 
 
            Other Securities     20,672,495       9.1  
 
 
                  21,652,951       9.5  
             
            Kazakhstan: 0.0%
            Other Securities     43,742       0.0  
 
 
             
            Netherlands: 2.3%
  67,311         Royal Dutch Shell PLC — Class B     1,747,956       0.8  
 
 
            Other Securities     3,497,126       1.5  
 
 
                  5,245,082       2.3  
             
            New Zealand: 0.0%
            Other Securities     80,735       0.0  
 
 
             
            Norway: 0.2%
            Other Securities     511,517       0.2  
 
 
             
            Portugal: 0.2%
            Other Securities     441,765       0.2  
 
 
             
            Singapore: 0.7%
            Other Securities     1,490,807       0.7  
 
 
             
            Spain: 1.2%
  92,273         Banco Santander Central Hispano S.A.     1,074,453       0.5  
 
 
  46,658         Telefonica S.A.     1,031,229       0.4  
 
 
            Other Securities     594,377       0.3  
 
 
                  2,700,059       1.2  
             
            Sweden: 1.2%
            Other Securities     2,842,632       1.2  
 
 
             
            Switzerland: 3.2%
  28,676         Nestle S.A.     1,482,428       0.7  
 
 
  22,821         Novartis AG     1,196,316       0.5  
 
 
  8,903         Roche Holding AG — Genusschein     1,207,688       0.5  
 
 
            Other Securities     3,294,734       1.5  
 
 
                  7,181,166       3.2  
             
            United Kingdom: 8.3%
  197,849         BP PLC     1,141,833       0.5  
 
 
  32,092         British American Tobacco PLC     1,087,376       0.5  
 
 
  172,906         HSBC Holdings PLC     1,693,555       0.7  
 
 
  22,139         Rio Tinto PLC     1,113,547       0.5  
 
 
  464,374         Vodafone Group PLC     1,114,988       0.5  
 
 
            Other Securities     12,736,041       5.6  
 
 
                  18,887,340       8.3  
             
            United States: 53.7%
  22,900         3M Co.     1,798,795       0.8  
 
 
  88,500     S   Altria Group, Inc.     1,975,320       0.9  
 
 
  50,400         American Express Co.     2,009,448       0.9  
 
 
  15,503     @,S   Apple, Inc.     3,772,965       1.6  
 
 
  16,400         Boeing Co.     1,002,532       0.4  
 
 
  84,800         Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.     2,211,584       1.0  
 
 
 
See Accompanying Notes to Financial Statements


19


Table of Contents

SUMMARY PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
ING Global Advantage and Premium
Opportunity Fund
as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
                             
 
            Percent
                of Net
Shares       Value   Assets
 
 
                             
             
            United States (continued)
                             
  45,542     S   Chevron Corp.   $ 3,377,395       1.5  
 
 
  24,700     @   Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp.     1,422,844       0.6  
 
 
  38,400     S   ConocoPhillips     2,013,312       0.9  
 
 
  16,800         Deere & Co.     1,062,936       0.5  
 
 
  44,000     @,S   DIRECTV     1,668,480       0.7  
 
 
  32,400         EI Du Pont de Nemours & Co.     1,320,948       0.6  
 
 
  91,450     @,S   EMC Corp.     1,668,048       0.7  
 
 
  23,600     @   Express Scripts, Inc.     1,005,360       0.4  
 
 
  27,669     S   ExxonMobil Corp.     1,636,898       0.7  
 
 
  22,600         HJ Heinz Co.     1,045,024       0.5  
 
 
  32,700     @   Intuit, Inc.     1,399,560       0.6  
 
 
  42,300         McDonald’s Corp.     3,090,426       1.3  
 
 
  69,027         Merck & Co., Inc.     2,426,989       1.1  
 
 
  41,262     S   Microsoft Corp.     968,832       0.4  
 
 
  26,500     @   NetApp, Inc.     1,071,660       0.5  
 
 
  16,400         Newmont Mining Corp.     1,005,648       0.4  
 
 
  29,900         PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.     1,523,704       0.7  
 
 
  18,500         Prudential Financial, Inc.     935,545       0.4  
 
 
  175,300         Qwest Communications International, Inc.     990,445       0.4  
 
 
  19,100     S   Reynolds American, Inc.     1,041,714       0.5  
 
 
  9,600     @   Salesforce.com, Inc.     1,054,848       0.5  
 
 
  38,400         Sysco Corp.     1,055,616       0.5  
 
 
  25,100         Time Warner Cable, Inc.     1,295,411       0.6  
 
 
  17,600         United Parcel Service, Inc. — Class B     1,122,880       0.5  
 
 
  19,733         United Technologies Corp.     1,286,789       0.6  
 
 
            Other Securities     72,960,069       32.0  
 
 
                  122,222,025       53.7  
            Total Common Stock
(Cost $220,438,418)
    216,936,827       95.3  
 
REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS: 4.0%
             
            Australia: 0.3%
            Other Securities     637,220       0.3  
 
 
             
            France: 0.0%
            Other Securities     136,185       0.0  
 
 
             
            Hong Kong: 0.1%
            Other Securities     150,861       0.1  
 
 
             
            Japan: 0.1%
            Other Securities     333,182       0.1  
 
 
             
            Singapore: 0.1%
            Other Securities     190,920       0.1  
 
 
             
            United Kingdom: 0.1%
            Other Securities     312,428       0.1  
 
 
             
            United States: 3.3%
  12,000         Public Storage, Inc.     1,176,240       0.5  
 
 
  15,769         Simon Property Group, Inc.     1,426,306       0.6  
 
 
  11,600         Vornado Realty Trust     940,296       0.4  
 
 
            Other Securities     3,957,564       1.8  
 
 
                  7,500,406       3.3  
            Total Real Estate Investment Trusts
(Cost $8,944,541)
    9,261,202       4.0  
 
EXCHANGE-TRADED FUNDS: 0.7%
             
            Developed Markets: 0.7%
  32,000         iShares MSCI EAFE Index Fund     1,598,400       0.7  
 
 
            Total Exchange-Traded Funds
(Cost $1,588,683)
    1,598,400       0.7  
 
PREFERRED STOCK: 0.5%
             
            Germany: 0.5%
            Other Securities     1,120,511       0.5  
 
 
            Total Preferred Stock
(Cost $1,147,307)
    1,120,511       0.5  
                             
            Total Long-Term Investments
(Cost $232,118,949)
    228,916,940       100.5  
 
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS: 1.0%
             
            Affiliated Mutual Fund: 1.0%
  2,243,000         ING Institutional Prime Money Market Fund — Class I     2,243,000       1.0  
 
 
            Total Short-Term Investments
(Cost $2,243,000)
    2,243,000       1.0  
                             
            Total Investments in Securities
(Cost $234,361,949)*
  $ 231,159,940       101.5  
            Other Assets and
Liabilities - Net
    (3,503,923 )     (1.5 )
                             
            Net Assets   $ 227,656,017       100.0  
                             
     
     
    “Other Securities” represents issues not identified as the top 50 holdings in terms of market value and issues or issuers not exceeding 1% of net assets individually or in aggregate respectively as of August 31, 2010.
 
See Accompanying Notes to Financial Statements


20


Table of Contents

SUMMARY PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
ING Global Advantage and Premium
Opportunity Fund
as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
     
     
    The following footnotes apply to either the individual securities noted or one or more of the securities aggregated and listed as a single line item.
     
@
  Non-income producing security
     
S
  All or a portion of this security has been identified by the Fund to cover future collateral requirements for applicable futures, options, swaps, foreign currency contracts and/or when-issued or delayed-delivery securities.
     
*
  Cost for federal income tax purposes is $237,680,603.
     
    Net unrealized depreciation consists of:
 
         
Gross Unrealized Appreciation
  $ 9,685,412  
Gross Unrealized Depreciation
    (16,206,075 )
         
Net Unrealized Depreciation
  $ (6,520,663 )
         
 
         
    Percentage of
Industry   Net Assets
 
Consumer Discretionary
    10.5 %
Consumer Staples
    11.2  
Energy
    9.0  
Financials
    20.0  
Health Care
    10.3  
Industrials
    10.8  
Information Technology
    12.9  
Materials
    6.2  
Telecommunication Services
    4.3  
Utilities
    4.6  
Other Long-Term Investments
    0.7  
Short-Term Investments
    1.0  
Other Assets and Liabilities – Net
    (1.5 )
         
Net Assets
    100.0 %
         
 
Fair Value Measurements^
 
The following is a summary of the fair valuations according to the inputs used as of August 31, 2010 in valuing the Fund’s assets and liabilities:
 
                                 
    Quoted Prices in Active Markets
  Other
  Significant
   
    for Identical Investments
  Observable Inputs#
  Unobservable Inputs
  Fair Value
    (Level 1)   (Level 2)   (Level 3)   at 8/31/2010
 
 
Asset Table
                               
Investments, at value
                               
Common Stock
                               
Australia
  $     $ 7,905,369     $     $ 7,905,369  
Austria
          268,544             268,544  
Barbados
    23,520                   23,520  
Belgium
    92       1,574,521             1,574,613  
Bermuda
    34,029                   34,029  
Denmark
          1,394,995             1,394,995  
Finland
          1,832,832             1,832,832  
France
    576,262       5,780,141             6,356,403  
Germany
          7,688,757             7,688,757  
Greece
          531,581             531,581  
Hong Kong
          1,958,908             1,958,908  
Israel
          803,647             803,647  
Italy
          3,263,808             3,263,808  
Japan
          21,652,951             21,652,951  
Kazakhstan
          43,742             43,742  
Netherlands
          5,245,082             5,245,082  
New Zealand
    27,878       52,857             80,735  
Norway
          511,517             511,517  
Portugal
          441,765             441,765  
Singapore
          1,490,807             1,490,807  
Spain
          2,700,059             2,700,059  
Sweden
          2,842,632             2,842,632  
Switzerland
    96,246       7,084,920             7,181,166  
United Kingdom
    844,873       18,042,467             18,887,340  
United States
    122,222,025                   122,222,025  
                                 
Total Common Stock
    123,824,925       93,111,902             216,936,827  
                                 
Real Estate Investment Trusts
    7,500,406       1,760,796             9,261,202  
Exchange-Traded Funds
    1,598,400                   1,598,400  
Preferred Stock
          1,120,511             1,120,511  
Short-Term Investments
    2,243,000                   2,243,000  
                                 
Total Investments, at value
  $ 135,166,731     $ 95,993,209     $     $ 231,159,940  
                                 
Other Financial Instruments+:
                               
Forward foreign currency contracts
          213,755             213,755  
                                 
Total Assets
  $ 135,166,731     $ 96,206,964     $     $ 231,373,695  
                                 
Liabilities Table
                               
Other Financial Instruments+:
                               
Forward foreign currency contracts
  $     $ (3,535,270 )   $     $ (3,535,270 )
Futures
    (99,800 )                 (99,800 )
Written options
          (2,037,794 )           (2,037,794 )
                                 
Total Liabilities
  $ (99,800 )   $ (5,573,064 )   $     $ (5,672,864 )
                                 
 
See Note 2, “Significant Accounting Policies” in the Notes to Financial Statements for additional information.
Other Financial Instruments are derivatives not reflected in the Portfolio of Investments and may include open forward foreign currency contracts, futures, swaps, and written options. Forward foreign currency contracts and futures are reported at their unrealized gain/loss at measurement date which represents the amount due to/from the Fund. Swaps and written options are reported at their market value at measurement date.
The earlier close of the foreign markets gives rise to the possibility that significant events, including broad market moves, may have occurred in the interim and may materially affect the value of those securities. To account for this, the Portfolio may frequently value many of its foreign equity securities using fair value prices based on third party vendor modeling tools to the extent available. Accordingly, a significant portion of the Portfolio’s investments are categorized as Level 2 investments.
 
