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OMB APPROVAL
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OMB
Number: ...... 3235-0307
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Expires:
.......... April 30, 2013
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Estimated
average burden
hours per response: ...645.3
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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM N-1A
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REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
(No. 002-34393)
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þ
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Pre-Effective
Amendment No.
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o
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Post-Effective
Amendment No.
188
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þ
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and/or
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REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
(No. 811-01879)
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þ
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Amendment
No.
171
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þ
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(Check appropriate box or boxes.)
JANUS INVESTMENT FUND
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)
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151 Detroit Street, Denver, Colorado
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80206-4805
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(Address of Principal Executive Offices)
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(Zip Code)
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Registrants
Telephone Number, including Area Code:
303-333-3863
Stephanie Grauerholz-Lofton 151 Detroit Street, Denver, Colorado 80206-4805
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)
Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering: As soon as practicable after the effective date of
this Registration Statement and thereafter from day to day.
It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box):
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immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
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þ
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on April 1, 2013 pursuant to paragraph (b)
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o
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60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
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o
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on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
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75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
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o
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on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of rule 485.
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If appropriate, check the following box:
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This post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a
previously filed post-effective amendment.
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6
April 1, 2013
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Class A
Shares
Ticker
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Class C
Shares
Ticker
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Class S
Shares
Ticker
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Class I
Shares
Ticker
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Class N
Shares
Ticker
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Class T
Shares
Ticker
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Value
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Perkins International Value Fund
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JIFAX
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JIFCX
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JIFSX
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JIFIX
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JIFNX
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JIFTX
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Janus
Investment Fund
The Securities and
Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved of these
securities or passed on the accuracy or adequacy of this
Prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal
offense.
This Prospectus describes Perkins International Value Fund (the
Fund), a portfolio of Janus Investment Fund (the
Trust). Janus Capital Management LLC (Janus
Capital or Janus) serves as investment adviser
to the Fund. The Fund is subadvised by Perkins Investment
Management LLC (Perkins).
The Fund offers multiple classes of shares in order to meet the
needs of various types of investors. Class A Shares,
Class C Shares, Class S Shares, Class I Shares,
Class N Shares, and Class T Shares (individually
and/or collectively, the Shares) are offered by this
Prospectus.
The Shares are not offered directly to individual investors.
Certain financial intermediaries may not offer all classes of
Shares. For additional information about these classes of Shares
and whether or not you are eligible to purchase these Shares,
please refer to the Shareholders Guide section of the
Prospectus.
Table
of contents
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Fund
summary
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Perkins International Value Fund
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2
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Additional
information about the Fund
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Fees and expenses
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6
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Additional investment strategies and general portfolio policies
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6
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Risks of the Fund
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10
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Management
of the Fund
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Investment adviser
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15
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Management expenses
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15
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Subadviser
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16
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Investment personnel
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16
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Other
information
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18
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Distributions
and taxes
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19
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Shareholders
guide
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Pricing of fund shares
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22
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Choosing a share class
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23
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Distribution, servicing, and administrative fees
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24
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Payments to financial intermediaries by Janus Capital or its
affiliates
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25
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Purchases
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26
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Exchanges
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30
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Redemptions
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30
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Excessive trading
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32
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Shareholder communications
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34
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Financial
highlights
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35
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Glossary
of investment terms
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36
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1
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Janus
Investment Fund
Fund
summary
Perkins International Value
Fund
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Ticker:
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JIFAX
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Class A Shares
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JIFSX
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Class S Shares
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JIFNX
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Class N Shares
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JIFCX
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Class C Shares
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JIFIX
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Class I Shares
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JIFTX
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Class T Shares
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INVESTMENT
OBJECTIVE
Perkins International Value Fund
seeks capital
appreciation.
FEES AND
EXPENSES OF THE FUND
This table describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if
you buy and hold Shares of the Fund. Each share class has
different expenses, but represents an investment in the same
Fund. For Class A Shares, you may qualify for sales charge
discounts if you and your family invest, or agree to invest in
the future, at least $50,000 in the Fund or in other Janus
mutual funds. More information about these and other discounts,
as well as eligibility requirements for each share class, is
available from your financial professional and in the
Purchases section on page 26 of the Funds
Prospectus and in the Purchases section on
page 52 of the Funds Statement of Additional
Information.
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SHAREHOLDER FEES
(fees paid directly from your investment)
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Class A
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Class C
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Class S
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Class I
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Class N
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Class T
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Maximum Sales Charge (load) Imposed on Purchases (as a
percentage of offering price)
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5.75%
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None
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None
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None
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None
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None
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Maximum Deferred Sales Charge (load) (as a percentage of the
lower of original purchase price or redemption proceeds)
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None
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1.00%
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None
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None
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None
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None
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ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
(expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the
value of your investment)
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Class A
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Class C
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Class S
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Class I
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Class N
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Class T
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Management Fees
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0.80%
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0.80%
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0.80%
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0.80%
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0.80%
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0.80%
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Distribution/Service (12b-1) Fees
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0.25%
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1.00%
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0.25%
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None
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None
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None
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Other
Expenses
(1)
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3.61%
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3.48%
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3.66%
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3.49%
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3.41%
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3.66%
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Total Annual Fund Operating
Expenses
(2)
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4.66%
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5.28%
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4.71%
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4.29%
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4.21%
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4.46%
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Fee
Waiver
(2)
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3.19%
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3.21%
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3.17%
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3.19%
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3.17%
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3.17%
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Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee
Waiver
(2)
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1.47%
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2.07%
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1.54%
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1.10%
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1.04%
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1.29%
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(1)
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Since the Fund is new, Other Expenses are based on the estimated
annualized expenses that the Fund expects to incur in its
initial fiscal year.
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(2)
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Janus Capital has contractually agreed to waive the Funds
total annual fund operating expenses (excluding the distribution
and shareholder servicing fees applicable to Class A
Shares, Class C Shares, and Class S Shares; administrative
services fees payable pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement;
brokerage commissions; interest; dividends; taxes; acquired fund
fees and expenses; and extraordinary expenses) to 0.98% until at
least February 1, 2015. The contractual waiver may be
terminated or modified prior to this date only at the discretion
of the Board of Trustees. For a period of three years subsequent
to the Funds commencement of operations (April 1,
2013), Janus Capital may recover from the Fund fees and expenses
previously waived or reimbursed, which could then be considered
a deferral, if the Funds expense ratio, including
recovered expenses, falls below the expense limit.
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EXAMPLE:
The following Example is based on expenses without
waivers.
The Example is intended to help you compare the
cost of investing in the Fund with the cost of investing in
other mutual funds. The Example assumes that you invest $10,000
in the Fund for the time periods indicated and reinvest all
dividends and distributions. The Example also assumes that your
2
ï
Perkins
International Value Fund
investment has a 5% return each year and that the Funds
operating expenses without waivers or recoupments (if
applicable) remain the same. Although your actual costs may be
higher or lower, based on these assumptions your costs
would be:
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If Shares are
redeemed:
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1 Year
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3 Years
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Class A Shares
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$
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1,015
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$
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1,899
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Class C Shares
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$
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627
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$
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1,577
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Class S Shares
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$
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472
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$
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1,419
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Class I Shares
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$
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431
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$
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1,301
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Class N Shares
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$
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423
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$
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1,278
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Class T Shares
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$
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447
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$
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1,349
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If Shares are not
redeemed:
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1 Year
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3 Years
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Class A Shares
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$
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1,015
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$
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1,899
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Class C Shares
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$
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527
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$
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1,577
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Class S Shares
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$
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472
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$
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1,419
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Class I Shares
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$
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431
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$
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1,301
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Class N Shares
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$
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423
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$
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1,278
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Class T Shares
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$
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447
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$
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1,349
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Portfolio Turnover:
The Fund pays transaction costs,
such as commissions, when it buys and sells securities (or
turns over its portfolio). A higher portfolio
turnover rate may indicate higher transaction costs and may
result in higher taxes when Fund shares are held in a taxable
account. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund
operating expenses or in the Example, affect the Funds
performance.
PRINCIPAL
INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
The Fund pursues its investment objective by investing primarily
in common stocks of companies of any size located outside of the
United States, including in emerging markets. The Fund normally
invests in issuers from several different countries, but under
unusual circumstances, may invest in a single country. The Fund
may also invest in non-U.S. debt securities. In addition,
when the portfolio managers believe that market conditions are
unfavorable for investing, or when they are otherwise unable to
locate attractive investment opportunities, the Funds cash
or similar investments may increase.
The Fund focuses on companies that have fallen out of favor with
the market or that appear to be temporarily misunderstood by the
investment community. The Funds portfolio managers
generally look for companies with:
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strong balance sheets and solid recurring free cash flows
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attractive relative and absolute valuation ratios or that have
underperformed recently
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favorable reward to risk characteristics
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PRINCIPAL
INVESTMENT RISKS
The biggest risk is that the Funds returns will vary, and
you could lose money. The Fund is designed for long-term
investors seeking an equity portfolio, including common stocks.
Common stocks tend to be more volatile than many other
investment choices.
Foreign Exposure Risk.
The Fund normally has
significant exposure to foreign markets as a result of its
investments in foreign securities, including investments in
emerging markets, which can be more volatile than the U.S.
markets. As a result, its returns and net asset value may be
affected to a large degree by fluctuations in currency exchange
rates or political or economic conditions in a particular
country. In some foreign markets, there may not be protection
against failure by other parties to complete transactions. It
may not be possible for the Fund to repatriate capital,
dividends, interest, and other income from a particular country
or governmental entity. In addition, a market swing in one or
more countries or regions where the Fund has invested a
significant amount of its assets may have a greater effect on
the Funds performance than it would in a more
geographically diversified portfolio. To the extent the Fund
invests in foreign debt securities, such investments are
sensitive to changes in interest rates. The Funds
investments in emerging market countries may involve risks
greater than, or in addition to, the risks of investing in more
developed countries.
3
ï
Perkins
International Value Fund
Emerging Markets Risk.
The risks of foreign
investing mentioned above are heightened when investing in
emerging markets. Emerging markets securities involve a number
of additional risks, which may result from less government
supervision and regulation of business and industry practices
(including the potential lack of strict finance and accounting
controls and standards), stock exchanges, brokers, and listed
companies, making these investments potentially more volatile in
price and less liquid than investments in developed securities
markets, resulting in greater risk to investors. There is a risk
in developing countries that a future economic or political
crisis could lead to price controls, forced mergers of
companies, expropriation or confiscatory taxation, imposition or
enforcement of foreign ownership limits, seizure,
nationalization, or creation of government monopolies, any of
which may have a detrimental effect on the Funds
investments. In addition, the Funds investments may be
denominated in foreign currencies and therefore, changes in the
value of a countrys currency compared to the
U.S. dollar may affect the value of the Funds
investments. To the extent that the Fund invests a significant
portion of its assets in the securities of issuers in or
companies of a single country or region, it is more likely to be
impacted by events or conditions affecting that country or
region, which could have a negative impact on the Funds
performance.
Value Investing Risk.
Because different types
of stocks tend to shift in and out of favor depending on market
and economic conditions, value stocks may perform
differently than other types of stocks and from the market as a
whole, and can continue to be undervalued by the market for long
periods of time. It is also possible that a value stock will
never appreciate to the extent expected by the Funds
portfolio managers. When the Funds investments in cash or
similar investments increase due to a lack of favorable
investment opportunities or other extraordinary factors, the
Fund may not participate in market advances or declines to the
same extent that it would if the Fund had been fully invested.
Market Risk.
The value of the Funds
portfolio may decrease if the value of an individual company or
security, or multiple companies or securities, in the portfolio
decreases or if the portfolio managers belief about a
companys intrinsic worth is incorrect. Further, regardless
of how well individual companies or securities perform, the
value of the Funds portfolio could also decrease if there
are deteriorating economic or market conditions. It is important
to understand that the value of your investment may fall,
sometimes sharply, in response to changes in the market, and you
could lose money.
An investment in the Fund is not a bank deposit and is not
insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation or any other government agency.
PERFORMANCE
INFORMATION
The Fund does not have a full calendar year of operations.
Performance information for certain periods will be included in
the Funds first annual and/or semiannual report.
4
ï
Perkins
International Value Fund
MANAGEMENT
Investment Adviser:
Janus Capital Management LLC
Investment Subadviser:
Perkins Investment Management
LLC
Portfolio Managers: Tadd H. Chessen
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of the Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception.
J. Christian Kirtley
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of the Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception.
Gregory R. Kolb
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of the Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception.
PURCHASE
AND SALE OF FUND SHARES
Minimum Investment Requirements*
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Class A Shares, Class C Shares**, Class S Shares, and Class T
Shares
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Non-retirement accounts
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$
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2,500
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Certain tax-deferred accounts or UGMA/UTMA accounts
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$
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500
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Class I Shares
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Institutional investors (investing directly with Janus)
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$
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1,000,000
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Through an intermediary institution
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non-retirement accounts
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$
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2,500
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certain tax-deferred accounts or
UGMA/UTMA
accounts
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$
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500
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Class N Shares
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No minimum investment requirements imposed by the Fund
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None
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*
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Exceptions to these minimums may apply for certain tax-deferred,
tax-qualified and retirement plans, and accounts held through
certain wrap programs.
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**
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The maximum purchase in Class C Shares is $500,000 for any
single purchase.
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Purchases, exchanges, and redemptions can generally be made only
through institutional channels, such as financial intermediaries
and retirement platforms. Class I Shares may be purchased
directly by certain institutional investors. You should contact
your financial intermediary or refer to your plan documents for
information on how to invest in the Fund. Requests must be
received in good order by the Fund or its agents (financial
intermediary or plan sponsor, if applicable) prior to the close
of the regular trading session of the New York Stock Exchange in
order to receive that days net asset value. For additional
information, refer to Purchases,
Exchanges, and/or Redemptions in the
Prospectus.
TAX
INFORMATION
The Funds distributions are taxable, and will be taxed as
ordinary income or capital gains, unless you are investing
through a tax-deferred arrangement, such as a 401(k) plan or an
individual retirement account.
PAYMENTS
TO BROKER-DEALERS AND OTHER FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES
If you purchase Class A Shares, Class C Shares,
Class S Shares, Class I Shares, or Class T Shares
of the Fund through a broker-dealer or other financial
intermediary (such as a bank), the Fund and its related
companies may pay the intermediary for the sale of Fund shares
and related services. These payments may create a conflict of
interest by influencing the broker-dealer or other intermediary
and your salesperson to recommend the Fund over another
investment or to recommend one share class over another. Ask
your salesperson or visit your financial intermediarys
website for more information.
5
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Perkins
International Value Fund
Additional
information about the Fund
FEES AND
EXPENSES
Please refer to the following important information when
reviewing the Fees and Expenses of the Fund table in
the Fund Summary of the Prospectus.
The fees and expenses
shown for Perkins International Value Fund reflect estimated
annualized expenses that the Shares expect to incur during the
Funds initial fiscal year.
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Shareholder Fees are fees paid directly from your
investment and may include sales loads.
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Annual Fund Operating Expenses are paid out of the
Funds assets and include fees for portfolio management and
administrative services, including recordkeeping, subaccounting,
and other shareholder services. You do not pay these fees
directly but, as the Example in the Fund Summary shows, these
costs are borne indirectly by all shareholders.
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The Management Fee is the investment advisory fee
rate paid by the Fund to Janus Capital. Refer to
Management Expenses in this Prospectus for
additional information with further description in the Statement
of Additional Information (SAI).
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Distribution/Service (12b-1) Fees. Because
12b-1
fees
are charged as an ongoing fee, over time the fee will increase
the cost of your investment and may cost you more than paying
other types of sales charges.
Distribution/Service (12b-1)
Fees include a shareholder servicing fee of up to 0.25% for
Class C Shares.
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A contingent deferred sales charge of up to 1.00% may be imposed
on certain redemptions of Class A Shares bought without an
initial sales charge and then redeemed within 12 months of
purchase. The contingent deferred sales charge is not reflected
in the Example in the Fund Summary.
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A contingent deferred sales charge of 1.00% generally applies on
Class C Shares redeemed within 12 months of purchase.
The contingent deferred sales charge may be waived for certain
investors, as described in the Shareholders Guide.
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Other Expenses
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for Class A Shares, Class C Shares, and Class I
Shares, may include administrative fees charged by
intermediaries for the provision of administrative services,
including recordkeeping, subaccounting, order processing for
omnibus or networked accounts, or other shareholder services
provided on behalf of shareholders of the Fund.
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for Class S Shares and Class T Shares, include an
administrative services fee of 0.25% of the average daily net
assets of each class to compensate Janus Services LLC
(Janus Services), the Funds transfer agent,
for providing, or arranging for the provision by intermediaries
of, administrative services, including recordkeeping,
subaccounting, order processing for omnibus or networked
accounts, or other shareholder services provided on behalf of
retirement plan participants, pension plan participants, or
other underlying investors investing through institutional
channels.
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for all classes, may include reimbursement to Janus Capital of
its out-of-pocket costs for services as administrator and to
Janus Services of its out-of-pocket costs for serving as
transfer agent and providing, or arranging by others the
provision of, servicing to shareholders.
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Janus Capital has contractually agreed to waive the Funds
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses to a certain
limit until at least February 1, 2015. The expense limit is
described in the Management Expenses section of this
Prospectus.
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All expenses in the Funds Fees and Expenses of the
Fund table are shown without the effect of expense offset
arrangements. Pursuant to such arrangements, credits realized as
a result of uninvested cash balances are used to reduce
custodian and transfer agent expenses.
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ADDITIONAL
INVESTMENT STRATEGIES AND GENERAL PORTFOLIO POLICIES
The Funds Board of Trustees (Trustees) may
change the Funds investment objective or non-fundamental
principal investment strategies without a shareholder vote. The
Fund will notify you in writing at least 60 days before making
any such change it considers material. If there is a material
change to the Funds objective or principal investment
strategies, you should consider whether the Fund remains an
appropriate investment for you. There is no guarantee that the
Fund will achieve its investment objective.
Unless otherwise stated, the following additional investment
strategies and general policies apply to the Fund and provide
further information including, but not limited to, the types of
securities the Fund may invest in when implementing its
investment objective. Some of these strategies and policies may
be part of a principal strategy. Other strategies and policies
may be utilized to a lesser extent. Except for the Funds
policies with respect to investments in illiquid securities and
6
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Janus
Investment Fund
borrowing, the percentage limitations included in these policies
and elsewhere in this Prospectus and/or the SAI normally apply
only at the time of purchase of a security. So, for example, if
the Fund exceeds a limit as a result of market fluctuations or
the sale of other securities, it will not be required to dispose
of any securities.
Cash
Position
The Fund may not always stay fully invested. For example, when
the portfolio managers believe that market conditions are
unfavorable for investing, or when they are otherwise unable to
locate attractive investment opportunities, the Funds cash
or similar investments may increase. In other words, cash or
similar investments generally are a residual they
represent the assets that remain after the Fund has committed
available assets to desirable investment opportunities. When the
Funds investments in cash or similar investments increase,
it may not participate in market advances or declines to the
same extent that it would if the Fund remained more fully
invested. To the extent the Fund invests its uninvested cash
through a sweep program (meaning its uninvested cash is pooled
with uninvested cash of other funds and invested in certain
securities such as repurchase agreements), it is subject to the
risks of the account or fund into which it is investing,
including liquidity issues that may delay the Fund from
accessing its cash.
In addition, the Fund may temporarily increase its cash position
under certain unusual circumstances, such as to protect its
assets or maintain liquidity in certain circumstances to meet
unusually large redemptions. The Funds cash position may
also increase temporarily due to unusually large cash inflows.
Under unusual circumstances such as these, the Fund may invest
up to 100% of its assets in cash or similar investments. In this
case, the Fund may take positions that are inconsistent with its
investment objective. As a result, the Fund may not achieve its
investment objective.
Common
Stock
The Fund may invest substantially all of its assets in common
stocks. The portfolio managers generally take a bottom
up approach to selecting companies in which to invest.
This means that they seek to identify individual companies with
earnings growth potential that may not be recognized by the
market at large. Securities are generally selected on a
security-by-security basis without regard to any predetermined
allocation among countries or geographic regions. However,
certain factors, such as expected levels of inflation,
government policies influencing business conditions, the outlook
for currency relationships, and prospects for economic growth
among countries, regions, or geographic areas, may warrant
greater consideration in selecting foreign securities. There are
no limitations on the countries in which the Fund may invest,
and the Fund may at times have significant exposure to emerging
markets. The portfolio managers may sell a holding if, among
other things, the security reaches the portfolio managers
price target, if the company has a deterioration of fundamentals
such as failing to meet key operating benchmarks, or if the
portfolio managers find a better investment opportunity. The
portfolio managers may also sell a Fund holding to meet
redemptions.
The Fund emphasizes investments in companies with attractive
prices compared to their free cash flow. The portfolio managers
will typically seek attractively valued companies that are
improving their free cash flow and improving their returns on
invested capital. A company may be considered attractively
valued when, in the opinion of the portfolio managers, shares of
the company are selling for a price that is below their
intrinsic worth (undervalued). A company may be
undervalued due to market or economic conditions, temporary
earnings declines, unfavorable developments affecting the
company, or other factors. Such factors may provide buying
opportunities at attractive prices compared to historical or
market price-earnings ratios,
price/free
cash flow, book value, or return on equity. The portfolio
managers believe that buying these securities at a price that is
below their intrinsic worth may generate greater returns for the
Fund than those obtained by paying premium prices for companies
currently in favor in the market.
Counterparties
Fund transactions involving a counterparty are subject to the
risk that the counterparty or a third party will not fulfill its
obligation to the Fund (counterparty risk).
Counterparty risk may arise because of the counterpartys
financial condition (i.e., financial difficulties, bankruptcy,
or insolvency), market activities and developments, or other
reasons, whether foreseen or not. A counterpartys
inability to fulfill its obligation may result in significant
financial loss to the Fund. The Fund may be unable to recover
its investment from the counterparty or may obtain a limited
recovery, and/or recovery may be delayed. The Fund may be
exposed to counterparty risk through participation in various
programs including, but not limited to, lending its securities
to third parties, cash sweep arrangements whereby the
Funds cash balance is invested in one or more types of
cash management vehicles, as well as investments in, but not
limited to, repurchase agreements, debt securities, and
derivatives, including various types of swaps, futures, and
options. The Fund intends to enter into financial transactions
with counterparties that Janus Capital believes to be
creditworthy at the time of the transaction. There is always the
risk that Janus
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Janus
Investment Fund
Capitals analysis of a counterpartys
creditworthiness is incorrect or may change due to market
conditions. To the extent that the Fund focuses its transactions
with a limited number of counterparties, it will have greater
exposure to the risks associated with one or more counterparties.
Emerging
Markets
The Fund may invest in securities of issuers or companies from
or with exposure to one or more developing countries
or emerging markets. Such countries include, but are
not limited to, countries included in the Morgan Stanley Capital
International Emerging Markets
Index
sm
.
High-Yield/High-Risk
Bonds
A high-yield/high-risk bond (also called a junk
bond) is a bond rated below investment grade by major rating
agencies (i.e., BB+ or lower by Standard & Poors
Ratings Services (Standard & Poors)
and Fitch, Inc. (Fitch), or Ba or lower by
Moodys Investors Service, Inc. (Moodys))
or is an unrated bond of similar quality. It presents greater
risk of default (the failure to make timely interest and
principal payments) than higher quality bonds. To the extent the
Fund invests in high-yield/high-risk bonds, under normal
circumstances, the Fund will limit its investments in
high-yield/high-risk bonds to 35% or less of its net assets.
Illiquid
Investments
Although the Fund intends to invest in liquid securities, it may
invest up to 15% of its net assets in illiquid investments. An
illiquid investment is a security or other position that cannot
be disposed of quickly in the normal course of business. For
example, some securities are not registered under U.S.
securities laws and cannot be sold to the U.S. public because of
Securities and Exchange Commission regulations (these are known
as restricted securities). Under procedures adopted
by the Funds Trustees, certain restricted securities that
are determined to be liquid will not be counted toward this 15%
limit.
Portfolio
Turnover
In general, the Fund intends to purchase securities for
long-term investment, although, to a limited extent, the Fund
may purchase securities in anticipation of relatively short-term
gains. Short-term transactions may also result from liquidity
needs, securities having reached a price or yield objective,
changes in interest rates or the credit standing of an issuer,
or by reason of economic or other developments not foreseen at
the time of the initial investment decision. The Fund may also
sell one security and simultaneously purchase the same or a
comparable security to take advantage of short-term
differentials in bond yields or securities prices. Portfolio
turnover is affected by market conditions, changes in the size
of the Fund, the nature of the Funds investments, and the
investment style of the portfolio managers. Changes are normally
made in the Funds portfolio whenever the portfolio
managers believe such changes are desirable. Portfolio turnover
rates are generally not a factor in making buy and sell
decisions.
Increased portfolio turnover may result in higher costs for
brokerage commissions, dealer mark-ups, and other transaction
costs, and may also result in taxable capital gains. Higher
costs associated with increased portfolio turnover also may have
a negative effect on the Funds performance.
Real
Estate-Related Securities
The Fund may invest in equity and debt securities of real
estate-related companies. Such companies may include those in
the real estate industry or real estate-related industries.
These securities may include common stocks, preferred stocks,
and other equity securities, including, but not limited to,
mortgage-backed securities, real estate-backed securities,
securities of real estate investment trusts (REITs)
and similar REIT-like entities. A REIT is a trust that invests
in real estate-related projects, such as properties, mortgage
loans, and construction loans. REITs are generally categorized
as equity, mortgage, or hybrid REITs. A REIT may be listed on an
exchange or traded over-the-counter.
Securities
Lending
Certain funds may seek to earn additional income through lending
its securities to certain qualified broker-dealers and
institutions on a short-term or long-term basis. A fund may lend
portfolio securities on a short-term or long-term basis, in an
amount equal to up to
1
/
3
of its total assets as determined at the time of the loan
origination. When a fund lends its securities, it receives
collateral (including cash collateral), at least equal to the
value of securities loaned. A fund may earn income by investing
this collateral in one or more affiliated or non-affiliated cash
management vehicles. It is also possible that, due to a decline
in the value of a cash management vehicle, a fund may lose
money. There is also the risk that when portfolio securities are
lent, the securities may not be returned on a timely basis, and
a fund may experience delays and costs in recovering the
security or gaining access to the collateral provided to the
fund to collateralize the loan. If a fund is unable to
8
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Janus
Investment Fund
recover a security on loan, the fund may use the collateral to
purchase replacement securities in the market. There is a risk
that the value of the collateral could decrease below the cost
of the replacement security by the time the replacement
investment is made, resulting in a loss to a fund. Janus Capital
intends to manage the cash collateral in an affiliated cash
management vehicle and will receive an investment advisory fee
for managing such assets.
Short
Sales
Certain funds may engage in short sales. No more than 10% of a
funds net assets may be invested in short positions
(through short sales of stocks, structured products, futures,
swaps, and uncovered written calls). A fund may engage in short
sales against the box and options for hedging
purposes that are not subject to this 10% limit. A short sale is
generally a transaction in which a fund sells a security it does
not own or have the right to acquire (or that it owns but does
not wish to deliver) in anticipation that the market price of
that security will decline. To complete the transaction, the
fund must borrow the security to make delivery to the buyer. The
fund is then obligated to replace the security borrowed by
purchasing the security at the market price at the time of
replacement. A short sale is subject to the risk that if the
price of the security sold short increases in value, the fund
will incur a loss because it will have to replace the security
sold short by purchasing it at a higher price. In addition, the
fund may not always be able to close out a short position at a
particular time or at an acceptable price. A lender may request,
or market conditions may dictate, that the securities sold short
be returned to the lender on short notice, and the fund may have
to buy the securities sold short at an unfavorable price. If
this occurs at a time that other short sellers of the same
security also want to close out their positions, it is more
likely that the fund will have to cover its short sale at an
unfavorable price and potentially reduce or eliminate any gain,
or cause a loss, as a result of the short sale. Because there is
no upper limit to the price a borrowed security may reach prior
to closing a short position, a funds losses are
potentially unlimited in a short sale transaction. A funds
gains and losses will also be decreased or increased, as the
case may be, by the amount of any dividends, interest, or
expenses, including transaction costs and borrowing fees, the
fund may be required to pay in connection with a short sale.
Such payments may result in the fund having higher expenses than
a fund that does not engage in short sales and may negatively
affect the funds performance.
A fund may also enter into short positions through derivative
instruments such as options contracts, futures contracts, and
swap agreements which may expose the fund to similar risks. To
the extent that the fund enters into short derivative positions,
the fund may be exposed to risks similar to those associated
with short sales, including the risk that the funds losses
are theoretically unlimited.
Due to certain foreign countries restrictions, a fund will
not be able to engage in short sales in certain foreign
countries where it may maintain long positions. As a result, a
funds ability to fully implement a short selling strategy
that could otherwise help the fund pursue its investment goals
may be limited. There can be no assurance that the
implementation of a short sale strategy will be successful.
Special
Situations
The Fund may invest in companies that demonstrate special
situations or turnarounds, meaning companies that have
experienced significant business problems but are believed to
have favorable prospects for recovery. For example, a special
situation or turnaround may arise when, in the opinion of the
portfolio managers, the securities of a particular issuer will
be recognized as undervalued by the market and appreciate in
value due to a specific development with respect to that issuer.
Special situations may include significant changes in a
companys allocation of its existing capital, a
restructuring of assets, or a redirection of free cash flow. For
example, issuers undergoing significant capital changes may
include companies involved in spin-offs, sales of divisions,
mergers or acquisitions, companies involved in bankruptcy
proceedings, or companies initiating large changes in their debt
to equity ratio. Companies that are redirecting cash flows may
be reducing debt, repurchasing shares, or paying dividends.
Special situations may also result from: (i) significant
changes in industry structure through regulatory developments or
shifts in competition; (ii) a new or improved product,
service, operation, or technological advance; (iii) changes
in senior management or other extraordinary corporate event;
(iv) differences in market supply of and demand for the
security; or (v) significant changes in cost structure.
Investments in special situations companies can
present greater risks than investments in companies not
experiencing special situations, and the Funds performance
could be adversely impacted if the securities selected decline
in value or fail to appreciate in value.
Swap
Agreements
The Fund may utilize swap agreements as a means to gain exposure
to certain common stocks
and/or
to
hedge or protect its portfolio from adverse
movements in securities prices, the rate of inflation, or
interest rates. Swaps may also be used for capital appreciation.
Swap agreements are two-party contracts to exchange one set of
cash flows for another. Swap agreements
9
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Janus
Investment Fund
entail the risk that a party will default on its payment
obligations to the Fund. If the other party to a swap defaults,
the Fund would risk the loss of the net amount of the payments
that it contractually is entitled to receive. If the Fund
utilizes a swap at the wrong time or judges market conditions
incorrectly, the swap may result in a loss to the Fund and
reduce the Funds total return. Various types of swaps such
as credit default, equity, interest rate, and total return swaps
are described in the Glossary of Investment Terms.
Other
Types of Investments
Unless otherwise stated within its specific investment policies,
the Fund may also invest in other types of domestic and foreign
securities and use other investment strategies, as described in
the Glossary of Investment Terms. These securities
and strategies are not principal investment strategies of the
Fund. If successful, they may benefit the Fund by earning a
return on the Funds assets or reducing risk; however, they
may not achieve the Funds investment objective. These
securities and strategies may include:
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debt securities (such as bonds, notes, and debentures)
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exchange-traded funds
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preferred stocks and securities convertible into common stocks
or preferred stocks
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indexed/structured securities (such as mortgage- and
asset-backed securities)
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various derivative transactions including, but not limited to,
options, futures, forwards, swap agreements (such as equity,
interest rate, inflation index, credit default, and total return
swaps), participatory notes, structured notes, and other types
of derivatives individually or in combination for hedging
purposes or for nonhedging purposes such as seeking to earn
income and enhance return, to protect unrealized gains, or to
avoid realizing losses; such techniques may also be used to
adjust currency exposure relative to a benchmark index, to gain
exposure to the market pending investment of cash balances, or
to meet liquidity needs
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securities purchased on a when-issued, delayed delivery, or
forward commitment basis
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equity and fixed-income securities issued in private placement
transactions
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RISKS OF
THE FUND
The value of your investment will vary over time, sometimes
significantly, and you may lose money by investing in the Fund.
To varying degrees, the Fund may invest in stocks, fixed-income
securities, alternative strategy investments, and money market
instruments or cash/cash equivalents. The following information
is intended to help you better understand some of the risks of
investing in the Fund. The impact of the following risks on the
Fund may vary depending on the Funds investments. The
greater the Funds investment in a particular security, the
greater the Funds exposure to the risks associated with
that security. Before investing in the Fund, you should consider
carefully the risks that you assume when investing in the Fund.
Derivatives Risk.
Derivatives can be highly
volatile and involve risks in addition to the risks of the
underlying referenced securities. Gains or losses from a
derivative can be substantially greater than the
derivatives original cost, and can therefore involve
leverage. Derivatives can be complex instruments and may involve
analysis that differs from that required for other investment
types used by the Fund. If the value of a derivative does not
correlate well with the particular market or other asset class
to which the derivative is intended to provide exposure, the
derivative may not produce the anticipated result. Derivatives
can also reduce the opportunity for gain or result in losses by
offsetting positive returns in other investments. Derivatives
can be less liquid than other types of investments and entail
the risk that the counterparty will default on its payment
obligations. If the counterparty to a derivative transaction
defaults, the Fund would risk the loss of the net amount of the
payments that it contractually is entitled to receive. To the
extent the Fund enters into short derivative positions, the Fund
may be exposed to risks similar to those associated with short
sales, including the risk that the Funds losses are
theoretically unlimited.
Emerging Markets Risk.
The Fund may invest in
securities of issuers or companies from or with exposure to one
or more developing countries or emerging
markets. Such countries include, but are not limited to,
countries included in the Morgan Stanley Capital International
Emerging Markets
Index
sm
.