See Accompanying Notes to Financial Statements


21


Table of Contents

SUMMARY PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
ING Global Advantage and Premium
Opportunity Fund
as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
 
At August 31, 2010 the following forward foreign currency contracts were outstanding for the ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund:
 
                                             
                In
      Unrealized
            Settlement
  Exchange
      Appreciation
Counterparty
  Currency   Buy/Sell   Date   For   Value   (Depreciation)
 
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.   Australian Dollar
AUD 9,080,000
    SELL       9/15/10     $ 7,615,895     $ 8,062,792     $ (446,897 )
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.   British Pound
GBP 12,660,000
    SELL       9/15/10       18,955,438       19,413,903       (458,465 )
Credit Suisse First Boston   Swiss Franc
CHF 7,465,000
    SELL       9/15/10       6,905,611       7,353,847       (448,236 )
JPMorgan Chase   EU Euro
EUR 25,464,000
    SELL       9/15/10       31,192,636       32,268,652       (1,076,016 )
JPMorgan Chase   EU Euro
EUR 2,720,000
    SELL       9/15/10       3,600,437       3,446,856       153,581  
JPMorgan Chase   Japanese Yen
JPY 1,839,900,000
    SELL       9/15/10       20,798,902       21,904,558       (1,105,656 )
UBS AG   British Pound
GBP 1,000,000
    SELL       9/15/10       1,593,658       1,533,484       60,174  
                                             
                                        $ (3,321,515 )
                                             
 
ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund Open Futures Contracts on August 31, 2010:
 
                                 
    Number
  Expiration
  Notional
  Unrealized
Contract Description
  of Contracts   Date   Value   Depreciation
 
Long Contracts
                               
S&P 500 E-Mini
    38       09/17/10     $ 1,991,770     $ (93,801 )
S&P 500 E-Mini
    11       12/17/10       573,815       (5,999 )
                                 
                    $ 2,565,585     $ (99,800 )
                                 
 
Written OTC Call Options
 
                                             
# of
          Expiration
  Strike
  Premiums
  Fair
Contracts   Counterparty   Description   Date   Price/Rate   Received   Value
 
 
  3,100     Goldman Sachs & Co.   Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50     09/16/10       2,679.300 EUR     $ 289,163     $ (131,110 )
  2,620     Goldman Sachs & Co.   Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50     09/02/10       2,822.440 EUR       226,061       (1 )
  1,300     Morgan Stanley   FTSE 100 Index     09/16/10       5,215.460 GBP       249,337       (207,885 )
  1,310     UBS Warburg LLC   FTSE 100 Index     09/02/10       5,356.660 GBP       223,445       (4,205 )
  100,000     UBS Warburg LLC   Nikkei 225 Index     09/16/10       9,375.780 JPY       272,145       (48,743 )
  103,000     UBS Warburg LLC   Nikkei 225 Index     09/02/10       9,667.430 JPY       291,981       (1 )
  47,791     JP Morgan Chase & Co.   S&P 500® Index     09/16/10       1,079.380 USD       1,372,080       (435,091 )
  40,828     JP Morgan Chase & Co.   S&P 500® Index     09/29/10       1,048.920 USD       1,139,101       (1,210,758 )
                                             
                                $ 4,063,313     $ (2,037,794 )
                                             
 
A summary of derivative instruments by primary risk exposure is outlined in the following tables.
 
The fair value of derivative instruments as of August 31, 2010 was as follows:
 
             
Derivatives not accounted for
       
as hedging instruments   Location on Statement of Assets and Liabilities   Fair Value
 
Asset Derivatives
           
             
Foreign exchange contracts
  Unrealized appreciation on forward foreign currency contracts   $ 213,755  
             
Total Asset Derivatives
      $ 213,755  
             
Liability Derivatives
           
             
Foreign exchange contracts
  Unrealized depreciation on forward foreign currency contracts   $ 3,535,270  
Equity contracts
  Written options, at fair value     2,037,794  
Equity contracts
  Net Assets- Unrealized depreciation*     99,800  
             
Total Liability Derivatives
      $ 5,672,864  
             
 
Includes cumulative appreciation/depreciation of futures contracts as reported in the table following the Summary Portfolio of Investments.
 
See Accompanying Notes to Financial Statements


22


Table of Contents

SUMMARY PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
ING Global Advantage and Premium
Opportunity Fund
as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited) (continued)
 
 
The effect of derivative instruments on the Fund’s Statement of Operations for the six months ended August 31, 2010 was as follows:
 
                                 
    Amount of Realized Gain or (Loss)
    on Derivatives Recognized in Income
    Foreign
           
    Currency
           
Derivatives not accounted for
  Related
      Written
   
as hedging instruments
  Transactions*   Futures   Options   Total
 
Equity contracts
  $     $ 57,680     $ 3,961,284     $ 4,018,964  
Foreign exchange contracts
    3,263,331                   3,263,331  
                                 
Total
  $ 3,263,331     $ 57,680     $ 3,961,284     $ 7,282,295  
                                 
 
                                 
    Change in Unrealized
    Appreciation or (Depreciation)
    on Derivatives Recognized in Income
    Foreign
           
    Currency
           
Derivatives not accounted for
  Related
      Written
   
as hedging instruments
  Transactions*   Futures   Options   Total
 
Equity contracts
  $     $ (118,983 )   $ 1,046,220     $ 927,237  
Foreign exchange contracts
    (3,652,265 )                 (3,652,265 )
                                 
Total
  $ (3,652,265 )   $ (118,983 )   $ 1,046,220     $ (2,725,028 )
                                 
 
Amounts recognized for forward foreign currency contracts are included in net realized gain (loss) on foreign currency related transactions and net change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation on foreign currency related transactions.
 
Supplemental Option Information (Unaudited)
 
     
Supplemental Call Option Statistics as of August 31, 2010
   
% of Total Net Assets against which calls written
  68.99%
Average Days to Expiration at time written
  29 days
Average Call Moneyness* at time written
  ATM
Premium received for calls
  $4,063,313
Value of calls
  $(2,037,794)
 
“Moneyness” is the term used to describe the relationship between the price of the underlying asset and the option’s exercise or strike price. For example, a call (buy) option is considered “in-the-money” when the value of the underlying asset exceeds the strike price. Conversely, a put (sell) option is considered “in-the-money” when its strike price exceeds the value of the underlying asset. Options are characterized for the purpose of Moneyness as, “in-the-money” (“ITM”), “out-of-the-money” (“OTM”) or “at-the-money” (“ATM”), where the underlying asset value equals the strike price.
 
See Accompanying Notes to Financial Statements


23


Table of Contents

SHAREHOLDER MEETING INFORMATION (Unaudited)
 
A special meeting of shareholders of the ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund was held June 24, 2010, at the offices of ING Funds, 7337 East Doubletree Ranch Road, Scottsdale, AZ 85258.
 
Proposal:
 
To elect three members of the Board of Trustees to represent the interests of the holders of Common Shares of the Fund, with all three individuals to serve as Class II Trustees, for a term of three-years, and until the election and qualification of their successors.
                                     
            Shares
       
            voted
       
        Shares
  against
      Total
        voted
  or
  Shares
  Shares
    Proposal*   for   withheld   abstained   Voted
 
Class II Trustees
  John V. Boyer     13,373,419.738       222,592.445               13,596,012.183  
    Patricia W. Chadwick     13,360,056.914       235,955.269               13,596,012.183  
    Sheryl K. Pressler     13,364,026.135       231,986.048               13,596,012.183  
Proposal Passed


24


Table of Contents

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION (Unaudited)
 
During the period, there were no material changes in the Fund’s investment objective or policies that were not approved by the shareholders or the Fund’s charter or by-laws or in the principal risk factors associated with investment in the Fund. Effective April 30, 2010, Pranay Gupta was added and Carl Ghielen was removed as individuals who are primarily responsible for the day to day management of the Fund’s portfolio. Effective September 30, 2010, Martin Jansen is no responsible for the day-to-day management of the Fund’s portfolio.
 
During the period, the Fund reduced its quarterly distribution from $0.372 to $0.335 per quarter, commencing with the distribution paid on July 15, 2010.
 
Dividend Reinvestment Plan
 
Unless the registered owner of Common Shares elects to receive cash by contacting BNY (the “Plan Agent”), all dividends declared on Common Shares of the Fund will be automatically reinvested by the Plan Agent for shareholders in additional Common Shares of the Fund through the Fund’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the “Plan”). Shareholders who elect not to participate in the Plan will receive all dividends and other distributions in cash paid by check mailed directly to the shareholder of record (or, if the Common Shares are held in street or other nominee name, then to such nominee) by the Plan Agent. Participation in the Plan is completely voluntary and may be terminated or resumed at any time without penalty by notice if received and processed by the Plan Agent prior to the dividend record date; otherwise such termination or resumption will be effective with respect to any subsequently declared dividend or other distribution. Some brokers may automatically elect to receive cash on your behalf and may re-invest that cash in additional Common Shares of the Fund for you. If you wish for all dividends declared on your Common Shares of the Fund to be automatically reinvested pursuant to the Plan, please contact your broker.
 
The Plan Agent will open an account for each Common Shareholder under the Plan in the same name in which such Common Shareholder’s Common Shares are registered. Whenever the Fund declares a dividend or other distribution (together, a “Dividend”) payable in cash, non-participants in the Plan will receive cash and participants in the Plan will receive the equivalent in Common Shares. The Common Shares will be acquired by the Plan Agent for the participants’ accounts, depending upon the circumstances described below, either (i) through receipt of additional unissued but authorized Common Shares from the Fund (“Newly Issued Common Shares”) or (ii) by purchase of outstanding Common Shares on the open market (“Open-Market Purchases”) on the NYSE or elsewhere. Open-market purchases and sales are usually made through a broker affiliated with the Plan Agent.
 
If, on the payment date for any Dividend, the closing market price plus estimated brokerage commissions per Common Share is equal to or greater than the net asset value per Common Share, the Plan Agent will invest the Dividend amount in Newly Issued Common Shares on behalf of the participants. The number of Newly Issued Common Shares to be credited to each participant’s account will be determined by dividing the dollar amount of the Dividend by the net asset value per Common Share on the payment date; provided that, if the net asset value is less than or equal to 95% of the closing market value on the payment date, the dollar amount of the Dividend will be divided by 95% of the closing market price per Common Share on the payment date. If, on the payment date for any Dividend, the net asset value per Common Share is greater than the closing market value plus estimated brokerage commissions, the Plan Agent will invest the Dividend amount in Common Shares acquired on behalf of the participants in Open-Market Purchases. In the event of a market discount on the payment date for any Dividend, the Plan Agent will have until the last business day before the next date on which the Common Shares trade on an “ex-dividend” basis or 30 days after the payment date for such Dividend, whichever is sooner (the “Last Purchase Date”), to invest the Dividend amount in Common Shares acquired in Open-Market Purchases.
 
It is contemplated that the Fund will pay quarterly Dividends. Therefore, the period during which Open-Market Purchases can be made will exist only from the payment date of each Dividend through the date before the next “ex-dividend” date, which typically will be approximately ten days.
 
If, before the Plan Agent has completed its Open-Market Purchases, the market price per common share exceeds the net asset value per Common Share, the average per Common Share purchase price paid by the Plan Administrator may exceed the net asset value of the Common Shares, resulting in the acquisition of fewer Common Shares than if the Dividend had been paid in Newly Issued Common Shares on the Dividend payment date. Because of the foregoing difficulty with


25


Table of Contents

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION (Unaudited) (continued)
 
respect to Open-Market Purchases, the Plan provides that if the Plan Agent is unable to invest the full Dividend amount in Open-Market Purchases during the purchase period or if the market discount shifts to a market premium during the purchase period, the Plan Agent will cease making Open-Market Purchases and will invest the un-invested portion of the Dividend amount in Newly Issued Common Shares at the net asset value per common share at the close of business on the Last Purchase Date provided that, if the net asset value is less than or equal to 95% of the then current market price per Common Share, the dollar amount of the Dividend will be divided by 95% of the market price on the payment date.
 
The Plan Agent maintains all shareholders’ accounts in the Plan and furnishes written confirmation of all transactions in the accounts, including information needed by shareholders for tax records. Common Shares in the account of each Plan participant will be held by the Plan Agent on behalf of the Plan participant, and each shareholder proxy will include those shares purchased or received pursuant to the Plan. The Plan Agent will forward all proxy solicitation materials to participants and vote proxies for shares held under the Plan in accordance with the instructions of the participants.
 
In the case of shareholders such as banks, brokers or nominees which hold shares for others who are the beneficial owners, the Plan Agent will administer the Plan on the basis of the number of Common Shares certified from time to time by the record shareholder’s name and held for the account of beneficial owners who participate in the Plan.
 
There will be no brokerage charges with respect to Common Shares issued directly by the Fund. However, each participant will pay a pro rata share of brokerage commissions incurred in connection with Open-Market Purchases. The automatic reinvestment of Dividends will not relieve participants of any federal, state or local income tax that may be payable (or required to be withheld) on such Dividends. Participants that request a partial or full sale of shares through the Plan Agent are subject to a $15.00 sales fee and a $0.10 per share brokerage commission on purchases or sales, and may be subject to certain other service charges.
 
The Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate the Plan. There is no direct service charge to participants with regard to purchases in the Plan; however, the Fund reserves the right to amend the Plan to include a service charge payable by the participants.
 
All questions concerning the Plan should be directed to the Fund’s Shareholder Service Department at (800) 992-0180.
 
KEY FINANCIAL DATES — CALENDAR 2010 DISTRIBUTIONS:
 
         
DECLARATION
  EX-DIVIDEND
  PAYABLE
DATE
 
DATE
 
DATE
 
March 19, 2010
  April 1, 2010   April 15, 2010
June 21, 2010
  July 1, 2010   July 15, 2010
September 20, 2010
  October 1, 2010   October 15, 2010
December 20, 2010
  December 29, 2010   January 17, 2011
 
Record date will be two business days after each Ex-Dividend Date. These dates are subject to change.
 
Stock Data
 
The Fund’s common shares are traded on the NYSE (Symbol: IGA).
 
Repurchase of Securities by Closed-End Companies
 
In accordance with Section 23(c) of the 1940 Act, and Rule 23c-1 under the 1940 Act the Fund may from time to time purchase shares of beneficial interest of the Fund in the open market, in privately negotiated transactions and/or purchase shares to correct erroneous transactions.
 
Number of Shareholders
 
The approximate number of record holders of Common Stock as of August 31, 2010 was 10,229, which does not include beneficial owners of shares held in the name of brokers of other nominees.
 
Certifications
 
In accordance with Section 303A.12 (a) of the New York Stock Exchange Listed Company Manual, the Fund’s CEO submitted the Annual CEO Certification on May 28, 2010 certifying that he was not aware, as of that date, of any violation by the Fund of the NYSE’s Corporate governance listing standards. In addition, as required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and related SEC rules, the Fund’s principal executive and financial officers have made quarterly certifications, included in filings with the SEC on Forms N-CSR and N-Q, relating to, among other things, the Fund’s disclosure controls and procedures and internal controls over financial reporting.


26


Table of Contents

 
Investment Adviser
ING Investments, LLC
7337 East Doubletree Ranch Road, Suite 100
Scottsdale, Arizona 85258
 
Administrator
ING Funds Services, LLC
7337 East Doubletree Ranch Road, Suite 100
Scottsdale, Arizona 85258
 
Transfer Agent
BNY Mellon Shareowner Services
480 Washington Boulevard
Jersey City, NJ 07310-1900
Custodian
The Bank of New York Mellon
One Wall Street
New York, New York 10286
 
Legal Counsel
Dechert LLP
1775 I Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20006
 
 
Toll-Free Shareholder Information
Call us from 9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Eastern time on any business day for account or other information, at (800) 992-0180
 
PRSAR-UIGA                  (0810-102210)
 
(ING FUNDS LOGO)


Table of Contents

Item 2.  Code of Ethics.

Not required for semi-annual filing.

Item 3.  Audit Committee Financial Expert.

Not required for semi-annual filing.

Item 4.  Principal Accountant Fees and Services.

Not required for semi-annual filing.

Item 5.  Audit Committee Of Listed Registrants.

Not required for semi-annual filing.

Item 6.  Schedule of Investments.

    PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund   as of August 31, 2010 (Unaudited)
                                 
    Shares                     Value  
 
COMMON STOCK:   95.3%            
 
              Australia:       3.5%        
 
    28,176         Amcor Ltd.           $ 169,281  
 
    5,170         AMP Ltd.             23,261  
 
    5,002         ASX Ltd.             130,039  
 
    30,665         Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd.             619,274  
 
    17,376         Bendigo Bank Ltd.             130,686  
 
    33,599         BHP Billiton Ltd.             1,114,747  
 
    52,472         Boral Ltd.             205,952  
 
    87,264         Brambles Ltd.             455,769  
 
    17,137         Commonwealth Bank of Australia             770,218  
 
    8,328         Computershare Ltd.             70,548  
 
    13,713         Crown Ltd.             101,414  
 
    8,289         CSL Ltd.             243,688  
 
    45,022         Foster’s Group Ltd.             243,249  
 
    15,260         Goodman Fielder Ltd.             18,224  
 
    10,360         Leighton Holdings Ltd.             283,999  
 
    16,882         MacArthur Coal Ltd.             169,676  
 
    848         Macquarie Group Ltd.             28,475  
 
    18,329         National Australia Bank Ltd.             380,075  
 
    5,469         Newcrest Mining Ltd.             182,150  
 
    27,581         OneSteel Ltd.             71,145  
 
    1,220         Orica Ltd.             27,317  
 
    21,156         Origin Energy Ltd.             287,894  
 
    17,327         QBE Insurance Group Ltd.             254,401  
 
    3,060         Rio Tinto Ltd.             192,184  
 
    3,871         Suncorp-Metway Ltd.             28,841  
 
    3,809         Wesfarmers Ltd.             108,612  
 
    35,167         Westpac Banking Corp.             681,528  
 
    5,194         Woodside Petroleum Ltd.             194,258  
 
    26,001         Woolworths Ltd.             642,714  
 
    4,088         WorleyParsons Ltd.             75,750  
 
                             
 
                            7,905,369  
 
                             
 
              Austria:       0.1%        
 
    4,168         Erste Bank der Oesterreichischen Sparkassen AG             150,321  
 
    36,324  @   Immofinanz Immobilien Anlagen AG             118,223  
 
                             
 
                            268,544  
 
                             
 
              Barbados:       0.0%        
 
    1,500  @   Nabors Industries Ltd.             23,520  
 
                             
 
                            23,520  
 
                             
 
              Belgium:       0.7%        
 
    14,572         Anheuser-Busch InBev NV             754,761  
 
    24,304  @   Anheuser-Busch InBev NV - Strip VVPR             92  
 
    5,825         Delhaize Group             389,323  
 
    1,772         Groupe Bruxelles Lambert S.A.             130,277  
 
    3,280  @   KBC Groep NV             135,407  
 
    5,787         UCB S.A.             164,753  
 
                             
 
                            1,574,613  
 
                             
 
              Bermuda:       0.0%        
 
    1,900         XL Group PLC             34,029  
 
                             
 
                            34,029  
 
                             
 
              Denmark:       0.6%        
 
    54         AP Moller - Maersk A/S - Class B             404,598  
 
    2,112         Coloplast A/S             224,490  
 
    9,277  @   Danske Bank A/S             204,909  
 
    6,566         Novo-Nordisk A/S             560,998  
 
                             
 
                            1,394,995  
 
                             
 