To the extent that the Fund invests a significant amount of its
assets in one or more of these countries, its returns and net
asset value may be affected to a large degree by events and
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Investment Fund
economic conditions in such countries. The risks of foreign
investing are heightened when investing in emerging markets,
which may result in the price of investments in emerging markets
experiencing sudden and sharp price swings. In many developing
markets, there is less government supervision and regulation of
business and industry practices (including the potential lack of
strict finance and accounting controls and standards), stock
exchanges, brokers, and listed companies than in more developed
markets, making these investments potentially more volatile in
price and less liquid than investments in developed securities
markets, resulting in greater risk to investors. There is a risk
in developing countries that a future economic or political
crisis could lead to price controls, forced mergers of
companies, expropriation or confiscatory taxation, imposition or
enforcement of foreign ownership limits, seizure,
nationalization, or creation of government monopolies, any of
which may have a detrimental effect on the Funds
investments. The securities markets of many of these countries
may also be smaller, less liquid, and subject to greater price
volatility than those in the United States. In the event of a
default on any investments in foreign debt obligations, it may
be more difficult for the Fund to obtain or to enforce a
judgment against the issuers of such securities. In addition,
the Funds investments may be denominated in foreign
currencies and therefore, changes in the value of a
countrys currency compared to the U.S. dollar may affect
the value of the Funds investments. To the extent that the
Fund invests a significant portion of its assets in the
securities of issuers in or companies of a single country or
region, it is more likely to be impacted by events or conditions
affecting that country or region, which could have a negative
impact on the Funds performance. The Fund may be subject
to emerging markets risk to the extent that it invests in
securities of issuers or companies which are not considered to
be from emerging markets, but which have customers, products, or
transactions associated with emerging markets.
Foreign Exposure Risks.
The Fund will invest
in foreign debt and equity securities either indirectly
(e.g., depositary receipts, depositary shares, and passive
foreign investment companies) or directly in foreign markets,
including emerging markets. Investments in foreign securities,
including securities of foreign and emerging markets
governments, may involve greater risks than investing in
domestic securities because the Funds performance may
depend on factors other than the performance of a particular
company. These factors include:
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Currency Risk.
As long as the Fund holds a
foreign security, its value will be affected by the value of the
local currency relative to the U.S. dollar. When the Fund
sells a foreign currency denominated security, its value may be
worth less in U.S. dollars even if the security increases
in value in its home country. U.S. dollar-denominated
securities of foreign issuers may also be affected by currency
risk, as the value of these securities may also be affected by
changes in the issuers local currency.
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Political and Economic Risk.
Foreign
investments may be subject to heightened political and economic
risks, particularly in emerging markets which may have
relatively unstable governments, immature economic structures,
national policies restricting investments by foreigners, social
instability, and different and/or developing legal systems. In
some countries, there is the risk that the government may take
over the assets or operations of a company or that the
government may impose withholding and other taxes or limits on
the removal of the Funds assets from that country. In
addition, the economies of emerging markets may be predominately
based on only a few industries, may be highly vulnerable to
changes in local or global trade conditions, and may suffer from
extreme and volatile debt burdens or inflation rates.
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Regulatory Risk.
There may be less government
supervision of foreign markets. As a result, foreign issuers may
not be subject to the uniform accounting, auditing, and
financial reporting standards and practices applicable to
domestic issuers, and there may be less publicly available
information about foreign issuers.
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Foreign Market Risk.
Foreign securities
markets, particularly those of emerging market countries, may be
less liquid and more volatile than domestic markets. These
securities markets may trade a small number of securities, may
have a limited number of issuers and a high proportion of
shares, or may be held by a relatively small number of persons
or institutions. Local securities markets may be unable to
respond effectively to increases in trading volume, potentially
making prompt liquidation of substantial holdings difficult or
impossible at times. It is also possible that certain markets
may require payment for securities before delivery, and delays
may be encountered in settling securities transactions. In some
foreign markets, there may not be protection against failure by
other parties to complete transactions. It may not be possible
for the Fund to repatriate capital, dividends, interest, and
other income from a particular country or governmental entity.
In addition, securities of issuers located in countries with
emerging markets may have limited marketability and may be
subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements which could
also have a negative effect on the Fund. Such factors may hinder
the Funds ability to buy and sell emerging market
securities in a timely manner, affecting the Funds
investment strategies and potentially affecting the value of the
Fund.
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Investment Fund
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Geographic Investment Risk.
To the extent
that the Fund invests a significant portion of its assets in a
particular country or geographic region, the Fund will generally
have more exposure to certain risks due to possible political,
economic, social, or regulatory events in that country or
region. Adverse developments in certain regions could also
adversely affect securities of other countries whose economies
appear to be unrelated and could have a negative impact on the
Funds performance.
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Transaction Costs.
Costs of buying, selling,
and holding foreign securities, including brokerage, tax, and
custody costs, may be higher than those involved in domestic
transactions.
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High-Yield/High-Risk Bond
Risk.
High-yield/high-risk bonds (or
junk bonds) are bonds rated below investment grade
by the primary rating agencies such as Standard &
Poors, Fitch, and Moodys or are unrated bonds of
similar quality. The value of lower quality bonds generally is
more dependent on credit risk than investment grade bonds.
Issuers of high-yield/high-risk bonds may not be as strong
financially as those issuing bonds with higher credit ratings
and are more vulnerable to real or perceived economic changes,
political changes, or adverse developments specific to the
issuer. In addition, the junk bond market can experience sudden
and sharp price swings.
Please refer to the Explanation of Rating Categories
section of the SAI for a description of bond rating categories.
Industry Risk.
Industry risk is the
possibility that a group of related securities will decline in
price due to industry-specific developments. Companies in the
same or similar industries may share common characteristics and
are more likely to react similarly to industry-specific market
or economic developments. The Funds investments, if any,
in multiple companies in a particular industry increase the
Funds exposure to industry risk.
Management Risk.
The Fund is an actively
managed investment portfolio and is therefore subject to the
risk that the investment strategies employed for the Fund may
fail to produce the intended results. The Fund may underperform
its benchmark index or other mutual funds with similar
investment objectives.
Because the Fund may invest substantially all of its assets in
common stocks, the main risk is the risk that the value of the
stocks it holds might decrease in response to the activities of
an individual company or in response to general market and/or
economic conditions. If this occurs, the Funds share price
may also decrease.
The Fund may use short sales, futures, options, swap agreements
(including, but not limited to, equity, interest rate, credit
default, and total return swaps), and other derivative
instruments individually or in combination to hedge
or protect its portfolio from adverse movements in securities
prices and interest rates. The Fund may also use a variety of
currency hedging techniques, including the use of forward
currency contracts, to manage currency risk. There is no
guarantee that a portfolio managers use of derivative
investments will benefit the Fund. The Funds performance
could be worse than if the Fund had not used such instruments.
Use of such investments may instead increase risk to the Fund,
rather than reduce risk.
The Funds performance may also be significantly affected,
positively or negatively, by a portfolio managers use of
certain types of investments, such as foreign (non-U.S.)
securities, non-investment grade bonds (junk bonds),
initial public offerings (IPOs), or securities of
companies with relatively small market capitalizations. Note
that a portfolio managers use of IPOs and other types of
investments may have a magnified performance impact on a fund
with a small asset base and the fund may not experience similar
performance as its assets grow.
Market Risk.
The value of the Funds
portfolio may decrease if the value of an individual company or
security, or multiple companies or securities, in the portfolio
decreases or if the portfolio managers belief about a
companys intrinsic worth is incorrect. Further, regardless
of how well individual companies or securities perform, the
value of the Funds portfolio could also decrease if there
are deteriorating economic or market conditions, including, but
not limited to, a general decline in prices on the stock
markets, a general decline in real estate markets, a decline in
commodities prices, or if the market favors different types of
securities than the types of securities in which the Fund
invests. If the value of the Funds portfolio decreases,
the Funds net asset value will also decrease, which means
if you sell your shares in the Fund you may lose money.
It is also important to note that events in both domestic and
international equity and fixed-income markets have resulted, and
may continue to result, in an unusually high degree of
volatility in the markets, with issuers that have exposure to
the real estate, mortgage, and credit markets particularly
affected. These events and the resulting market upheavals may
have an adverse effect on the Fund, such as a decline in the
value and liquidity of many securities held by the Fund,
unusually high and unanticipated levels of redemptions, an
increase in portfolio turnover, a decrease in net asset value,
and an increase in Fund expenses. Because the situation is
unprecedented and widespread, it may also be unusually difficult
to identify both
12
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Janus
Investment Fund
investment risks and opportunities, which could limit or
preclude the Funds ability to achieve its investment
objective. It is impossible to predict whether or for how long
these conditions will continue. Therefore, it is important to
understand that the value of your investment may fall, sometimes
sharply, and you could lose money.
Further, the instability experienced in the financial markets
has resulted in the U.S. Government and various other
governmental and regulatory entities taking actions to address
the financial crisis. These actions include, but are not limited
to, the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (the Dodd-Frank Act) in July
2010 which is expected to dramatically change the way in which
the U.S. financial system is supervised and regulated. More
specifically, the Dodd-Frank Act provides for widespread
regulation of financial institutions, consumer financial
products and services, broker-dealers, over-the-counter
derivatives, investment advisers, credit rating agencies, and
mortgage lending, which expands federal oversight in the
financial sector and may affect the investment management
industry as a whole. Given the broad scope, sweeping nature, and
the fact that many provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act must be
implemented through future rulemaking, the ultimate impact of
the Dodd-Frank Act, and any resulting regulation, is not yet
certain. As a result, there can be no assurance that these
government and regulatory measures will not have an adverse
effect on the value or marketability of securities held by the
Fund, including potentially limiting or completely restricting
the ability of the Fund to use a particular investment
instrument as part of its investment strategy, increasing the
costs of using these instruments, or possibly making them less
effective in general. Furthermore, no assurance can be made that
the U.S. Government or any U.S. regulatory entity (or other
authority or regulatory entity) will not continue to take
further legislative or regulatory action in response to the
economic crisis or otherwise, and the effect of such actions, if
taken, cannot be known.
In addition, European markets have recently experienced
volatility and adverse trends due to concerns about economic
downturns, rising government debt levels, and the possible
default of government debt in several European countries,
including Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. A default
or debt restructuring by any European country would adversely
impact holders of that countrys debt and worldwide sellers
of credit default swaps linked to that countrys
creditworthiness. These trends have adversely affected the value
and exchange rate of the euro and may continue to significantly
affect the economies of all European countries, which in turn
may have a material adverse effect on the Funds
investments in such countries, other countries that depend on
European countries for significant amounts of trade or
investment, or issuers with exposure to European debt.
Real Estate Securities Risk.
To the extent it
holds equity and/or debt securities of real estate-related
companies, the Fund may be affected by the risks associated with
real estate investments. The value of securities of companies in
real estate and real estate-related industries, including
securities of REITs, is sensitive to decreases in real estate
values and rental income, property taxes, interest rates, tax
and regulatory requirements, overbuilding/supply and demand,
increased competition, local and general economic conditions,
increases in operating costs, environmental liabilities,
management skill in running a REIT, and the creditworthiness of
the REIT. In addition, mortgage REITs and mortgage-backed
securities are subject to prepayment risk. Mortgage-backed
securities comprised of subprime mortgages and investments in
other real estate-backed securities comprised of
under-performing real estate assets also may be subject to a
higher degree of credit risk, valuation risk, and liquidity
risk. If the Fund has REIT investments, the Funds
shareholders will indirectly bear their proportionate share of
the REITs expenses, in addition to their proportionate
share of the Funds expenses.
REIT Risk.
To the extent that the Fund
invests in REITs, it may be subject to the additional risks
associated with REIT investments. The ability to trade REITs in
the secondary market can be more limited compared to other
equity investments, and certain REITs have relatively small
market capitalizations, which can increase the volatility of the
market price for their securities. REITs are also subject to
heavy cash flow dependency to allow them to make distributions
to their shareholders. The prices of equity REITs are affected
by changes in the value of the underlying property owned by the
REITs and changes in capital markets and interest rates. The
prices of mortgage REITs are affected by the quality of any
credit they extend, the creditworthiness of the mortgages they
hold, as well as by the value of the property that secures the
mortgages. Equity REITs and mortgage REITs generally are not
diversified and are subject to heavy cash flow dependency,
defaults by borrowers, and self-liquidation. There is also the
risk that borrowers under mortgages held by a REIT or lessees of
a property that a REIT owns may be unable to meet their
obligations to the REIT. In the event of a default by a borrower
or lessee, the REIT may incur substantial costs associated with
protecting its investments. Certain special purpose
REITs in which the Fund may invest focus their assets in
specific real property sectors, such as hotels, shopping malls,
nursing homes, or warehouses, and are therefore subject to the
specific risks associated with adverse developments in these
sectors.
13
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Janus
Investment Fund
Reverse Repurchase Agreement Risk.
Reverse
repurchase agreements are transactions in which the Fund sells a
security and simultaneously commits to repurchase that security
from the buyer, such as a bank or broker-dealer, at an agreed
upon price on an agreed upon future date. The repurchase price
consists of the sale price plus an incremental amount reflecting
the interest cost to the Fund on the proceeds it has received
from the initial sale. Reverse repurchase agreements involve the
risk that the value of securities that the Fund is obligated to
repurchase under the agreement may decline below the repurchase
price. Additionally, such transactions are only advantageous if
the interest cost to the Fund of the reverse repurchase
transaction is less than the cost of obtaining the cash
otherwise. Interest costs on the proceeds received in a reverse
repurchase agreement may exceed the return received on the
investments made by the Fund with those proceeds, resulting in
reduced returns to shareholders. When the Fund enters into a
reverse repurchase agreement, it is subject to the risk that the
buyer (counterparty) may default on its obligations to the Fund.
In the event of such a default, the Fund may experience delays,
costs, and losses, all of which may reduce returns to
shareholders. Investing reverse repurchase proceeds may also
have a leveraging effect on the Funds portfolio. The
Funds use of leverage can magnify the effect of any gains
or losses, causing the Fund to be more volatile than if it had
not been leveraged. There is no assurance that any leveraging
strategy used by the Fund will be successful.
Small- and Mid-Sized Companies Risk.
The
Funds investments in securities issued by small- and
mid-sized companies, which can include smaller,
start-up
companies offering emerging products or services, may involve
greater risks than are customarily associated with larger, more
established companies. For example, while small- and mid-sized
companies may realize more substantial growth than larger or
more established issuers, they may also suffer more significant
losses as a result of their narrow product lines, limited
operating history, greater exposure to competitive threats,
limited financial resources, limited trading markets, and the
potential lack of management depth. Securities issued by small-
and mid-sized companies tend to be more volatile and somewhat
more speculative than securities issued by larger or more
established companies and may underperform as compared to the
securities of larger companies. These holdings are also subject
to wider price fluctuations and tend to be less liquid than
stocks of larger companies, which could have a significant
adverse effect on the Funds returns, especially as market
conditions change.
Sovereign Debt Risk.
The Fund may invest in
U.S. and foreign government debt securities (sovereign
debt). Investments in U.S. sovereign debt are considered
low risk. However, investments in non-U.S. sovereign debt can
involve a high degree of risk, including the risk that the
governmental entity that controls the repayment of sovereign
debt may not be willing or able to repay the principal
and/or
to
pay the interest on its sovereign debt in a timely manner. A
sovereign debtors willingness or ability to satisfy its
debt obligation may be affected by various factors, including
its cash flow situation, the extent of its foreign currency
reserves, the availability of foreign exchange when a payment is
due, the relative size of its debt position in relation to its
economy as a whole, the sovereign debtors policy toward
international lenders, and local political constraints to which
the governmental entity may be subject. Sovereign debtors may
also be dependent on expected disbursements from foreign
governments, multilateral agencies, and other entities. The
failure of a sovereign debtor to implement economic reforms,
achieve specified levels of economic performance, or repay
principal or interest when due may result in the cancellation of
third party commitments to lend funds to the sovereign debtor,
which may further impair such debtors ability or
willingness to timely service its debts. The Fund may be
requested to participate in the rescheduling of such sovereign
debt and to extend further loans to governmental entities, which
may adversely affect the Funds holdings. In the event of
default, there may be limited or no legal remedies for
collecting sovereign debt and there may be no bankruptcy
proceedings through which the Fund may collect all or part of
the sovereign debt that a governmental entity has not repaid.
14
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Janus
Investment Fund
Management
of the Fund
INVESTMENT
ADVISER
Janus Capital Management LLC, 151 Detroit Street, Denver,
Colorado 80206-4805, is the investment adviser to the Fund.
Perkins is responsible for the
day-to-day
management of the Funds investment portfolio subject to
the general oversight of Janus Capital. Janus Capital also
provides certain administration and other services and is
responsible for other business affairs of the Fund.
Janus Capital (together with its predecessors) has served as
investment adviser to Janus mutual funds since 1970 and
currently serves as investment adviser to all of the Janus
funds, acts as subadviser for a number of private-label mutual
funds, and provides separate account advisory services for
institutional accounts and other unregistered products.
Janus Capital furnishes certain administration, compliance, and
accounting services for the Fund and is reimbursed by the Fund
for certain of its costs in providing those services (to the
extent Janus Capital seeks reimbursement and such costs are not
otherwise waived). In addition, employees of Janus Capital
and/or its affiliates may serve as officers of the Trust. Janus
Capital provides office space for the Fund. Some expenses
related to compensation payable to the Janus funds Chief
Compliance Officer and compliance staff are shared with the
Janus funds. The Fund also pays for salaries, fees, and expenses
of certain Janus Capital employees and Fund officers, with
respect to certain specified administration functions they
perform on behalf of the Janus funds. The Janus funds pay these
costs based on
out-of-pocket
expenses incurred by Janus Capital, and these costs are separate
and apart from advisory fees and other expenses paid in
connection with the investment advisory services Janus Capital
provides to the Fund.
MANAGEMENT
EXPENSES
The Fund pays Janus Capital an investment advisory fee and
incurs expenses, including the distribution and shareholder
servicing fees (12b-1 fee), administrative services fees payable
pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement, any other transfer
agent and custodian fees and expenses, legal and auditing fees,
printing and mailing costs of sending reports and other
information to existing shareholders, and Independent
Trustees fees and expenses. The Funds investment
advisory fee is calculated daily and paid monthly. The
Funds advisory agreement details the investment advisory
fee and other expenses that the Fund must pay. Janus Capital
pays Perkins a subadvisory fee from its investment advisory fee
for managing the Fund.
The following table reflects the Funds contractual
investment advisory fee rate (expressed as an annual rate). The
investment advisory fee rate is aggregated to include all
investment advisory fees paid by the Fund. The rate shown is a
fixed rate based on the Funds average daily net assets.
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Contractual
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Average Daily
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Investment
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Net Assets
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Advisory Fee (%)
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Fund Name
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of the Fund
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(annual rate)
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Perkins International Value
Fund
(1)
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All Asset Levels
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0.80
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(1)
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Janus Capital has agreed to waive the Funds total annual
fund operating expenses (excluding the distribution and
shareholder servicing fees, administrative services fees payable
pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement, brokerage
commissions, interest, dividends, taxes, acquired fund fees and
expenses, and extraordinary expenses) to a certain level until
at least February 1, 2015. Application of the expense
waiver and its effect on annual fund operating expenses is
reflected, when applicable, in the Fees and Expenses of
the Fund table in the Fund Summary of the Prospectus, and
additional information is included under Expense
Limitation below. The waiver is not reflected in the
contractual fee rate shown.
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A discussion regarding the basis for the Trustees approval
of the Funds investment advisory agreement and subadvisory
agreement will be included in the Funds next annual or
semiannual report to shareholders, following such approval. You
can request the Funds annual or semiannual reports (as
they become available), free of charge, by contacting your plan
sponsor, broker-dealer, or financial intermediary, or by
contacting a Janus representative at
1-877-335-2687.
The reports are also available, free of charge, at
janus.com/info.
Expense
Limitation
Janus Capital has contractually agreed to waive the advisory fee
payable by the Fund in an amount equal to the amount, if any,
that the Funds normal operating expenses in any fiscal
year, including the investment advisory fee, but excluding the
distribution and shareholder servicing fees (applicable to
Class A Shares, Class C Shares, and Class S
Shares), administrative services fees payable pursuant to the
Transfer Agency Agreement, brokerage commissions, interest,
dividends, taxes, acquired fund fees and expenses, and
extraordinary expenses, exceed the annual rate shown below. For
information about how the
15
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Janus
Investment Fund
expense limit affects the total expenses of the Fund, see the
Fees and Expenses of the Fund table in the Fund
Summary of the Prospectus. Janus Capital has agreed to continue
the waiver until at least February 1, 2015.
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Fund Name
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Expense Limit Percentage (%)
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Perkins International Value
Fund
(1)
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0.98
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(1)
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For a period of three years subsequent to the Funds
commencement of operations (April 1, 2013), Janus Capital
may recover from the Fund fees and expenses previously waived or
reimbursed, which could then be considered a deferral, if the
Funds expense ratio, including recovered expenses, falls
below the expense limit.
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SUBADVISER
Perkins Investment Management LLC (Perkins)
serves as subadviser to the Fund, and has served in such
capacity since the Funds inception. Perkins (together with
its predecessors), 311 S. Wacker Drive, Suite 6000,
Chicago, Illinois 60606, has been in the investment management
business since 1984 and provides day-to-day management of the
Funds portfolio operations, as well as other mutual funds
and separate accounts. Janus Capital owns approximately 78% of
Perkins. Perkins has the option to require Janus Capital to
purchase all or part of their remaining ownership interests
following certain anniversary dates. On February 1, 2013,
Perkins exercised their rights to put 98% of their interests to
Janus Capital. The transaction is expected to close in August
2013.
INVESTMENT
PERSONNEL
Perkins
International Value Fund
Co-Portfolio Managers Tadd H. Chessen, J. Christian
Kirtley, and Gregory R. Kolb are responsible for the
day-to-day
management of the Fund, with no limitation on the authority of
any one
co-portfolio
manager in relation to the others.
Tadd H. Chessen
, CFA, is Co-Portfolio Manager
of Perkins International Value Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception. Mr. Chessen joined Perkins in May 2011 as
a research analyst covering international securities. Prior to
joining Perkins, Mr. Chessen was a partner and analyst at
Millgate Capital Inc. from 2004 to 2011. He holds a Bachelor of
Arts degree in Business from the University of Virginia, where
he graduated with Distinction, and a Master of Business
Administration with a concentration in Finance from Columbia
Business School. Mr. Chessen holds the Chartered Financial
Analyst designation.
J. Christian Kirtley
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of Perkins International Value Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception. Mr. Kirtley joined Perkins in October 2010
as a research analyst covering international securities. Prior
to joining Perkins, Mr. Kirtley was a Senior Vice President
and research analyst with Institutional Capital LLC from 2003 to
2010. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Business
Administration from the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill. Mr. Kirtley holds the Chartered Financial Analyst
designation.
Gregory R. Kolb
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of Perkins International Value Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception. He is also Portfolio Manager of other Janus
accounts. Prior to joining Perkins, Mr. Kolb was Executive
Vice President and Portfolio Manager from 2005 to July 2010 at
Janus Capital. He holds a Bachelors degree in Business
Administration from Miami University (of Ohio) where he
graduated magna cum laude. Mr. Kolb holds the Chartered
Financial Analyst designation.
Information about the portfolio managers compensation
structure and other accounts managed is included in the SAI.
Conflicts
of Interest
Janus Capital and Perkins each manage many funds and numerous
other accounts, which may include separate accounts and other
pooled investment vehicles, such as hedge funds. Side-by-side
management of multiple accounts, including the management of a
cash collateral pool for securities lending and investing the
Janus funds cash, may give rise to conflicts of interest
among those accounts, and may create potential risks, such as
the risk that investment activity in one account may adversely
affect another account. For example, short sale activity in an
account could adversely affect the market value of long
positions in one or more other accounts (and vice versa).
Side-by-side management may raise additional potential conflicts
of interest relating to the allocation of investment
opportunities and the aggregation and allocation of trades.
Additionally, Janus Capital is the adviser to the Janus
funds of funds, which are funds that invest
primarily in other mutual
16
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Janus
Investment Fund
funds managed by Janus Capital. To the extent that the Fund is
an underlying fund in a Janus fund of funds, a
potential conflict of interest arises when allocating the assets
of the Janus fund of funds to the Fund. Purchases
and redemptions of fund shares by a Janus fund of
funds due to reallocations or rebalancings may result in a
fund having to sell securities or invest cash when it otherwise
would not do so. Such transactions could accelerate the
realization of taxable income if sales of securities resulted in
gains and could also increase a funds transaction costs.
Large redemptions by a Janus fund of funds may cause
a funds expense ratio to increase due to a resulting
smaller asset base. A further discussion of potential conflicts
of interest and a discussion of certain procedures intended to
mitigate such potential conflicts are contained in the
Funds SAI.
17
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Janus
Investment Fund
Other
information
DISTRIBUTION
OF THE FUND
The Fund is distributed by Janus Distributors LLC (Janus
Distributors), which is a member of the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority, Inc. (FINRA). To obtain
information about FINRA member firms and their associated
persons, you may contact FINRA at www.finra.org, or
1-800-289-9999.
18
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Janus
Investment Fund
Distributions
and taxes
DISTRIBUTIONS
To avoid taxation of the Fund, the Internal Revenue Code
requires the Fund to distribute all or substantially all of its
net investment income and any net capital gains realized on its
investments at least annually. The Funds income from
certain dividends, interest, and any net realized short-term
capital gains are paid to shareholders as ordinary income
dividends. Certain dividend income may be reported to
shareholders as qualified dividend income, which is
generally subject to reduced rates of taxation. Net realized
long-term capital gains, if any, are paid to shareholders as
capital gains distributions, regardless of how long Shares of
the Fund have been held. Distributions are made at the class
level, so they may vary from class to class within the Fund.
Distribution
Schedule
Dividends from net investment income and distributions of
capital gains are normally declared and distributed in December
but, if necessary, may be distributed at other times as well.
The date you receive your distribution may vary depending on how
your intermediary processes trades. Please consult your
intermediary for details.
How
Distributions Affect the Funds NAV
Distributions are paid to shareholders as of the record date of
a distribution of the Fund, regardless of how long the shares
have been held. Undistributed dividends and net capital gains
are included in the Funds daily net asset value
(NAV). The share price of the Fund drops by the
amount of the distribution, net of any subsequent market
fluctuations. For example, assume that on December 31, the
Fund declared a dividend in the amount of $0.25 per share.
If the Funds share price was $10.00 on December 30,
the Funds share price on December 31 would be $9.75,
barring market fluctuations. You should be aware that
distributions from a taxable mutual fund do not increase the
value of your investment and may create income tax obligations.
Buying
a Dividend
If you purchase shares of the Fund just before a distribution,
you will pay the full price for the shares and receive a portion
of the purchase price back as a taxable distribution. This is
referred to as buying a dividend. In the above
example, if you bought shares on December 30, you would
have paid $10.00 per share. On December 31, the Fund would
pay you $0.25 per share as a dividend and your shares would
now be worth $9.75 per share. Unless your account is set up
as a tax-deferred account, dividends paid to you would be
included in your gross income for tax purposes, even though you
may not have participated in the increase in NAV of the Fund,
whether or not you reinvested the dividends. You should
consult with your financial intermediary or tax adviser as to
potential tax consequences of any distributions that may be paid
shortly after purchase.
For your convenience, distributions of net investment income and
net capital gains are automatically reinvested in additional
Shares of the Fund without any sales charge. To receive
distributions in cash, contact your financial intermediary, or a
Janus representative
(1-800-333-1181)
if you hold Class I Shares directly with Janus. Whether
reinvested or paid in cash, the distributions may be subject to
taxes, unless your shares are held in a qualified tax-deferred
plan or account.
TAXES
As with any investment, you should consider the tax consequences
of investing in the Fund. Any time you sell or exchange shares
of a fund in a taxable account, it is considered a taxable
event. For federal income tax purposes, an exchange is treated
the same as a sale. Depending on the purchase price and the sale
price, you may have a gain or loss on the transaction; whether
the gain or loss is long-term or short-term depends on how long
you owned the shares. Any tax liabilities generated by your
transactions are your responsibility.
The following discussion does not apply to qualified
tax-deferred accounts or other non-taxable entities, nor is it a
complete analysis of the federal income tax implications of
investing in the Fund. You should consult your tax adviser if
you have any questions. Additionally, state or local taxes may
apply to your investment, depending upon the laws of your state
of residence.
Taxes
on Distributions
Distributions by the Fund are subject to federal income tax,
regardless of whether the distribution is made in cash or
reinvested in additional shares of the Fund. When gains from the
sale of a security held by the Fund are paid to shareholders,
the rate at which the gain will be taxed to shareholders depends
on the length of time the Fund held the security. In certain
states, a portion of the distributions (depending on the sources
of the Funds income) may be exempt
19
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Janus
Investment Fund
from state and local taxes. Individuals, trusts, and estates
whose income exceeds certain threshold amounts will be subject
to a 3.8% Medicare contribution tax on net investment income in
tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2013. Net
investment income includes dividends paid by the Fund and
capital gains from any sale or exchange of Fund shares. The
Funds net investment income and capital gains are
distributed to (and may be taxable to) those persons who are
shareholders of the Fund at the record date of such payments.
Although the Funds total net income and net realized gain
are the results of its operations, the per share amount
distributed or taxable to shareholders is affected by the number
of Fund shares outstanding at the record date. Generally,
account tax information will be made available to shareholders
on or before January 31st of each year. Information
regarding distributions may also be reported to the Internal
Revenue Service.
Distributions made by the Fund with respect to Shares purchased
through a qualified retirement plan will generally be exempt
from current taxation if left to accumulate within the qualified
plan.
Generally, withdrawals from qualified plans may be subject to
federal income tax at ordinary income rates and, if made before
age 59
1
/
2
,
a 10% penalty tax may be imposed. The federal income tax
status of your investment depends on the features of your
qualified plan. For further information, please contact your
plan sponsor or tax adviser.
The Fund may be required to withhold U.S. federal income
tax on all distributions and redemptions payable to shareholders
who fail to provide their correct taxpayer identification
number, fail to make certain required certifications, or who
have been notified by the Internal Revenue Service that they are
subject to backup withholding. The current backup withholding
rate is applied.
When shareholders sell Fund shares from a taxable account, they
typically receive information on their tax forms that calculates
their gain or loss using the average cost method. Prior to
January 1, 2012, this information was not reported to the
IRS, and shareholders had the option of calculating gains or
losses using an alternative IRS permitted method. In accordance
with legislation passed by Congress in 2008, however, your
intermediary (or the Fund, if you hold Class I Shares directly
with Janus) began reporting cost basis information to the IRS
for shares purchased on or after January 1, 2012 and sold
thereafter. Your intermediary (or the Fund, if you hold Class I
Shares directly with Janus) will permit shareholders to elect
their preferred cost basis method. In the absence of an
election, your cost basis method will be your
intermediarys default method, unless you hold Class I
Shares directly with Janus in which case the Fund will use an
average cost basis method. Please consult your tax adviser to
determine the appropriate cost basis method for your particular
tax situation and to learn more about how the new cost basis
reporting laws apply to you and your investments.
Taxation
of the Fund
Dividends, interest, and some capital gains received by the Fund
on foreign securities may be subject to foreign tax withholding
or other foreign taxes. If the Fund is eligible, it may from
year to year make the election permitted under Section 853
of the Internal Revenue Code to pass through such taxes to
shareholders as a foreign tax credit. If such an election is not
made, any foreign taxes paid or accrued will represent an
expense to the Fund.
Certain fund transactions may involve short sales, futures,
options, swap agreements, hedged investments, and other similar
transactions, and may be subject to special provisions of the
Internal Revenue Code that, among other things, can potentially
affect the character, amount, timing of distributions to
shareholders, and utilization of capital loss carryforwards. The
Fund will monitor its transactions and may make certain tax
elections and use certain investment strategies where applicable
in order to mitigate the effect of these tax provisions, if
possible. Certain transactions or strategies utilized by the
Fund may generate nonqualified income that can impact an
investors taxes.
The Fund does not expect to pay any federal income or excise
taxes because it intends to meet certain requirements of the
Internal Revenue Code, including the distribution each year of
all its net investment income and net capital gains. It is
important that the Fund meets these requirements so that any
earnings on your investment will not be subject to federal
income taxes twice. Funds that invest in partnerships may be
subject to state tax liabilities.
20
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Janus
Investment Fund
Shareholders
guide
The Fund offers multiple classes of shares in order to meet the
needs of various types of investors.
Class A Shares and Class C Shares
are offered
through financial intermediary platforms including, but not
limited to, traditional brokerage platforms, mutual fund wrap
fee programs, bank trust platforms, and retirement platforms.
Class A Shares may be offered without an initial sales
charge through certain retirement platforms and through certain
financial intermediary platforms, including but not limited to,
fee-based broker-dealers or financial advisors, primarily on
their wrap account platform(s) where such broker-dealer or
financial advisor imposes additional fees for services connected
to the wrap account. Class A Shares pay up to 0.25% of net
assets to financial intermediaries for the provision of
distribution services and/or shareholder services on behalf of
their clients. Class C Shares pay up to 0.75% of net assets
for payment to financial intermediaries for the provision of
distribution services and up to 0.25% of net assets for the
provision of shareholder services on behalf of their clients. In
addition, Class A Shares and Class C Shares pay
financial intermediaries for the provision of administrative
services, including recordkeeping, subaccounting, order
processing for omnibus or networked accounts, or other
shareholder services provided to shareholders.