              Finland:       0.8%        
 
    787         Metso OYJ             28,640  
 
    19,708         Nokia OYJ             167,933  
 
    9,037         Nokian Renkaat OYJ             258,033  
 
    8,577         OKO Bank             93,446  
 
    8,131         Sampo OYJ             195,342  
 
    25,453         Stora Enso OYJ (Euro Denominated Security)             195,077  
 
    34,339         UPM-Kymmene OYJ             469,908  
 
    7,980         Wartsila OYJ             424,453  
 
                             
 
                            1,832,832  
 
                             
 
              France:       2.8%        
 
    1,242         Air Liquide             128,464  
 
    17,887         AXA S.A.             275,544  
 
    11,433         BNP Paribas             708,290  
 
    1,071         Capgemini S.A.             45,153  
 
    4,653         Cie de Saint-Gobain             169,956  
 
    6,705         CNP Assurances             113,738  
 
    2,361         Credit Agricole S.A.             29,493  
 
    28,350         France Telecom S.A.             576,262  
 
    1,312         Gaz de France             40,458  
 
    8,003         M6-Metropole Television             166,041  
 
    3,600         PPR             466,679  
 
    4,475         Publicis Groupe             186,823  
 
    11,910         Sanofi-Aventis             681,804  
 
    5,916         Schneider Electric S.A.             625,222  
 
    6,053         Scor S.A.             131,241  
 
    4,986         Societe Generale             251,434  
 
    14,632         Total S.A.             680,599  
 
    5,022         Vallourec             429,910  
 
    27,985         Vivendi             649,292  
 
                             
 
                            6,356,403  
 
                             
 
              Germany:       3.4%        
 
    3,105         Adidas AG             157,476  
 
    5,628         Allianz AG             574,542  
 
    8,683         BASF AG             456,689  
 
    5,670         Bayer AG             345,846  
 
    2,319  @   DaimlerChrysler AG             112,193  


Table of Contents

                                 
    Shares                     Value  
 
 
    7,876         Deutsche Bank AG             489,757  
 
    1,376         Deutsche Boerse AG             83,777  
 
    43,726         Deutsche Telekom AG             574,436  
 
    29,133         E.ON AG             817,683  
 
    2,308         Hannover Rueckversicheru - Reg             101,951  
 
    9,364         HeidelbergCement AG             374,067  
 
    1,302         Henkel KGaA             52,316  
 
    28,888  @   Infineon Technologies AG             160,194  
 
    5,242         Linde AG             589,366  
 
    2,574         Muenchener Rueckversicherungs AG             328,012  
 
    7,729         RWE AG             505,885  
 
    12,927         SAP AG             562,914  
 
    12,088         Siemens AG             1,095,752  
 
    17,036         United Internet AG             218,114  
 
    969         Volkswagen AG             87,787  
 
                             
 
                            7,688,757  
 
                             
 
              Greece:       0.2%        
 
    22,129         Hellenic Telecommunications                
 
              Organization S.A.             150,974  
 
    1,470  @   National Bank of Greece S.A.             18,251  
 
    25,515         Public Power Corp.             362,356  
 
                             
 
                            531,581  
 
                             
 
              Hong Kong:       0.9%        
 
    70,500         BOC Hong Kong Holdings Ltd.             186,182  
 
    7,000         Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd.             88,635  
 
    27,500         CLP Holdings Ltd.             210,488  
 
    3,800         Hang Seng Bank Ltd.             52,239  
 
    5,200         Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd.             81,895  
 
    40,000         HongKong Electric Holdings             243,258  
 
    5,000         Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.             37,056  
 
    33,000         Hysan Development Co., Ltd.             105,006  
 
    24,000         Li & Fung Ltd.             122,268  
 
    16,000         New World Development Ltd.             25,848  
 
    673,000         PCCW Ltd.             220,410  
 
    19,000         Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd.             268,191  
 
    15,500         Swire Pacific Ltd.             187,467  
 
    24,000         Wharf Holdings Ltd.             129,965  
 
                             
 
                            1,958,908  
 
                             
 
              Israel:       0.4%        
 
    33,350  @   Bank Leumi Le-Israel BM             137,805  
 
    28,951         Bezeq Israeli Telecommunication Corp. Ltd.             63,832  
 
    210         Delek Group Ltd.             52,840  
 
    18,109         Makhteshim-Agan Industries Ltd.             62,299  
 
    9,610         Teva Phaemaceutical Industries Ltd.             486,871  
 
                             
 
                            803,647  
 
                             
 
              Italy:       1.4%        
 
    8,438         Assicurazioni Generali S.p.A.             151,694  
 
    1,657  @   Autogrill S.p.A.             19,051  
 
    148,739         Enel S.p.A.             705,838  
 
    39,293         ENI S.p.A.             776,355  
 
    107,796         Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A.             300,367  
 
    27,289         Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A. - RNC             61,523  
 
    1,736  @   Mediobanca S.p.A.             13,587  
 
    57,422         Pirelli & C S.p.A.             379,250  
 
    11,596         Saipem S.p.A.             403,625  
 
    150,358         Telecom Italia S.p.A. RNC             164,941  
 
    123,367         UniCredito Italiano S.p.A.             287,577  
 
                             
 
                            3,263,808  
 
                             
 
              Japan:       9.5%        
 
    20,000         77 Bank Ltd.             99,375  
 
    4,480         Acom Co., Ltd.             67,294  
 
    2,700         Aeon Credit Service Co., Ltd.             28,520  
 
    9,200         Aisin Seiki Co., Ltd.             237,665  
 
    6,600         Alfresa Holdings Corp.             294,247  
 
    18,000         Asahi Glass Co., Ltd.             175,629  
 
    4,900         Astellas Pharma, Inc.             169,210  
 
    12,000         Bank of Kyoto Ltd.             95,521  
 
    26,400         Brother Industries Ltd.             283,065  
 
    14,200         Canon, Inc.             581,355  
 
    65         Central Japan Railway Co.             524,185  
 
    2,200         Chubu Electric Power Co., Inc.             57,913  
 
    73,000         Cosmo Oil Co., Ltd.             174,562  
 
    20,000         Daihatsu Motor Co., Ltd.             252,554  
 
    24         Dai-ichi Life Insurance Co. Ltd.             28,444  
 
    21,100         Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma Co., Ltd.             175,447  
 
    2,400         Daito Trust Construction Co., Ltd.             137,822  
 
    1,000         Denso Corp.             27,117  
 
    9,681         East Japan Railway Co.             626,091  
 
    10,500         Electric Power Development Co.             337,649  
 
    21,700  @   Elpida Memory, Inc.             260,183  
 
    9,000         Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd.             50,372  
 
    29,000         Fukuoka Financial Group, Inc.             115,844  
 
    19,000         Gunma Bank Ltd.             98,098  
 
    21,000         Hachijuni Bank Ltd.             113,770  
 
    14,500         Honda Motor Co., Ltd.             480,272  
 
    67,300         Itochu Corp.             548,651  
 
    1,500         Japan Petroleum Exploration Co.             54,036  
 
    34         Japan Tobacco, Inc.             105,625  
 
    15,500         JFE Holdings, Inc.             457,358  
 
    11,000         Kajima Corp.             25,752  
 
    69,000         Kaneka Corp.             411,818  
 
    20,100         Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc.             514,982  
 
    10,400         Kao Corp.             242,103  
 
    700         Keyence Corp.             144,895  
 
    17,000         Kirin Brewery Co., Ltd.             234,900  
 
    16,635         Kyushu Electric Power Co., Inc.             395,181  
 
    85,000         Marubeni Corp.             437,617  
 
    80,000         Mazda Motor Corp.             178,855  
 
    6,200         MEIJI Holdings Co., Ltd.             288,670  
 
    28,800         Mitsubishi Corp.             617,110  

 


Table of Contents

                                 
    Shares                     Value  
 
 
    5,000         Mitsubishi Estate Co., Ltd.             75,206  
 
    151,200         Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc.             716,916  
 
    47,100         Mitsui & Co., Ltd.             613,125  
 
    2,497         Mitsui Fudosan Co., Ltd.             40,520  
 
    9,800         Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Group Holdings, Inc.             219,293  
 
    144,503         Mizuho Financial Group, Inc.             221,627  
 
    8,100         Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd.             384,825  
 
    3,000         NHK Spring Co., Ltd.             24,878  
 
    700         Nintendo Co., Ltd.             194,061  
 
    23,000         Nippon Electric Glass Co., Ltd.             257,431  
 
    12,700         Nippon Paper Group, Inc.             329,624  
 
    61,000         Nippon Steel Corp.             201,265  
 
    10,100         Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp.             434,277  
 
    35,000         Nippon Yusen KK             134,810  
 
    10,163         Nishi-Nippon City Bank Ltd.             28,480  
 
    41,100  @   Nissan Motor Co., Ltd.             313,264  
 
    900         Nitto Denko Corp.             28,882  
 
    5,579  @   NKSJ Holdings, Inc.             31,148  
 
    19,800         Nomura Holdings, Inc.             112,149  
 
    32         NTT DoCoMo, Inc.             54,225  
 
    110         NTT Urban Development Corp.             85,716  
 
    2,600         Oriental Land Co., Ltd.             230,443  
 
    24,000         Ricoh Co., Ltd.             307,599  
 
    23,400         Sapporo Hokuyo Holdings, Inc.             110,279  
 
    27,900         Sega Sammy Holdings, Inc.             414,297  
 
    5,000         Sekisui Chemical Co., Ltd.             29,307  
 
    4,300         Shinko Electric Industries             47,243  
 
    47,000         Shinko Securities Co., Ltd.             105,285  
 
    92,000         Shinsei Bank Ltd.             69,736  
 
    13,900         Softbank Corp.             398,431  
 
    21,000         Sony Corp.             588,589  
 
    50,500         Sumitomo Corp.             578,508  
 
    12,612         Sumitomo Electric Industries Ltd.             135,180  
 
    10,900         Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, Inc.             323,478  
 
    33,142         Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co., Ltd.             175,767  
 
    1,800         T&D Holdings, Inc.             34,173  
 
    14,432         Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.             663,315  
 
    6,500         TDK Corp.             341,026  
 
    3,000         Tohoku Electric Power Co., Inc.             69,495  
 
    11,389         Tokio Marine Holdings, Inc.             305,527  
 
    1,700         Tokyo Electric Power Co., Inc.             49,424  
 
    600         Tokyo Electron Ltd.             28,151  
 
    91,000         Tosoh Corp.             228,014  
 
    16,000         Toyo Suisan Kaisha Ltd.             337,124  
 
    28,900         Toyota Motor Corp.             980,456  
 
    5,340         USS Co., Ltd.             393,983  
 
    6,000         Yamaguchi Financial Group, Inc.             56,642  
 
                             
 