Class S Shares
are offered through financial intermediary
platforms including, but not limited to, retirement platforms
and asset allocation, mutual fund wrap, or other discretionary
or nondiscretionary fee-based investment advisory programs. In
addition, Class S Shares may be available through certain
financial intermediaries who have an agreement with Janus
Capital or its affiliates to offer the Shares on their
supermarket platforms. Class S Shares pay up to 0.25% of
net assets to financial intermediaries for the provision of
distribution services and/or shareholder services and up to
0.25% of net assets for the provision of administrative
services, including recordkeeping, subaccounting, order
processing for omnibus or networked accounts, or other
shareholder services provided to or on behalf of their clients.
Class I Shares
are available through certain financial
intermediary platforms including, but not limited to, mutual
fund wrap fee programs, managed account programs, asset
allocation programs, bank trust platforms, as well as certain
retirement platforms. Class I Shares pay financial
intermediaries for the provision of administrative services,
including recordkeeping, subaccounting, order processing for
omnibus or networked accounts, or other shareholder services
provided to shareholders. Class I Shares are also available
to certain direct institutional investors including, but not
limited to, corporations, certain retirement plans, public plans
and foundations/endowments.
Class N Shares
are generally available only to financial
intermediaries purchasing on behalf of 401(k) plans, 457 plans,
403(b) plans, Taft-Hartley multi-employer plans, profit-sharing
and money purchase pension plans, defined benefit plans and
nonqualified deferred compensation plans. Class N Shares
also are available to Janus proprietary products. Class N
Shares are not available to retail non-retirement accounts,
traditional or Roth individual retirement accounts
(IRAs), Coverdell Education Savings Accounts, SEPs,
SARSEPs, SIMPLE IRAs, or 529 college savings plans.
Class T Shares
are available through certain financial
intermediary platforms including, but not limited to, mutual
fund wrap fee programs, managed account programs, asset
allocation programs, bank trust platforms, as well as certain
retirement platforms. In addition, Class T Shares may be
available through certain financial intermediaries who have an
agreement with Janus Capital or its affiliates to offer the
Shares on their supermarket platforms. Class T Shares pay
up to 0.25% of net assets to financial intermediaries for the
provision of administrative services, including recordkeeping,
subaccounting, order processing for omnibus or networked
accounts, or other shareholder services provided to shareholders.
The Shares are not offered directly to individual investors.
Consult with your financial intermediary representative for
additional information on whether the Shares are an appropriate
investment choice. Certain funds may not be available through
certain of these intermediaries and not all financial
intermediaries offer all classes of shares.
If your financial
intermediary offers more than one class of shares, you should
carefully consider which class of shares to purchase. Certain
classes have higher expenses than other classes, which may lower
the return on your investment. For instructions on how to
purchase, exchange, or redeem Shares, contact your financial
intermediary or refer to your plan documents. For Class I
Shares held directly with Janus, please contact a Janus
representative at
1-800-333-1181.
With certain limited exceptions, the Fund is available only to
U.S. citizens or residents, and employees of Janus Capital or
its affiliates.
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Janus
Investment Fund
PRICING
OF FUND SHARES
The per share NAV for each class is computed by dividing the
total value of assets allocated to the class, less liabilities
allocated to that class, by the total number of outstanding
shares of the class. The Funds NAV is calculated as of the
close of the regular trading session of the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) (normally 4:00 p.m.
New York time) each day that the NYSE is open
(business day). However, the NAV may be
calculated earlier if trading on the NYSE is restricted, or as
permitted by the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC). Foreign securities held by the Fund may be
traded on days and at times when the NYSE is closed and the NAV
is therefore not calculated. Accordingly, the value of the
Funds holdings may change on days that are not business
days in the United States and on which you will not be able
to purchase or redeem the Funds Shares.
The price you pay for purchases of Shares is the public offering
price, which is the NAV next determined after your request is
received in good order by the Fund or its agents, plus, for
Class A Shares, any applicable initial sales charge. The
price you pay to sell Shares is also the NAV, although for
Class A Shares and Class C Shares, a contingent
deferred sales charge may be taken out of the proceeds. Your
financial intermediary may charge you a separate or additional
fee for processing purchases and redemptions of Shares. In order
to receive a days price, your order must be received in
good order by the Fund or its agents by the close of the regular
trading session of the NYSE.
Securities held by the Fund are generally valued at market
value. Certain short-term instruments maturing within
60 days or less are valued at amortized cost, which
approximates market value. If a market quotation for a security
is not readily available or is deemed unreliable, or if an event
that is expected to affect the value of the security occurs
after the close of the principal exchange or market on which the
security is traded, and before the close of the NYSE, a fair
value of the security (except for short-term instruments
maturing within 60 days or less) will be determined in good
faith under policies and procedures established by and under the
supervision of the Funds Trustees. Such events include,
but are not limited to: (i) a significant event that may
affect the securities of a single issuer, such as a merger,
bankruptcy, or significant issuer-specific development;
(ii) an event that may affect an entire market, such as a
natural disaster or significant governmental action;
(iii) a non-significant event such as a market closing
early or not opening, or a security trading halt; and
(iv) pricing of a non-valued security and a restricted or
non-public security. While fair value pricing may be more
commonly used with foreign equity securities, it may also be
used with, among other things, thinly-traded domestic securities
or fixed-income securities. For valuation purposes, quotations
of foreign portfolio securities, other assets and liabilities,
and forward contracts stated in foreign currency are generally
translated into U.S. dollar equivalents at the prevailing market
rates. The Fund may use systematic fair valuation models
provided by independent pricing services to value foreign equity
securities in order to adjust for stale pricing, which may occur
between the close of certain foreign exchanges and the close of
the NYSE.
Due to the subjective nature of fair value pricing, the
Funds value for a particular security may be different
from the last quoted market price. Fair value pricing may reduce
arbitrage activity involving the frequent buying and selling of
mutual fund shares by investors seeking to take advantage of a
perceived lag between a change in the value of the Funds
portfolio securities and the reflection of such change in the
Funds NAV, as further described in the Excessive
Trading section of this Prospectus. While funds that
invest in foreign securities may be at a greater risk for
arbitrage activity, such activity may also arise in funds which
do not invest in foreign securities, for example, when trading
in a security held by a fund is halted and does not resume prior
to the time the fund calculates its NAV (referred to as
stale pricing). Funds that hold thinly-traded
securities, such as certain small-capitalization securities, may
be subject to attempted use of arbitrage techniques. To the
extent that the Funds valuation of a security is different
from the securitys market value, short-term arbitrage
traders buying and/or selling shares of the Fund may dilute the
NAV of the Fund, which negatively impacts long-term
shareholders. The Funds fair value pricing and excessive
trading policies and procedures may not completely eliminate
short-term trading in certain omnibus accounts and other
accounts traded through intermediaries.
The value of the securities of other open-end funds held by the
Fund, if any, will be calculated using the NAV of such open-end
funds, and the prospectuses for such open-end funds explain the
circumstances under which they use fair value pricing and the
effects of using fair value pricing.
All purchases, exchanges, redemptions, or other account activity
must be processed through your financial intermediary or plan
sponsor. Your financial intermediary or plan sponsor is
responsible for promptly transmitting purchase, redemption, and
other requests to the Fund under the arrangements made between
your financial intermediary or plan sponsor and its customers.
The Fund is not responsible for the failure of any
financial intermediary or plan sponsor to carry out its
obligations to its customers.
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Janus
Investment Fund
CHOOSING
A SHARE CLASS
Class A Shares, Class C Shares, Class S Shares,
Class I Shares, Class N Shares, and Class T
Shares are offered by this Prospectus. The Fund offers multiple
classes of shares in order to meet the needs of various types of
investors. For more information about these classes of Shares
and whether or not you are eligible to purchase these Shares,
please call
1-877-335-2687.
Each class represents an interest in the same portfolio of
investments, but has different charges and expenses, allowing
you to choose the class that best meets your needs. For an
analysis of fees associated with an investment in each share
class or other similar funds, please visit
www.finra.org/fundanalyzer.
When choosing a share class, you should consider:
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how much you plan to invest;
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how long you expect to own the shares;
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the expenses paid by each class; and
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for Class A Shares and Class C Shares, whether you
qualify for any reduction or waiver of any sales charges.
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You should also consult your financial intermediary about which
class is most suitable for you. In addition, you should consider
the factors below with respect to each class of Shares:
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Class A Shares
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Initial sales charge on purchases
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Up to
5.75%
(1)
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reduction of initial sales charge for purchases of
$50,000 or more
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initial sales charge waived for purchases of
$1 million or more
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Deferred sales charge (CDSC)
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None except on certain redemptions of Shares purchased without
an initial sales
charge
(1)
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Administrative fees
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Pays administrative, networking or omnibus fees to certain
intermediaries, and out-of-pocket costs to Janus Services
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Minimum initial investment
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$2,500
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Maximum purchase
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None
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Minimum aggregate account balance
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None
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12b-1 fee
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0.25% annual distribution/service fee
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Class C Shares
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Initial sales charge on purchases
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None
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Deferred sales charge (CDSC)
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1.00% on Shares redeemed within 12 months of
purchase
(1)
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Administrative fees
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Pays administrative, networking or omnibus fees to certain
intermediaries, and out-of-pocket costs to Janus Services
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Minimum initial investment
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$2,500
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Maximum purchase
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$500,000
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Minimum aggregate account balance
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None
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12b-1 fee
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1.00% annual fee (up to 0.75% distribution fee and up to 0.25%
shareholder servicing fee)
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Class S Shares
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Initial sales charge on purchases
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None
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Deferred sales charge (CDSC)
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None
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Administrative services fees
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0.25%
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Minimum initial investment
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$2,500
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Maximum purchase
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None
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Minimum aggregate account balance
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None
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12b-1 fee
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0.25% annual distribution/service fee
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23
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Janus
Investment Fund
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Class I Shares
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Initial sales charge on purchases
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None
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Deferred sales charge (CDSC)
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None
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Administrative fees
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Pays administrative, networking or omnibus fees to certain
intermediaries, and out-of-pocket costs to Janus Services
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Minimum initial investment
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institutional investors (investing directly with
Janus)
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$1,000,000
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through an intermediary institution
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$2,500
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Maximum purchase
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None
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Minimum aggregate account balance
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None
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12b-1 fee
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None
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Class N Shares
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Initial sales charge on purchases
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None
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Deferred sales charge (CDSC)
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None
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Administrative fees
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Pays administrative fees to Janus Capital or Janus Services
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Minimum initial investment
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None
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Maximum purchase
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None
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Minimum aggregate account balance
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None
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12b-1 fee
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None
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Class T Shares
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Initial sales charge on purchases
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None
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Deferred sales charge (CDSC)
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None
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Administrative services fees
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0.25%
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Minimum initial investment
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$2,500
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Maximum purchase
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None
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Minimum aggregate account balance
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None
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12b-1 fee
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None
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(1)
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May be waived under certain circumstances.
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DISTRIBUTION,
SERVICING, AND ADMINISTRATIVE FEES
Distribution
and Shareholder Servicing Plans
Under separate distribution and shareholder servicing plans
adopted in accordance with
Rule 12b-1
under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, for
Class A Shares and Class S Shares (each a
Plan) and Class C Shares (the
Class C Plan), the Fund pays Janus
Distributors, the Trusts distributor, a fee for the sale
and distribution and/or shareholder servicing of the Shares
based on the average daily net assets of each, at the following
annual rates:
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Class
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12b-1 Fee for the Fund
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Class A Shares
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0.25%
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Class C Shares
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1.00%
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(1)
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Class S Shares
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0.25%
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(1)
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Up to 0.75% of this fee is for distribution services and up to
0.25% of this fee is for shareholder services.
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Under the terms of each Plan, the Trust is authorized to make
payments to Janus Distributors for remittance to retirement plan
service providers, broker-dealers, bank trust departments,
financial advisors, and other financial intermediaries, as
compensation for distribution and/or shareholder services
performed by such entities for their customers who are investors
in the Fund.
24
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Janus
Investment Fund
Janus Distributors is entitled to retain all fees paid under the
Class C Plan for the first 12 months on any investment
in Class C Shares to recoup its expenses with respect to
the payment of commissions on sales of Class C Shares.
Financial intermediaries will become eligible for compensation
under the Class C Plan beginning in the 13th month
following the purchase of Class C Shares, although Janus
Distributors may, pursuant to a written agreement between Janus
Distributors and a particular financial intermediary, pay such
financial intermediary
12b-1
fees
prior to the 13th month following the purchase of
Class C Shares.
Financial intermediaries may from time to time be required to
meet certain criteria in order to receive
12b-1
fees.
Janus Distributors is entitled to retain some or all fees
payable under each Plan in certain circumstances, including when
there is no broker of record or when certain qualification
standards have not been met by the broker of record.
Because
12b-1
fees
are paid out of the Funds assets on an ongoing basis, over
time they will increase the cost of your investment and may cost
you more than paying other types of sales charges.
Administrative
Fees
Class A
Shares, Class C Shares, and Class I Shares
Certain, but not all, intermediaries may charge fees for
administrative services, including recordkeeping, subaccounting,
order processing for omnibus or networked accounts, or other
shareholder services provided by intermediaries on behalf of
shareholders of the Fund. Order processing includes the
submission of transactions through the National Securities
Clearing Corporation (NSCC) or similar systems, or
those processed on a manual basis with Janus. Other shareholder
services may include the provision of order confirmations,
periodic account statements, forwarding prospectuses,
shareholder reports, and other materials to existing customers,
and answering inquiries regarding accounts. Janus Services
remits these administrative fees to intermediaries on behalf of
the Fund. Janus Services is then reimbursed by the Fund for such
payments. Because the form and amount charged varies by
intermediary, the amount of the administrative fee borne by the
class is an average of all fees charged by intermediaries. In
the event an intermediary receiving payments from Janus Services
on behalf of the Fund converts from a networking structure to an
omnibus account structure, or otherwise experiences increased
costs, fees borne by the Shares may increase. The Funds
Trustees have set limits on fees that the Fund may incur with
respect to administrative fees paid for omnibus or networked
accounts. Such limits are subject to change by the Trustees in
the future. Janus Services also seeks reimbursement for costs it
incurs as transfer agent and for providing servicing.
Class S
Shares and Class T Shares
Janus Services receives an administrative services fee at an
annual rate of 0.25% of the average daily net assets of
Class S Shares and Class T Shares of the Fund for
providing, or arranging for the provision by intermediaries of,
administrative services, including recordkeeping, subaccounting,
order processing for omnibus or networked accounts, or other
shareholder services provided on behalf of shareholders of the
Fund. Order processing includes the submission of transactions
through the NSCC or similar systems, or those processed on a
manual basis with Janus. Other shareholder services may include
the provision of order confirmations, periodic account
statements, forwarding prospectuses, shareholder reports, and
other materials to existing customers, and answering inquiries
regarding accounts. Janus Services expects to use all or a
significant portion of this fee to compensate intermediaries and
retirement plan service providers for providing these services
to their customers who invest in the Fund. Janus Services or its
affiliates may also pay fees for services provided by
intermediaries to the extent the fees charged by intermediaries
exceed the 0.25% of net assets charged to the Fund.
PAYMENTS
TO FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES BY JANUS CAPITAL OR ITS
AFFILIATES
From their own assets, Janus Capital or its affiliates may pay
selected brokerage firms or other financial intermediaries that
sell Class A and Class C Shares of the Janus funds for
distribution, marketing, promotional, or related services. Such
payments may be based on gross sales, assets under management,
or transactional charges, or on a combination of these factors.
The amount of these payments is determined from time to time by
Janus Capital, may be substantial, and may differ for different
financial intermediaries. Payments based primarily on sales
create an incentive to make new sales of shares, while payments
based on assets create an incentive to retain previously sold
shares. Sales- and asset-based payments currently range up to
25 basis points on sales and up to 20 basis points on
average annual net assets of shares held through the
intermediary and are subject to change. Payments based on
transactional charges may include the payment or reimbursement
of all or a portion of ticket charges. Ticket
charges are fees charged to salespersons purchasing through a
financial intermediary firm in connection with mutual fund
purchases, redemptions, or exchanges. The payment or
reimbursement of ticket charges creates an incentive for
salespersons of an intermediary to sell shares of Janus funds
over shares of funds for which there is
25
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Janus
Investment Fund
lesser or no payment or reimbursement of any applicable ticket
charge. Janus Capital and its affiliates consider a number of
factors in making payments to financial intermediaries,
including the distribution capabilities of the intermediary, the
overall quality of the relationship, expected gross and/or net
sales generated by the relationship, redemption and retention
rates of assets held through the intermediary, the willingness
of the intermediary to cooperate with Janus Capitals
marketing efforts, access to sales personnel, and the
anticipated profitability of sales through the institutional
relationship. These factors may change from time to time.
Currently, these payments are limited to the top 100
distributors (measured by sales or expected sales of shares of
the Janus funds). Broker-dealer firms currently receiving or
expected to receive these fees are listed in the SAI.
In addition, for all share classes, Janus Capital, Janus
Distributors, or their affiliates may pay fees, from their own
assets, to brokerage firms, banks, financial advisors,
retirement plan service providers, and other financial
intermediaries for providing other marketing or
distribution-related services, as well as recordkeeping,
subaccounting, transaction processing, and other shareholder or
administrative services (including payments for processing
transactions via NSCC or other means) in connection with
investments in the Janus funds. These fees are in addition to
any fees that may be paid by the Janus funds for these types of
services or other services.
Janus Capital or its affiliates may also share certain marketing
expenses with intermediaries, or pay for or sponsor
informational meetings, seminars, client awareness events,
support for marketing materials, sales reporting, or business
building programs for such intermediaries to raise awareness of
the Fund. Janus Capital or its affiliates may make payments to
participate in intermediary marketing support programs which may
provide Janus Capital or its affiliates with one or more of the
following benefits: attendance at sales conferences,
participation in meetings or training sessions, access to or
information about intermediary personnel, use of an
intermediarys marketing and communication infrastructure,
fund analysis tools, business planning and strategy sessions
with intermediary personnel, information on industry- or
platform-specific developments, trends and service providers,
and other marketing-related services. Such payments may be in
addition to, or in lieu of, the payments described above. These
payments are intended to promote the sales of Janus funds and to
reimburse financial intermediaries, directly or indirectly, for
the costs that they or their salespersons incur in connection
with educational seminars, meetings, and training efforts about
the Janus funds to enable the intermediaries and their
salespersons to make suitable recommendations, provide useful
services, and maintain the necessary infrastructure to make the
Janus funds available to their customers.
The receipt of (or prospect of receiving) payments,
reimbursements and other forms of compensation described above
may provide a financial intermediary and its salespersons with
an incentive to favor sales of Janus funds shares over
sales of other mutual funds (or non-mutual fund investments) or
to favor sales of one class of Janus funds shares over
sales of another Janus funds share class, with respect to
which the financial intermediary does not receive such payments
or receives them in a lower amount. The receipt of these
payments may cause certain financial intermediaries to elevate
the prominence of the Janus funds within such financial
intermediarys organization by, for example, placement on a
list of preferred or recommended funds and/or the provision of
preferential or enhanced opportunities to promote the Janus
funds in various ways within such financial intermediarys
organization.
From time to time, certain financial intermediaries approach
Janus Capital to request that Janus Capital make contributions
to certain charitable organizations. In these cases, Janus
Capitals contribution may result in the financial
intermediary, or its salespersons, recommending Janus funds over
other mutual funds (or non-mutual fund investments).
The payment arrangements described above will not change the
price an investor pays for Shares nor the amount that a Janus
fund receives to invest on behalf of the investor. You should
consider whether such arrangements exist when evaluating any
recommendations from an intermediary to purchase or sell Shares
of the Fund and, if applicable, when considering which share
class of the Fund is most appropriate for you. Please contact
your financial intermediary or plan sponsor for details on such
arrangements.
PURCHASES
With the exception of Class I Shares, purchases of Shares may
generally be made only through institutional channels such as
financial intermediaries and retirement platforms. Class I
Shares may be purchased directly with the Fund in certain
circumstances as described in the Minimum Investment
Requirements section. Contact your financial intermediary,
a Janus representative
(1-800-333-1181)
if you hold Class I Shares directly with Janus, or refer to your
plan documents for information on how to invest in the Fund,
including additional information on minimum initial or
subsequent investment
26
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Janus
Investment Fund
requirements. Under certain circumstances, the Fund may permit
an
in-kind
purchase of Shares at the discretion of Janus Capital. Your
financial intermediary may charge you a separate or additional
fee for processing purchases of Shares. Only certain financial
intermediaries are authorized to receive purchase orders on the
Funds behalf. As discussed under Payments to
financial intermediaries by Janus Capital or its
affiliates, Janus Capital and its affiliates may make
payments to brokerage firms or other financial intermediaries
that were instrumental in the acquisition or retention of
shareholders for the Fund or that provide services in connection
with investments in the Fund. You should consider such
arrangements when evaluating any recommendation of the Fund.
The Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase order,
including exchange purchases, for any reason. The Fund is not
intended for excessive trading. For more information about the
Funds policy on excessive trading, refer to
Excessive Trading.
In compliance with the Uniting and Strengthening America by
Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct
Terrorism Act of 2001 (USA PATRIOT Act), your
financial intermediary is required to verify certain information
on your account application as part of its Anti-Money Laundering
Program. You will be required to provide your full name, date of
birth, social security number, and permanent street address to
assist in verifying your identity. You may also be asked to
provide documents that may help to establish your identity.
Until verification of your identity is made, your financial
intermediary may temporarily limit additional share purchases.
In addition, your financial intermediary may close an account if
they are unable to verify a shareholders identity. Please
contact your financial intermediary if you need additional
assistance when completing your application or additional
information about the intermediarys Anti-Money Laundering
Program.
In an effort to ensure compliance with this law, Janus
Anti-Money Laundering Program (the Program) provides
for the development of internal practices, procedures and
controls, designation of anti-money laundering compliance
officers, an ongoing training program, and an independent audit
function to determine the effectiveness of the Program.
Minimum
Investment Requirements
Class A
Shares, Class C Shares, Class S Shares, and
Class T Shares
The minimum investment is $2,500 per Fund account for
non-retirement accounts and $500 per Fund account for
certain tax-deferred accounts or UGMA/UTMA accounts. Investors
in a defined contribution plan through a third party
administrator should refer to their plan document or contact
their plan administrator for additional information. In
addition, accounts held through certain wrap programs may not be
subject to these minimums. Investors should refer to their
intermediary for additional information.
The maximum purchase in Class C Shares is $500,000 for any
single purchase. The sales charge and expense structure of
Class A Shares may be more advantageous for investors
purchasing more than $500,000 of Fund shares.
Class I
Shares
The minimum investment is $1 million for institutional
investors investing directly with Janus. Institutional investors
generally may meet the minimum investment amount by aggregating
multiple accounts within the Fund. Accounts offered through an
intermediary institution must meet the minimum investment
requirements of $2,500 per Fund account for non-retirement
accounts and $500 per Fund account for certain tax-deferred
accounts or UGMA/UTMA accounts. Directors, officers, and
employees of Janus Capital Group Inc. (JCGI) and its
affiliates, as well as Trustees and officers of the Fund, may
purchase Class I Shares through certain financial
intermediaries institutional platforms. For more
information about this program and eligibility requirements,
please contact a Janus representative at
1-800-333-1181.
Exceptions to these minimums may apply for certain tax-deferred,
tax-qualified and retirement plans, and accounts held through
certain wrap programs. For additional information, contact your
intermediary, plan sponsor, administrator, or a Janus
representative, as applicable.
Class N
Shares
Investors in a retirement plan through a third party
administrator should refer to their plan documents or contact
their plan administrator for information regarding account
minimums.
Class A
Shares, Class C Shares, Class S Shares, Class I
Shares, and Class T Shares
The Fund reserves the right to annually request that
intermediaries close Fund accounts that are valued at less than
$100, other than as a result solely of depreciation in share
value. Certain accounts held through intermediaries may not be
subject to closure due to the policies of the intermediaries.
You may receive written notice from your intermediary to
increase your account balance to the required minimum to avoid
having your account closed. If you hold Class I Shares
directly with the
27
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Janus
Investment Fund
Fund, you may receive written notice prior to the closure of
your Fund account so that you may increase your account balance
to the required minimum. Please note that you may incur a tax
liability as a result of a redemption.
The Fund reserves the right to change the amount of these
minimums or maximums from time to time or to waive them in whole
or in part.
Systematic
Purchase Plan
You may arrange for periodic purchases by authorizing your
financial intermediary (or a Janus representative, if you hold
Class I Shares directly with the Fund) to withdraw the
amount of your investment from your bank account on a day or
days you specify. Not all financial intermediaries offer this
plan. Contact your financial intermediary or a Janus
representative for details.
Initial
Sales Charge
Class A
Shares
An initial sales charge may apply to your purchase of Class A
Shares of the Fund based on the amount invested, as set forth in
the table below. The sales charge is allocated between Janus
Distributors and your financial intermediary. Sales charges, as
expressed as a percentage of offering price and as a percentage
of your net investment, are shown in the table. The dollar
amount of your initial sales charge is calculated as the
difference between the public offering price and the net asset
value of those shares. Since the offering price is calculated to
two decimal places using standard rounding criteria, the number
of shares purchased and the dollar amount of your sales charge
as a percentage of the offering price and of your net investment
may be higher or lower than the amounts set forth in the table
depending on whether there was a downward or upward rounding.
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Class A Shares
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Class A Shares
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Sales Charge as a
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Sales Charge as a
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Percentage of
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Percentage of
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Amount of Purchase at Offering Price
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Offering
Price
(1)
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Net Amount Invested
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Under $50,000
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5.75
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%
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6.10
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%
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$50,000 but under $100,000
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4.50
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%
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4.71
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%
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$100,000 but under $250,000
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3.50
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%
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3.63
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%
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$250,000 but under $500,000
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2.50
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%
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2.56
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%
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$500,000 but under $1,000,000
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2.00
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%
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2.04
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%
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$1,000,000 and above
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None
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(2)
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None
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(1)
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Offering Price includes the initial sales charge.
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(2)
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A contingent deferred sales charge of 1.00% may apply to Class A
Shares purchased without an initial sales charge if redeemed
within 12 months of purchase.
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For purchases of Class A Shares of $1,000,000 or greater,
from its own assets, Janus Distributors may pay financial
intermediaries commissions as follows:
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1.00% on amounts from $1,000,000 to $4,000,000;
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plus 0.50% on amounts greater than $4,000,000 to $10,000,000;
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plus 0.25% on amounts over $10,000,000.
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The purchase totals eligible for these commissions are
aggregated on a rolling one year basis so that the rate payable
resets to the highest rate annually.
Qualifying
for a Reduction or Waiver of Class A Shares Sales
Charge
You may be able to lower your Class A Shares sales charge
under certain circumstances. For example, you can combine
Class A Shares and Class C Shares you already own
(either in this Fund or certain other Janus funds) with your
current purchase of Class A Shares of the Fund and certain
other Janus funds (including Class C Shares of those funds)
to take advantage of the breakpoints in the sales charge
schedule as set forth above. Certain circumstances under which
you may combine such ownership of Shares and purchases are
described below. Contact your financial intermediary for more
information.
28
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Janus
Investment Fund
Class A Shares of the Fund may be purchased without an
initial sales charge by the following persons (and their spouses
and children under 21 years of age): (i) registered
representatives and other employees of intermediaries that have
selling agreements with Janus Distributors to sell Class A
Shares; (ii) directors, officers, and employees of JCGI and
its affiliates; and (iii) Trustees and officers of the
Trust. In addition, the initial sales charge may be waived on
purchases of Class A Shares through financial
intermediaries that have entered into an agreement with Janus
Distributors that allows the waiver of the sales charge.
In order to obtain a sales charge discount, you should inform
your financial intermediary of other accounts in which there are
Fund holdings eligible to be aggregated to meet a sales charge
breakpoint. These other accounts may include the accounts
described under Aggregating Accounts. You may need
to provide documents such as account statements or confirmation
statements to prove that the accounts are eligible for
aggregation. The Letter of Intent described below requires
historical cost information in certain circumstances. You should
retain records necessary to show the price you paid to purchase
Fund shares, as the Fund, its agents, or your financial
intermediary may not retain this information.
Right of Accumulation.
You may purchase
Class A Shares of the Fund at a reduced sales charge
determined by aggregating the dollar amount of the new purchase
(measured by the offering price) and the total prior days
net asset value (net amount invested) of all Class A Shares
of the Fund and of certain other classes (Class A Shares
and Class C Shares of the Trust) of Janus funds then held
by you, or held in accounts identified under Aggregating
Accounts, and applying the sales charge applicable to such
aggregate amount. In order for your purchases and holdings to be
aggregated for purposes of qualifying for such discount, they
must have been made through one financial intermediary and you
must provide sufficient information to your financial
intermediary at the time of purchase to permit verification that
the purchase qualifies for the reduced sales charge. The right
of accumulation is subject to modification or discontinuance at
any time with respect to all shares purchased thereafter.
Letter of Intent.
You may obtain a reduced
sales charge on Class A Shares by signing a Letter of
Intent indicating your intention to purchase $50,000 or more of
Class A Shares (including Class A Shares in other
series of the Trust) over a
13-month
period. The term of the Letter of Intent will commence upon the
date you sign the Letter of Intent. You must refer to such
Letter when placing orders. With regard to a Letter of Intent,
the amount of investment for purposes of applying the sales load
schedule includes (i) the historical cost (what you
actually paid for the shares at the time of purchase, including
any sales charges) of all Class A Shares acquired during
the term of the Letter of Intent, minus (ii) the value of
any redemptions of Class A Shares made during the term of
the Letter of Intent. Each investment made during the period
receives the reduced sales charge applicable to the total amount
of the investment goal. A portion of shares purchased may be
held in escrow to pay for any sales charge that may be
applicable. If the goal is not achieved within the period, you
must pay the difference between the sales charges applicable to
the purchases made and the charges previously paid, or an
appropriate number of escrowed shares will be redeemed. Please
contact your financial intermediary to obtain a Letter of Intent
application.
Aggregating Accounts.
To take advantage of
lower Class A Shares sales charges on large purchases or
through the exercise of a Letter of Intent or right of
accumulation, investments made by you, your spouse, and your
children under age 21 may be aggregated if made for your
own account(s) and/or certain other accounts such as:
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trust accounts established by the above individuals (or the
accounts of the primary beneficiary of the trust if the person
who established the trust is deceased);
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solely controlled business accounts; and
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single participant retirement plans.
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To receive a reduced sales charge under rights of accumulation
or a Letter of Intent, you must notify your financial
intermediary of any eligible accounts that you, your spouse, and
your children under age 21 have at the time of your
purchase.
You may access information regarding sales loads, breakpoint
discounts, and purchases of the Funds shares, free of
charge, and in a clear and prominent format, on our website at
janus.com/breakpoints,
and by following the appropriate hyperlinks to the specific
information.
29
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Janus
Investment Fund
Commission
on Class C Shares
Janus Distributors may compensate your financial intermediary at
the time of sale at a commission rate of 1.00% of the net asset
value of the Class C Shares purchased. Service providers to
qualified plans or other financial intermediaries will not
receive this amount if they receive
12b-1
fees
from the time of initial investment of assets in Class C
Shares.
EXCHANGES
Contact your financial intermediary, a Janus representative
(1-800-333-1181)
if you hold Class I Shares directly with the Fund, or
consult your plan documents to exchange into other funds in the
Trust. Be sure to read the prospectus of the fund into which you
are exchanging. An exchange from one fund to another is
generally a taxable transaction (except for certain tax-deferred
accounts).
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You may generally exchange Shares of the Fund for Shares of the
same class of any other fund in the Trust offered through your
financial intermediary or qualified plan.
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You may also exchange shares of one class for another class of
shares within the same fund, provided the eligibility
requirements of the class of shares to be received are met.
Same-fund
exchanges will only be processed in instances where there is no
contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) on the
shares to be exchanged and no initial sales charge on the shares
to be received. The Funds fees and expenses differ between
share classes. Please read the Prospectus for the share class
you are interested in prior to investing in that share class.
Contact your financial intermediary or consult your plan
documents for additional information.
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You must meet the minimum investment amount for each fund.
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The exchange privilege is not intended as a vehicle for
short-term or excessive trading. The Fund may suspend or
terminate your exchange privilege if you make more than one
round trip in the Fund in a
90-day
period and may bar future purchases in the Fund or any of the
other Janus funds. The Fund will work with intermediaries to
apply the Funds exchange limit. However, the Fund may not
always have the ability to monitor or enforce the trading
activity in such accounts. For more information about the
Funds policy on excessive trading, refer to
Excessive Trading.
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The Fund reserves the right to reject any exchange request and
to modify or terminate the exchange privilege at any time.
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Waiver
of Sales Charges
Class A Shares received through an exchange of Class A
Shares of another fund of the Trust will not be subject to any
initial sales charge of the Funds Class A Shares.
Class A Shares or Class C Shares received through an
exchange of Class A Shares or Class C Shares,
respectively, of another fund of the Trust will not be subject
to any applicable CDSC at the time of the exchange. Any CDSC
applicable to redemptions of Class A Shares or Class C
Shares will continue to be measured on the Shares received by
exchange from the date of your original purchase. For more
information about the CDSC, please refer to
Redemptions. While Class C Shares do not have
any front-end sales charges, their higher annual fund operating
expenses mean that over time, you could end up paying more than
the equivalent of the maximum allowable front-end sales charge.
REDEMPTIONS
Redemptions, like purchases, may generally be effected only
through financial intermediaries, retirement platforms, and by
certain direct institutional investors holding Class I
Shares. Please contact your financial intermediary, a Janus
representative
(1-800-333-1181)
if you hold Class I Shares directly with the Fund, or refer
to the appropriate plan documents for details. Your
financial intermediary may charge a processing or service fee in
connection with the redemption of Shares.
Shares of the Fund may be redeemed on any business day on which
the Funds NAV is calculated. Redemptions are duly
processed at the NAV next calculated after your redemption order
is received in good order by the Fund or its agents. Redemption
proceeds, less any applicable CDSC for Class A Shares or Class C
Shares, will normally be sent the business day following receipt
of the redemption order.
The Fund reserves the right to postpone payment of redemption
proceeds for up to seven calendar days. Additionally, the right
to require the Fund to redeem its Shares may be suspended,
or the date of payment may be postponed beyond seven calendar
days, whenever: (i) trading on the NYSE is restricted, as
determined by the SEC, or the NYSE is closed (except for
holidays and weekends); (ii) the SEC permits such
suspension and so orders; or (iii) an emergency exists as
determined by the SEC so that disposal of securities or
determination of NAV is not reasonably practicable.
30
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Janus
Investment Fund
The Fund reserves the right to annually request that
intermediaries close Fund accounts that are valued at less than
$100, other than as a result solely of depreciation in share
value. Certain accounts held through intermediaries may not be
subject to closure due to the policies of the intermediaries.
You may receive written notice from your intermediary to
increase your account balance to the required minimum to avoid
having your account closed. If you hold Class I Shares
directly with the Fund, you may receive written notice prior to
the closure of your Fund account so that you may increase your
account balance to the required minimum. Please note that you
may incur a tax liability as a result of a redemption.
Large
Shareholder Redemptions
Certain accounts or Janus affiliates may from time to time own
(beneficially or of record) or control a significant percentage
of the Funds Shares. Redemptions by these accounts of
their holdings in the Fund may impact the Funds liquidity
and NAV. These redemptions may also force the Fund to sell
securities, which may negatively impact the Funds
brokerage costs.
Redemptions
In-Kind
Shares normally will be redeemed for cash, although the Fund
retains the right to redeem some or all of its shares
in-kind
under unusual circumstances, in order to protect the interests
of remaining shareholders, to accommodate a request by a
particular shareholder that does not adversely affect the
interests of the remaining shareholders, or in connection with
the liquidation of a fund, by delivery of securities selected
from its assets at its discretion. However, the Fund is required
to redeem shares solely for cash up to the lesser of $250,000 or
1% of the NAV of the Fund during any
90-day
period for any one shareholder. Should redemptions by any
shareholder exceed such limitation, the Fund will have the
option of redeeming the excess in cash or in-kind. In-kind
payment means payment will be made in portfolio securities
rather than cash. If this occurs, the redeeming shareholder
might incur brokerage or other transaction costs to convert the
securities to cash, whereas such costs are borne by the
Fund for cash redemptions.
While the Fund may pay redemptions in-kind, the Fund may instead
choose to raise cash to meet redemption requests through the
sale of fund securities or permissible borrowings. If the Fund
is forced to sell securities at an unfavorable time
and/or
under
unfavorable conditions, such sales may adversely affect the
Funds NAV and may increase brokerage costs.
Systematic
Withdrawal Plan
Class A
Shares and Class C Shares
You may arrange for periodic redemptions of Class A Shares
or Class C Shares by authorizing your financial
intermediary to redeem a specified amount from your account on a
day or days you specify. Any resulting CDSC may be waived
through financial intermediaries that have entered into an
agreement with Janus Distributors. The maximum annual rate at
which shares subject to a CDSC may be redeemed, pursuant to a
systematic withdrawal plan, without paying a CDSC, is 12% of the
net asset value of the account. Certain other terms and minimums
may apply. Not all financial intermediaries offer this plan.
Contact your financial intermediary for details.
Class S
Shares, Class I Shares, Class N Shares, and
Class T Shares
You may arrange for periodic redemptions by authorizing your
financial intermediary (or a Janus representative, if you hold
Class I Shares directly with the Fund) to redeem a
specified amount from your account on a day or days you specify.
Not all financial intermediaries offer this plan. Contact your
financial intermediary or a Janus representative for details.
Contingent
Deferred Sales Charge
Class A
Shares and Class C Shares
A 1.00% CDSC may be deducted with respect to Class A
Shares purchased without an initial sales charge if redeemed
within 12 months of purchase, unless any of the CDSC
waivers listed apply. A 1.00% CDSC will be deducted with respect
to Class C Shares redeemed within 12 months of
purchase, unless a CDSC waiver applies. The CDSC will be based
on the lower of the original purchase price or the value of the
redemption of the Class A Shares or Class C Shares
redeemed, as applicable.
CDSC
Waivers
There are certain cases in which you may be exempt from a CDSC
charged to Class A Shares and Class C Shares. Among
others, these include:
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Upon the death or disability of an account owner;
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Retirement plans and certain other accounts held through a
financial intermediary that has entered into an agreement with
Janus Distributors to waive CDSCs for such accounts;
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31
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Janus
Investment Fund
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Retirement plan shareholders taking required minimum
distributions;
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The redemption of Class A Shares or Class C Shares
acquired through reinvestment of Fund dividends or distributions;
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The portion of the redemption representing appreciation as a
result of an increase in NAV above the total amount of payments
for Class A Shares or Class C Shares during the period
during which the CDSC applied; or
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If the Fund chooses to liquidate or involuntarily redeem shares
in your account.
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To keep the CDSC as low as possible, Class A Shares or
Class C Shares not subject to any CDSC will be redeemed
first, followed by shares held longest.
Reinstatement
Privilege
After you have redeemed Class A Shares, you have a one-time
right to reinvest the proceeds into Class A Shares of the same
or another fund within 90 days of the redemption date at
the current NAV (without an initial sales charge). You will not
be reimbursed for any CDSC paid on your redemption of
Class A Shares.
EXCESSIVE
TRADING
Excessive Trading Policies and Procedures
The Trustees have adopted policies and procedures with respect
to short-term and excessive trading of Fund shares
(excessive trading). The Fund is intended for
long-term investment purposes only, and the Fund will take
reasonable steps to attempt to detect and deter short-term and
excessive trading. Transactions placed in violation of the
Funds exchange limits or excessive trading policies may be
cancelled or revoked by the Fund by the next business day
following receipt by the Fund. The trading history of accounts
determined to be under common ownership or control within any of
the Janus funds may be considered in enforcing these policies
and procedures. As described below, however, the Fund may not be
able to identify all instances of excessive trading or
completely eliminate the possibility of excessive trading. In
particular, it may be difficult to identify excessive trading in
certain omnibus accounts and other accounts traded through
intermediaries. By their nature, omnibus accounts, in which
purchases and redemptions of the Funds shares by multiple
investors are aggregated by the intermediary and presented to
the Fund on a net basis, may effectively conceal the identity of
individual investors and their transactions from the Fund and
its agents. This makes the elimination of excessive trading in
the accounts impractical without the assistance of the
intermediary.
The Fund attempts to deter excessive trading through at least
the following methods:
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exchange limitations as described under Exchanges;
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trade monitoring; and
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fair valuation of securities as described under Pricing of
Fund Shares.
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Generally, a purchase and redemption of Shares from the Fund
(i.e., round trip) within 90 calendar days may
result in enforcement of the Funds excessive trading
policies and procedures with respect to future purchase orders,
provided that the Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase
request as explained above.
The Fund monitors for patterns of shareholder frequent trading
and may suspend or permanently terminate the exchange privilege
of any investor who makes more than one round trip in the Fund
over a
90-day
period, and may bar future purchases into the Fund and any of
the other Janus funds by such investor. The Funds
excessive trading policies generally do not apply to (i) a
money market fund, although money market funds at all times
reserve the right to reject any purchase request (including
exchange purchases) for any reason without prior notice;
(ii) transactions in the Janus funds by a Janus fund
of funds, which is a fund that primarily invests in other
Janus mutual funds; and (iii) identifiable transactions by
certain funds of funds and asset allocation programs to realign
portfolio investments with existing target allocations.
The Funds Trustees may approve from time to time a
redemption fee to be imposed by any Janus fund, subject to
60 days notice to shareholders of that fund.
Investors who place transactions through the same financial
intermediary on an omnibus basis may be deemed part of a group
for the purpose of the Funds excessive trading policies
and procedures and may be rejected in whole or in part by the
Fund. The Fund, however, cannot always identify or reasonably
detect excessive trading that may be facilitated by financial
intermediaries or made difficult to identify through the use of
omnibus accounts by those intermediaries that transmit purchase,
exchange, and redemption orders to the Fund, and thus the Fund
may have difficulty curtailing such activity.
32
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Janus
Investment Fund
Transactions accepted by a financial intermediary in violation
of the Funds excessive trading policies may be cancelled
or revoked by the Fund by the next business day following
receipt by the Fund.
In an attempt to detect and deter excessive trading in omnibus
accounts, the Fund or its agents may require intermediaries to
impose restrictions on the trading activity of accounts traded
through those intermediaries. Such restrictions may include, but
are not limited to, requiring that trades be placed by U.S.
mail, prohibiting future purchases by investors who have
recently redeemed Fund shares, requiring intermediaries to
report information about customers who purchase and redeem large
amounts, and similar restrictions. The Funds ability to
impose such restrictions with respect to accounts traded through
particular intermediaries may vary depending on the
systems capabilities, applicable contractual and legal
restrictions, and cooperation of those intermediaries.
Certain transactions in Fund shares, such as periodic
rebalancing through intermediaries (no more frequently than
every 60 days) or those which are made pursuant to
systematic purchase, exchange, or redemption programs generally
do not raise excessive trading concerns and normally do not
require application of the Funds methods to detect and
deter excessive trading.
The Fund also reserves the right to reject any purchase request
(including exchange purchases) by any investor or group of
investors for any reason without prior notice, including, in
particular, if the trading activity in the account(s) is deemed
to be disruptive to the Fund. For example, the Fund may refuse a
purchase order if the Funds portfolio managers believe
they would be unable to invest the money effectively in
accordance with the Funds investment policies or the Fund
would otherwise be adversely affected due to the size of the
transaction, frequency of trading, or other factors.
The Funds policies and procedures regarding excessive
trading may be modified at any time by the Funds Trustees.
Excessive
Trading Risks
Excessive trading may present risks to the Funds long-term
shareholders. Excessive trading into and out of the Fund may
disrupt portfolio investment strategies, may create taxable
gains to remaining Fund shareholders, and may increase Fund
expenses, all of which may negatively impact investment returns
for all remaining shareholders, including long-term shareholders.
Funds that invest in foreign securities may be at a greater risk
for excessive trading. Investors may attempt to take advantage
of anticipated price movements in securities held by a fund
based on events occurring after the close of a foreign market
that may not be reflected in the funds NAV (referred to as
price arbitrage). Such arbitrage opportunities may
also arise in funds which do not invest in foreign securities,
for example, when trading in a security held by a fund is halted
and does not resume prior to the time the fund calculates its
NAV (referred to as stale pricing). Funds that hold
thinly-traded securities, such as certain small-capitalization
securities, may be subject to attempted use of arbitrage
techniques. To the extent that the Funds valuation of a
security differs from the securitys market value,
short-term arbitrage traders may dilute the NAV of the Fund,
which negatively impacts long-term shareholders. Although the
Fund has adopted fair valuation policies and procedures intended
to reduce the Funds exposure to price arbitrage, stale
pricing, and other potential pricing inefficiencies, under such
circumstances there is potential for short-term arbitrage trades
to dilute the value of Fund shares.
Although the Fund takes steps to detect and deter excessive
trading pursuant to the policies and procedures described in
this Prospectus and approved by the Trustees, there is no
assurance that these policies and procedures will be effective
in limiting excessive trading in all circumstances. For example,
the Fund may be unable to completely eliminate the possibility
of excessive trading in certain omnibus accounts and other
accounts traded through intermediaries. Omnibus accounts may
effectively conceal the identity of individual investors and
their transactions from the Fund and its agents. This makes the
Funds identification of excessive trading transactions in
the Fund through an omnibus account difficult and makes the
elimination of excessive trading in the account impractical
without the assistance of the intermediary. Although the Fund
encourages intermediaries to take necessary actions to detect
and deter excessive trading, some intermediaries may be unable
or unwilling to do so, and accordingly, the Fund cannot
eliminate completely the possibility of excessive trading.
Shareholders that invest through an omnibus account should be
aware that they may be subject to the policies and procedures of
their financial intermediary with respect to excessive trading
in the Fund.
33
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Janus
Investment Fund
AVAILABILITY
OF PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS INFORMATION
The Mutual Fund Holdings Disclosure Policies and Procedures
adopted by Janus Capital and all mutual funds managed within the
Janus fund complex are designed to be in the best interests of
the funds and to protect the confidentiality of the funds
portfolio holdings. The following describes policies and
procedures with respect to disclosure of portfolio holdings.
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Full Holdings.
The Fund is required to
disclose its complete holdings in the quarterly holdings report
on
Form N-Q
within 60 days of the end of the first and third fiscal
quarters, and in the annual report and semiannual report to Fund
shareholders. These reports (i) are available on the
SECs website at
http://www.sec.gov;
(ii) may be reviewed and copied at the SECs Public
Reference Room in Washington, D.C. (information on the Public
Reference Room may be obtained by calling
1-800-SEC-0330);
and (iii) are available without charge, upon request, by
calling a Janus representative at
1-800-525-0020
(toll free). Portfolio holdings consisting of at least the names
of the holdings are generally available on a calendar
quarter-end basis with a
30-day
lag.
Holdings are generally posted approximately two business days
thereafter under Full Holdings for the Fund at
janus.com/info.
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The Fund may provide, upon request, historical full holdings on
a monthly basis for periods prior to the previous quarter-end
subject to a written confidentiality agreement.
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Top Holdings.
The Funds top portfolio
holdings, in order of position size and as a percentage of the
Funds total portfolio, are available monthly with a
15-day
lag
and on a calendar quarter-end basis with a
15-day
lag.
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Other Information.
The Fund may occasionally
provide security breakdowns (e.g., industry, sector,
regional, market capitalization, and asset allocation), top
performance contributors/detractors (consisting of security
names in alphabetical order), and specific portfolio level
performance attribution information and statistics monthly with
a
15-day
lag
and on a calendar quarter-end basis with a
15-day
lag.
Top performance contributors/detractors provided at calendar
quarter-end may include the percentage of
contribution/detraction to Fund performance.
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Full portfolio holdings will remain available on the Janus
websites at least until a
Form N-CSR
or
Form N-Q
is filed with the SEC for the period that includes the date as
of which the website information is current. Funds disclose
their short positions, if applicable, only to the extent
required in regulatory reports. Janus Capital may exclude from
publication on its websites all or any portion of portfolio
holdings or change the time periods of disclosure as deemed
necessary to protect the interests of the Janus funds. Under
extraordinary circumstances, exceptions to the Mutual
Fund Holdings Disclosure Policies and Procedures may be
made by Janus Capitals Chief Investment Officer(s) or
their delegates. Such exceptions may be made without prior
notice to shareholders. A summary of the Funds portfolio
holdings disclosure policies and procedures, which includes a
discussion of any exceptions, is contained in the Funds
SAI.
SHAREHOLDER
COMMUNICATIONS
Your financial intermediary or plan sponsor (or Janus, if you
hold Class I Shares directly with the Fund) is responsible
for sending you periodic statements of all transactions, along
with trade confirmations and tax reporting, as required by
applicable law.
Your financial intermediary or plan sponsor (or Janus, if you
hold Class I Shares directly with the Fund) is responsible
for providing annual and semiannual reports, including the
financial statements of the Fund. These reports show the
Funds investments and the market value of such
investments, as well as other information about the Fund and its
operations. Please contact your financial intermediary or plan
sponsor (or Janus, if you hold Class I Shares directly with
the Fund) to obtain these reports. The Funds fiscal year
ends September 30.
34
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Janus
Investment Fund
Financial
highlights
No financial highlights are presented for the Fund since the
Fund is new.
35
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Janus
Investment Fund
Glossary
of investment terms
This glossary provides a more detailed description of some of
the types of securities, investment strategies, and other
instruments in which the Fund may invest, as well as some
general investment terms. The Fund may invest in these
instruments to the extent permitted by its investment objective
and policies. The Fund is not limited by this discussion and may
invest in any other types of instruments not precluded by the
policies discussed elsewhere in this Prospectus.
EQUITY
AND DEBT SECURITIES
Average-Weighted Effective Maturity
is a measure
of a bonds maturity. The stated maturity of a bond is the
date when the issuer must repay the bonds entire principal
value to an investor. Some types of bonds may also have an
effective maturity that is shorter than the stated
date due to prepayment or call provisions. Securities without
prepayment or call provisions generally have an effective
maturity equal to their stated maturity. Average-weighted
effective maturity is calculated by averaging the effective
maturity of bonds held by a Fund with each effective maturity
weighted according to the percentage of net assets
that it represents.
Bank loans
include institutionally-traded floating
and fixed-rate debt securities generally acquired as a
participation interest in or assignment of a loan originated by
a lender or financial institution. Assignments and
participations involve credit, interest rate, and liquidity
risk. Interest rates on floating rate securities adjust with
interest rate changes and/or issuer credit quality. If a Fund
purchases a participation interest, it may only be able to
enforce its rights through the lender and may assume the credit
risk of both the borrower and the lender. Additional risks are
involved in purchasing assignments. If a loan is foreclosed, a
Fund may become part owner of any collateral securing the loan
and may bear the costs and liabilities associated with owning
and disposing of any collateral. The Fund could be held liable
as a
co-lender.
In addition, there is no assurance that the liquidation of any
collateral from a secured loan would satisfy a borrowers
obligations or that any collateral could be liquidated. A Fund
may have difficulty trading assignments and participations to
third parties or selling such securities in secondary markets,
which in turn may affect the Funds NAV.
Bonds
are debt securities issued by a company,
municipality, government, or government agency. The issuer of a
bond is required to pay the holder the amount of the loan (or
par value of the bond) at a specified maturity and to make
scheduled interest payments.
Certificates of Participation (COPs)
are certificates representing an interest in a pool of
securities. Holders are entitled to a proportionate interest in
the underlying securities. Municipal lease obligations are often
sold in the form of COPs. Refer to Municipal lease
obligations below.
Commercial paper
is a short-term debt obligation
with a maturity ranging from 1 to 270 days issued by banks,
corporations, and other borrowers to investors seeking to invest
idle cash. A Fund may purchase commercial paper issued in
private placements under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended (the 1933 Act).
Common stocks
are equity securities representing
shares of ownership in a company and usually carry voting rights
and earn dividends. Unlike preferred stock, dividends on common
stock are not fixed but are declared at the discretion of the
issuers board of directors.
Convertible securities
are preferred stocks or
bonds that pay a fixed dividend or interest payment and are
convertible into common stock at a specified price or conversion
ratio.
Debt securities
are securities representing money
borrowed that must be repaid at a later date. Such securities
have specific maturities and usually a specific rate of interest
or an original purchase discount.
Depositary receipts
are receipts for shares of a
foreign-based corporation that entitle the holder to dividends
and capital gains on the underlying security. Receipts include
those issued by domestic banks (American Depositary Receipts),
foreign banks (Global or European Depositary Receipts), and
broker-dealers (depositary shares).
Duration
is the time it will take investors to
recoup their investment in a bond. Unlike average maturity,
duration reflects both principal and interest payments.
Generally, the higher the coupon rate on a bond, the lower its
duration will be. The duration of a bond portfolio is calculated
by averaging the duration of bonds held by a Fund with each
duration weighted according to the percentage of net
assets that it represents. Because duration accounts for
interest payments, a Funds duration is usually shorter
than its average maturity.
36
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Investment Fund
Equity securities
generally include domestic and
foreign common stocks; preferred stocks; securities convertible
into common stocks or preferred stocks; warrants to purchase
common or preferred stocks; and other securities with equity
characteristics.
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
are
index-based investment companies which hold substantially all of
their assets in securities with equity characteristics. As a
shareholder of another investment company, a Fund would bear its
pro rata portion of the other investment companys
expenses, including advisory fees, in addition to the expenses
the Fund bears directly in connection with its own operations.
Fixed-income securities
are securities that pay a
specified rate of return. The term generally includes short- and
long-term government, corporate, and municipal obligations that
pay a specified rate of interest, dividends, or coupons for a
specified period of time. Coupon and dividend rates may be fixed
for the life of the issue or, in the case of adjustable and
floating rate securities, for a shorter period.
High-yield/high-risk bonds
are bonds that are
rated below investment grade by the primary rating agencies
(i.e., BB+ or lower by Standard & Poors and
Fitch, or Ba or lower by Moodys). Other terms commonly
used to describe such bonds include lower rated
bonds, non-investment grade bonds, and
junk bonds.
Industrial development bonds
are revenue bonds
that are issued by a public authority but which may be backed
only by the credit and security of a private issuer and may
involve greater credit risk. Refer to Municipal
securities below.
Mortgage- and asset-backed securities
are shares
in a pool of mortgages or other debt instruments. These
securities are generally pass-through securities, which means
that principal and interest payments on the underlying
securities (less servicing fees) are passed through to
shareholders on a pro rata basis. These securities involve
prepayment risk, which is the risk that the underlying mortgages
or other debt may be refinanced or paid off prior to their
maturities during periods of declining interest rates. In that
case, a Fund may have to reinvest the proceeds from the
securities at a lower rate. Potential market gains on a security
subject to prepayment risk may be more limited than potential
market gains on a comparable security that is not subject to
prepayment risk.
Mortgage dollar rolls
are transactions in which a
Fund sells a mortgage-related security, such as a security
issued by Government National Mortgage Association, to a dealer
and simultaneously agrees to purchase a similar security (but
not the same security) in the future at a predetermined price. A
dollar roll can be viewed as a collateralized
borrowing in which a Fund pledges a mortgage-related security to
a dealer to obtain cash.
Municipal lease obligations
are revenue bonds
backed by leases or installment purchase contracts for property
or equipment. Lease obligations may not be backed by the issuing
municipalitys credit and may involve risks not normally
associated with general obligation bonds and other revenue
bonds. For example, their interest may become taxable if the
lease is assigned and the holders may incur losses if the issuer
does not appropriate funds for the lease payments on an annual
basis, which may result in termination of the lease and possible
default.
Municipal securities
are bonds or notes issued by
a U.S. state or political subdivision. A municipal security
may be a general obligation backed by the full faith and credit
(i.e., the borrowing and taxing power) of a municipality or a
revenue obligation paid out of the revenues of a designated
project, facility, or revenue source.
Pass-through securities
are shares or certificates
of interest in a pool of debt obligations that have been
repackaged by an intermediary, such as a bank or broker-dealer.
Passive foreign investment companies
(PFICs)
are any foreign corporations which
generate certain amounts of passive income or hold certain
amounts of assets for the production of passive income. Passive
income includes dividends, interest, royalties, rents, and
annuities. To avoid taxes and interest that a Fund must pay if
these investments are profitable, the Fund may make various
elections permitted by the tax laws. These elections could
require that a Fund recognize taxable income, which in turn must
be distributed, before the securities are sold and before cash
is received to pay the distributions.
Pay-in-kind bonds
are debt securities that
normally give the issuer an option to pay cash at a coupon
payment date or give the holder of the security a similar bond
with the same coupon rate and a face value equal to the amount
of the coupon payment that would have been made.
Preferred stocks
are equity securities that
generally pay dividends at a specified rate and have preference
over common stock in the payment of dividends and liquidation.
Preferred stock generally does not carry voting rights.
37
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Janus
Investment Fund
Real estate investment trust (REIT)
is
an investment trust that operates through the pooled capital of
many investors who buy its shares. Investments are in direct
ownership of either income property or mortgage loans.
Rule 144A securities
are securities that are
not registered for sale to the general public under the 1933
Act, but that may be resold to certain institutional investors.
Standby commitment
is a right to sell a specified
underlying security or securities within a specified period of
time and at an exercise price equal to the amortized cost of the
underlying security or securities plus accrued interest, if any,
at the time of exercise, that may be sold, transferred, or
assigned only with the underlying security or securities. A
standby commitment entitles the holder to receive same day
settlement, and will be considered to be from the party to whom
the investment company will look for payment of the exercise
price.
Step coupon bonds
are high-quality issues with
above-market interest rates and a coupon that increases over the
life of the bond. They may pay monthly, semiannual, or annual
interest payments. On the date of each coupon payment, the
issuer decides whether to call the bond at par, or whether to
extend it until the next payment date at the new coupon rate.
Strip bonds
are debt securities that are stripped
of their interest (usually by a financial intermediary) after
the securities are issued. The market value of these securities
generally fluctuates more in response to changes in interest
rates than interest-paying securities of comparable maturity.
Tender option bonds
are relatively long-term bonds
that are coupled with the option to tender the securities to a
bank, broker-dealer, or other financial institution at periodic
intervals and receive the face value of the bond. This
investment structure is commonly used as a means of enhancing a
securitys liquidity.
U.S. Government securities
include direct
obligations of the U.S. Government that are supported by
its full faith and credit. Treasury bills have initial
maturities of less than one year, Treasury notes have initial
maturities of one to ten years, and Treasury bonds may be issued
with any maturity but generally have maturities of at least ten
years. U.S. Government securities also include indirect
obligations of the U.S. Government that are issued by
federal agencies and government sponsored entities. Unlike
Treasury securities, agency securities generally are not backed
by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. Some
agency securities are supported by the right of the issuer to
borrow from the Treasury, others are supported by the
discretionary authority of the U.S. Government to purchase
the agencys obligations, and others are supported only by
the credit of the sponsoring agency.
Variable and floating rate securities
have
variable or floating rates of interest and, under certain
limited circumstances, may have varying principal amounts.
Variable and floating rate securities pay interest at rates that
are adjusted periodically according to a specified formula,
usually with reference to some interest rate index or market
interest rate (the underlying index). The floating
rate tends to decrease the securitys price sensitivity to
changes in interest rates.
Warrants
are securities, typically issued with
preferred stock or bonds, which give the holder the right to buy
a proportionate amount of common stock at a specified price. The
specified price is usually higher than the market price at the
time of issuance of the warrant. The right may last for a
period of years or indefinitely.
Zero coupon bonds
are debt securities that do not
pay regular interest at regular intervals, but are issued at a
discount from face value. The discount approximates the total
amount of interest the security will accrue from the date of
issuance to maturity. The market value of these securities
generally fluctuates more in response to changes in interest
rates than interest-paying securities.
FUTURES,
OPTIONS, AND OTHER DERIVATIVES
Credit default swaps
are a specific kind of
counterparty agreement that allows the transfer of third party
credit risk from one party to the other. One party in the swap
is a lender and faces credit risk from a third party, and the
counterparty in the credit default swap agrees to insure this
risk in exchange for regular periodic payments.
Derivatives
are financial instruments whose
performance is derived from the performance of another asset
(stock, bond, commodity, currency, interest rate or market
index). Types of derivatives can include, but are not limited to
options, forward contracts, swaps, and futures contracts.
Equity-linked structured notes
are derivative
securities which are specially designed to combine the
characteristics of one or more underlying securities and their
equity derivatives in a single note form. The return and/or
yield or income component
38
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Janus
Investment Fund
may be based on the performance of the underlying equity
securities, an equity index, and/or option positions.
Equity-linked structured notes are typically offered in limited
transactions by financial institutions in either registered or
non-registered form. An investment in equity-linked notes
creates exposure to the credit risk of the issuing financial
institution, as well as to the market risk of the underlying
securities. There is no guaranteed return of principal with
these securities, and the appreciation potential of these
securities may be limited by a maximum payment or call right. In
certain cases, equity-linked notes may be more volatile and less
liquid than less complex securities or other types of
fixed-income securities. Such securities may exhibit price
behavior that does not correlate with other fixed-income
securities.
Equity swaps
involve the exchange by two parties
of future cash flow (e.g., one cash flow based on a
referenced interest rate and the other based on the performance
of stock or a stock index).
Forward contracts
are contracts to purchase or
sell a specified amount of a financial instrument for an agreed
upon price at a specified time. Forward contracts are not
currently exchange-traded and are typically negotiated on an
individual basis. A Fund may enter into forward currency
contracts for investment purposes or to hedge against declines
in the value of securities denominated in, or whose value is
tied to, a currency other than the U.S. dollar or to reduce the
impact of currency appreciation on purchases of such securities.
It may also enter into forward contracts to purchase or sell
securities or other financial indices.
Futures contracts
are contracts that obligate the
buyer to receive and the seller to deliver an instrument or
money at a specified price on a specified date. A Fund may buy
and sell futures contracts on foreign currencies, securities,
and financial indices including indices of U.S. Government,
foreign government, equity, or fixed-income securities. A Fund
may also buy options on futures contracts. An option on a
futures contract gives the buyer the right, but not the
obligation, to buy or sell a futures contract at a specified
price on or before a specified date. Futures contracts and
options on futures are standardized and traded on designated
exchanges.
Indexed/structured securities
are typically short-
to intermediate-term debt securities whose value at maturity or
interest rate is linked to currencies, interest rates, equity
securities, indices, commodity prices, or other financial
indicators. Such securities may be positively or negatively
indexed (e.g., their value may increase or decrease if the
reference index or instrument appreciates). Indexed/structured
securities may have return characteristics similar to direct
investments in the underlying instruments and may be more
volatile than the underlying instruments. A Fund bears the
market risk of an investment in the underlying instruments, as
well as the credit risk of the issuer.
Interest rate swaps
involve the exchange by two
parties of their respective commitments to pay or receive
interest (e.g., an exchange of floating rate payments for fixed
rate payments).
Inverse floaters
are debt instruments whose
interest rate bears an inverse relationship to the interest rate
on another instrument or index. For example, upon reset, the
interest rate payable on the inverse floater may go down when
the underlying index has risen. Certain inverse floaters may
have an interest rate reset mechanism that multiplies the
effects of change in the underlying index. Such mechanism may
increase the volatility of the securitys market value.
Options
are the right, but not the obligation, to
buy or sell a specified amount of securities or other assets on
or before a fixed date at a predetermined price. A Fund may
purchase and write put and call options on securities,
securities indices, and foreign currencies. A Fund may purchase
or write such options individually or in combination.
Participatory notes
are derivative securities
which are linked to the performance of an underlying Indian
security and which allow investors to gain market exposure to
Indian securities without trading directly in the local Indian
market.
Total return swaps
involve an exchange by two
parties in which one party makes payments based on a set rate,
either fixed or variable, while the other party makes payments
based on the return of an underlying asset, which includes both
the income it generates and any capital gains over the payment
period.
OTHER
INVESTMENTS, STRATEGIES, AND/OR TECHNIQUES
Cash sweep program
is an arrangement in which a
Funds uninvested cash balance is used to purchase shares
of affiliated or non-affiliated money market funds or cash
management pooled investment vehicles at the end of each day.
Diversification
is a classification given to a
fund under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the
1940 Act). Funds are classified as either
diversified or nondiversified. To be
classified as diversified under the 1940 Act, a fund
39
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Janus
Investment Fund
may not, with respect to 75% of its total assets, invest more
than 5% of its total assets in any issuer and may not own more
than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of an issuer. A
fund that is classified as nondiversified under the
1940 Act, on the other hand, has the flexibility to take larger
positions in a smaller number of issuers than a fund that is
classified as diversified. However, because the
appreciation or depreciation of a single security may have a
greater impact on the net asset value of a fund which is
classified as nondiversified, its share price can be expected to
fluctuate more than a comparable fund which is classified as
diversified.
Industry concentration
for purposes under the 1940
Act is the investment of 25% or more of a Funds total
assets in an industry or group of industries.
Leverage
is when a Fund increases its assets
available for investment using borrowings or similar
transactions. Because short sales involve borrowing securities
and then selling them, a Funds short sales effectively
leverage the Funds assets. The use of leverage may make
any change in a Funds NAV even greater and thus result in
increased volatility of returns. A Funds assets that are
used as collateral to secure the short sales may decrease in
value while the short positions are outstanding, which may force
the Fund to use its other assets to increase the collateral.
Leverage also creates interest expense that may lower a
Funds overall returns.
Market capitalization
is the most commonly used
measure of the size and value of a company. It is computed by
multiplying the current market price of a share of the
companys stock by the total number of its shares
outstanding. Market capitalization is an important investment
criterion for certain funds, while others do not emphasize
investments in companies of any particular size.
Net long
is a term used to describe when a
Funds assets committed to long positions exceed those
committed to short positions.
Repurchase agreements
involve the purchase of a
security by a Fund and a simultaneous agreement by the seller
(generally a bank or dealer) to repurchase the security from the
Fund at a specified date or upon demand. This technique offers a
method of earning income on idle cash. These securities involve
the risk that the seller will fail to repurchase the security,
as agreed. In that case, a Fund will bear the risk of market
value fluctuations until the security can be sold and may
encounter delays and incur costs in liquidating the security.
Reverse repurchase agreements
involve the sale of
a security by a Fund to another party (generally a bank or
dealer) in return for cash and an agreement by the Fund to buy
the security back at a specified price and time. This technique
will be used primarily to provide cash to satisfy unusually high
redemption requests, or for other temporary or emergency
purposes.
Short sales
in which a Fund may engage may be
either short sales against the box or other short
sales. Short sales against the box involve selling short a
security that a Fund owns, or the Fund has the right to obtain
the amount of the security sold short at a specified date in the
future. A Fund may also enter into a short sale to hedge against
anticipated declines in the market price of a security or to
reduce portfolio volatility. If the value of a security sold
short increases prior to the scheduled delivery date, the Fund
loses the opportunity to participate in the gain. For short
sales, the Fund will incur a loss if the value of a security
increases during this period because it will be paying more for
the security than it has received from the purchaser in the
short sale. If the price declines during this period, a Fund
will realize a short-term capital gain. Although a Funds
potential for gain as a result of a short sale is limited to the
price at which it sold the security short less the cost of
borrowing the security, its potential for loss is theoretically
unlimited because there is no limit to the cost of replacing the
borrowed security.
When-issued, delayed delivery, and forward commitment
transactions
generally involve the purchase of a
security with payment and delivery at some time in the
future i.e., beyond normal settlement. A Fund
does not earn interest on such securities until settlement and
bears the risk of market value fluctuations in between the
purchase and settlement dates. New issues of stocks and bonds,
private placements, and U.S. Government securities may be
sold in this manner.
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Investment Fund
This page intentionally left blank.