                            21,652,951  
 
                             
 
              Kazakhstan:       0.0%        
 
    3,385         Eurasian Natural Resources Corp.             43,742  
 
                             
 
                            43,742  
 
                             
 
              Netherlands:       2.3%        
 
    5,877         Fugro NV             329,314  
 
    43,589         Koninklijke Ahold NV             535,092  
 
    10,221         Koninklijke Boskalis Westminster NV             379,913  
 
    22,785         Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV             634,945  
 
    720         Koninklijke Vopak NV             28,836  
 
    32,498         Royal Dutch Shell PLC - Class A             860,671  
 
    34,813         Royal Dutch Shell PLC - Class B             887,285  
 
    30,069         Royal KPN NV             434,736  
 
    15,487         TNT NV             391,430  
 
    28,587         Unilever NV             762,860  
 
                             
 
                            5,245,082  
 
                             
 
              New Zealand:       0.0%        
 
    37,842         Auckland International Airport Ltd.             52,857  
 
    19,408         Telecom Corp. of New Zealand Ltd.             27,878  
 
                             
 
                            80,735  
 
                             
 
              Norway:       0.2%        
 
    29,491         Aker Kvaerner ASA             323,596  
 
    17,114         DnB NOR ASA             187,921  
 
                             
 
                            511,517  
 
                             
 
              Portugal:       0.2%        
 
    40,114         Jeronimo Martins             441,765  
 
                             
 
                            441,765  
 
                             
 
              Singapore:       0.7%        
 
    25,000         DBS Group Holdings Ltd.             256,795  
 
    33,000         Fraser and Neave Ltd.             135,560  
 
    16,000         Jardine Cycle & Carriage Ltd.             384,633  
 
    38,000         Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp.             243,688  
 
    8,000         Singapore Airlines Ltd.             89,281  
 
    9,000         Singapore Telecommunications Ltd.             20,508  
 
    73,000         StarHub Ltd.             132,591  
 
    9,000         United Overseas Bank Ltd.             124,549  
 
    35,000         United Overseas Land Ltd.             103,202  
 
                             
 
                            1,490,807  
 
                             
 
              Spain:       1.2%        
 
    41,194         Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria S.A.             496,193  
 
    92,273         Banco Santander Central Hispano S.A.             1,074,453  
 
    20,944         Criteria Caixacorp S.A.             98,184  
 
    46,658         Telefonica S.A.             1,031,229  
 
                             
 
                            2,700,059  
 
                             
 
              Sweden:       1.2%        
 
    26,087         Atlas Copco AB - Class B             356,258  
 
    36,823         Boliden AB             415,687  
 
    20,600         Electrolux AB             395,704  
 
    8,404         Getinge AB             168,464  
 
    9,538         Investor AB             163,989  
 
    7,223         Kinnevik Investment AB             130,700  
 
    43,738         Nordea Bank AB             390,030  

 


Table of Contents

                                 
    Shares                     Value  
 
 
    4,461         Ratos AB             118,805  
 
    4,045         SKF AB - B Shares             72,295  
 
    8,772         Svenska Handelsbanken AB             227,986  
 
    41,706         Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson             402,714  
 
                             
 
                            2,842,632  
 
                             
 
              Switzerland:       3.2%        
 
    4,164  @   ABB Ltd.             80,375  
 
    1,800         ACE Ltd.             96,246  
 
    13,975         Compagnie Financiere Richemont S.A.             540,443  
 
    13,872         Credit Suisse Group             606,675  
 
    8,526         Holcim Ltd.             511,184  
 
    28,676         Nestle S.A.             1,482,428  
 
    22,821         Novartis AG             1,196,316  
 
    1,541         Pargesa Holding S.A.             100,196  
 
    8,903         Roche Holding AG - Genusschein             1,207,688  
 
    29         SGS S.A.             41,931  
 
    5,628         Swiss Reinsurance             232,389  
 
    31,888  @   UBS AG - Reg             535,013  
 
    7,068         Xstrata PLC             110,299  
 
    1,980         Zurich Financial Services AG             439,983  
 
                             
 
                            7,181,166  
 
                             
 
              United Kingdom:       8.3%        
 
    5,240         Aggreko PLC             113,600  
 
    16,444         Anglo American PLC             586,494  
 
    6,516         ARM Holdings PLC             36,362  
 
    14,721         AstraZeneca PLC             723,616  
 
    5,906  @   Autonomy Corp. PLC             140,789  
 
    44,247         Aviva PLC             255,594  
 
    132,660         Barclays PLC             609,044  
 
    46,275         BG Group PLC             741,174  
 
    13,008         BHP Billiton PLC             362,736  
 
    197,849         BP PLC             1,141,833  
 
    32,092         British American Tobacco PLC             1,087,376  
 
    44,835         BT Group PLC             91,432  
 
    118,360         Cable & Wireless Worldwide PLC             121,257  
 
    16,927         Capita Group PLC             182,053  
 
    62,706         Compass Group PLC             511,235  
 
    27,823         Diageo PLC             452,245  
 
    43,081         GlaxoSmithKline PLC             803,951  
 
    5,656         Group 4 Securicor PLC             21,824  
 
    172,906         HSBC Holdings PLC             1,693,555  
 
    18,474         ICAP PLC             115,592  
 
    23,715         Imperial Tobacco Group PLC             652,658  
 
    20,289         Inmarsat PLC             207,491  
 
    14,103         International Power PLC             80,044  
 
    15,713         Investec PLC             112,976  
 
    20,318         J Sainsbury PLC             113,466  
 
    18,268         Kazakhmys PLC             321,532  
 
    31,244         Kingfisher PLC             97,514  
 
    95,851         Legal & General Group PLC             135,593  
 
    329,230  @   Lloyds TSB Group PLC             346,545  
 
    41,992         Man Group PLC             133,421  
 
    86,398         National Grid PLC             727,482  
 
    52,824         Old Mutual PLC             102,657  
 
    32,230         Pearson PLC             477,934  
 
    7,019         Petrofac Ltd.             150,183  
 
    15,404         Prudential PLC             133,619  
 
    6,007         Reckitt Benckiser PLC             299,402  
 
    22,139         Rio Tinto PLC             1,113,547  
 
    55,801         Rolls-Royce Group PLC             472,130  
 
    62,419  @   Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC             42,274  
 
    2,769         Schroders PLC             58,024  
 
    1,325         Scottish & Southern Energy PLC             23,247  
 
    21,278         Serco Group PLC             189,449  
 
    6,795         Severn Trent PLC             134,719  
 
    6,903         Shire PLC             148,506  
 
    32,877         Smith & Nephew PLC             272,084  
 
    4,440         Smiths Group PLC             77,644  
 
    23,762         Standard Chartered PLC             634,566  
 
    11,951         Standard Life PLC             37,166  
 
    26,365         Tesco PLC             164,071  
 
    12,897         Unilever PLC             339,769  
 
    3,578         Vedanta Resources PLC             103,090  
 
    464,374         Vodafone Group PLC             1,114,988  
 
    2,072         Whitbread PLC             44,184  
 
    3,399         WPP PLC             33,603  
 
                             
 
                            18,887,340  
 
                             
 
              United States:       53.7%        
 
    22,900         3M Co.             1,798,795  
 
    8,401  S   Abbott Laboratories             414,505  
 
    500         Abercrombie & Fitch Co.             17,300  
 
    2,800  @   Adobe Systems, Inc.             77,728  
 
    3,100  @   Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.             17,422  
 
    3,600  @   AES Corp.             36,864  
 
    2,300         Aetna, Inc.             61,456  
 
    2,578         Aflac, Inc.             121,811  
 
    1,900  @   Agilent Technologies, Inc.             51,243  
 
    1,100         Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.             81,433  
 
    6,500         Airgas, Inc.             427,700  
 
    600         AK Steel Holding Corp.             7,644  
 
    15,400  @   Akamai Technologies, Inc.             709,478  
 
    5,500  S   Alcoa, Inc.             56,155  
 
    900         Allegheny Energy, Inc.             20,295  
 
    500         Allegheny Technologies, Inc.             20,360  
 
    1,700         Allergan, Inc.             104,414  
 
    2,900         Allstate Corp.             80,040  
 
    36,400         Altera Corp.             897,988  
 
    88,500  S   Altria Group, Inc.             1,975,320  
 
    1,900  @, S   Amazon.com, Inc.             237,177  

 


Table of Contents

                                 
    Shares                     Value  
 
 
    1,300         Ameren Corp.             36,491  
 
    2,600         American Electric Power Co., Inc.             92,066  
 
    50,400         American Express Co.             2,009,448  
 
    700  @   American International Group, Inc.             23,751  
 
    17,700  @   American Tower Corp.             829,422  
 
    14,400         Ameriprise Financial, Inc.             627,552  
 
    23,652         AmerisourceBergen Corp.             645,227  
 
    5,169  @, S   Amgen, Inc.             263,826  
 
    16,300  S   Amphenol Corp.             663,736  
 
    2,700         Anadarko Petroleum Corp.             124,173  
 
    1,600         Analog Devices, Inc.             44,608  
 
    1,500         AON Corp.             54,360  
 
    1,900         Apache Corp.             170,715  
 
    700  @   Apollo Group, Inc. - Class A             29,736  
 
    15,503  @, S   Apple, Inc.             3,772,965  
 
    7,300         Applied Materials, Inc.             75,847  
 
    3,466         Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.             106,683  
 
    9,300         Assurant, Inc.             340,008  
 
    32,000  S   AT&T, Inc.             864,960  
 
    1,200  @   Autodesk, Inc.             33,300  
 
    2,700         Automatic Data Processing, Inc.             104,247  
 
    400  @   Autonation, Inc.             9,032  
 
    3,600  @   Autozone, Inc.             755,208  
 
    600         Avery Dennison Corp.             19,512  
 
    2,300         Avon Products, Inc.             66,930  
 
    2,300         Baker Hughes, Inc.             86,434  
 
    500         Ball Corp.             28,040  
 
    54,340  S   Bank of America Corp.             676,533  
 
    6,600         Bank of New York Mellon Corp.             160,182  
 
    3,200         Baxter International, Inc.             136,192  
 
    3,700         BB&T Corp.             81,844  
 
    1,300         Becton Dickinson & Co.             88,647  
 
    1,400  @   Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc.             50,358  
 