You can make inquiries and request
other information, including a Statement of Additional
Information, annual report, or semiannual report (as they become
available), free of charge, by contacting your plan sponsor,
broker-dealer, or financial intermediary, or by contacting a
Janus representative at 1-877-335-2687. The Funds
Statement of Additional Information and most recent annual and
semiannual reports are also available, free of charge, at
janus.com/info.
Additional information about the Funds investments is
available in the Funds annual and semiannual reports. In
the Funds annual and semiannual reports, you will find a
discussion of the market conditions and investment strategies
that significantly affected the Funds performance during
its last fiscal period. Other information is also available from
financial intermediaries that sell Shares of the Fund.
The Statement of Additional
Information provides detailed information about the Fund and is
incorporated into this Prospectus by reference. You may review
and copy information about the Fund (including the Funds
Statement of Additional Information) at the Public Reference
Room of the SEC or get text only copies, after paying a
duplicating fee, by sending an electronic request by e-mail to
publicinfo@sec.gov or by writing to or calling the
Commissions Public Reference Section, Washington, D.C.
20549-1520
(1-202-551-8090).
Information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may
also be obtained by calling this number. You may also obtain
reports and other information about the Fund from the Electronic
Data Gathering Analysis and Retrieval (EDGAR) Database on the
SECs website at
http://www.sec.gov.
janus.com
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO
80206-4805
1-877-335-2687
The Trusts Investment Company
Act File No. is 811-1879.
6
April 1, 2013
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Class D Shares*
Ticker
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Value
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Perkins International Value Fund
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JIFDX
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Janus
Investment Fund
*CLASS
D SHARES ARE CLOSED TO NEW INVESTORS
Eliminate
Paper
Mail.
Set up e-Delivery of prospectuses, annual reports, and
statements at
janus.com/edelivery.
The Securities and
Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved of these
securities or passed on the accuracy or adequacy of this
Prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal
offense.
This Prospectus describes Perkins International Value Fund (the
Fund), a portfolio of Janus Investment Fund (the
Trust). Janus Capital Management LLC (Janus
Capital or Janus) serves as investment adviser
to the Fund. The Fund is subadvised by Perkins Investment
Management LLC (Perkins).
The Fund offers multiple classes of shares in order to meet the
needs of various types of investors. Only Class D Shares
(the Shares) are offered by this Prospectus. The
Shares are generally no longer being made available to new
investors who do not already have a direct account with the
Janus funds. The Shares are available only to investors who hold
accounts directly with the Janus funds, and to immediate family
members or members of the same household of an eligible
individual investor. The Shares are offered directly through the
Janus funds to eligible investors by calling
1-800-525-3713
or at
janus.com/individual.
The Shares are not offered through financial intermediaries.
Table
of contents
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Fund
summary
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Perkins International Value Fund
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2
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Additional
information about the Fund
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Fees and expenses
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5
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Additional investment strategies and general portfolio policies
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5
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Risks of the Fund
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9
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Management
of the Fund
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Investment adviser
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14
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Management expenses
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14
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Subadviser
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15
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Investment personnel
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15
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Other
information
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17
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Distributions
and taxes
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18
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Shareholders
manual
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Doing business with Janus
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21
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Pricing of fund shares
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24
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Administrative services fees
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25
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Payments to financial intermediaries by Janus Capital or its
affiliates
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25
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Paying for shares
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26
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Exchanges
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27
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Payment of redemption proceeds
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28
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Excessive trading
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30
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Shareholder services and account policies
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32
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Financial
highlights
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35
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Glossary
of investment terms
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36
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1
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Janus
Investment Fund
Fund
summary
Perkins International Value
Fund
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Ticker:
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JIFDX
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Class D Shares*
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* Class D Shares are closed to certain new investors.
INVESTMENT
OBJECTIVE
Perkins International Value Fund
seeks capital
appreciation.
FEES AND
EXPENSES OF THE FUND
This table describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if
you buy and hold Shares of the Fund.
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ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
(expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the
value of your investment)
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Class D
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Management Fees
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0.80%
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Other
Expenses
(1)
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3.95%
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Total Annual Fund Operating
Expenses
(2)
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4.75%
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Fee
Waiver
(2)
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3.51%
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Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses After Fee
Waiver
(2)
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1.24%
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(1)
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Since the Fund is new, Other Expenses are based on the estimated
annualized expenses that the Fund expects to incur in its
initial fiscal year.
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(2)
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Janus Capital has contractually agreed to waive the Funds
total annual fund operating expenses (excluding administrative
services fees payable pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement,
brokerage commissions, interest, dividends, taxes, acquired fund
fees and expenses, and extraordinary expenses) to 0.98% until at
least February 1, 2015. The contractual waiver may be
terminated or modified prior to this date only at the discretion
of the Board of Trustees. For a period of three years subsequent
to the Funds commencement of operations (April 1,
2013), Janus Capital may recover from the Fund fees and expenses
previously waived or reimbursed, which could then be considered
a deferral, if the Funds expense ratio, including
recovered expenses, falls below the expense limit.
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EXAMPLE:
The following Example is based on expenses without waivers.
The Example is intended to help you compare the cost of
investing in the Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual
funds. The Example assumes that you invest $10,000 in the Fund
for the time periods indicated, reinvest all dividends and
distributions, and then redeem all of your Shares at the end of
each period. The Example also assumes that your investment has a
5% return each year and that the Funds operating expenses
without waivers or recoupments (if applicable) remain the same.
Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, based on
these assumptions your costs would be:
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1 Year
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3 Years
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Class D Shares
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$
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476
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$
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1,430
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Portfolio Turnover:
The Fund pays transaction costs,
such as commissions, when it buys and sells securities (or
turns over its portfolio). A higher portfolio
turnover rate may indicate higher transaction costs and may
result in higher taxes when Fund shares are held in a taxable
account. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund
operating expenses or in the Example, affect the Funds
performance.
PRINCIPAL
INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
The Fund pursues its investment objective by investing primarily
in common stocks of companies of any size located outside of the
United States, including in emerging markets. The Fund normally
invests in issuers from several different countries, but under
unusual circumstances, may invest in a single country. The Fund
may also invest in non-U.S. debt securities. In addition,
when the portfolio managers believe that market conditions are
unfavorable for investing, or when they are otherwise unable to
locate attractive investment opportunities, the Funds cash
or similar investments may increase.
The Fund focuses on companies that have fallen out of favor with
the market or that appear to be temporarily misunderstood by the
investment community. The Funds portfolio managers
generally look for companies with:
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strong balance sheets and solid recurring free cash flows
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2
ï
Perkins
International Value Fund
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attractive relative and absolute valuation ratios or that have
underperformed recently
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favorable reward to risk characteristics
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PRINCIPAL
INVESTMENT RISKS
The biggest risk is that the Funds returns will vary, and
you could lose money. The Fund is designed for long-term
investors seeking an equity portfolio, including common stocks.
Common stocks tend to be more volatile than many other
investment choices.
Foreign Exposure Risk.
The Fund normally has
significant exposure to foreign markets as a result of its
investments in foreign securities, including investments in
emerging markets, which can be more volatile than the U.S.
markets. As a result, its returns and net asset value may be
affected to a large degree by fluctuations in currency exchange
rates or political or economic conditions in a particular
country. In some foreign markets, there may not be protection
against failure by other parties to complete transactions. It
may not be possible for the Fund to repatriate capital,
dividends, interest, and other income from a particular country
or governmental entity. In addition, a market swing in one or
more countries or regions where the Fund has invested a
significant amount of its assets may have a greater effect on
the Funds performance than it would in a more
geographically diversified portfolio. To the extent the Fund
invests in foreign debt securities, such investments are
sensitive to changes in interest rates. The Funds
investments in emerging market countries may involve risks
greater than, or in addition to, the risks of investing in more
developed countries.
Emerging Markets Risk.
The risks of foreign
investing mentioned above are heightened when investing in
emerging markets. Emerging markets securities involve a number
of additional risks, which may result from less government
supervision and regulation of business and industry practices
(including the potential lack of strict finance and accounting
controls and standards), stock exchanges, brokers, and listed
companies, making these investments potentially more volatile in
price and less liquid than investments in developed securities
markets, resulting in greater risk to investors. There is a risk
in developing countries that a future economic or political
crisis could lead to price controls, forced mergers of
companies, expropriation or confiscatory taxation, imposition or
enforcement of foreign ownership limits, seizure,
nationalization, or creation of government monopolies, any of
which may have a detrimental effect on the Funds
investments. In addition, the Funds investments may be
denominated in foreign currencies and therefore, changes in the
value of a countrys currency compared to the
U.S. dollar may affect the value of the Funds
investments. To the extent that the Fund invests a significant
portion of its assets in the securities of issuers in or
companies of a single country or region, it is more likely to be
impacted by events or conditions affecting that country or
region, which could have a negative impact on the Funds
performance.
Value Investing Risk.
Because different types
of stocks tend to shift in and out of favor depending on market
and economic conditions, value stocks may perform
differently than other types of stocks and from the market as a
whole, and can continue to be undervalued by the market for long
periods of time. It is also possible that a value stock will
never appreciate to the extent expected by the Funds
portfolio managers. When the Funds investments in cash or
similar investments increase due to a lack of favorable
investment opportunities or other extraordinary factors, the
Fund may not participate in market advances or declines to the
same extent that it would if the Fund had been fully invested.
Market Risk.
The value of the Funds
portfolio may decrease if the value of an individual company or
security, or multiple companies or securities, in the portfolio
decreases or if the portfolio managers belief about a
companys intrinsic worth is incorrect. Further, regardless
of how well individual companies or securities perform, the
value of the Funds portfolio could also decrease if there
are deteriorating economic or market conditions. It is important
to understand that the value of your investment may fall,
sometimes sharply, in response to changes in the market, and you
could lose money.
An investment in the Fund is not a bank deposit and is not
insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation or any other government agency.
PERFORMANCE
INFORMATION
The Fund does not have a full calendar year of operations.
Performance information for certain periods will be included in
the Funds first annual and/or semiannual report.
3
ï
Perkins
International Value Fund
MANAGEMENT
Investment Adviser:
Janus Capital Management LLC
Investment Subadviser:
Perkins Investment Management
LLC
Portfolio Managers: Tadd H. Chessen
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of the Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception.
J. Christian Kirtley
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of the Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception.
Gregory R. Kolb
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of the Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception.
PURCHASE
AND SALE OF FUND SHARES
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Minimum Investment Requirements
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To open a new regular Fund account
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$
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2,500
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To open a new UGMA/UTMA account, Coverdell Education Savings
Account, or a retirement Fund account
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without an automatic investment program
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$
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1,000
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with an automatic investment program of
$100 per month
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$
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500
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To add to any existing type of Fund account
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$
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100
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You may generally purchase, exchange, or redeem Fund Shares on
any business day by written request, wire transfer, telephone,
and in most cases, online at
janus.com/individual.
You may conduct transactions by mail (Janus,
P.O. Box 55932, Boston, MA
02205-5932),
or by telephone at
1-800-525-3713.
Purchase, exchange, or redemption requests must be received in
good order by the Fund or its agents prior to the close of the
regular trading session of the New York Stock Exchange in order
to receive that days net asset value. For additional
information, refer to To Open an Account or Buy
Shares, To Exchange Shares, and/or To
Sell Shares in the Prospectus.
TAX
INFORMATION
The Funds distributions are taxable, and will be taxed as
ordinary income or capital gains, unless you are investing
through a tax-deferred arrangement, such as a 401(k) plan or an
individual retirement account.
PAYMENTS
TO BROKER-DEALERS AND OTHER FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES
With respect to certain other classes of shares, the Fund and
its related companies may pay select broker-dealer firms or
other financial intermediaries for the sale of Fund shares and
related services. These payments may create a conflict of
interest by influencing a broker-dealer or other intermediary or
a salesperson to recommend the Fund over another investment or
to recommend one share class over another.
4
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Perkins
International Value Fund
Additional
information about the Fund
FEES AND
EXPENSES
Please refer to the following important information when
reviewing the Fees and Expenses of the Fund table in
the Fund Summary of the Prospectus.
The fees and expenses
shown for Perkins International Value Fund reflect estimated
annualized expenses that the Shares expect to incur during the
Funds initial fiscal year.
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Annual Fund Operating Expenses are paid out of the
Funds assets and include fees for portfolio management and
administrative services, including recordkeeping, accounting,
and other shareholder services, as well as reimbursement to
Janus Capital of its out-of-pocket costs for services as
administrator. You do not pay these fees directly but, as the
Example in the Fund Summary shows, these costs are borne
indirectly by all shareholders.
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The Management Fee is the investment advisory fee
rate paid by the Fund to Janus Capital. Refer to
Management Expenses in this Prospectus for
additional information with further description in the Statement
of Additional Information (SAI).
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Other Expenses
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○
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include an administrative services fee of 0.12% of the average
daily net assets of Class D Shares for shareholder services
provided by Janus Services LLC (Janus Services), the
Funds transfer agent.
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○
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may include reimbursement to Janus Services of its out-of-pocket
costs for arranging for the provision by third parties of
certain servicing to shareholders.
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Janus Capital has contractually agreed to waive the Funds
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses to a certain
limit until at least February 1, 2015. The expense limit is
described in the Management Expenses section of this
Prospectus.
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All expenses in the Funds Fees and Expenses of the
Fund table are shown without the effect of expense offset
arrangements. Pursuant to such arrangements, credits realized as
a result of uninvested cash balances are used to reduce
custodian and transfer agent expenses.
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ADDITIONAL
INVESTMENT STRATEGIES AND GENERAL PORTFOLIO POLICIES
The Funds Board of Trustees (Trustees) may
change the Funds investment objective or non-fundamental
principal investment strategies without a shareholder vote. The
Fund will notify you in writing at least 60 days before making
any such change it considers material. If there is a material
change to the Funds objective or principal investment
strategies, you should consider whether the Fund remains an
appropriate investment for you. There is no guarantee that the
Fund will achieve its investment objective.
Unless otherwise stated, the following additional investment
strategies and general policies apply to the Fund and provide
further information including, but not limited to, the types of
securities the Fund may invest in when implementing its
investment objective. Some of these strategies and policies may
be part of a principal strategy. Other strategies and policies
may be utilized to a lesser extent. Except for the Funds
policies with respect to investments in illiquid securities and
borrowing, the percentage limitations included in these policies
and elsewhere in this Prospectus and/or the SAI normally apply
only at the time of purchase of a security. So, for example, if
the Fund exceeds a limit as a result of market fluctuations or
the sale of other securities, it will not be required to dispose
of any securities.
Cash
Position
The Fund may not always stay fully invested. For example, when
the portfolio managers believe that market conditions are
unfavorable for investing, or when they are otherwise unable to
locate attractive investment opportunities, the Funds cash
or similar investments may increase. In other words, cash or
similar investments generally are a residual they
represent the assets that remain after the Fund has committed
available assets to desirable investment opportunities. When the
Funds investments in cash or similar investments increase,
it may not participate in market advances or declines to the
same extent that it would if the Fund remained more fully
invested. To the extent the Fund invests its uninvested cash
through a sweep program (meaning its uninvested cash is pooled
with uninvested cash of other funds and invested in certain
securities such as repurchase agreements), it is subject to the
risks of the account or fund into which it is investing,
including liquidity issues that may delay the Fund from
accessing its cash.
In addition, the Fund may temporarily increase its cash position
under certain unusual circumstances, such as to protect its
assets or maintain liquidity in certain circumstances to meet
unusually large redemptions. The Funds cash position may
also increase temporarily due to unusually large cash inflows.
Under unusual circumstances such as these, the Fund may invest
5
ï
Janus
Investment Fund
up to 100% of its assets in cash or similar investments. In this
case, the Fund may take positions that are inconsistent with its
investment objective. As a result, the Fund may not achieve its
investment objective.
Common
Stock
The Fund may invest substantially all of its assets in common
stocks. The portfolio managers generally take a bottom
up approach to selecting companies in which to invest.
This means that they seek to identify individual companies with
earnings growth potential that may not be recognized by the
market at large. Securities are generally selected on a
security-by-security basis without regard to any predetermined
allocation among countries or geographic regions. However,
certain factors, such as expected levels of inflation,
government policies influencing business conditions, the outlook
for currency relationships, and prospects for economic growth
among countries, regions, or geographic areas, may warrant
greater consideration in selecting foreign securities. There are
no limitations on the countries in which the Fund may invest,
and the Fund may at times have significant exposure to emerging
markets. The portfolio managers may sell a holding if, among
other things, the security reaches the portfolio managers
price target, if the company has a deterioration of fundamentals
such as failing to meet key operating benchmarks, or if the
portfolio managers find a better investment opportunity. The
portfolio managers may also sell a Fund holding to meet
redemptions.
The Fund emphasizes investments in companies with attractive
prices compared to their free cash flow. The portfolio managers
will typically seek attractively valued companies that are
improving their free cash flow and improving their returns on
invested capital. A company may be considered attractively
valued when, in the opinion of the portfolio managers, shares of
the company are selling for a price that is below their
intrinsic worth (undervalued). A company may be
undervalued due to market or economic conditions, temporary
earnings declines, unfavorable developments affecting the
company, or other factors. Such factors may provide buying
opportunities at attractive prices compared to historical or
market price-earnings ratios,
price/free
cash flow, book value, or return on equity. The portfolio
managers believe that buying these securities at a price that is
below their intrinsic worth may generate greater returns for the
Fund than those obtained by paying premium prices for companies
currently in favor in the market.
Counterparties
Fund transactions involving a counterparty are subject to the
risk that the counterparty or a third party will not fulfill its
obligation to the Fund (counterparty risk).
Counterparty risk may arise because of the counterpartys
financial condition (i.e., financial difficulties, bankruptcy,
or insolvency), market activities and developments, or other
reasons, whether foreseen or not. A counterpartys
inability to fulfill its obligation may result in significant
financial loss to the Fund. The Fund may be unable to recover
its investment from the counterparty or may obtain a limited
recovery, and/or recovery may be delayed. The Fund may be
exposed to counterparty risk through participation in various
programs including, but not limited to, lending its securities
to third parties, cash sweep arrangements whereby the
Funds cash balance is invested in one or more types of
cash management vehicles, as well as investments in, but not
limited to, repurchase agreements, debt securities, and
derivatives, including various types of swaps, futures, and
options. The Fund intends to enter into financial transactions
with counterparties that Janus Capital believes to be
creditworthy at the time of the transaction. There is always the
risk that Janus Capitals analysis of a counterpartys
creditworthiness is incorrect or may change due to market
conditions. To the extent that the Fund focuses its transactions
with a limited number of counterparties, it will have greater
exposure to the risks associated with one or more counterparties.
Emerging
Markets
The Fund may invest in securities of issuers or companies from
or with exposure to one or more developing countries
or emerging markets. Such countries include, but are
not limited to, countries included in the Morgan Stanley Capital
International Emerging Markets
Index
sm
.
High-Yield/High-Risk
Bonds
A high-yield/high-risk bond (also called a junk
bond) is a bond rated below investment grade by major rating
agencies (i.e., BB+ or lower by Standard & Poors
Ratings Services (Standard & Poors)
and Fitch, Inc. (Fitch), or Ba or lower by
Moodys Investors Service, Inc. (Moodys))
or is an unrated bond of similar quality. It presents greater
risk of default (the failure to make timely interest and
principal payments) than higher quality bonds. To the extent the
Fund invests in high-yield/high-risk bonds, under normal
circumstances, the Fund will limit its investments in
high-yield/high-risk bonds to 35% or less of its net assets.
6
ï
Janus
Investment Fund
Illiquid
Investments
Although the Fund intends to invest in liquid securities, it may
invest up to 15% of its net assets in illiquid investments. An
illiquid investment is a security or other position that cannot
be disposed of quickly in the normal course of business. For
example, some securities are not registered under U.S.
securities laws and cannot be sold to the U.S. public because of
Securities and Exchange Commission regulations (these are known
as restricted securities). Under procedures adopted
by the Funds Trustees, certain restricted securities that
are determined to be liquid will not be counted toward this 15%
limit.
Portfolio
Turnover
In general, the Fund intends to purchase securities for
long-term investment, although, to a limited extent, the Fund
may purchase securities in anticipation of relatively short-term
gains. Short-term transactions may also result from liquidity
needs, securities having reached a price or yield objective,
changes in interest rates or the credit standing of an issuer,
or by reason of economic or other developments not foreseen at
the time of the initial investment decision. The Fund may also
sell one security and simultaneously purchase the same or a
comparable security to take advantage of short-term
differentials in bond yields or securities prices. Portfolio
turnover is affected by market conditions, changes in the size
of the Fund, the nature of the Funds investments, and the
investment style of the portfolio managers. Changes are normally
made in the Funds portfolio whenever the portfolio
managers believe such changes are desirable. Portfolio turnover
rates are generally not a factor in making buy and sell
decisions.
Increased portfolio turnover may result in higher costs for
brokerage commissions, dealer mark-ups, and other transaction
costs, and may also result in taxable capital gains. Higher
costs associated with increased portfolio turnover also may have
a negative effect on the Funds performance.
Real
Estate-Related Securities
The Fund may invest in equity and debt securities of real
estate-related companies. Such companies may include those in
the real estate industry or real estate-related industries.
These securities may include common stocks, preferred stocks,
and other equity securities, including, but not limited to,
mortgage-backed securities, real estate-backed securities,
securities of real estate investment trusts (REITs)
and similar REIT-like entities. A REIT is a trust that invests
in real estate-related projects, such as properties, mortgage
loans, and construction loans. REITs are generally categorized
as equity, mortgage, or hybrid REITs. A REIT may be listed on an
exchange or traded over-the-counter.
Securities
Lending
Certain funds may seek to earn additional income through lending
its securities to certain qualified broker-dealers and
institutions on a short-term or long-term basis. A fund may lend
portfolio securities on a short-term or long-term basis, in an
amount equal to up to
1
/
3
of its total assets as determined at the time of the loan
origination. When a fund lends its securities, it receives
collateral (including cash collateral), at least equal to the
value of securities loaned. A fund may earn income by investing
this collateral in one or more affiliated or non-affiliated cash
management vehicles. It is also possible that, due to a decline
in the value of a cash management vehicle, a fund may lose
money. There is also the risk that when portfolio securities are
lent, the securities may not be returned on a timely basis, and
a fund may experience delays and costs in recovering the
security or gaining access to the collateral provided to the
fund to collateralize the loan. If a fund is unable to recover a
security on loan, the fund may use the collateral to purchase
replacement securities in the market. There is a risk that the
value of the collateral could decrease below the cost of the
replacement security by the time the replacement investment is
made, resulting in a loss to a fund. Janus Capital intends to
manage the cash collateral in an affiliated cash management
vehicle and will receive an investment advisory fee for managing
such assets.
Short
Sales
Certain funds may engage in short sales. No more than 10% of a
funds net assets may be invested in short positions
(through short sales of stocks, structured products, futures,
swaps, and uncovered written calls). A fund may engage in short
sales against the box and options for hedging
purposes that are not subject to this 10% limit. A short sale is
generally a transaction in which a fund sells a security it does
not own or have the right to acquire (or that it owns but does
not wish to deliver) in anticipation that the market price of
that security will decline. To complete the transaction, the
fund must borrow the security to make delivery to the buyer. The
fund is then obligated to replace the security borrowed by
purchasing the security at the market price at the time of
replacement. A short sale is subject to the risk that if the
price of the security sold short increases in value, the fund
will incur a loss because it will have to replace the security
sold short by purchasing it at a higher price. In addition, the
fund may not always be able to close out a short position at a
particular time or at an acceptable price. A lender may request,
or market conditions may dictate, that the securities sold short
be returned to the
7
ï
Janus
Investment Fund
lender on short notice, and the fund may have to buy the
securities sold short at an unfavorable price. If this occurs at
a time that other short sellers of the same security also want
to close out their positions, it is more likely that the fund
will have to cover its short sale at an unfavorable price and
potentially reduce or eliminate any gain, or cause a loss, as a
result of the short sale. Because there is no upper limit to the
price a borrowed security may reach prior to closing a short
position, a funds losses are potentially unlimited in a
short sale transaction. A funds gains and losses will also
be decreased or increased, as the case may be, by the amount of
any dividends, interest, or expenses, including transaction
costs and borrowing fees, the fund may be required to pay in
connection with a short sale. Such payments may result in the
fund having higher expenses than a fund that does not engage in
short sales and may negatively affect the funds
performance.
A fund may also enter into short positions through derivative
instruments such as options contracts, futures contracts, and
swap agreements which may expose the fund to similar risks. To
the extent that the fund enters into short derivative positions,
the fund may be exposed to risks similar to those associated
with short sales, including the risk that the funds losses
are theoretically unlimited.
Due to certain foreign countries restrictions, a fund will
not be able to engage in short sales in certain foreign
countries where it may maintain long positions. As a result, a
funds ability to fully implement a short selling strategy
that could otherwise help the fund pursue its investment goals
may be limited. There can be no assurance that the
implementation of a short sale strategy will be successful.
Special
Situations
The Fund may invest in companies that demonstrate special
situations or turnarounds, meaning companies that have
experienced significant business problems but are believed to
have favorable prospects for recovery. For example, a special
situation or turnaround may arise when, in the opinion of the
portfolio managers, the securities of a particular issuer will
be recognized as undervalued by the market and appreciate in
value due to a specific development with respect to that issuer.
Special situations may include significant changes in a
companys allocation of its existing capital, a
restructuring of assets, or a redirection of free cash flow. For
example, issuers undergoing significant capital changes may
include companies involved in spin-offs, sales of divisions,
mergers or acquisitions, companies involved in bankruptcy
proceedings, or companies initiating large changes in their debt
to equity ratio. Companies that are redirecting cash flows may
be reducing debt, repurchasing shares, or paying dividends.
Special situations may also result from: (i) significant
changes in industry structure through regulatory developments or
shifts in competition; (ii) a new or improved product,
service, operation, or technological advance; (iii) changes
in senior management or other extraordinary corporate event;
(iv) differences in market supply of and demand for the
security; or (v) significant changes in cost structure.
Investments in special situations companies can
present greater risks than investments in companies not
experiencing special situations, and the Funds performance
could be adversely impacted if the securities selected decline
in value or fail to appreciate in value.
Swap
Agreements
The Fund may utilize swap agreements as a means to gain exposure
to certain common stocks
and/or
to
hedge or protect its portfolio from adverse
movements in securities prices, the rate of inflation, or
interest rates. Swaps may also be used for capital appreciation.
Swap agreements are two-party contracts to exchange one set of
cash flows for another. Swap agreements entail the risk that a
party will default on its payment obligations to the Fund. If
the other party to a swap defaults, the Fund would risk the loss
of the net amount of the payments that it contractually is
entitled to receive. If the Fund utilizes a swap at the wrong
time or judges market conditions incorrectly, the swap may
result in a loss to the Fund and reduce the Funds total
return. Various types of swaps such as credit default, equity,
interest rate, and total return swaps are described in the
Glossary of Investment Terms.
Other
Types of Investments
Unless otherwise stated within its specific investment policies,
the Fund may also invest in other types of domestic and foreign
securities and use other investment strategies, as described in
the Glossary of Investment Terms. These securities
and strategies are not principal investment strategies of the
Fund. If successful, they may benefit the Fund by earning a
return on the Funds assets or reducing risk; however, they
may not achieve the Funds investment objective. These
securities and strategies may include:
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debt securities (such as bonds, notes, and debentures)
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exchange-traded funds
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preferred stocks and securities convertible into common stocks
or preferred stocks
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Investment Fund
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indexed/structured securities (such as mortgage- and
asset-backed securities)
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various derivative transactions including, but not limited to,
options, futures, forwards, swap agreements (such as equity,
interest rate, inflation index, credit default, and total return
swaps), participatory notes, structured notes, and other types
of derivatives individually or in combination for hedging
purposes or for nonhedging purposes such as seeking to earn
income and enhance return, to protect unrealized gains, or to
avoid realizing losses; such techniques may also be used to
adjust currency exposure relative to a benchmark index, to gain
exposure to the market pending investment of cash balances, or
to meet liquidity needs
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securities purchased on a when-issued, delayed delivery, or
forward commitment basis
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equity and fixed-income securities issued in private placement
transactions
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RISKS OF
THE FUND
The value of your investment will vary over time, sometimes
significantly, and you may lose money by investing in the Fund.
To varying degrees, the Fund may invest in stocks, fixed-income
securities, alternative strategy investments, and money market
instruments or cash/cash equivalents. The following information
is intended to help you better understand some of the risks of
investing in the Fund. The impact of the following risks on the
Fund may vary depending on the Funds investments. The
greater the Funds investment in a particular security, the
greater the Funds exposure to the risks associated with
that security. Before investing in the Fund, you should consider
carefully the risks that you assume when investing in the Fund.
Derivatives Risk.
Derivatives can be highly
volatile and involve risks in addition to the risks of the
underlying referenced securities. Gains or losses from a
derivative can be substantially greater than the
derivatives original cost, and can therefore involve
leverage. Derivatives can be complex instruments and may involve
analysis that differs from that required for other investment
types used by the Fund. If the value of a derivative does not
correlate well with the particular market or other asset class
to which the derivative is intended to provide exposure, the
derivative may not produce the anticipated result. Derivatives
can also reduce the opportunity for gain or result in losses by
offsetting positive returns in other investments. Derivatives
can be less liquid than other types of investments and entail
the risk that the counterparty will default on its payment
obligations. If the counterparty to a derivative transaction
defaults, the Fund would risk the loss of the net amount of the
payments that it contractually is entitled to receive. To the
extent the Fund enters into short derivative positions, the Fund
may be exposed to risks similar to those associated with short
sales, including the risk that the Funds losses are
theoretically unlimited.
Emerging Markets Risk.
The Fund may invest in
securities of issuers or companies from or with exposure to one
or more developing countries or emerging
markets. Such countries include, but are not limited to,
countries included in the Morgan Stanley Capital International
Emerging Markets
Index
sm
.
To the extent that the Fund invests a significant amount of its
assets in one or more of these countries, its returns and net
asset value may be affected to a large degree by events and
economic conditions in such countries. The risks of foreign
investing are heightened when investing in emerging markets,
which may result in the price of investments in emerging markets
experiencing sudden and sharp price swings. In many developing
markets, there is less government supervision and regulation of
business and industry practices (including the potential lack of
strict finance and accounting controls and standards), stock
exchanges, brokers, and listed companies than in more developed
markets, making these investments potentially more volatile in
price and less liquid than investments in developed securities
markets, resulting in greater risk to investors. There is a risk
in developing countries that a future economic or political
crisis could lead to price controls, forced mergers of
companies, expropriation or confiscatory taxation, imposition or
enforcement of foreign ownership limits, seizure,
nationalization, or creation of government monopolies, any of
which may have a detrimental effect on the Funds
investments. The securities markets of many of these countries
may also be smaller, less liquid, and subject to greater price
volatility than those in the United States. In the event of a
default on any investments in foreign debt obligations, it may
be more difficult for the Fund to obtain or to enforce a
judgment against the issuers of such securities. In addition,
the Funds investments may be denominated in foreign
currencies and therefore, changes in the value of a
countrys currency compared to the U.S. dollar may affect
the value of the Funds investments. To the extent that the
Fund invests a significant portion of its assets in the
securities of issuers in or companies of a single country or
region, it is more likely to be impacted by events or conditions
affecting that country or region, which could have a negative
impact on the Funds performance. The Fund may be subject
to emerging markets risk to the extent that it invests
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Investment Fund
in securities of issuers or companies which are not considered
to be from emerging markets, but which have customers, products,
or transactions associated with emerging markets.
Foreign Exposure Risks.
The Fund will invest
in foreign debt and equity securities either indirectly
(e.g., depositary receipts, depositary shares, and passive
foreign investment companies) or directly in foreign markets,
including emerging markets. Investments in foreign securities,
including securities of foreign and emerging markets
governments, may involve greater risks than investing in
domestic securities because the Funds performance may
depend on factors other than the performance of a particular
company. These factors include:
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Currency Risk.
As long as the Fund holds a
foreign security, its value will be affected by the value of the
local currency relative to the U.S. dollar. When the Fund
sells a foreign currency denominated security, its value may be
worth less in U.S. dollars even if the security increases
in value in its home country. U.S. dollar-denominated
securities of foreign issuers may also be affected by currency
risk, as the value of these securities may also be affected by
changes in the issuers local currency.
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Political and Economic Risk.
Foreign
investments may be subject to heightened political and economic
risks, particularly in emerging markets which may have
relatively unstable governments, immature economic structures,
national policies restricting investments by foreigners, social
instability, and different and/or developing legal systems. In
some countries, there is the risk that the government may take
over the assets or operations of a company or that the
government may impose withholding and other taxes or limits on
the removal of the Funds assets from that country. In
addition, the economies of emerging markets may be predominately
based on only a few industries, may be highly vulnerable to
changes in local or global trade conditions, and may suffer from
extreme and volatile debt burdens or inflation rates.
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Regulatory Risk.
There may be less government
supervision of foreign markets. As a result, foreign issuers may
not be subject to the uniform accounting, auditing, and
financial reporting standards and practices applicable to
domestic issuers, and there may be less publicly available
information about foreign issuers.
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Foreign Market Risk.
Foreign securities
markets, particularly those of emerging market countries, may be
less liquid and more volatile than domestic markets. These
securities markets may trade a small number of securities, may
have a limited number of issuers and a high proportion of
shares, or may be held by a relatively small number of persons
or institutions. Local securities markets may be unable to
respond effectively to increases in trading volume, potentially
making prompt liquidation of substantial holdings difficult or
impossible at times. It is also possible that certain markets
may require payment for securities before delivery, and delays
may be encountered in settling securities transactions. In some
foreign markets, there may not be protection against failure by
other parties to complete transactions. It may not be possible
for the Fund to repatriate capital, dividends, interest, and
other income from a particular country or governmental entity.
In addition, securities of issuers located in countries with
emerging markets may have limited marketability and may be
subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements which could
also have a negative effect on the Fund. Such factors may hinder
the Funds ability to buy and sell emerging market
securities in a timely manner, affecting the Funds
investment strategies and potentially affecting the value of the
Fund.
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Geographic Investment Risk.
To the extent
that the Fund invests a significant portion of its assets in a
particular country or geographic region, the Fund will generally
have more exposure to certain risks due to possible political,
economic, social, or regulatory events in that country or
region. Adverse developments in certain regions could also
adversely affect securities of other countries whose economies
appear to be unrelated and could have a negative impact on the
Funds performance.
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Transaction Costs.
Costs of buying, selling,
and holding foreign securities, including brokerage, tax, and
custody costs, may be higher than those involved in domestic
transactions.
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High-Yield/High-Risk Bond
Risk.
High-yield/high-risk bonds (or
junk bonds) are bonds rated below investment grade
by the primary rating agencies such as Standard &
Poors, Fitch, and Moodys or are unrated bonds of
similar quality. The value of lower quality bonds generally is
more dependent on credit risk than investment grade bonds.
Issuers of high-yield/high-risk bonds may not be as strong
financially as those issuing bonds with higher credit ratings
and are more vulnerable to real or perceived economic changes,
political changes, or adverse developments specific to the
issuer. In addition, the junk bond market can experience sudden
and sharp price swings.
Please refer to the Explanation of Rating Categories
section of the SAI for a description of bond rating categories.
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Investment Fund
Industry Risk.
Industry risk is the
possibility that a group of related securities will decline in
price due to industry-specific developments. Companies in the
same or similar industries may share common characteristics and
are more likely to react similarly to industry-specific market
or economic developments. The Funds investments, if any,
in multiple companies in a particular industry increase the
Funds exposure to industry risk.
Management Risk.
The Fund is an actively
managed investment portfolio and is therefore subject to the
risk that the investment strategies employed for the Fund may
fail to produce the intended results. The Fund may underperform
its benchmark index or other mutual funds with similar
investment objectives.
Because the Fund may invest substantially all of its assets in
common stocks, the main risk is the risk that the value of the
stocks it holds might decrease in response to the activities of
an individual company or in response to general market and/or
economic conditions. If this occurs, the Funds share price
may also decrease.
The Fund may use short sales, futures, options, swap agreements
(including, but not limited to, equity, interest rate, credit
default, and total return swaps), and other derivative
instruments individually or in combination to hedge
or protect its portfolio from adverse movements in securities
prices and interest rates. The Fund may also use a variety of
currency hedging techniques, including the use of forward
currency contracts, to manage currency risk. There is no
guarantee that a portfolio managers use of derivative
investments will benefit the Fund. The Funds performance
could be worse than if the Fund had not used such instruments.
Use of such investments may instead increase risk to the Fund,
rather than reduce risk.
The Funds performance may also be significantly affected,
positively or negatively, by a portfolio managers use of
certain types of investments, such as foreign (non-U.S.)
securities, non-investment grade bonds (junk bonds),
initial public offerings (IPOs), or securities of
companies with relatively small market capitalizations. Note
that a portfolio managers use of IPOs and other types of
investments may have a magnified performance impact on a fund
with a small asset base and the fund may not experience similar
performance as its assets grow.
Market Risk.
The value of the Funds
portfolio may decrease if the value of an individual company or
security, or multiple companies or securities, in the portfolio
decreases or if the portfolio managers belief about a
companys intrinsic worth is incorrect. Further, regardless
of how well individual companies or securities perform, the
value of the Funds portfolio could also decrease if there
are deteriorating economic or market conditions, including, but
not limited to, a general decline in prices on the stock
markets, a general decline in real estate markets, a decline in
commodities prices, or if the market favors different types of
securities than the types of securities in which the Fund
invests. If the value of the Funds portfolio decreases,
the Funds net asset value will also decrease, which means
if you sell your shares in the Fund you may lose money.
It is also important to note that events in both domestic and
international equity and fixed-income markets have resulted, and
may continue to result, in an unusually high degree of
volatility in the markets, with issuers that have exposure to
the real estate, mortgage, and credit markets particularly
affected. These events and the resulting market upheavals may
have an adverse effect on the Fund, such as a decline in the
value and liquidity of many securities held by the Fund,
unusually high and unanticipated levels of redemptions, an
increase in portfolio turnover, a decrease in net asset value,
and an increase in Fund expenses. Because the situation is
unprecedented and widespread, it may also be unusually difficult
to identify both investment risks and opportunities, which could
limit or preclude the Funds ability to achieve its
investment objective. It is impossible to predict whether or for
how long these conditions will continue. Therefore, it is
important to understand that the value of your investment may
fall, sometimes sharply, and you could lose money.
Further, the instability experienced in the financial markets
has resulted in the U.S. Government and various other
governmental and regulatory entities taking actions to address
the financial crisis. These actions include, but are not limited
to, the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (the Dodd-Frank Act) in July
2010 which is expected to dramatically change the way in which
the U.S. financial system is supervised and regulated. More
specifically, the Dodd-Frank Act provides for widespread
regulation of financial institutions, consumer financial
products and services, broker-dealers, over-the-counter
derivatives, investment advisers, credit rating agencies, and
mortgage lending, which expands federal oversight in the
financial sector and may affect the investment management
industry as a whole. Given the broad scope, sweeping nature, and
the fact that many provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act must be
implemented through future rulemaking, the ultimate impact of
the Dodd-Frank Act, and any resulting regulation, is not yet
certain. As a result, there can be no assurance that these
government and regulatory measures will not have an adverse
effect on the value or marketability of securities held by the
Fund, including potentially limiting or completely restricting
the ability of the Fund to use a particular investment
instrument as part of its investment strategy, increasing the
costs of using these instruments, or possibly
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Janus
Investment Fund
making them less effective in general. Furthermore, no assurance
can be made that the U.S. Government or any U.S. regulatory
entity (or other authority or regulatory entity) will not
continue to take further legislative or regulatory action in
response to the economic crisis or otherwise, and the effect of
such actions, if taken, cannot be known.
In addition, European markets have recently experienced
volatility and adverse trends due to concerns about economic
downturns, rising government debt levels, and the possible
default of government debt in several European countries,
including Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. A default
or debt restructuring by any European country would adversely
impact holders of that countrys debt and worldwide sellers
of credit default swaps linked to that countrys
creditworthiness. These trends have adversely affected the value
and exchange rate of the euro and may continue to significantly
affect the economies of all European countries, which in turn
may have a material adverse effect on the Funds
investments in such countries, other countries that depend on
European countries for significant amounts of trade or
investment, or issuers with exposure to European debt.
Real Estate Securities Risk.
To the extent it
holds equity and/or debt securities of real estate-related
companies, the Fund may be affected by the risks associated with
real estate investments. The value of securities of companies in
real estate and real estate-related industries, including
securities of REITs, is sensitive to decreases in real estate
values and rental income, property taxes, interest rates, tax
and regulatory requirements, overbuilding/supply and demand,
increased competition, local and general economic conditions,
increases in operating costs, environmental liabilities,
management skill in running a REIT, and the creditworthiness of
the REIT. In addition, mortgage REITs and mortgage-backed
securities are subject to prepayment risk. Mortgage-backed
securities comprised of subprime mortgages and investments in
other real estate-backed securities comprised of
under-performing real estate assets also may be subject to a
higher degree of credit risk, valuation risk, and liquidity
risk. If the Fund has REIT investments, the Funds
shareholders will indirectly bear their proportionate share of
the REITs expenses, in addition to their proportionate
share of the Funds expenses.
REIT Risk.
To the extent that the Fund
invests in REITs, it may be subject to the additional risks
associated with REIT investments. The ability to trade REITs in
the secondary market can be more limited compared to other
equity investments, and certain REITs have relatively small
market capitalizations, which can increase the volatility of the
market price for their securities. REITs are also subject to
heavy cash flow dependency to allow them to make distributions
to their shareholders. The prices of equity REITs are affected
by changes in the value of the underlying property owned by the
REITs and changes in capital markets and interest rates. The
prices of mortgage REITs are affected by the quality of any
credit they extend, the creditworthiness of the mortgages they
hold, as well as by the value of the property that secures the
mortgages. Equity REITs and mortgage REITs generally are not
diversified and are subject to heavy cash flow dependency,
defaults by borrowers, and self-liquidation. There is also the
risk that borrowers under mortgages held by a REIT or lessees of
a property that a REIT owns may be unable to meet their
obligations to the REIT. In the event of a default by a borrower
or lessee, the REIT may incur substantial costs associated with
protecting its investments. Certain special purpose
REITs in which the Fund may invest focus their assets in
specific real property sectors, such as hotels, shopping malls,
nursing homes, or warehouses, and are therefore subject to the
specific risks associated with adverse developments in these
sectors.
Reverse Repurchase Agreement Risk.
Reverse
repurchase agreements are transactions in which the Fund sells a
security and simultaneously commits to repurchase that security
from the buyer, such as a bank or broker-dealer, at an agreed
upon price on an agreed upon future date. The repurchase price
consists of the sale price plus an incremental amount reflecting
the interest cost to the Fund on the proceeds it has received
from the initial sale. Reverse repurchase agreements involve the
risk that the value of securities that the Fund is obligated to
repurchase under the agreement may decline below the repurchase
price. Additionally, such transactions are only advantageous if
the interest cost to the Fund of the reverse repurchase
transaction is less than the cost of obtaining the cash
otherwise. Interest costs on the proceeds received in a reverse
repurchase agreement may exceed the return received on the
investments made by the Fund with those proceeds, resulting in
reduced returns to shareholders. When the Fund enters into a
reverse repurchase agreement, it is subject to the risk that the
buyer (counterparty) may default on its obligations to the Fund.
In the event of such a default, the Fund may experience delays,
costs, and losses, all of which may reduce returns to
shareholders. Investing reverse repurchase proceeds may also
have a leveraging effect on the Funds portfolio. The
Funds use of leverage can magnify the effect of any gains
or losses, causing the Fund to be more volatile than if it had
not been leveraged. There is no assurance that any leveraging
strategy used by the Fund will be successful.
Small- and Mid-Sized Companies Risk.
The
Funds investments in securities issued by small- and
mid-sized companies, which can include smaller,
start-up
companies offering emerging products or services, may involve
greater risks than are
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Investment Fund
customarily associated with larger, more established companies.
For example, while small- and mid-sized companies may realize
more substantial growth than larger or more established issuers,
they may also suffer more significant losses as a result of
their narrow product lines, limited operating history, greater
exposure to competitive threats, limited financial resources,
limited trading markets, and the potential lack of management
depth. Securities issued by small- and mid-sized companies tend
to be more volatile and somewhat more speculative than
securities issued by larger or more established companies and
may underperform as compared to the securities of larger
companies. These holdings are also subject to wider price
fluctuations and tend to be less liquid than stocks of larger
companies, which could have a significant adverse effect on the
Funds returns, especially as market conditions change.
Sovereign Debt Risk.
The Fund may invest in
U.S. and foreign government debt securities (sovereign
debt). Investments in U.S. sovereign debt are considered
low risk. However, investments in non-U.S. sovereign debt can
involve a high degree of risk, including the risk that the
governmental entity that controls the repayment of sovereign
debt may not be willing or able to repay the principal
and/or
to
pay the interest on its sovereign debt in a timely manner. A
sovereign debtors willingness or ability to satisfy its
debt obligation may be affected by various factors, including
its cash flow situation, the extent of its foreign currency
reserves, the availability of foreign exchange when a payment is
due, the relative size of its debt position in relation to its
economy as a whole, the sovereign debtors policy toward
international lenders, and local political constraints to which
the governmental entity may be subject. Sovereign debtors may
also be dependent on expected disbursements from foreign
governments, multilateral agencies, and other entities. The
failure of a sovereign debtor to implement economic reforms,
achieve specified levels of economic performance, or repay
principal or interest when due may result in the cancellation of
third party commitments to lend funds to the sovereign debtor,
which may further impair such debtors ability or
willingness to timely service its debts. The Fund may be
requested to participate in the rescheduling of such sovereign
debt and to extend further loans to governmental entities, which
may adversely affect the Funds holdings. In the event of
default, there may be limited or no legal remedies for
collecting sovereign debt and there may be no bankruptcy
proceedings through which the Fund may collect all or part of
the sovereign debt that a governmental entity has not repaid.
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Management
of the Fund
INVESTMENT
ADVISER
Janus Capital Management LLC, 151 Detroit Street, Denver,
Colorado 80206-4805, is the investment adviser to the Fund.
Perkins is responsible for the
day-to-day
management of the Funds investment portfolio subject to
the general oversight of Janus Capital. Janus Capital also
provides certain administration and other services and is
responsible for other business affairs of the Fund.
Janus Capital (together with its predecessors) has served as
investment adviser to Janus mutual funds since 1970 and
currently serves as investment adviser to all of the Janus
funds, acts as subadviser for a number of private-label mutual
funds, and provides separate account advisory services for
institutional accounts and other unregistered products.
Janus Capital furnishes certain administration, compliance, and
accounting services for the Fund and is reimbursed by the Fund
for certain of its costs in providing those services (to the
extent Janus Capital seeks reimbursement and such costs are not
otherwise waived). In addition, employees of Janus Capital
and/or its affiliates may serve as officers of the Trust. Janus
Capital provides office space for the Fund. Some expenses
related to compensation payable to the Janus funds Chief
Compliance Officer and compliance staff are shared with the
Janus funds. The Fund also pays for salaries, fees, and expenses
of certain Janus Capital employees and Fund officers, with
respect to certain specified administration functions they
perform on behalf of the Janus funds. The Janus funds pay these
costs based on
out-of-pocket
expenses incurred by Janus Capital, and these costs are separate
and apart from advisory fees and other expenses paid in
connection with the investment advisory services Janus Capital
provides to the Fund.
MANAGEMENT
EXPENSES
The Fund pays Janus Capital an investment advisory fee and
incurs expenses, including administrative services fees payable
pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement, any other transfer
agent and custodian fees and expenses, legal and auditing fees,
printing and mailing costs of sending reports and other
information to existing shareholders, and Independent
Trustees fees and expenses. The Funds investment
advisory fee is calculated daily and paid monthly. The
Funds advisory agreement details the investment advisory
fee and other expenses that the Fund must pay. Janus Capital
pays Perkins a subadvisory fee from its investment advisory fee
for managing the Fund.
The following table reflects the Funds contractual
investment advisory fee rate (expressed as an annual rate). The
investment advisory fee rate is aggregated to include all
investment advisory fees paid by the Fund. The rate shown is a
fixed rate based on the Funds average daily net assets.
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Contractual
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Average Daily
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Investment
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Net Assets
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Advisory Fee (%)
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Fund Name
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of the Fund
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(annual rate)
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Perkins International Value
Fund
(1)
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All Asset Levels
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0.80
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(1)
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Janus Capital has agreed to waive the Funds total annual
fund operating expenses (excluding administrative services fees
payable pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement, brokerage
commissions, interest, dividends, taxes, acquired fund fees and
expenses, and extraordinary expenses) to a certain level until
at least February 1, 2015. Application of the expense
waiver and its effect on annual fund operating expenses is
reflected, when applicable, in the Fees and Expenses of
the Fund table in the Fund Summary of the Prospectus, and
additional information is included under Expense
Limitation below. The waiver is not reflected in the
contractual fee rate shown.
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A discussion regarding the basis for the Trustees approval
of the Funds investment advisory agreement and subadvisory
agreement will be included in the Funds next annual or
semiannual report to shareholders, following such approval. You
can request the Funds annual or semiannual reports (as
they become available), free of charge, by contacting a Janus
representative at
1-800-525-3713.
The reports are also available, free of charge, at
janus.com/reports.
Expense
Limitation
Janus Capital has contractually agreed to waive the advisory fee
payable by the Fund in an amount equal to the amount, if any,
that the Funds normal operating expenses in any fiscal
year, including the investment advisory fee, but excluding
administrative services fees payable pursuant to the Transfer
Agency Agreement, brokerage commissions, interest, dividends,
taxes, acquired fund fees and expenses, and extraordinary
expenses, exceed the annual rate shown below. For information
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about how the expense limit affects the total expenses of the
Fund, see the Fees and Expenses of the Fund table in
the Fund Summary of the Prospectus. Janus Capital has agreed to
continue the waiver until at least February 1, 2015.
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Fund Name
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Expense Limit Percentage (%)
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Perkins International Value
Fund
(1)
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0.98
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(1)
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For a period of three years subsequent to the Funds
commencement of operations (April 1, 2013), Janus Capital
may recover from the Fund fees and expenses previously waived or
reimbursed, which could then be considered a deferral, if the
Funds expense ratio, including recovered expenses, falls
below the expense limit.
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SUBADVISER
Perkins Investment Management LLC (Perkins)
serves as subadviser to the Fund, and has served in such
capacity since the Funds inception. Perkins (together with
its predecessors), 311 S. Wacker Drive, Suite 6000,
Chicago, Illinois 60606, has been in the investment management
business since 1984 and provides day-to-day management of the
Funds portfolio operations, as well as other mutual funds
and separate accounts. Janus Capital owns approximately 78% of
Perkins. Perkins has the option to require Janus Capital to
purchase all or part of their remaining ownership interests
following certain anniversary dates. On February 1, 2013,
Perkins exercised their rights to put 98% of their interests to
Janus Capital. The transaction is expected to close in August
2013.
INVESTMENT
PERSONNEL
Perkins
International Value Fund
Co-Portfolio Managers Tadd H. Chessen, J. Christian
Kirtley, and Gregory R. Kolb are responsible for the
day-to-day
management of the Fund, with no limitation on the authority of
any one
co-portfolio
manager in relation to the others.
Tadd H. Chessen
, CFA, is Co-Portfolio Manager
of Perkins International Value Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception. Mr. Chessen joined Perkins in May 2011 as
a research analyst covering international securities. Prior to
joining Perkins, Mr. Chessen was a partner and analyst at
Millgate Capital Inc. from 2004 to 2011. He holds a Bachelor of
Arts degree in Business from the University of Virginia, where
he graduated with Distinction, and a Master of Business
Administration with a concentration in Finance from Columbia
Business School. Mr. Chessen holds the Chartered Financial
Analyst designation.
J. Christian Kirtley
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of Perkins International Value Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception. Mr. Kirtley joined Perkins in October 2010
as a research analyst covering international securities. Prior
to joining Perkins, Mr. Kirtley was a Senior Vice President
and research analyst with Institutional Capital LLC from 2003 to
2010. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Business
Administration from the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill. Mr. Kirtley holds the Chartered Financial Analyst
designation.
Gregory R. Kolb
, CFA, is
Co-Portfolio
Manager of Perkins International Value Fund, which he has
co-managed
since inception. He is also Portfolio Manager of other Janus
accounts. Prior to joining Perkins, Mr. Kolb was Executive
Vice President and Portfolio Manager from 2005 to July 2010 at
Janus Capital. He holds a Bachelors degree in Business
Administration from Miami University (of Ohio) where he
graduated magna cum laude. Mr. Kolb holds the Chartered
Financial Analyst designation.
Information about the portfolio managers compensation
structure and other accounts managed is included in the SAI.
Conflicts
of Interest
Janus Capital and Perkins each manage many funds and numerous
other accounts, which may include separate accounts and other
pooled investment vehicles, such as hedge funds. Side-by-side
management of multiple accounts, including the management of a
cash collateral pool for securities lending and investing the
Janus funds cash, may give rise to conflicts of interest
among those accounts, and may create potential risks, such as
the risk that investment activity in one account may adversely
affect another account. For example, short sale activity in an
account could adversely affect the market value of long
positions in one or more other accounts (and vice versa).
Side-by-side management may raise additional potential conflicts
of interest relating to the allocation of investment
opportunities and the aggregation and allocation of trades.
Additionally, Janus Capital is the adviser to the Janus
funds of funds, which are funds that invest
primarily in other mutual
15
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Janus
Investment Fund
funds managed by Janus Capital. To the extent that the Fund is
an underlying fund in a Janus fund of funds, a
potential conflict of interest arises when allocating the assets
of the Janus fund of funds to the Fund. Purchases
and redemptions of fund shares by a Janus fund of
funds due to reallocations or rebalancings may result in a
fund having to sell securities or invest cash when it otherwise
would not do so. Such transactions could accelerate the
realization of taxable income if sales of securities resulted in
gains and could also increase a funds transaction costs.
Large redemptions by a Janus fund of funds may cause
a funds expense ratio to increase due to a resulting
smaller asset base. A further discussion of potential conflicts
of interest and a discussion of certain procedures intended to
mitigate such potential conflicts are contained in the
Funds SAI.
16
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Janus
Investment Fund
Other
information
DISTRIBUTION
OF THE FUND
The Fund is distributed by Janus Distributors LLC (Janus
Distributors), which is a member of the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority, Inc. (FINRA). To obtain
information about FINRA member firms and their associated
persons, you may contact FINRA at www.finra.org, or
1-800-289-9999.
17
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Janus
Investment Fund
Distributions
and taxes
DISTRIBUTIONS
To avoid taxation of the Fund, the Internal Revenue Code
requires the Fund to distribute all or substantially all of its
net investment income and any net capital gains realized on its
investments at least annually. The Funds income from
certain dividends, interest, and any net realized short-term
capital gains are paid to shareholders as ordinary income
dividends. Certain dividend income may be reported to
shareholders as qualified dividend income, which is
generally subject to reduced rates of taxation. Net realized
long-term capital gains, if any, are paid to shareholders as
capital gains distributions, regardless of how long Shares of
the Fund have been held. Distributions are made at the class
level, so they may vary from class to class within the Fund.
Distribution
Schedule
Dividends from net investment income and distributions of
capital gains are normally declared and distributed in December
but, if necessary, may be distributed at other times as well.
How
Distributions Affect the Funds NAV
Distributions are paid to shareholders as of the record date of
a distribution of the Fund, regardless of how long the shares
have been held. Undistributed dividends and net capital gains
are included in the Funds daily net asset value
(NAV). The share price of the Fund drops by the
amount of the distribution, net of any subsequent market
fluctuations. For example, assume that on December 31, the
Fund declared a dividend in the amount of $0.25 per share.
If the Funds share price was $10.00 on December 30,
the Funds share price on December 31 would be $9.75,
barring market fluctuations. You should be aware that
distributions from a taxable mutual fund do not increase the
value of your investment and may create income tax obligations.
Buying
a Dividend
If you purchase shares of the Fund just before a distribution,
you will pay the full price for the shares and receive a portion
of the purchase price back as a taxable distribution. This is
referred to as buying a dividend. In the above
example, if you bought shares on December 30, you would
have paid $10.00 per share. On December 31, the Fund
would pay you $0.25 per share as a dividend and your shares
would now be worth $9.75 per share. Unless your account is set
up as a tax-deferred account, dividends paid to you would be
included in your gross income for tax purposes, even though you
may not have participated in the increase in NAV of the Fund,
whether or not you reinvested the dividends. You should consult
with your tax adviser as to potential tax consequences of any
distributions that may be paid shortly after purchase.
For your convenience, distributions of net investment income and
net capital gains are automatically reinvested in additional
Shares of the Fund. To receive distributions in cash, contact a
Janus representative
at 1-800-525-3713.
Whether reinvested or paid in cash, the distributions may be
subject to taxes, unless your shares are held in a qualified
tax-deferred
plan or account.
DISTRIBUTION
OPTIONS
When you open an account, it will automatically provide for
reinvestment of all distributions. If you have a non-retirement
account, you may change your distribution option at any time by
logging on to
janus.com/individual,
by calling a Janus representative, or by writing to the Fund at
one of the addresses listed in the Shareholders Manual
section of this Prospectus. The Fund offers the following
options:
Reinvestment Option.
You may reinvest your income
dividends and capital gains distributions in additional shares.
Cash Option.
You may receive your income dividends
and capital gains distributions in cash.
Reinvest and Cash Option.
You may receive either
your income dividends or capital gains distributions in cash and
reinvest the other in additional shares.
Redirect Option.
You may direct your dividends or
capital gains distributions to purchase shares of another Janus
fund.
The Fund reserves the right to reinvest undeliverable and
uncashed dividend and distribution checks into your open
non-retirement account at the NAV next computed after the check
is cancelled. Subsequent distributions may also be reinvested.
For more information, refer to Distributions.
18
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Janus
Investment Fund
TAXES
As with any investment, you should consider the tax consequences
of investing in the Fund. Any time you sell or exchange shares
of a fund in a taxable account, it is considered a taxable
event. For federal income tax purposes, an exchange is treated
the same as a sale. Depending on the purchase price and the sale
price, you may have a gain or loss on the transaction; whether
the gain or loss is long-term or short-term depends on how long
you owned the shares. Any tax liabilities generated by your
transactions are your responsibility.
The following discussion does not apply to qualified
tax-deferred accounts or other non-taxable entities, nor is it a
complete analysis of the federal income tax implications of
investing in the Fund. You should consult your tax adviser if
you have any questions. Additionally, state or local taxes may
apply to your investment, depending upon the laws of your state
of residence.
Taxes
on Distributions
Distributions by the Fund are subject to federal income tax,
regardless of whether the distribution is made in cash or
reinvested in additional shares of the Fund. When gains from the
sale of a security held by the Fund are paid to shareholders,
the rate at which the gain will be taxed to shareholders depends
on the length of time the Fund held the security. In certain
states, a portion of the distributions (depending on the sources
of the Funds income) may be exempt from state and local
taxes. Individuals, trusts, and estates whose income exceeds
certain threshold amounts will be subject to a 3.8% Medicare
contribution tax on net investment income in tax years beginning
on or after January 1, 2013. Net investment income includes
dividends paid by the Fund and capital gains from any sale or
exchange of Fund shares. The Funds net investment income
and capital gains are distributed to (and may be taxable to)
those persons who are shareholders of the Fund at the record
date of such payments. Although the Funds total net income
and net realized gain are the results of its operations, the per
share amount distributed or taxable to shareholders is affected
by the number of Fund shares outstanding at the record date.
Generally, account tax information will be made available to
shareholders on or before January 31st of each year.
Information regarding distributions may also be reported to the
Internal Revenue Service.
Distributions made by the Fund with respect to Shares purchased
through a qualified retirement plan will generally be exempt
from current taxation if left to accumulate within the qualified
plan.
Generally, withdrawals from qualified plans may be subject to
federal income tax at ordinary income rates and, if made before
age
59
1
/
2
,
a 10% penalty tax may be imposed. The federal income tax status
of your investment depends on the features of your qualified
plan. For further information, please contact your tax adviser.
The Fund may be required to withhold U.S. federal income
tax on all distributions and redemptions payable to shareholders
who fail to provide their correct taxpayer identification
number, fail to make certain required certifications, or who
have been notified by the Internal Revenue Service that they are
subject to backup withholding. The current backup withholding
rate is applied.
When shareholders sell Fund shares from a taxable account, they
typically receive information on their tax forms that calculates
their gain or loss using the average cost method. Prior to
January 1, 2012, this information was not reported to the
IRS, and shareholders had the option of calculating gains or
losses using an alternative IRS permitted method. In accordance
with legislation passed by Congress in 2008, however, the Fund
began reporting cost basis information to the IRS for shares
purchased on or after January 1, 2012 and sold thereafter.
The Fund will permit shareholders to elect their preferred cost
basis method. In the absence of an election, the Fund will use
an average cost basis method. Please consult your tax adviser to
determine the appropriate cost basis method for your particular
tax situation and to learn more about how the new cost basis
reporting laws apply to you and your investments.
Taxation
of the Fund
Dividends, interest, and some capital gains received by the Fund
on foreign securities may be subject to foreign tax withholding
or other foreign taxes. If the Fund is eligible, it may from
year to year make the election permitted under Section 853
of the Internal Revenue Code to pass through such taxes to
shareholders as a foreign tax credit. If such an election is not
made, any foreign taxes paid or accrued will represent an
expense to the Fund.
Certain fund transactions may involve short sales, futures,
options, swap agreements, hedged investments, and other similar
transactions, and may be subject to special provisions of the
Internal Revenue Code that, among other things, can potentially
affect the character, amount, timing of distributions to
shareholders, and utilization of capital loss carryforwards. The
Fund
19
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Janus
Investment Fund
will monitor its transactions and may make certain tax elections
and use certain investment strategies where applicable in order
to mitigate the effect of these tax provisions, if possible.
Certain transactions or strategies utilized by the Fund may
generate nonqualified income that can impact an investors
taxes.
The Fund does not expect to pay any federal income or excise
taxes because it intends to meet certain requirements of the
Internal Revenue Code, including the distribution each year of
all its net investment income and net capital gains. It is
important that the Fund meets these requirements so that any
earnings on your investment will not be subject to federal
income taxes twice. Funds that invest in partnerships may be
subject to state tax liabilities.
20
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Janus
Investment Fund
Shareholders
manual
This Shareholders Manual is for those shareholders
investing directly with the Fund. This section will help you
become familiar with the different types of accounts you can
establish with Janus. It also explains in detail the wide array
of services and features you can establish on your account, as
well as describes account policies and fees that may apply to
your account. Account policies (including fees), services, and
features may be modified or discontinued without shareholder
approval or prior notice.
DOING
BUSINESS WITH JANUS
The Shares are generally no longer being made available to new
investors who do not already have a direct account with the
Janus funds. The Shares are available only to investors who hold
accounts directly with the Janus funds, and to immediate family
members or members of the same household of an eligible
individual investor. Under certain limited circumstances,
shareholders of other Janus share classes who no longer wish to
hold shares through an intermediary may be eligible to purchase
Class D Shares.
In addition, directors, officers, and employees of Janus Capital
Group Inc. (JCGI) and its affiliates, as well as
Trustees and officers of the Fund, may purchase Class D
Shares. Under certain circumstances, where there has been a
change in the form of ownership due to, for example, mandatory
retirement distributions, legal proceedings, estate settlements,
or the gifting of Shares, the recipient of Class D Shares
may continue to purchase Class D Shares.
The Fund offers multiple classes of shares in order to meet the
needs of various types of investors.
You should carefully
consider which class of shares to purchase. Certain classes have
higher expenses than other classes, which may lower the return
on your investment.
If you would like additional information
about the other available share classes, please call
1-800-525-3713.
Online janus.com 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week
At janus.com/individual* existing shareholders can:
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Open the following types of accounts: individual, joint,
UGMA/UTMA, Traditional and Roth IRAs, Simplified Employee
Pension (SEP) IRAs, and Coverdell Education Savings
Accounts
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Review your account or your complete portfolio
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Buy, exchange, and sell Janus funds
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View your personalized performance
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Analyze the fees associated with your investment
(www.finra.org/fundanalyzer)
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Obtain Fund information and performance
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Update personal information
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Receive electronic daily, quarterly, and year-end statements,
semiannual and annual reports, prospectuses, and tax forms
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*
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Certain account or transaction
types may be restricted from being processed through janus.com.
If you would like more information about these restrictions,
please contact a Janus representative.
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Janus XpressLine
tm
1-888-979-7737
24-hour automated phone system
Janus Representatives
1-800-525-3713
TDD
For the speech and hearing impaired.
1-800-525-0056
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Mailing Address
Janus
P.O. Box 55932
Boston, MA 02205-5932
For Overnight Mail
Janus
30 Dan Road, Suite 55932
Canton, MA
02021-2809
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21
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Janus
Investment Fund
MINIMUM
INVESTMENTS*
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To open a new regular Fund account
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$
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2,500
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To open a new UGMA/UTMA account, Coverdell Education Savings
Account, or a retirement Fund account
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without an automatic investment program
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$
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1,000
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with an automatic investment program of
$100 per month
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$
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500
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To add to any existing type of Fund account
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$
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100
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*
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The Fund reserves the right to change the amount of these
minimums from time to time or to waive them in whole or in part.
Participants in certain retirement plans, including but not
limited to, Janus prototype Money Purchase Pension and Profit
Sharing plans, SEP IRAs, SAR SEP IRAs, or outside qualified
retirement plans, may not be subject to the stated minimums.
Employees of Janus Capital, its wholly-owned subsidiaries,
INTECH, and Perkins may open Fund accounts for $100.
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Minimum
Investment Requirements
Due to the proportionately higher costs of maintaining small
accounts, the Fund reserves the right to deduct an annual $25
minimum balance fee per Fund account (paid to Janus Services)
with values below the minimums described under Minimum
Investments or to close Fund accounts valued at less than
$100. This policy may not apply to accounts that fall below the
minimums solely as a result of market value fluctuations or to
those accounts not subject to a minimum investment requirement.
The fee or account closure will occur during the fourth quarter
of each calendar year. You may receive written notice before we
charge the $25 fee or close your account so that you may
increase your account balance to the required minimum. Please
note that you may incur a tax liability as a result of the fee
being charged or the redemption.
TYPES OF
ACCOUNT OWNERSHIP
Please refer to
janus.com/individual
or an account application for specific requirements to open and
maintain an account.
Individual
or Joint Ownership
Individual accounts are owned by one person. Joint accounts have
two or more owners.
Trust
An established trust can open an account. The names of each
trustee, the name of the trust, and the date of the trust
agreement must be included on the application.
Business
Accounts
Corporations and partnerships may also open an account. The
application must be signed by an authorized officer of the
corporation or a general partner of the partnership.
TAX-DEFERRED
ACCOUNTS
Please refer to
janus.com/individual
or an account application for specific requirements to open and
maintain an account. Certain tax-deferred accounts can only be
opened and maintained via written request. Please contact a
Janus representative for more information.
If you are eligible, you may set up one or more tax-deferred
accounts. A tax-deferred account allows you to shelter your
investment income and capital gains from current income taxes. A
contribution to certain of these plans may also be tax
deductible. The types of tax-deferred accounts that may be
opened with Janus are described below. Investors should consult
their tax adviser or legal counsel before selecting a
tax-deferred account. You may initiate a rollover or a transfer
of assets from certain tax-deferred accounts via
janus.com/individual.