    552         Bemis Co.             15,936  
 
    9,000  @   Berkshire Hathaway, Inc.             709,020  
 
    1,900         Best Buy Co., Inc.             59,641  
 
    400  @   Big Lots, Inc.             12,504  
 
    1,300  @   Biogen Idec, Inc.             69,940  
 
    1,000  @   BMC Software, Inc.             36,060  
 
    16,400         Boeing Co.             1,002,532  
 
    8,200  @, S   Boston Scientific Corp.             42,558  
 
    84,800         Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.             2,211,584  
 
    2,300         Broadcom Corp.             68,931  
 
    7,169         Brown-Forman Corp.             439,388  
 
    2,092         CA, Inc.             37,677  
 
    600         Cabot Oil & Gas Corp.             16,704  
 
    1,300  @   Cameron International Corp.             47,814  
 
    22,900         Campbell Soup Co.             853,254  
 
    2,500         Capital One Financial Corp.             94,650  
 
    27,600         Cardinal Health, Inc.             826,896  
 
    1,000  @   CareFusion Corp.             21,580  
 
    1,200  @   Carmax, Inc.             23,916  
 
    2,300         Carnival Corp.             71,714  
 
    3,400         Caterpillar, Inc.             221,544  
 
    1,500  @, S   CB Richard Ellis Group, Inc.             24,630  
 
    3,700         CBS Corp. - Class B             51,134  
 
    2,500  @   Celgene Corp.             128,800  
 
    2,300         CenterPoint Energy, Inc.             34,017  
 
    16,900         CenturyTel, Inc.             611,104  
 
    400  @   Cephalon, Inc.             22,644  
 
    5,600  @   Cerner Corp.             407,960  
 
    400         CF Industries Holdings, Inc.             37,000  
 
    900         CH Robinson Worldwide, Inc.             58,491  
 
    5,300  S   Charles Schwab Corp.             67,628  
 
    3,500         Chesapeake Energy Corp.             72,380  
 
    45,542  S   Chevron Corp.             3,377,395  
 
    1,800         Chubb Corp.             99,216  
 
    1,500         Cigna Corp.             48,330  
 
    900         Cincinnati Financial Corp.             24,012  
 
    700         Cintas Corp.             17,843  
 
    30,892  @, S   Cisco Systems, Inc.             619,385  
 
    122,400  @, S   Citigroup, Inc.             455,328  
 
    14,900  @   Citrix Systems, Inc.             863,306  
 
    700         Cliffs Natural Resources, Inc.             42,833  
 
    800         Clorox Co.             51,856  
 
    393  S   CME Group, Inc.             97,495  
 
    24,000         CMS Energy Corp.             420,000  
 
    1,700         Coach, Inc.             60,928  
 
    12,472         Coca-Cola Co.             697,434  
 
    1,800         Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.             51,228  
 
    24,700  @   Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp.             1,422,844  
 
    2,700         Colgate-Palmolive Co.             199,368  
 
    15,255  S   Comcast Corp. – Class A             261,166  
 
    16,400         Comerica, Inc.             564,324  
 
    800         Computer Sciences Corp.             31,848  
 
    1,200  @   Compuware Corp.             8,616  
 
    2,400         ConAgra Foods, Inc.             51,816  
 
    38,400  S   ConocoPhillips             2,013,312  
 
    1,200         Consol Energy, Inc.             38,640  
 
    18,500         Consolidated Edison, Inc.             879,305  
 
    1,000  @   Constellation Brands, Inc.             16,660  
 
    1,100         Constellation Energy Group, Inc.             32,263  
 
    8,500  S   Corning, Inc.             133,280  
 
    2,400         Costco Wholesale Corp.             135,720  
 
    800  @   Coventry Health Care, Inc.             15,480  
 
    500         CR Bard, Inc.             38,415  
 
    2,100         CSX Corp.             104,769  
 
    1,100         Cummins, Inc.             81,851  
 
    7,400         CVS Caremark Corp.             199,800  

 


Table of Contents

                         
    Shares               Value
 
 
    1,500         D.R. Horton, Inc.       15,390
 
    2,800         Danaher Corp.       101,724
 
    800         Darden Restaurants, Inc.       33,008
 
    600  @   DaVita, Inc.       38,772
 
    1,000  @   Dean Foods Co.       10,230
 
    16,800         Deere & Co.       1,062,936
 
    9,300  @, S   Dell, Inc.       109,461
 
    2,200  @, S   Denbury Resources, Inc.       32,428
 
    800         Densply International, Inc.       22,256
 
    2,400         Devon Energy Corp.       144,672
 
    300         DeVry, Inc.       11,433
 
    400         Diamond Offshore Drilling       23,272
 
    44,000  @, S   DIRECTV       1,668,480
 
    2,900  S   Discover Financial Services       42,079
 
    12,300  @   Discovery Communications, Inc. - Class A       464,325
 
    3,200         Dominion Resources, Inc.       136,832
 
    1,050         Dover Corp.       46,998
 
    6,300         Dow Chemical Co.       153,531
 
    20,700         Dr Pepper Snapple Group, Inc.       762,174
 
    16,317         DTE Energy Co.       764,451
 
    7,100  S   Duke Energy Corp.       122,049
 
    300         Dun & Bradstreet Corp.       19,770
 
    1,090  @   E*Trade Financial Corp.       13,527
 
    400         Eastman Chemical Co.       24,620
 
    1,500  @   Eastman Kodak Co.       5,235
 
    6,200         Eaton Corp.       430,776
 
    6,116  @, S   eBay, Inc.       142,136
 
    1,300         Ecolab, Inc.       61,620
 
    1,800         Edison International       60,750
 
    32,400         EI Du Pont de Nemours & Co.       1,320,948
 
    58,400         El Paso Corp.       665,176
 
    1,800  @   Electronic Arts, Inc.       27,432
 
    5,500         Eli Lilly & Co.       184,580
 
    91,450  @, S   EMC Corp.       1,668,048
 
    18,948         Emerson Electric Co.       883,924
 
    1,000         Entergy Corp.       78,840
 
    9,800         EOG Resources, Inc.       851,326
 
    800         EQT Corp.       26,080
 
    700         Equifax, Inc.       20,629
 
    10,300         Estee Lauder Cos., Inc.       577,521
 
    3,600         Exelon Corp.       146,592
 
    1,100         Expedia, Inc.       25,146
 
    1,200         Expeditors International Washington, Inc.       47,508
 
    23,600  @   Express Scripts, Inc.       1,005,360
 
    27,669  S   ExxonMobil Corp.       1,636,898
 
    11,800         Family Dollar Stores, Inc.       504,922
 
    700         Fastenal Co.       31,689
 
    500         Federated Investors, Inc.       10,425
 
    1,700         FedEx Corp.       132,685
 
    1,400         Fidelity National Information Services, Inc.       36,176
 
    4,326  S   Fifth Third Bancorp.       47,802
 
    1,223  @   First Horizon National Corp.       12,328
 
    300  @   First Solar, Inc.       38,355
 
    1,600         FirstEnergy Corp.       58,448
 
    800  @   Fiserv, Inc.       40,024
 
    15,500  @   Flir Systems, Inc.       389,360
 
    300         Flowserve Corp.       26,814
 
    1,000         Fluor Corp.       44,660
 
    400         FMC Corp.       24,912
 
    10,800  @   FMC Technologies, Inc.       667,980
 
    18,400  @, S   Ford Motor Co.       207,736
 
    1,500  @   Forest Laboratories, Inc.       40,935
 
    800         Fortune Brands, Inc.       35,832
 
    800         Franklin Resources, Inc.       77,208
 
    2,600         Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc.       187,148
 
    5,400         Frontier Communications Corp.       41,742
 
    800  @   GameStop Corp.       14,344
 
    1,300         Gannett Co., Inc.       15,717
 
    2,470         Gap, Inc.       41,718
 
    2,100         General Dynamics Corp.       117,327
 
    57,816  S   General Electric Co.       837,176
 
    3,600         General Mills, Inc.       130,176
 
    900         Genuine Parts Co.       37,737
 
    2,600  @   Genworth Financial, Inc.       28,158
 
    1,400  @   Genzyme Corp.       98,154
 
    4,800  @   Gilead Sciences, Inc.       152,928
 
    2,805  S   Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.       384,117
 
    5,100         Goodrich Corp.       349,248
 
    1,300  @   Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.       12,012
 
    1,269  @   Google, Inc. - Class A       571,075
 
    1,800  S   H&R Block, Inc.       23,130
 
    4,900         Halliburton Co.       138,229
 
    1,300         Harley-Davidson, Inc.       31,616
 
    400  @   Harman International Industries, Inc.       12,468
 
    11,543         Harris Corp.       485,614
 
    2,400         Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.       48,384
 
    11,800         Hasbro, Inc.       476,248
 
    600         Helmerich & Payne, Inc.       22,224
 
    900         Hershey Co.       41,823
 
    1,600         Hess Corp.       80,400
 
    12,609         Hewlett-Packard Co.       485,194
 
    22,600         HJ Heinz Co.       1,045,024
 
    9,100         Home Depot, Inc.       253,071
 
    4,100         Honeywell International, Inc.       160,269
 
    400         Hormel Foods Corp.       17,260
 
    14,500  @   Hospira, Inc.       744,720
 
    2,581  S   Hudson City Bancorp., Inc.       29,746
 
    7,386  @, S   Humana, Inc.       352,977
 
    3,900  S   Huntington Bancshares, Inc.       20,631

 


Table of Contents

                         
    Shares               Value
 
 
    2,100      Illinois Tool Works, Inc.       86,646
 
    6,991      Integrys Energy Group, Inc.       338,714
 
    30,102      Intel Corp.       533,407
 
    400  @   IntercontinentalExchange, Inc.       38,224
 
    6,989  S   International Business Machines Corp.       861,254
 
    7,300      International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc.       333,537
 