Investing
for Your Retirement
Please visit
janus.com/individual
or call a Janus representative for more complete information
regarding the different types of IRAs available. Distributions
from these plans may be subject to income tax and generally to
an additional tax if withdrawn prior to
age 59
1
/
2
or used for a nonqualifying purpose.
Traditional
and Roth IRAs
Both IRAs allow most individuals with earned income to
contribute up to the lesser of $5,000 or 100% of compensation,
with future years increased by cost-of-living adjustments. In
addition, IRA holders age 50 or older may contribute $1,000 more
than these limits.
22
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Janus
Investment Fund
Simplified
Employee Pension (SEP) IRA
This plan allows small business owners (including sole
proprietors) to make tax-deductible contributions for themselves
and any eligible employee(s). A SEP requires an IRA (a
SEP-IRA) to be set up for each SEP participant.
Profit
Sharing or Money Purchase Pension Plans
These plans are open to corporations, partnerships, and small
business owners (including sole proprietors) for the benefit of
their employees and themselves. You may only open and maintain
this type of account via written request. Please contact a Janus
representative for more information.
ACCOUNTS
FOR THE BENEFIT OF A CHILD
Custodial
Accounts (UGMA or UTMA)
An UGMA/UTMA account is a custodial account managed for
the benefit of a minor.
Coverdell
Education Savings Account
This tax-deferred plan allows individuals, subject to certain
income limitations, to contribute up to $2,000 annually on
behalf of any child under the age of 18. Contributions are also
allowed on behalf of children with special needs beyond age 18.
Distributions are generally tax-free when used for qualified
education expenses.
Please refer to the following for information regarding opening
an account and conducting business with Janus. With certain
limited exceptions, the Fund is available only to U.S. citizens
or residents, and employees of Janus or its affiliates.
TO OPEN
AN ACCOUNT OR BUY SHARES
Certain tax-deferred accounts can only be opened and maintained
via written request. Please contact a Janus representative for
more information.
Online
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You may open a new Fund account or you may buy shares in an
existing Fund account. You may elect to have Janus
electronically withdraw funds from your designated bank account.
You may initiate a rollover or a transfer of assets from certain
tax-deferred accounts via
janus.com/individual.
A real-time confirmation of your transaction will be provided
via
janus.com/individual.
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By Telephone
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For an existing account, you may use Janus XpressLine to
buy shares 24 hours a day, or you may call a Janus
representative during normal business hours. Janus will
electronically withdraw funds from your designated bank account.
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You may also buy shares by wiring money from your bank account
to your Fund account. For wiring instructions, call a Janus
representative.
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By Mail/In Writing
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To open your Fund account, complete and sign the appropriate
application. Make your check payable to Janus or elect a
one-time electronic withdrawal from your bank account as noted
on the appropriate application.
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To buy additional shares, complete the remittance slip
accompanying your confirmation statement. If you are making a
purchase into a retirement account, please indicate whether the
purchase is a rollover or a current or prior year contribution.
Send your check and remittance slip or written instructions to
the address listed on the slip.
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By Automated Investments
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To buy additional shares through the Automatic Investment
Program, you select the frequency with which your money
($100 minimum) will be electronically transferred from your
bank account to your Fund account. Certain tax-deferred accounts
are not eligible for automated investments.
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You may buy additional shares using Payroll Deduction if your
employer can initiate this type of transaction. You may have all
or a portion of your paycheck ($100 minimum) invested
directly into your Fund account.
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Note:
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For more information, refer to Paying for Shares.
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23
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Janus
Investment Fund
TO
EXCHANGE SHARES
Online
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Exchanges may be made online at
janus.com/individual.
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By Telephone
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Generally all accounts are automatically eligible to exchange
shares by telephone. To exchange all or a portion of your shares
into any other available Janus fund, call Janus XpressLine
or a Janus representative.
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By Mail/In Writing
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To request an exchange in writing, please follow the
instructions in Written Instructions.
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By Systematic Exchange
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You determine the amount of money you would like automatically
exchanged from one Fund account to another on any day of the
month.
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Note:
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For more information, refer to Exchanges.
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TO SELL
SHARES
Online
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Redemptions may be made online at
janus.com/individual.
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By Telephone
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Generally all accounts are automatically eligible to sell shares
by telephone. To sell all or a portion of your shares, call
Janus XpressLine or a Janus representative. The Fund
reserves the right to limit the dollar amount that you may
redeem from your account by telephone.
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By Mail/In Writing
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To request a redemption in writing, please follow the
instructions in Written Instructions.
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By Systematic Redemption
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This program allows you to sell shares worth a specific dollar
amount from your Fund account on a regular basis.
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Note:
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For more information, refer to Payment of Redemption
Proceeds.
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PRICING
OF FUND SHARES
The per share NAV for each class is computed by dividing the
total value of assets allocated to the class, less liabilities
allocated to that class, by the total number of outstanding
shares of the class. The Funds NAV is calculated as of the
close of the regular trading session of the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) (normally 4:00 p.m.
New York time) each day that the NYSE is open
(business day). However, the NAV may be
calculated earlier if trading on the NYSE is restricted, or as
permitted by the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC). Foreign securities held by the Fund may be
traded on days and at times when the NYSE is closed and the NAV
is therefore not calculated. Accordingly, the value of the
Funds holdings may change on days that are not business
days in the United States and on which you will not be able
to purchase or redeem the Funds Shares.
All purchases, exchanges, and redemptions will be duly processed
at the NAV as described under Policies in Relation to
Transactions after your request is received in good order
by the Fund or its agents.
Securities held by the Fund are generally valued at market
value. Certain short-term instruments maturing within
60 days or less are valued at amortized cost, which
approximates market value. If a market quotation for a security
is not readily available or is deemed unreliable, or if an event
that is expected to affect the value of the security occurs
after the close of the principal exchange or market on which the
security is traded, and before the close of the NYSE, a fair
value of the security (except for short-term instruments
maturing within 60 days or less) will be determined in good
faith under policies and procedures established by and under the
supervision of the Funds Trustees. Such events include,
but are not limited to: (i) a significant event that may
affect the securities of a single issuer, such as a merger,
bankruptcy, or significant issuer-specific
24
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Janus
Investment Fund
development; (ii) an event that may affect an entire
market, such as a natural disaster or significant governmental
action; (iii) a non-significant event such as a market
closing early or not opening, or a security trading halt; and
(iv) pricing of a non-valued security and a restricted or
non-public security. While fair value pricing may be more
commonly used with foreign equity securities, it may also be
used with, among other things, thinly-traded domestic securities
or fixed-income securities. For valuation purposes, quotations
of foreign portfolio securities, other assets and liabilities,
and forward contracts stated in foreign currency are generally
translated into U.S. dollar equivalents at the prevailing market
rates. The Fund may use systematic fair valuation models
provided by independent pricing services to value foreign equity
securities in order to adjust for stale pricing, which may occur
between the close of certain foreign exchanges and the close of
the NYSE.
Due to the subjective nature of fair value pricing, the
Funds value for a particular security may be different
from the last quoted market price. Fair value pricing may reduce
arbitrage activity involving the frequent buying and selling of
mutual fund shares by investors seeking to take advantage of a
perceived lag between a change in the value of the Funds
portfolio securities and the reflection of such change in the
Funds NAV, as further described in the Excessive
Trading section of this Prospectus. While funds that
invest in foreign securities may be at a greater risk for
arbitrage activity, such activity may also arise in funds which
do not invest in foreign securities, for example, when trading
in a security held by a fund is halted and does not resume prior
to the time the fund calculates its NAV (referred to as
stale pricing). Funds that hold thinly-traded
securities, such as certain small-capitalization securities, may
be subject to attempted use of arbitrage techniques. To the
extent that the Funds valuation of a security is different
from the securitys market value, short-term arbitrage
traders buying and/or selling shares of the Fund may dilute the
NAV of the Fund, which negatively impacts long-term
shareholders. The Funds fair value pricing and excessive
trading policies and procedures may not completely eliminate
short-term trading in certain omnibus accounts and other
accounts traded through intermediaries.
The value of the securities of other open-end funds held by the
Fund, if any, will be calculated using the NAV of such open-end
funds, and the prospectuses for such open-end funds explain the
circumstances under which they use fair value pricing and the
effects of using fair value pricing.
Policies
in Relation to Transactions
All requests, including but not limited to, exchanges between
the Fund and other Janus funds, purchases by check or automated
investment, redemptions by wire transfer, ACH transfer, or
check, must be received in good order by the Fund or its agents
prior to the close of the regular trading session of the NYSE
(normally 4:00 p.m. New York time) in order to receive that
days NAV. Transaction requests submitted in writing and
mailed to Janus P.O. Box, once delivered, are considered
received for processing the following business day. Transactions
involving funds which pay dividends will generally begin to earn
dividends, as applicable, on the first bank business day
following the date of purchase.
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES FEES
The Fund pays an annual administrative services fee of 0.12% of
net assets of Class D Shares. These administrative services
fees are paid by Class D Shares of the Fund for shareholder
services provided by Janus Services.
PAYMENTS
TO FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES BY JANUS CAPITAL OR ITS
AFFILIATES
With respect to other share classes not offered in this
Prospectus, Janus Capital or its affiliates may pay, from their
own assets, selected brokerage firms or other financial
intermediaries that sell the Janus funds for distribution,
marketing, promotional, or related services. Such payments may
be based on gross sales, assets under management, or
transactional charges, or on a combination of these factors. The
amount of these payments is determined from time to time by
Janus Capital, may be substantial, and may differ for different
financial intermediaries. Janus Capital and its affiliates
consider a number of factors in making payments to financial
intermediaries.
In addition, with respect to other share classes not offered in
this Prospectus, Janus Capital or its affiliates may pay fees,
from their own assets, to brokerage firms, banks, financial
advisors, retirement plan service providers, and other financial
intermediaries for providing recordkeeping, subaccounting,
transaction processing, and other shareholder or administrative
services (including payments for processing transactions via
National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) or
other means) in connection with investments in the Janus funds.
These fees are in addition to any fees that may be paid by the
Janus funds for these types of services or other services.
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Janus
Investment Fund
Further, Janus Capital or its affiliates may also share certain
marketing expenses with intermediaries, or pay for or sponsor
informational meetings, seminars, client awareness events,
support for marketing materials, sales reporting, or business
building programs for such intermediaries to raise awareness of
the Fund. Janus Capital or its affiliates may make payments to
participate in intermediary marketing support programs which may
provide Janus Capital or its affiliates with one or more of the
following benefits: attendance at sales conferences,
participation in meetings or training sessions, access to or
information about intermediary personnel, use of an
intermediarys marketing and communication infrastructure,
fund analysis tools, business planning and strategy sessions
with intermediary personnel, information on industry- or
platform-specific developments, trends and service providers,
and other marketing-related services. Such payments may be in
addition to, or in lieu of, the payments described above. These
payments are intended to promote the sales of Janus funds and to
reimburse financial intermediaries, directly or indirectly, for
the costs that they or their salespersons incur in connection
with educational seminars, meetings, and training efforts about
the Janus funds to enable the intermediaries and their
salespersons to make suitable recommendations, provide useful
services, and maintain the necessary infrastructure to make the
Janus funds available to their customers.
The receipt of (or prospect of receiving) payments described
above may provide a financial intermediary and its salespersons
with an incentive to favor sales of Janus funds shares
over sales of other mutual funds (or non-mutual fund
investments) or to favor sales of one class of Janus funds
shares over sales of another Janus funds share class, with
respect to which the financial intermediary does not receive
such payments or receives them in a lower amount. The receipt of
these payments may cause certain financial intermediaries to
elevate the prominence of the Janus funds within such financial
intermediarys organization by, for example, placement on a
list of preferred or recommended funds and/or the provision of
preferential or enhanced opportunities to promote the Janus
funds in various ways within such financial intermediarys
organization.
From time to time, certain financial intermediaries approach
Janus Capital to request that Janus Capital make contributions
to certain charitable organizations. In these cases, Janus
Capitals contribution may result in the financial
intermediary, or its salespersons, recommending Janus funds over
other mutual funds (or non-mutual fund investments).
The payment arrangements described above will not change the
price an investor pays for Shares nor the amount that a Janus
fund receives to invest on behalf of the investor. You should
consider whether such arrangements exist when evaluating any
recommendations from an intermediary to purchase or sell Shares
of the Fund and, if applicable, when considering which share
class of the Fund is most appropriate for you.
PAYING
FOR SHARES
Please note the following when purchasing Shares:
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Cash, credit cards, third party checks (with certain limited
exceptions), travelers cheques, credit card checks, line of
credit checks, or money orders will not be accepted.
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All purchases must be made in U.S. dollars and checks must
be drawn on U.S. banks or an accepted Canadian bank.
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Purchases initiated using a bill-pay service (or an equivalent)
and presented either electronically or in the form of a check
are considered direct deposit transactions.
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When purchasing Shares through the Automatic Investment Program,
if no date or dollar amount is specified on your application,
investments of $100 will be made on the 20th of each month. Your
first automatic investment may take up to two weeks to
establish. If the balance in the Janus fund account you are
buying into falls to zero as the result of a redemption or
exchange, your Automatic Investment Program will be discontinued.
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We may make additional attempts to debit your predesignated bank
account for automated investments that initially fail. You are
liable for any costs associated with these additional attempts.
If your automated investment fails, you may purchase Shares of
the Fund by submitting good funds via another method accepted by
the Fund (e.g., by wire transfer). In this case, your purchase
will be processed at the next NAV determined after we receive
good funds, not at the NAV available as of the date of the
original request.
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The Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase order,
including exchange purchases, for any reason. The Fund is not
intended for excessive trading. For more information about the
Funds policy on excessive trading, refer to
Excessive Trading.
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If all or a portion of a purchase is received for investment
without a specific fund designation, for investment in one of
our closed funds, or for investment in a fund that is not yet
available for public sale, the undesignated amount or entire
investment, as applicable, will be invested in Janus Money
Market Fund. For investments without a specific fund
designation, where you own a single Fund account with a current
balance greater than zero, the investment will be applied to
that Fund account. For investments without a specific fund
designation, where you own two or more Fund accounts with
current balances greater than zero, and for investments in
closed funds, unless you later direct Janus to (i) buy
shares of another Janus fund or (ii) sell shares of Janus
Money Market Fund and return the proceeds (including any
dividends earned) to you, Janus will treat your inaction as
approval of the purchase of Janus Money Market Fund. If you hold
shares of a closed fund and submit an order directly to Janus
for your account in that closed fund, your account must be open
and your order must clearly indicate that you are currently a
shareholder of the closed fund, or your money will be invested
in Janus Money Market Fund. If you submit an order to buy shares
of a fund that is not yet available for investment (during a
subscription period), your investment will be held in Janus
Money Market Fund until the new funds commencement of
operations. At that time, your investment (including any
dividends) will be automatically exchanged from Janus Money
Market Fund to the new fund. All orders for purchase, exchange,
or redemption will receive the NAV as described under
Policies in Relation to Transactions.
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For Fund purchases by check, if your check does not clear for
any reason, your purchase will be cancelled.
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If your purchase is cancelled for any reason, you will be
responsible for any losses or fees imposed by your bank and may
be responsible for losses that may be incurred as a result of
any decline in the value of the cancelled purchase.
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In compliance with the Uniting and Strengthening America by
Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct
Terrorism Act of 2001 (USA PATRIOT Act), Janus is
required to verify certain information on your account
application as part of its Anti-Money Laundering Program. You
will be required to provide your full name, date of birth,
social security number, and permanent street address to assist
in verifying your identity. You may also be asked to provide
documents that may help to establish your identity. Until
verification of your identity is made, Janus may temporarily
limit additional share purchases. In addition, Janus may close
an account if they are unable to verify a shareholders
identity. Please contact a Janus representative if you need
additional assistance when completing your application or
additional information about the Anti-Money Laundering Program.
In an effort to ensure compliance with this law, Janus
Anti-Money Laundering Program (the Program) provides
for the development of internal practices, procedures and
controls, designation of anti-money laundering compliance
officers, an ongoing training program, and an independent audit
function to determine the effectiveness of the Program.
The Fund has also adopted an identity theft policy (Red
Flag Policy) to detect, prevent, and mitigate patterns,
practices, or specific activities that indicate the possible
existence of identity theft. The Fund is required by law to
obtain certain personal information which will be used to verify
your identity. The Red Flag Policy applies to the opening of
Fund accounts and activity with respect to existing accounts.
EXCHANGES
Please note the following when exchanging shares:
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An exchange represents the redemption (or sale) of shares from
one Fund and the purchase of shares of another Fund, which may
produce a taxable gain or loss in a non-retirement account.
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You may generally exchange Shares of the Fund for Shares of the
same class of any other fund in the Trust.
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You may also exchange shares of one class for another class of
shares within the same fund, provided the eligibility
requirements of the class of shares to be received are met. The
Funds fees and expenses differ between share classes.
Exchanging from a direct share class to one held through an
intermediary typically results in increased expenses. This is
because share classes distributed through intermediaries include
additional fees for administration and/or distribution to pay
for services provided by intermediaries. Please read the
Prospectus for the share class you are interested in prior to
investing in that share class.
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New regular Janus fund accounts established by exchange must be
opened with $2,500 or the total account value if the value of
the Janus fund account you are exchanging from is less than
$2,500. (If your Janus fund account balance does not meet the
minimum investment requirements, you may be subject to an annual
minimum balance fee or account closure. For more information,
refer to Minimum Investment Requirements.)
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Investment Fund
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UGMA/UTMA accounts, Traditional or Roth IRAs, Simplified
Employee Pension IRAs, and Coverdell Education Savings Accounts
established by exchange must meet the minimum investment
requirements previously described. If the value of the Janus
fund account you are exchanging from is less than the stated
minimum, you must exchange the entire balance. (If your Janus
fund account balance does not meet the minimum investment
requirements, you may be subject to an annual minimum balance
fee or account closure. For more information, refer to
Minimum Investment Requirements.)
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New Janus fund non-retirement accounts established by an
exchange (or exchange purchases to an existing Roth IRA)
resulting from a required minimum distribution from a retirement
account do not have an initial minimum investment requirement.
(If your Janus fund account balance does not meet the minimum
investment requirements, you may be subject to an annual minimum
balance fee or account closure. For more information, refer to
Minimum Investment Requirements.)
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Exchanges between existing Janus fund accounts must meet the
$100 subsequent investment requirement.
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For Systematic Exchanges, if no date is specified on your
request, systematic exchanges will be made on the 20th of each
month. You may establish this option for as little as $100 per
exchange. If the balance in the Janus fund account you are
exchanging from falls below the Systematic Exchange amount, all
remaining shares will be exchanged and your Systematic Exchange
Program will be discontinued.
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The exchange privilege is not intended as a vehicle for
short-term or excessive trading. The Fund may suspend or
terminate your exchange privilege if you make more than one
round trip in the Fund in a 90-day period and may bar future
purchases in the Fund or any of the other Janus funds. Different
restrictions may apply if you invest through an intermediary.
For more information about the Funds policy on excessive
trading, refer to Excessive Trading.
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The Fund reserves the right to reject any exchange request and
to modify or terminate the exchange privilege at any time.
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With certain limited exceptions, exchanges between Janus fund
accounts will be accepted only if the registrations are
identical. If you are exchanging into a closed Janus fund, you
will need to meet criteria for investing in the closed fund.
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Note: For the fastest and easiest way to exchange shares,
log on to
janus.com/individual*
24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
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*
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Certain account types do not allow
transactions via janus.com. For more information, access
janus.com/individual
or refer to this Shareholders Manual.
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PAYMENT
OF REDEMPTION PROCEEDS
By Electronic Transfer
Generally all accounts
are automatically eligible for the electronic redemption option
if bank information is provided.
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Next Day Wire Transfer
Your redemption
proceeds can be electronically transferred to your predesignated
bank account on the next bank business day after receipt of your
redemption request (wire transfer). You may be charged a fee for
each wire transfer, and your bank may charge an additional fee
to receive the wire.
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ACH (Automated Clearing House) Transfer
Your
redemption proceeds can be electronically transferred to your
predesignated bank account on or about the second bank business
day after receipt of your redemption request. There is no fee
associated with this type of electronic transfer.
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By Check
Redemption proceeds will be sent to
the shareholder(s) of record at the address of record normally
within seven days after receipt of a valid redemption request.
During the 10 days following an address change, requests for
redemption checks to be sent to a new address require a
signature guarantee.
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Janus
Investment Fund
By Systematic Redemption
If no date is
specified on your request, systematic redemptions will be made
on or about the 24th of each month. If the balance in the Janus
fund account you are selling from falls to zero, your Systematic
Redemption Program will be discontinued.
Generally, orders to sell Shares may be initiated at any time
at
janus.com/individual,
by telephone, or in writing. Certain tax-deferred accounts may
require a written request. If the Shares being sold were
purchased by check or automated investment, the Fund can delay
the payment of your redemption proceeds for up to 15 days
from the day of purchase to allow the purchase to clear. In
addition, there may be a delay in the payment of your redemption
proceeds if you request a redemption by electronic transfer and
your bank information is new. Unless you provide alternate
instructions, your proceeds will be invested in Shares of Janus
Money Market Fund during the 15-day hold period.
The Fund reserves the right to postpone payment of redemption
proceeds for up to seven calendar days. Additionally, the right
to require the Fund to redeem its Shares may be suspended,
or the date of payment may be postponed beyond seven calendar
days, whenever: (i) trading on the NYSE is restricted, as
determined by the SEC, or the NYSE is closed (except for
holidays and weekends); (ii) the SEC permits such
suspension and so orders; or (iii) an emergency exists as
determined by the SEC so that disposal of securities or
determination of NAV is not reasonably practicable.
Note: For the fastest and easiest way to redeem shares, log on
to
janus.com/individual*
24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
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*
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Certain account types do not allow
transactions via janus.com. For more information, access
janus.com/individual
or refer to this Shareholders Manual.
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Large
Shareholder Redemptions
Certain accounts or Janus affiliates may from time to time own
(beneficially or of record) or control a significant percentage
of the Funds Shares. Redemptions by these accounts of
their holdings in the Fund may impact the Funds liquidity
and NAV. These redemptions may also force the Fund to sell
securities, which may negatively impact the Funds
brokerage costs.
Redemptions
In-Kind
Shares normally will be redeemed for cash, although the Fund
retains the right to redeem some or all of its shares
in-kind
under unusual circumstances, in order to protect the interests
of remaining shareholders, to accommodate a request by a
particular shareholder that does not adversely affect the
interests of the remaining shareholders, or in connection with
the liquidation of a fund, by delivery of securities selected
from its assets at its discretion. However, the Fund is required
to redeem shares solely for cash up to the lesser of $250,000 or
1% of the NAV of the Fund during any
90-day
period for any one shareholder. Should redemptions by any
shareholder exceed such limitation, the Fund will have the
option of redeeming the excess in cash or in-kind. In-kind
payment means payment will be made in portfolio securities
rather than cash. If this occurs, the redeeming shareholder
might incur brokerage or other transaction costs to convert the
securities to cash, whereas such costs are borne by the
Fund for cash redemptions.
While the Fund may pay redemptions in-kind, the Fund may instead
choose to raise cash to meet redemption requests through the
sale of fund securities or permissible borrowings. If the Fund
is forced to sell securities at an unfavorable time
and/or
under
unfavorable conditions, such sales may adversely affect the
Funds NAV and may increase brokerage costs.
WRITTEN
INSTRUCTIONS
To redeem or exchange all or part of your Shares in writing,
your request should be sent to one of the addresses listed under
Doing Business with Janus. Requests or documents
received in a language other than English may be inadvertently
delayed or returned due to an inability to accurately translate
the intended instructions. Please include the following
information:
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the name of the Janus fund(s) being redeemed or exchanged;
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the account number(s);
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the amount of money or number of shares being redeemed or
exchanged;
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the name(s) on the account;
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the signature(s) of one or more registered account
owners; and
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your daytime telephone number.
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29
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Janus
Investment Fund
SIGNATURE
GUARANTEE
A signature guarantee for each registered account owner is
required
if any of the following is applicable:
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You request a redemption by check above a certain dollar amount.
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You would like a check made payable to anyone other than the
shareholder(s) of record.
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You would like a check mailed to an address that has been
changed within 10 days of the redemption request.
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You would like a check mailed to an address other than the
address of record.
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You would like your redemption proceeds sent to a bank account
other than a bank account of record.
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The Fund reserves the right to require a signature guarantee
under other circumstances or to reject or delay a redemption on
certain legal grounds.
A signature guarantee may be refused
if any of the
following is applicable:
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It does not appear valid or in good form.
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The transaction amount exceeds the surety bond limit of the
signature guarantee.
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The guarantee stamp has been reported as stolen, missing, or
counterfeit.
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How
to Obtain a Signature Guarantee
A signature guarantee assures that a signature is genuine. The
signature guarantee protects shareholders from unauthorized
account transfers. The following financial institutions may
guarantee signatures: banks, savings and loan associations,
trust companies, credit unions, broker-dealers, and member firms
of a national securities exchange. Call your financial
institution to see if they have the ability to guarantee a
signature.
A signature guarantee cannot be provided by a
notary public.
If you live outside the United States, a foreign bank properly
authorized to do business in your country of residence or a U.S.
consulate may be able to authenticate your signature.
EXCESSIVE
TRADING
Excessive
Trading Policies and Procedures
The Trustees have adopted policies and procedures with respect
to short-term and excessive trading of Fund shares
(excessive trading). The Fund is intended for
long-term investment purposes only, and the Fund will take
reasonable steps to attempt to detect and deter short-term and
excessive trading. Transactions placed in violation of the
Funds exchange limits or excessive trading policies may be
cancelled or revoked by the Fund by the next business day
following receipt by the Fund. The trading history of accounts
determined to be under common ownership or control within any of
the Janus funds may be considered in enforcing these policies
and procedures. Direct investors should be aware that the Fund
is also available for purchase through third party
intermediaries. As described below, the Fund may not be able to
identify all instances of excessive trading or completely
eliminate the possibility of excessive trading. In particular,
it may be difficult to identify excessive trading in certain
omnibus accounts and other accounts traded through
intermediaries. By their nature, omnibus accounts, in which
purchases and redemptions of the Funds shares by multiple
investors are aggregated by the intermediary and presented to
the Fund on a net basis, may effectively conceal the identity of
individual investors and their transactions from the Fund and
its agents. This makes the elimination of excessive trading in
the accounts impractical without the assistance of the
intermediary.
The Fund attempts to deter excessive trading through at least
the following methods:
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exchange limitations as described under Exchanges;
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trade monitoring; and
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fair valuation of securities as described under Pricing of
Fund Shares.
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Generally, a purchase and redemption of Shares from the Fund
(i.e., round trip) within 90 calendar days may
result in enforcement of the Funds excessive trading
policies and procedures with respect to future purchase orders,
provided that the Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase
request as explained above.
The Fund monitors for patterns of shareholder frequent trading
and may suspend or permanently terminate the exchange privilege
of any investor who makes more than one round trip in the Fund
over a 90-day period, and may bar future purchases into the Fund
and any of the other Janus funds by such investor. The
Funds excessive trading policies generally do not apply to
(i) a money market fund, although money market funds at all
times reserve the right to reject any purchase
30
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Janus
Investment Fund
request (including exchange purchases) for any reason without
prior notice; (ii) transactions in the Janus funds by a
Janus fund of funds, which is a fund that primarily
invests in other Janus mutual funds; and (iii) identifiable
transactions by certain funds of funds and asset allocation
programs to realign portfolio investments with existing target
allocations.
The Funds Trustees may approve from time to time a
redemption fee to be imposed by any Janus fund, subject to
60 days notice to shareholders of that fund.
Investors in other share classes who place transactions through
the same financial intermediary on an omnibus basis may be
deemed part of a group for the purpose of the Funds
excessive trading policies and procedures and may be rejected in
whole or in part by the Fund. The Fund, however, cannot always
identify or reasonably detect excessive trading that may be
facilitated by financial intermediaries or made difficult to
identify through the use of omnibus accounts by those
intermediaries that transmit purchase, exchange, and redemption
orders to the Fund, and thus the Fund may have difficulty
curtailing such activity. Transactions accepted by a financial
intermediary in violation of the Funds excessive trading
policies may be cancelled or revoked by the Fund by the next
business day following receipt by the Fund.
In an attempt to detect and deter excessive trading in omnibus
accounts, the Fund or its agents may require intermediaries to
impose restrictions on the trading activity of accounts traded
through those intermediaries. Such restrictions may include, but
are not limited to, requiring that trades be placed by
U.S. mail, prohibiting future purchases by investors who
have recently redeemed Fund shares, requiring intermediaries to
report information about customers who purchase and redeem large
amounts, and similar restrictions. The Funds ability to
impose such restrictions with respect to accounts traded through
particular intermediaries may vary depending on the
systems capabilities, applicable contractual and legal
restrictions, and cooperation of those intermediaries.
Certain transactions in Fund shares, such as periodic
rebalancing through intermediaries (no more frequently than
every 60 days) or those which are made pursuant to
systematic purchase, exchange, or redemption programs generally
do not raise excessive trading concerns and normally do not
require application of the Funds methods to detect and
deter excessive trading.
The Fund also reserves the right to reject any purchase request
(including exchange purchases) by any investor or group of
investors for any reason without prior notice, including, in
particular, if the trading activity in the account(s) is deemed
to be disruptive to the Fund. For example, the Fund may refuse a
purchase order if the Funds portfolio managers believe
they would be unable to invest the money effectively in
accordance with the Funds investment policies or the Fund
would otherwise be adversely affected due to the size of the
transaction, frequency of trading, or other factors.
The Funds policies and procedures regarding excessive
trading may be modified at any time by the Funds Trustees.
Excessive
Trading Risks
Excessive trading may present risks to the Funds long-term
shareholders. Excessive trading into and out of the Fund may
disrupt portfolio investment strategies, may create taxable
gains to remaining Fund shareholders, and may increase Fund
expenses, all of which may negatively impact investment returns
for all remaining shareholders, including long-term shareholders.
Funds that invest in foreign securities may be at a greater risk
for excessive trading. Investors may attempt to take advantage
of anticipated price movements in securities held by a fund
based on events occurring after the close of a foreign market
that may not be reflected in the funds NAV (referred to as
price arbitrage). Such arbitrage opportunities may
also arise in funds which do not invest in foreign securities,
for example, when trading in a security held by a fund is halted
and does not resume prior to the time the fund calculates its
NAV (referred to as stale pricing). Funds that hold
thinly-traded securities, such as certain small-capitalization
securities, may be subject to attempted use of arbitrage
techniques. To the extent that the Funds valuation of a
security differs from the securitys market value,
short-term arbitrage traders may dilute the NAV of the Fund,
which negatively impacts long-term shareholders. Although the
Fund has adopted fair valuation policies and procedures intended
to reduce the Funds exposure to price arbitrage, stale
pricing, and other potential pricing inefficiencies, under such
circumstances there is potential for short-term arbitrage trades
to dilute the value of Fund shares.
Although the Fund takes steps to detect and deter excessive
trading pursuant to the policies and procedures described in
this Prospectus and approved by the Trustees, there is no
assurance that these policies and procedures will be effective
in limiting excessive trading in all circumstances. For example,
for share classes sold through financial intermediaries, the
Fund may be unable to completely eliminate the possibility of
excessive trading in certain omnibus accounts and other accounts
traded
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Janus
Investment Fund
through intermediaries. Omnibus accounts may effectively conceal
the identity of individual investors and their transactions from
the Fund and its agents. This makes the Funds
identification of excessive trading transactions in the Fund
through an omnibus account difficult and makes the elimination
of excessive trading in the account impractical without the
assistance of the intermediary. Although the Fund encourages
intermediaries to take necessary actions to detect and deter
excessive trading, some intermediaries may be unable or
unwilling to do so, and accordingly, the Fund cannot eliminate
completely the possibility of excessive trading.
Shareholders that invest through an omnibus account should be
aware that they may be subject to the policies and procedures of
their financial intermediary with respect to excessive trading
in the Fund.
AVAILABILITY
OF PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS INFORMATION
The Mutual Fund Holdings Disclosure Policies and Procedures
adopted by Janus Capital and all mutual funds managed within the
Janus fund complex are designed to be in the best interests of
the funds and to protect the confidentiality of the funds
portfolio holdings. The following describes policies and
procedures with respect to disclosure of portfolio holdings.
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Full Holdings.
The Fund is required to
disclose its complete holdings in the quarterly holdings report
on
Form N-Q
within 60 days of the end of the first and third fiscal
quarters, and in the annual report and semiannual report to Fund
shareholders. These reports (i) are available on the
SECs website at
http://www.sec.gov;
(ii) may be reviewed and copied at the SECs Public
Reference Room in Washington, D.C. (information on the Public
Reference Room may be obtained by calling
1-800-SEC-0330);
and (iii) are available without charge, upon request, by
calling a Janus representative at
1-800-525-0020
(toll free). Portfolio holdings consisting of at least the names
of the holdings are generally available on a calendar
quarter-end basis with a
30-day
lag.
Holdings are generally posted approximately two business days
thereafter under the Funds Holdings & Details tab at
janus.com/allfunds.
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The Fund may provide, upon request, historical full holdings on
a monthly basis for periods prior to the previous quarter-end
subject to a written confidentiality agreement.
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Top Holdings.
The Funds top portfolio
holdings, in order of position size and as a percentage of the
Funds total portfolio, are available monthly with a
15-day
lag
and on a calendar quarter-end basis with a
15-day
lag.
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Other Information.
The Fund may occasionally
provide security breakdowns (e.g., industry, sector,
regional, market capitalization, and asset allocation), top
performance contributors/detractors (consisting of security
names in alphabetical order), and specific portfolio level
performance attribution information and statistics monthly with
a
15-day
lag
and on a calendar quarter-end basis with a
15-day
lag.