    1,600      International Game Technology       23,360
 
    2,368      International Paper Co.       48,449
 
    2,600  @   Interpublic Group of Cos., Inc.       22,178
 
    32,700  @   Intuit, Inc.       1,399,560
 
    2,500  @   Intuitive Surgical, Inc.       662,575
 
    2,500  @   Invesco Ltd.       45,250
 
    1,000      Iron Mountain, Inc.       20,280
 
    986      ITT Corp.       41,905
 
    1,000  S   Jabil Circuit, Inc.       10,250
 
    700  @   Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc.       24,276
 
    1,000  S   Janus Capital Group, Inc.       9,080
 
    1,300      JC Penney Co., Inc.       26,000
 
    1,200  @   JDS Uniphase Corp.       11,028
 
    600      JM Smucker Co.       35,088
 
    14,975  S   Johnson & Johnson       853,875
 
    3,600      Johnson Controls, Inc.       95,508
 
    21,557      JP Morgan Chase & Co.       783,813
 
    2,800  @   Juniper Networks, Inc.       76,160
 
    1,400      Kellogg Co.       69,552
 
    4,800      Keycorp       35,376
 
    2,245      Kimberly-Clark Corp.       144,578
 
    1,400  @   King Pharmaceuticals, Inc.       12,194
 
    900      KLA-Tencor Corp.       25,209
 
    1,700  @   Kohl’s Corp.       79,866
 
    9,400      Kraft Foods, Inc.       281,530
 
    3,500      Kroger Co.       69,055
 
    600      L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.       39,960
 
    600  @   Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings       43,572
 
    900      Legg Mason, Inc.       22,797
 
    800      Leggett & Platt, Inc.       15,336
 
    900      Lennar Corp.       11,853
 
    1,000  @   Leucadia National Corp.       21,350
 
    400  @   Lexmark International, Inc.       13,996
 
    1,000  @   Life Technologies Corp.       42,770
 
    27,000      Limited Brands, Inc.       637,200
 
    1,600      Lincoln National Corp.       37,376
 
    1,200      Linear Technology Corp.       34,380
 
    1,640      Lockheed Martin Corp.       114,013
 
    1,900      Loews Corp.       66,766
 
    800      Lorillard, Inc.       60,808
 
    7,700      Lowe’s Cos., Inc.       156,310
 
    3,500  @   LSI Logic Corp.       14,070
 
    6,900      M&T Bank Corp.       590,916
 
    2,300      Macy’s, Inc.       44,712
 
    3,800      Marathon Oil Corp.       115,862
 
    1,400      Marriott International, Inc.       44,814
 
    2,900      Marsh & McLennan Cos., Inc.       68,788
 
    2,900      Marshall & Ilsley Corp.       18,995
 
    1,900      Masco Corp.       19,931
 
    600      Massey Energy Co.       17,250
 
    500      Mastercard, Inc.       99,180
 
    2,000      Mattel, Inc.       41,980
 
    800  @   McAfee, Inc.       37,640
 
    10,700      McCormick & Co., Inc.       426,609
 
    42,300      McDonald’s Corp.       3,090,426
 
    1,700      McGraw-Hill Cos., Inc.       47,005
 
    1,489      McKesson Corp.       86,436
 
    17,700      Mead Johnson Nutrition Co.       923,763
 
    900      MeadWestvaco Corp.       19,584
 
    2,300  @   Medco Health Solutions, Inc.       100,004
 
    6,000      Medtronic, Inc.       188,880
 
    1,200  @   MEMC Electronic Materials, Inc.       12,348
 
    69,027      Merck & Co., Inc.       2,426,989
 
    200      Meredith Corp.       5,852
 
    4,800      Metlife, Inc.       180,480
 
    1,400  @   MetroPCS Communications, Inc.       12,516
 
    20,200      Microchip Technology, Inc.       559,338
 
    4,600  @, S   Micron Technology, Inc.       29,739
 
    41,262  S   Microsoft Corp.       968,832
 
    700      Molex, Inc.       12,355
 
    900      Molson Coors Brewing Co.       39,204
 
    3,000      Monsanto Co.       157,950
 
    700  @   Monster Worldwide, Inc.       7,721
 
    1,100  S   Moody’s Corp.       23,254
 
    7,600      Morgan Stanley       187,644
 
    12,600  @, S   Motorola, Inc.       94,878
 
    1,000      Murphy Oil Corp.       53,560
 
    1,700  @, S   Mylan Laboratories       29,172
 
    800  @, S   Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.       14,328
 
    2,240      National Oilwell Varco, Inc.       84,202
 
    1,300      National Semiconductor Corp.       16,393
 
    26,500  @   NetApp, Inc.       1,071,660
 
    600  @   New York Times Co.       4,308
 
    1,500      Newell Rubbermaid, Inc.       22,530
 
    16,400      Newmont Mining Corp.       1,005,648
 
    12,200  S   News Corp. - Class A       153,354
 
    2,200      NextEra Energy, Inc.       118,206
 
    292      Nicor, Inc.       12,349
 
    2,100      Nike, Inc.       147,000
 
    1,500  S   NiSource, Inc.       26,010
 
    900      Noble Energy, Inc.       62,802
 
    900      Nordstrom, Inc.       26,028
 
    2,000      Norfolk Southern Corp.       107,360

 


Table of Contents

                                 
    Shares                     Value  
 
 
    14,700      Northeast Utilities             425,859  
 
    1,300      Northern Trust Corp.             59,982  
 
    1,600      Northrop Grumman Corp.             86,592  
 
    42,900  @   Novell, Inc.             241,098  
 
    500  @   Novellus Systems, Inc.             11,650  
 
    1,400  @   NRG Energy, Inc.             28,448  
 
    1,700      Nucor Corp.             62,526  
 
    3,100  @   Nvidia Corp.             28,923  
 
    1,400      NYSE Euronext             38,836  
 
    4,400      Occidental Petroleum Corp.             321,552  
 
    1,500  @   Office Depot, Inc.             5,115  
 
    1,700      Omnicom Group             59,517  
 
    600      Oneok, Inc.             25,746  
 
    21,175  S   Oracle Corp.             463,309  
 
    700  @   O’Reilly Automotive, Inc.             33,089  
 
    900  @   Owens-Illinois, Inc.             22,554  
 
    2,000      Paccar, Inc.             81,980  
 
    2,000      Pacific Gas & Electric Co.             93,520  
 
    700  @   Pactiv Corp.             22,456  
 
    600      Pall Corp.             20,514  
 
    900      Parker Hannifin Corp.             53,244  
 
    500      Patterson Cos., Inc.             12,645  
 
    1,700      Paychex, Inc.             42,313  
 
    1,500      Peabody Energy Corp.             64,200  
 
    2,000      People’s United Financial, Inc.             25,440  
 
    1,200      Pepco Holdings, Inc.             21,540  
 
    8,700      PepsiCo, Inc.             558,366  
 
    600      PerkinElmer, Inc.             12,606  
 
    43,655      Pfizer, Inc.             695,424  
 
    10,004      Philip Morris International, Inc.             514,606  
 
    10,600      Pinnacle West Capital Corp.             422,410  
 
    600      Pioneer Natural Resources Co.             34,692  
 
    1,100      Pitney Bowes, Inc.             21,164  
 
    29,900      PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.             1,523,704  
 
    400      Polo Ralph Lauren Corp.             30,296  
 
    900      PPG Industries, Inc.             59,247  
 
    2,500      PPL Corp.             67,900  
 
    1,700      Praxair, Inc.             146,251  
 
    800      Precision Castparts Corp.             90,544  
 
    300  @   Priceline.com, Inc.             87,444  
 
    1,700      Principal Financial Group, Inc.             39,185  
 
    15,550  S   Procter & Gamble Co.             927,869  
 
    1,600      Progress Energy, Inc.             68,656  
 
    3,600      Progressive Corp.             71,280  
 
    18,500      Prudential Financial, Inc.             935,545  
 
    2,700      Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.             86,292  
 
    1,700  @   Pulte Homes, Inc.             13,651  
 
    900      QEP Resources, Inc.             26,127  
 
    600  @   QLogic Corp.             8,937  
 
    8,905      Qualcomm, Inc.             341,151  
 
    1,100  @   Quanta Services, Inc.             19,734  
 
    800      Quest Diagnostics             34,800  
 
    175,300      Qwest Communications International, Inc.             990,445  
 
    700      RadioShack Corp.             12,936  
 
    900      Range Resources Corp.             30,429  
 
    2,100      Raytheon Co.             92,232  
 
    24,000  @   Red Hat, Inc.             829,200  
 
    6,500  S   Regions Financial Corp.             41,795  
 
    1,800      Republic Services, Inc.             52,974  
 
    19,100  S   Reynolds American, Inc.             1,041,714  
 
    800      Robert Half International, Inc.             17,264  
 
    7,000      Rockwell Automation, Inc.             357,980  
 
    900      Rockwell Collins, Inc.             48,537  
 
    4,500      Roper Industries, Inc.             261,360  
 
    700      Ross Stores, Inc.             34,741  
 
    600  @   Rowan Cos., Inc.             15,426  
 
    1,100  S   RR Donnelley & Sons Co.             16,660  
 
    300      Ryder System, Inc.             11,511  
 
    2,100      Safeway, Inc.             39,480  
 
    1,600  @   SAIC, Inc.             23,808  
 
    9,600  @   Salesforce.com, Inc.             1,054,848  
 
    1,200  @   Sandisk Corp.             39,888  
 
    57,300  S   Sara Lee Corp.             827,412  
 
    600      SCANA Corp.             23,418  
 
    7,405      Schlumberger Ltd.             394,909  
 
    500      Scripps Networks Interactive - Class A             20,090  
 
    900      Sealed Air Corp.             18,459  
 
    300  @   Sears Holding Corp.             18,570  
 
    1,300      Sempra Energy             66,196  
 
    500      Sherwin-Williams Co.             35,190  
 
    700      Sigma-Aldrich Corp.             37,219  
 
    2,600  @, S   SLM Corp.             28,730  
 
    300      Snap-On, Inc.             12,369  
 
    4,500      Southern Co.             165,105  
 
    4,000      Southwest Airlines Co.             44,200  
 
    1,900  @   Southwestern Energy Co.             62,168  
 
    41,200      Spectra Energy Corp.             838,008  
 
    16,100  @, S   Sprint Nextel Corp.             65,688  
 
    1,800  @   St. Jude Medical, Inc.             62,226  
 
    8,100      Stanley Black & Decker, Inc.             434,484  
 
    4,000      Staples, Inc.             71,080  
 
    4,000      Starbucks Corp.             91,960  
 
    1,000      Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc.             46,730  
 
    2,723      State Street Corp.             95,523  
 
    7,700  @   Stericycle, Inc.             504,350  
 
    1,500      Stryker Corp.             64,785  
 
    9,600      Sunoco, Inc.             323,328  
 
    2,700      SunTrust Bank             60,723  
 
    1,100  S   Supervalu, Inc.             10,692  

 


Table of Contents

                                 
    Shares                     Value  
 
 
    4,300  @, S   Symantec Corp.             58,609  
 
    38,400      Sysco Corp.             1,055,616  
 
    1,400      T. Rowe Price Group, Inc.             61,292  
 
    4,008      Target Corp.             205,049  
 
    1,200      TECO Energy, Inc.             20,256  
 
    2,100      Tellabs, Inc.             14,910  
 
    2,400  @, S   Tenet Healthcare Corp.             9,408  
 
    900  @, S   Teradata Corp.             29,466  
 
    1,000  @   Teradyne, Inc.             8,980  
 
    800  S   Tesoro Corp.             8,984  
 
    6,600  S   Texas Instruments, Inc.             151,998  
 
    1,500      Textron, Inc.             25,605  
 
    2,186  @   Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.             92,074  
 
    12,100      Tiffany & Co.             479,523  
 
    25,100      Time Warner Cable, Inc.             1,295,411  
 
    6,200      Time Warner, Inc.             185,876  
 
    500  @   Titanium Metals Corp.             9,060  
 
    2,200      TJX Cos., Inc.             87,318  
 
    6,700      Torchmark Corp.             330,645  
 
    1,100      Total System Services, Inc.             15,620  
 
    2,571      Travelers Cos., Inc.             125,928  
 
    1,700      Tyson Foods, Inc.             27,846  
 
    2,700      Union Pacific Corp.             196,938  
 
    17,600      United Parcel Service, Inc. - Class B             1,122,880  
 
    800      United States Steel Corp.             34,008  
 
    19,733      United Technologies Corp.             1,286,789  
 
    6,195      UnitedHealth Group, Inc.             196,505  
 
    1,798      UnumProvident Corp.             36,050  
 
    700  @   Urban Outfitters, Inc.             21,224  
 
    10,420      US Bancorp.             216,736  
 
    3,100      Valero Energy Corp.             48,887  
 
    7,900  @   Varian Medical Systems, Inc.             420,596  
 
    25,600  @   VeriSign, Inc.             745,728  
 
    15,355  S   Verizon Communications, Inc.             453,126  
 
    500      VF Corp.             35,310  
 
    3,300      Viacom - Class B             103,686  
 
    2,400      Visa, Inc.             165,552  
 
    700      Vulcan Materials Co.             25,732  
 
    5,300      Walgreen Co.             142,464  
 
    11,267  S   Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.             564,927  
 
    10,600      Walt Disney Co.             345,454  
 
    2,600      Waste Management, Inc.             86,034  
 
    6,900  @   Waters Corp.             417,588  
 
    600  @   Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc.             25,842  
 
    2,200  @   WellPoint, Inc.             109,296  
 
    28,171      Wells Fargo & Co.             663,427  
 
    1,200  @   Western Digital Corp.             28,980  
 
    3,600  S   Western Union Co.             56,448  
 
    1,100      Weyerhaeuser Co.             17,270  
 
    400      Whirlpool Corp.             29,664  
 
    900  @   Whole Foods Market, Inc.             31,311  
 
    31,700  S   Williams Cos., Inc.             574,721  
 
    2,600      Windstream Corp.             29,991  
 
    600      Wisconsin Energy Corp.             33,444  
 
    3,200      WW Grainger, Inc.             338,528  
 
    1,000      Wyndham Worldwide Corp.             23,190  
 
    400      Wynn Resorts Ltd.             32,244  
 
    2,500      Xcel Energy, Inc.             55,775  
 
    7,500  S   Xerox Corp.             63,300  
 
    29,900      Xilinx, Inc.             722,085  
 
    6,400  @, S   Yahoo!, Inc.             83,712  
 
    2,500      Yum! Brands, Inc.             104,250  
 
    1,100  @   Zimmer Holdings, Inc.             51,887  
 
    900      Zions Bancorp.             16,587  
 
                          
 
                         122,222,025  
 
                          
 
           Total Common Stock
(Cost $220,438,418)
            216,936,827  
 
                          
REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS:   4.0%            
 
           Australia:       0.3%        
 
    66,777      CFS Retail Property Trust             115,135  
 
    115,766      Macquarie Goodman Group             65,756  
 
    100,204      Mirvac Group             119,902  
 
    30,097      Westfield Group             336,427  
 
                          
 
                         637,220  
 
                          
 
           France:       0.0%        
 
    371      ICADE             35,148  
 
    538      Unibail             101,037  
 
                          
 
                         136,185  
 
                          
 
           Hong Kong:       0.1%        
 
    51,500      Link Real Estate Investment Trust             150,861  
 
                          
 
                         150,861  
 
                          
 
           Japan:       0.1%        
 
    46      Japan Prime Realty Investment Corp.             102,662  
 
    13      Japan Real Estate Investment Corp.             115,430  
 
    86      Japan Retail Fund Investment Corp.             115,090  
 
                          
 
                         333,182  
 
                          
 
           Singapore:       0.1%        
 
    64,550      Ascendas Real Estate Investment Trust             98,929  
 
    64,000      CapitaMall Trust             91,991  
 
                          
 
                         190,920  
 
                          
 
           United Kingdom:       0.1%        
 
    19,664      British Land Co. PLC             137,006  
 
    16,095      Land Securities Group PLC             150,261  
 
    6,099      Segro PLC             25,161  
 
                          
 
                         312,428  
 
                          
 
           United States:       3.3%        
 
    600  S   Apartment Investment & Management Co.             12,264  
 
    5,900      AvalonBay Communities, Inc.             620,798  

 


Table of Contents

                                       
    Shares                     Value  
 
 
    7,600         Boston Properties, Inc.             618,640  
 
    19,200         Equity Residential             879,936  
 
    20,000         HCP, Inc.             704,400  
 
    700         Health Care Real Estate Investment Trust, Inc.             32,158  
 
    3,600         Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc.             47,268  
 
    2,200         Kimco Realty Corp.             32,802  
 
    900         Plum Creek Timber Co., Inc.             31,023  
 
    34,300  S   Prologis             372,155  
 
    12,000         Public Storage, Inc.             1,176,240  
 
    15,769         Simon Property Group, Inc.             1,426,306  
 
    12,000         Ventas, Inc.             606,120  
 
    11,600         Vornado Realty Trust             940,296  
 
                             
 
                            7,500,406  
 
                             
 
              Total Real Estate Investment Trusts
(Cost $8,944,541)
            9,261,202  
 
                             
EXCHANGE-TRADED FUNDS:   0.7 %             
 
              Developed Markets:       0.7%        
 
    32,000         iShares MSCI EAFE Index Fund             1,598,400  
 
                             
 
              Total Exchange-Traded Funds
(Cost $1,588,683)
            1,598,400  
 
                             
PREFERRED STOCK:   0.5 %            
 
              Germany:       0.5%        
 
    9,412         Henkel KGaA - Vorzug             441,138  
 
    2,857         RWE AG             175,624  
 
    5,073         Volkswagen AG             503,749  
 
                             
 
              Total Preferred Stock
(Cost $1,147,307)
            1,120,511  
 
                             
 
              Total Long-Term Investments
(Cost $232,118,949)
            228,916,940  
 
                             
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS:   1.0 %            
 
              Affiliated Mutual Fund:       1.0%        
 
    2,243,000         ING Institutional Prime Money Market Fund - Class I             2,243,000  
 
                             
 
              Total Mutual Fund
(Cost $2,243,000)
            2,243,000  
 
                             
 
              Total Short-Term Investments
(Cost $2,243,000)
            2,243,000  
 
                             
 
              Total Investments in Securities
(Cost $234,361,949)*
  101.5 %       $ 231,159,940  
 
              Other Assets and Liabilities - Net   (1.5 )         (3,503,923 )
 
                           
 
              Net Assets   100.0 %       $ 227,656,017  
 
                           
 
@   Non-income producing security
 
S   All or a portion of this security has been identified by the Fund to cover future collateral requirements for applicable futures, options, swaps, foreign currency contracts and/or when-issued or delayed-delivery securities.

Item 7.  Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-end Management Investment Companies.

Not applicable.

Item 8.  Portfolio Managers of Closed-end Management Investment Companies.

Not applicable.

Item 9.  Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-end Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers.

Not applicable.

Item 10.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.

The Board has a Nominating Committee for the purpose of considering and presenting to the Board candidates it proposes for nomination to fill Independent Trustee vacancies on the Board. The Committee currently consists of all Independent Trustees of the Board. (6 individuals). The Nominating Committee operates pursuant to a Charter approved by the Board. The primary purpose of the Nominating Committee is to consider and present to the Board the candidates it proposes for nomination to fill vacancies on the Board. In evaluating candidates, the Nominating Committee may consider a variety of factors, but it has not at this time set any specific minium qualifications that must be met. Specific qualifications of candidates for Board membership will be based on the needs of the Board at the time of nomination.

The Nominating Committee is willing to consider nominations received from shareholders and shall assess shareholder nominees in the same manner as it reviews its own nominees. A shareholder nominee for director should be submitted in writing to the Fund’s Secretary. Any such shareholder nomination should include at a minimum the following information as to each individual proposed for nomination as trustee: such individual’s written consent to be named in the proxy statement as a nominee (if nominated) and to serve as a trustee (if elected), and all information relating to such individual that is required to be disclosed in the solicitation of proxies for election of trustees, or is otherwise required, in each case under applicable federal securities laws, rules and regulations.

The secretary shall submit all nominations received in a timely manner to the Nominating Committee. To be timely, any such submission must be delivered to the Fund’s Secretary not earlier than the 90th day prior to such meeting and not later than the close of business on the later of the 60th day prior to such meeting or the 10th day following the day on which public announcement of the date of the meeting is first made, by either disclosure in a press release or in a document publicly filed by the Fund with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 


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Item 11. Controls and Procedures.

(a)   Based on our evaluation conducted within 90 days of the filing date, hereof, the design and operation of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures are effective to ensure that material information relating to the registrant is made known to the certifying officers by others within the appropriate entities, particularly during the period in which Forms N-CSR are being prepared, and the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures allow timely preparation and review of the information for the registrant’s Form N-CSR and the officer certifications of such Form N-CSR.
 
(b)   There were no significant changes in the registrant’s internal controls that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

Item 12. Exhibits.

(a)(1)  The Code of Ethics is not required for the semi-annual filing.
 
(a)(2)  A separate certification for each principal executive officer and principal financial officer of the registrant as required by Rule 30a-2 under the Act (17 CFR 270.30a-2) is attached hereto as EX-99.CERT.
 
(a)(3)  Not required for semi-annual filing.
 
(b) The officer certifications required by Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 are attached hereto as EX-99.906CERT.


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SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

(Registrant): ING Global Advantage and Premium Opportunity Fund

         
By
  /s/ Shaun P. Mathews
 
Shaun P. Mathews
   
 
  President and Chief Executive Officer    
Date: November 4, 2010

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

         
By
  /s/ Shaun P. Mathews
 
Shaun P. Mathews
   
 
  President and Chief Executive Officer    
Date: November 4, 2010
         
By
  /s/ Todd Modic
 
Todd Modic
   
 
  Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Date: November 4, 2010