Top performance contributors/detractors provided at calendar
quarter-end may include the percentage of
contribution/detraction to Fund performance.
|
Full portfolio holdings will remain available on the Janus
websites at least until a
Form N-CSR
or
Form N-Q
is filed with the SEC for the period that includes the date as
of which the website information is current. Funds disclose
their short positions, if applicable, only to the extent
required in regulatory reports. Janus Capital may exclude from
publication on its websites all or any portion of portfolio
holdings or change the time periods of disclosure as deemed
necessary to protect the interests of the Janus funds. Under
extraordinary circumstances, exceptions to the Mutual
Fund Holdings Disclosure Policies and Procedures may be
made by Janus Capitals Chief Investment Officer(s) or
their delegates. Such exceptions may be made without prior
notice to shareholders. A summary of the Funds portfolio
holdings disclosure policies and procedures, which includes a
discussion of any exceptions, is contained in the Funds
SAI.
SHAREHOLDER
SERVICES AND ACCOUNT POLICIES
Address
Changes
For the easiest way to change the address on your account, visit
janus.com/individual.
You may also call a Janus representative or send a written
request signed by one or more shareholder(s) of record. Include
the name of the Janus fund(s) you hold, the account number(s),
the name(s) on the account, and both the old and new addresses.
Certain options may be suspended for 10 days following an
address change unless a signature guarantee is provided.
Bank
Account Changes
For the easiest way to change your bank account of record or add
new bank account information to your account, visit
janus.com/individual.
You may also send a written request signed by the shareholder of
record or each shareholder of record
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if more than one. Please note that you may change or add bank
information online at
janus.com/individual
for purchases only. Certain tax-deferred accounts may require a
written notice and, in some instances, bank privileges may not
be available. We cannot accept changes or additions to bank
account redemption options online at
janus.com/individual
or over the telephone. If the added bank account is a joint
tenant/tenants in common account, at least one name on the bank
account must match one name on the Fund account. There may be a
delay in the payment of your redemption proceeds if you request
a redemption by electronic transfer to a new bank or bank
account.
Distributions
Generally, all income dividends and capital gains distributions
will automatically be reinvested in your Fund account. If you
wish to change your distribution option, please visit
janus.com/individual,
call a Janus representative, or send a written request signed by
one or more shareholder(s) of record.
If you receive Fund distributions from an open non-retirement
Fund account by check, and a distribution check sent to you at
your address of record has been returned to Janus and you have
failed to respond to follow up mailings from Janus, upon
return of the follow up mailing the distribution check will be
reinvested in your open Fund account at the next calculated NAV.
In addition, your non-retirement Fund account distribution
checks may be reinvested in your Fund account if you do not cash
them within one year of the date they were written. No interest
will accrue on amounts represented by uncashed distribution or
redemption checks.
Involuntary
Redemptions
The Fund reserves the right to close an account if the
shareholder is deemed to engage in activities which are illegal
or otherwise believed to be detrimental to the Fund. This
includes, but is not limited to, accounts that the Fund or its
agents believe are engaged in market timing. Any time shares are
redeemed in a taxable account, it is considered a taxable event.
You are responsible for any tax liabilities associated with an
involuntary redemption of your account.
Online
and Telephone Transactions
You may initiate many transactions through
janus.com/individual
or by calling Janus XpressLine. You may also contact a
Janus representative. Generally all new accounts automatically
receive online and telephone transaction privileges including
redemption privileges. If you do not want to receive these
privileges, please visit
janus.com/individual
or call a Janus representative. The Fund and its agents will not
be responsible for any losses, costs, or expenses resulting from
unauthorized transactions when reasonable procedures designed to
verify the identity of the online user or caller are followed.
Your account information should be kept private, and you should
immediately review any account statements that you receive from
Janus. Someone other than you could act on your account if that
person is able to provide the required identifying information.
Contact Janus immediately about any transactions you believe to
be unauthorized.
Occasionally, we experience high call volumes due to unusual
market activity or other events that may make it difficult for
you to reach a Janus representative by telephone. If you are
unable to reach a Janus representative by telephone, please
consider visiting
janus.com/individual,
calling Janus XpressLine, or sending written instructions.
Registration
Changes
To change the name on an account, the shares are generally
transferred to a new account. In some cases, legal documentation
may be required. Please visit
janus.com/individual
or call a Janus representative for further instructions.
Statements,
Reports, and Prospectuses
We will send you quarterly confirmations of all transactions.
You may elect at
janus.com/edelivery
to discontinue delivery of your paper statements, and instead
receive them online. In addition, at
janus.com/individual,
the Fund will send you an immediate transaction confirmation
statement after every non-systematic transaction. If you have
not elected to receive online statements, your confirmation will
be mailed within two days of the transaction. The Fund reserves
the right to charge a fee for additional account statement
requests.
The Fund produces financial reports that include a complete list
of the Funds portfolio holdings semiannually, and updates
its prospectus annually. You may elect to receive these reports
and prospectus updates electronically at
janus.com/edelivery.
The Funds fiscal year ends September 30.
Unless you instruct Janus otherwise by contacting a Janus
representative, the Fund will mail only one report or prospectus
to your address of record (household), even if more
than one person in your household has a Fund account. This
process, known as householding, reduces the amount
of mail you receive and helps lower Fund expenses. If you decide
that you no
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longer want the mailing of these documents to be combined with
the other members of your household, please call a Janus
representative or send a written request signed by one or more
shareholder(s) of record. Individual copies will be sent within
thirty (30) days after the Fund receives your instructions.
Taxpayer
Identification Number
On the application or other appropriate forms, you may be asked
to certify that your Social Security or employer identification
number is correct and that you are not subject to backup
withholding for failing to report income to the IRS. If you are
subject to backup withholding, or you did not certify your
taxpayer identification number, the IRS requires the Fund to
withhold a certain percentage (at the currently applicable rate)
of any dividends paid and redemption or exchange proceeds. In
addition to this backup withholding, you may be subject to a
$50 fee to reimburse the Fund for any penalty that the IRS
may impose.
Temporary
Suspension of Services
The Fund or its agents may, in case of emergency, temporarily
suspend telephone transactions and other shareholder services.
As previously noted, the Fund may postpone payment of redemption
proceeds for up to seven calendar days. In addition, the right
to require the Fund to redeem its Shares may be suspended or the
date of payment may be postponed beyond seven calendar days
whenever: (i) trading on the NYSE is restricted, as
determined by the SEC, or the NYSE is closed (except for
holidays and weekends); (ii) the SEC permits such
suspension and so orders; or (iii) an emergency exists as
determined by the SEC so that disposal of securities or
determination of NAV is not reasonably practicable. The exchange
privilege may also be suspended in these circumstances.
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Financial
highlights
No financial highlights are presented for the Fund since the
Fund is new.
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Glossary
of investment terms
This glossary provides a more detailed description of some of
the types of securities, investment strategies, and other
instruments in which the Fund may invest, as well as some
general investment terms. The Fund may invest in these
instruments to the extent permitted by its investment objective
and policies. The Fund is not limited by this discussion and may
invest in any other types of instruments not precluded by the
policies discussed elsewhere in this Prospectus.
EQUITY
AND DEBT SECURITIES
Average-Weighted Effective Maturity
is a measure
of a bonds maturity. The stated maturity of a bond is the
date when the issuer must repay the bonds entire principal
value to an investor. Some types of bonds may also have an
effective maturity that is shorter than the stated
date due to prepayment or call provisions. Securities without
prepayment or call provisions generally have an effective
maturity equal to their stated maturity. Average-weighted
effective maturity is calculated by averaging the effective
maturity of bonds held by a Fund with each effective maturity
weighted according to the percentage of net assets
that it represents.
Bank loans
include institutionally-traded floating
and fixed-rate debt securities generally acquired as a
participation interest in or assignment of a loan originated by
a lender or financial institution. Assignments and
participations involve credit, interest rate, and liquidity
risk. Interest rates on floating rate securities adjust with
interest rate changes and/or issuer credit quality. If a Fund
purchases a participation interest, it may only be able to
enforce its rights through the lender and may assume the credit
risk of both the borrower and the lender. Additional risks are
involved in purchasing assignments. If a loan is foreclosed, a
Fund may become part owner of any collateral securing the loan
and may bear the costs and liabilities associated with owning
and disposing of any collateral. The Fund could be held liable
as a
co-lender.
In addition, there is no assurance that the liquidation of any
collateral from a secured loan would satisfy a borrowers
obligations or that any collateral could be liquidated. A Fund
may have difficulty trading assignments and participations to
third parties or selling such securities in secondary markets,
which in turn may affect the Funds NAV.
Bonds
are debt securities issued by a company,
municipality, government, or government agency. The issuer of a
bond is required to pay the holder the amount of the loan (or
par value of the bond) at a specified maturity and to make
scheduled interest payments.
Certificates of Participation (COPs)
are certificates representing an interest in a pool of
securities. Holders are entitled to a proportionate interest in
the underlying securities. Municipal lease obligations are often
sold in the form of COPs. Refer to Municipal lease
obligations below.
Commercial paper
is a short-term debt obligation
with a maturity ranging from 1 to 270 days issued by banks,
corporations, and other borrowers to investors seeking to invest
idle cash. A Fund may purchase commercial paper issued in
private placements under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended (the 1933 Act).
Common stocks
are equity securities representing
shares of ownership in a company and usually carry voting rights
and earn dividends. Unlike preferred stock, dividends on common
stock are not fixed but are declared at the discretion of the
issuers board of directors.
Convertible securities
are preferred stocks or
bonds that pay a fixed dividend or interest payment and are
convertible into common stock at a specified price or conversion
ratio.
Debt securities
are securities representing money
borrowed that must be repaid at a later date. Such securities
have specific maturities and usually a specific rate of interest
or an original purchase discount.
Depositary receipts
are receipts for shares of a
foreign-based corporation that entitle the holder to dividends
and capital gains on the underlying security. Receipts include
those issued by domestic banks (American Depositary Receipts),
foreign banks (Global or European Depositary Receipts), and
broker-dealers (depositary shares).
Duration
is the time it will take investors to
recoup their investment in a bond. Unlike average maturity,
duration reflects both principal and interest payments.
Generally, the higher the coupon rate on a bond, the lower its
duration will be. The duration of a bond portfolio is calculated
by averaging the duration of bonds held by a Fund with each
duration weighted according to the percentage of net
assets that it represents. Because duration accounts for
interest payments, a Funds duration is usually shorter
than its average maturity.
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Equity securities
generally include domestic and
foreign common stocks; preferred stocks; securities convertible
into common stocks or preferred stocks; warrants to purchase
common or preferred stocks; and other securities with equity
characteristics.
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs)
are
index-based investment companies which hold substantially all of
their assets in securities with equity characteristics. As a
shareholder of another investment company, a Fund would bear its
pro rata portion of the other investment companys
expenses, including advisory fees, in addition to the expenses
the Fund bears directly in connection with its own operations.
Fixed-income securities
are securities that pay a
specified rate of return. The term generally includes short- and
long-term government, corporate, and municipal obligations that
pay a specified rate of interest, dividends, or coupons for a
specified period of time. Coupon and dividend rates may be fixed
for the life of the issue or, in the case of adjustable and
floating rate securities, for a shorter period.
High-yield/high-risk bonds
are bonds that are
rated below investment grade by the primary rating agencies
(i.e., BB+ or lower by Standard & Poors and
Fitch, or Ba or lower by Moodys). Other terms commonly
used to describe such bonds include lower rated
bonds, non-investment grade bonds, and
junk bonds.
Industrial development bonds
are revenue bonds
that are issued by a public authority but which may be backed
only by the credit and security of a private issuer and may
involve greater credit risk. Refer to Municipal
securities below.
Mortgage- and asset-backed securities
are shares
in a pool of mortgages or other debt instruments. These
securities are generally pass-through securities, which means
that principal and interest payments on the underlying
securities (less servicing fees) are passed through to
shareholders on a pro rata basis. These securities involve
prepayment risk, which is the risk that the underlying mortgages
or other debt may be refinanced or paid off prior to their
maturities during periods of declining interest rates. In that
case, a Fund may have to reinvest the proceeds from the
securities at a lower rate. Potential market gains on a security
subject to prepayment risk may be more limited than potential
market gains on a comparable security that is not subject to
prepayment risk.
Mortgage dollar rolls
are transactions in which a
Fund sells a mortgage-related security, such as a security
issued by Government National Mortgage Association, to a dealer
and simultaneously agrees to purchase a similar security (but
not the same security) in the future at a predetermined price. A
dollar roll can be viewed as a collateralized
borrowing in which a Fund pledges a mortgage-related security to
a dealer to obtain cash.
Municipal lease obligations
are revenue bonds
backed by leases or installment purchase contracts for property
or equipment. Lease obligations may not be backed by the issuing
municipalitys credit and may involve risks not normally
associated with general obligation bonds and other revenue
bonds. For example, their interest may become taxable if the
lease is assigned and the holders may incur losses if the issuer
does not appropriate funds for the lease payments on an annual
basis, which may result in termination of the lease and possible
default.
Municipal securities
are bonds or notes issued by
a U.S. state or political subdivision. A municipal security
may be a general obligation backed by the full faith and credit
(i.e., the borrowing and taxing power) of a municipality or a
revenue obligation paid out of the revenues of a designated
project, facility, or revenue source.
Pass-through securities
are shares or certificates
of interest in a pool of debt obligations that have been
repackaged by an intermediary, such as a bank or broker-dealer.
Passive foreign investment companies
(PFICs)
are any foreign corporations which
generate certain amounts of passive income or hold certain
amounts of assets for the production of passive income. Passive
income includes dividends, interest, royalties, rents, and
annuities. To avoid taxes and interest that a Fund must pay if
these investments are profitable, the Fund may make various
elections permitted by the tax laws. These elections could
require that a Fund recognize taxable income, which in turn must
be distributed, before the securities are sold and before cash
is received to pay the distributions.
Pay-in-kind bonds
are debt securities that
normally give the issuer an option to pay cash at a coupon
payment date or give the holder of the security a similar bond
with the same coupon rate and a face value equal to the amount
of the coupon payment that would have been made.
Preferred stocks
are equity securities that
generally pay dividends at a specified rate and have preference
over common stock in the payment of dividends and liquidation.
Preferred stock generally does not carry voting rights.
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Real estate investment trust (REIT)
is
an investment trust that operates through the pooled capital of
many investors who buy its shares. Investments are in direct
ownership of either income property or mortgage loans.
Rule 144A securities
are securities that are
not registered for sale to the general public under the 1933
Act, but that may be resold to certain institutional investors.
Standby commitment
is a right to sell a specified
underlying security or securities within a specified period of
time and at an exercise price equal to the amortized cost of the
underlying security or securities plus accrued interest, if any,
at the time of exercise, that may be sold, transferred, or
assigned only with the underlying security or securities. A
standby commitment entitles the holder to receive same day
settlement, and will be considered to be from the party to whom
the investment company will look for payment of the exercise
price.
Step coupon bonds
are high-quality issues with
above-market interest rates and a coupon that increases over the
life of the bond. They may pay monthly, semiannual, or annual
interest payments. On the date of each coupon payment, the
issuer decides whether to call the bond at par, or whether to
extend it until the next payment date at the new coupon rate.
Strip bonds
are debt securities that are stripped
of their interest (usually by a financial intermediary) after
the securities are issued. The market value of these securities
generally fluctuates more in response to changes in interest
rates than interest-paying securities of comparable maturity.
Tender option bonds
are relatively long-term bonds
that are coupled with the option to tender the securities to a
bank, broker-dealer, or other financial institution at periodic
intervals and receive the face value of the bond. This
investment structure is commonly used as a means of enhancing a
securitys liquidity.
U.S. Government securities
include direct
obligations of the U.S. Government that are supported by
its full faith and credit. Treasury bills have initial
maturities of less than one year, Treasury notes have initial
maturities of one to ten years, and Treasury bonds may be issued
with any maturity but generally have maturities of at least ten
years. U.S. Government securities also include indirect
obligations of the U.S. Government that are issued by
federal agencies and government sponsored entities. Unlike
Treasury securities, agency securities generally are not backed
by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. Some
agency securities are supported by the right of the issuer to
borrow from the Treasury, others are supported by the
discretionary authority of the U.S. Government to purchase
the agencys obligations, and others are supported only by
the credit of the sponsoring agency.
Variable and floating rate securities
have
variable or floating rates of interest and, under certain
limited circumstances, may have varying principal amounts.
Variable and floating rate securities pay interest at rates that
are adjusted periodically according to a specified formula,
usually with reference to some interest rate index or market
interest rate (the underlying index). The floating
rate tends to decrease the securitys price sensitivity to
changes in interest rates.
Warrants
are securities, typically issued with
preferred stock or bonds, which give the holder the right to buy
a proportionate amount of common stock at a specified price. The
specified price is usually higher than the market price at the
time of issuance of the warrant. The right may last for a
period of years or indefinitely.
Zero coupon bonds
are debt securities that do not
pay regular interest at regular intervals, but are issued at a
discount from face value. The discount approximates the total
amount of interest the security will accrue from the date of
issuance to maturity. The market value of these securities
generally fluctuates more in response to changes in interest
rates than interest-paying securities.
FUTURES,
OPTIONS, AND OTHER DERIVATIVES
Credit default swaps
are a specific kind of
counterparty agreement that allows the transfer of third party
credit risk from one party to the other. One party in the swap
is a lender and faces credit risk from a third party, and the
counterparty in the credit default swap agrees to insure this
risk in exchange for regular periodic payments.
Derivatives
are financial instruments whose
performance is derived from the performance of another asset
(stock, bond, commodity, currency, interest rate or market
index). Types of derivatives can include, but are not limited to
options, forward contracts, swaps, and futures contracts.
Equity-linked structured notes
are derivative
securities which are specially designed to combine the
characteristics of one or more underlying securities and their
equity derivatives in a single note form. The return and/or
yield or income component
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Investment Fund
may be based on the performance of the underlying equity
securities, an equity index, and/or option positions.
Equity-linked structured notes are typically offered in limited
transactions by financial institutions in either registered or
non-registered form. An investment in equity-linked notes
creates exposure to the credit risk of the issuing financial
institution, as well as to the market risk of the underlying
securities. There is no guaranteed return of principal with
these securities, and the appreciation potential of these
securities may be limited by a maximum payment or call right. In
certain cases, equity-linked notes may be more volatile and less
liquid than less complex securities or other types of
fixed-income securities. Such securities may exhibit price
behavior that does not correlate with other fixed-income
securities.
Equity swaps
involve the exchange by two parties
of future cash flow (e.g., one cash flow based on a
referenced interest rate and the other based on the performance
of stock or a stock index).
Forward contracts
are contracts to purchase or
sell a specified amount of a financial instrument for an agreed
upon price at a specified time. Forward contracts are not
currently exchange-traded and are typically negotiated on an
individual basis. A Fund may enter into forward currency
contracts for investment purposes or to hedge against declines
in the value of securities denominated in, or whose value is
tied to, a currency other than the U.S. dollar or to reduce the
impact of currency appreciation on purchases of such securities.
It may also enter into forward contracts to purchase or sell
securities or other financial indices.
Futures contracts
are contracts that obligate the
buyer to receive and the seller to deliver an instrument or
money at a specified price on a specified date. A Fund may buy
and sell futures contracts on foreign currencies, securities,
and financial indices including indices of U.S. Government,
foreign government, equity, or fixed-income securities. A Fund
may also buy options on futures contracts. An option on a
futures contract gives the buyer the right, but not the
obligation, to buy or sell a futures contract at a specified
price on or before a specified date. Futures contracts and
options on futures are standardized and traded on designated
exchanges.
Indexed/structured securities
are typically short-
to intermediate-term debt securities whose value at maturity or
interest rate is linked to currencies, interest rates, equity
securities, indices, commodity prices, or other financial
indicators. Such securities may be positively or negatively
indexed (e.g., their value may increase or decrease if the
reference index or instrument appreciates). Indexed/structured
securities may have return characteristics similar to direct
investments in the underlying instruments and may be more
volatile than the underlying instruments. A Fund bears the
market risk of an investment in the underlying instruments, as
well as the credit risk of the issuer.
Interest rate swaps
involve the exchange by two
parties of their respective commitments to pay or receive
interest (e.g., an exchange of floating rate payments for fixed
rate payments).
Inverse floaters
are debt instruments whose
interest rate bears an inverse relationship to the interest rate
on another instrument or index. For example, upon reset, the
interest rate payable on the inverse floater may go down when
the underlying index has risen. Certain inverse floaters may
have an interest rate reset mechanism that multiplies the
effects of change in the underlying index. Such mechanism may
increase the volatility of the securitys market value.
Options
are the right, but not the obligation, to
buy or sell a specified amount of securities or other assets on
or before a fixed date at a predetermined price. A Fund may
purchase and write put and call options on securities,
securities indices, and foreign currencies. A Fund may purchase
or write such options individually or in combination.
Participatory notes
are derivative securities
which are linked to the performance of an underlying Indian
security and which allow investors to gain market exposure to
Indian securities without trading directly in the local Indian
market.
Total return swaps
involve an exchange by two
parties in which one party makes payments based on a set rate,
either fixed or variable, while the other party makes payments
based on the return of an underlying asset, which includes both
the income it generates and any capital gains over the payment
period.
OTHER
INVESTMENTS, STRATEGIES, AND/OR TECHNIQUES
Cash sweep program
is an arrangement in which a
Funds uninvested cash balance is used to purchase shares
of affiliated or non-affiliated money market funds or cash
management pooled investment vehicles at the end of each day.
Diversification
is a classification given to a
fund under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the
1940 Act). Funds are classified as either
diversified or nondiversified. To be
classified as diversified under the 1940 Act, a fund
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may not, with respect to 75% of its total assets, invest more
than 5% of its total assets in any issuer and may not own more
than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of an issuer. A
fund that is classified as nondiversified under the
1940 Act, on the other hand, has the flexibility to take larger
positions in a smaller number of issuers than a fund that is
classified as diversified. However, because the
appreciation or depreciation of a single security may have a
greater impact on the net asset value of a fund which is
classified as nondiversified, its share price can be expected to
fluctuate more than a comparable fund which is classified as
diversified.
Industry concentration
for purposes under the 1940
Act is the investment of 25% or more of a Funds total
assets in an industry or group of industries.
Leverage
is when a Fund increases its assets
available for investment using borrowings or similar
transactions. Because short sales involve borrowing securities
and then selling them, a Funds short sales effectively
leverage the Funds assets. The use of leverage may make
any change in a Funds NAV even greater and thus result in
increased volatility of returns. A Funds assets that are
used as collateral to secure the short sales may decrease in
value while the short positions are outstanding, which may force
the Fund to use its other assets to increase the collateral.
Leverage also creates interest expense that may lower a
Funds overall returns.
Market capitalization
is the most commonly used
measure of the size and value of a company. It is computed by
multiplying the current market price of a share of the
companys stock by the total number of its shares
outstanding. Market capitalization is an important investment
criterion for certain funds, while others do not emphasize
investments in companies of any particular size.
Net long
is a term used to describe when a
Funds assets committed to long positions exceed those
committed to short positions.
Repurchase agreements
involve the purchase of a
security by a Fund and a simultaneous agreement by the seller
(generally a bank or dealer) to repurchase the security from the
Fund at a specified date or upon demand. This technique offers a
method of earning income on idle cash. These securities involve
the risk that the seller will fail to repurchase the security,
as agreed. In that case, a Fund will bear the risk of market
value fluctuations until the security can be sold and may
encounter delays and incur costs in liquidating the security.
Reverse repurchase agreements
involve the sale of
a security by a Fund to another party (generally a bank or
dealer) in return for cash and an agreement by the Fund to buy
the security back at a specified price and time. This technique
will be used primarily to provide cash to satisfy unusually high
redemption requests, or for other temporary or emergency
purposes.
Short sales
in which a Fund may engage may be
either short sales against the box or other short
sales. Short sales against the box involve selling short a
security that a Fund owns, or the Fund has the right to obtain
the amount of the security sold short at a specified date in the
future. A Fund may also enter into a short sale to hedge against
anticipated declines in the market price of a security or to
reduce portfolio volatility. If the value of a security sold
short increases prior to the scheduled delivery date, the Fund
loses the opportunity to participate in the gain. For short
sales, the Fund will incur a loss if the value of a security
increases during this period because it will be paying more for
the security than it has received from the purchaser in the
short sale. If the price declines during this period, a Fund
will realize a short-term capital gain. Although a Funds
potential for gain as a result of a short sale is limited to the
price at which it sold the security short less the cost of
borrowing the security, its potential for loss is theoretically
unlimited because there is no limit to the cost of replacing the
borrowed security.
When-issued, delayed delivery, and forward commitment
transactions
generally involve the purchase of a
security with payment and delivery at some time in the
future i.e., beyond normal settlement. A Fund
does not earn interest on such securities until settlement and
bears the risk of market value fluctuations in between the
purchase and settlement dates. New issues of stocks and bonds,
private placements, and U.S. Government securities may be
sold in this manner.
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You can make inquiries and request
other information, including a Statement of Additional
Information, annual report, or semiannual report (as they become
available), free of charge, by contacting a Janus representative
at
1-800-525-3713.
The Funds Statement of Additional Information and most
recent annual and semiannual reports are also available, free of
charge, at
janus.com/reports.
Additional information about the Funds investments is
available in the Funds annual and semiannual reports. In
the Funds annual and semiannual reports, you will find a
discussion of the market conditions and investment strategies
that significantly affected the Funds performance during
its last fiscal period.
The Statement of Additional
Information provides detailed information about the Fund and is
incorporated into this Prospectus by reference. You may review
and copy information about the Fund (including the Funds
Statement of Additional Information) at the Public Reference
Room of the SEC or get text only copies, after paying a
duplicating fee, by sending an electronic request by e-mail to
publicinfo@sec.gov or by writing to or calling the
Commissions Public Reference Section, Washington, D.C.
20549-1520
(1-202-551-8090).
Information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may
also be obtained by calling this number. You may also obtain
reports and other information about the Fund from the Electronic
Data Gathering Analysis and Retrieval (EDGAR) Database on the
SECs website at
http://www.sec.gov.
janus.com
PO Box 55932
Boston, MA 02205-5932
1-800-525-3713
The Trusts Investment Company
Act File No. is 811-1879.
6
April 1, 2013
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Class A
Shares
Ticker
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Class C
Shares
Ticker
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Class D
Shares
Ticker
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Class I
Shares
Ticker
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Class N
Shares
Ticker
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Class S
Shares
Ticker
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Class T
Shares
Ticker
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Value
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Perkins International Value Fund
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JIFAX
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JIFCX
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JIFDX
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JIFIX
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JIFNX
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JIFSX
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JIFTX
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Janus
Investment Fund
Statement
of Additional Information
Class D
Shares are closed to certain new investors.
This
Statement of Additional Information (SAI) expands
upon and supplements the information contained in the current
Prospectuses for Class A Shares, Class C Shares,
Class D Shares, Class I Shares, Class N Shares,
Class S Shares, and Class T Shares (collectively, the
Shares) of Perkins International Value Fund, which
is a separate series of Janus Investment Fund, a Massachusetts
business trust (the Trust). This series of the Trust
represents shares of beneficial interest in a separate portfolio
of securities and other assets with its own objective and
policies.
This
SAI is not a Prospectus and should be read in conjunction with
the Funds Prospectuses dated April 1, 2013, and any
supplements thereto, which are incorporated by reference into
this SAI and may be obtained from your plan sponsor,
broker-dealer, or other financial intermediary, or by contacting
a Janus representative at
1-877-335-2687
(or
1-800-525-3713
if you hold Class D Shares). This SAI contains additional
and more detailed information about the Funds operations
and activities than the Prospectuses. The Annual and Semiannual
Reports (as they become available) contain important financial
information about the Fund, and are available, without charge,
from your plan sponsor, broker-dealer, or other financial
intermediary, at
janus.com/info
(or
janus.com/reports
if you hold Class D Shares), or by contacting a Janus
representative at
1-877-335-2687
(or
1-800-525-3713
if you hold Class D Shares).
Table
of contents
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Classification, Investment Policies and Restrictions, and
Investment Strategies and Risks
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2
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Investment Adviser and Subadviser
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30
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Custodian, Transfer Agent, and Certain Affiliations
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38
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Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage
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40
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Trustees and Officers
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42
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Shares of the Trust
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52
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Net Asset Value Determination
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52
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Purchases
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52
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Distribution and Shareholder Servicing Plans
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54
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Redemptions
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55
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Income Dividends, Capital Gains Distributions, and Tax Status
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57
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Principal Shareholders
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58
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Miscellaneous Information
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Shares of the Trust
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60
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Shareholder Meetings
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60
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Voting Rights
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60
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Master/Feeder Option
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61
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Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
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61
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Registration Statement
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61
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Financial Statements
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62
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Appendix A
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63
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Explanation of Rating Categories
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63
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1
Classification,
investment policies and restrictions,
and investment strategies and risks
JANUS
INVESTMENT FUND
This Statement of Additional Information includes information
about Perkins International Value Fund (the Fund),
which is a series of the Trust, an open-end, management
investment company.
CLASSIFICATION
The Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (1940
Act), classifies mutual funds as either diversified or
nondiversified. The Fund is classified as diversified.
ADVISER
Janus Capital Management LLC (Janus Capital or
Janus) is the investment adviser for the Fund and is
responsible for the general oversight of the subadviser.
SUBADVISER
Perkins Investment Management LLC (Perkins) is the
investment subadviser for the Fund.
INVESTMENT
POLICIES AND RESTRICTIONS
The Fund is subject to certain fundamental policies and
restrictions that may not be changed without shareholder
approval. Shareholder approval means approval by the lesser of:
(i) more than 50% of the outstanding voting securities of
the Trust (or the Fund or particular class of shares if a matter
affects just the Fund or that class of shares) or (ii) 67%
or more of the voting securities present at a meeting if the
holders of more than 50% of the outstanding voting securities of
the Trust (or the Fund or class of shares) are present or
represented by proxy. The following policies are fundamental
policies of the Fund.
(1) With respect to 75% of its total assets, the Fund may
not purchase securities of an issuer (other than the
U.S. Government, its agencies, instrumentalities or
authorities, or repurchase agreements collateralized by
U.S. Government securities, and securities of other
investment companies) if: (a) such purchase would, at the
time, cause more than 5% of the Funds total assets taken
at market value to be invested in the securities of such issuer
or (b) such purchase would, at the time, result in more
than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer
being held by the Fund.
The Fund may not:
(2) Invest 25% or more of the value of its total assets in
any particular industry (other than U.S. Government
securities).
(3) Purchase or sell physical commodities unless acquired
as a result of ownership of securities or other instruments (but
this limitation shall not prevent the Fund from purchasing
or selling foreign currencies, options, futures, swaps, forward
contracts, or other derivative instruments, or from investing in
securities or other instruments backed by physical commodities).
(4) Lend any security or make any other loan if, as a
result, more than one-third of the Funds total assets
would be lent to other parties (but this limitation does not
apply to investments in repurchase agreements, commercial paper,
debt securities, or loans, including assignments and
participation interests).
(5) Act as an underwriter of securities issued by others,
except to the extent that the Fund may be deemed an underwriter
in connection with the disposition of its portfolio securities.
(6) Borrow money except that the Fund may borrow money for
temporary or emergency purposes (not for leveraging or
investment). Borrowings from banks will not, in any event,
exceed one-third of the value of the Funds total assets
(including the amount borrowed). This policy shall not prohibit
short sales transactions or futures, options, swaps, or forward
transactions. The Fund may not issue senior
securities in contravention of the 1940 Act.
(7) Invest directly in real estate or interests in real
estate; however, the Fund may own debt or equity securities
issued by companies engaged in those businesses.
As a fundamental policy, the Fund may, notwithstanding any other
investment policy or limitation (whether or not fundamental),
invest all of its assets in the securities of a single open-end
management investment company with substantially the same
fundamental investment objectives, policies, and limitations as
the Fund.
2
The Board of Trustees (Trustees) has adopted
additional investment restrictions for the Fund. These
restrictions are operating policies of the Fund and may be
changed by the Trustees without shareholder approval. The
additional restrictions adopted by the Trustees to date include
the following:
(1) If the Fund is an approved underlying fund in a Janus
fund of funds, the Fund may not acquire the securities of other
investment companies or registered unit investment trusts in
excess of the limits of Section 12(d)(1) of the 1940 Act in
reliance on subparagraph (F) or subparagraph (G) of
Section 12(d)(1).
(2) The Fund may sell securities short if it owns or has
the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount to
the securities sold short without the payment of any additional
consideration therefor (short sales against the
box). In addition, the Fund may engage in short sales
other than against the box, which involve selling a security
that the Fund borrows and does not own. The Trustees may impose
limits on the Funds investments in short sales, as
described in the Funds Prospectuses. Transactions in
futures, options, swaps, and forward contracts not involving
short sales are not deemed to constitute selling securities
short.
(3) The Fund does not intend to purchase securities on
margin, except that the Fund may obtain such short-term credits
as are necessary for the clearance of transactions, and provided
that margin payments and other deposits in connection with
transactions involving short sales, futures, options, swaps,
forward contracts, and other permitted investment techniques
shall not be deemed to constitute purchasing securities on
margin.
(4) The Fund may not mortgage or pledge any securities
owned or held by the Fund in amounts that exceed, in the
aggregate, 15% of the Funds net asset value
(NAV), provided that this limitation does not apply
to: reverse repurchase agreements; deposits of assets to margin;
guarantee positions in futures, options, swaps, or forward
contracts; or the segregation of assets in connection with such
contracts.
(5) The Fund does not currently intend to purchase any
security or enter into a repurchase agreement if, as a result,
more than 15% of its net assets would be invested in repurchase
agreements not entitling the holder to payment of principal and
interest within seven days and in securities that are illiquid
by virtue of legal or contractual restrictions on resale or the
absence of a readily available market. The Trustees, or the
Funds investment adviser acting pursuant to authority
delegated by the Trustees, may determine that a readily
available market exists for: securities eligible for resale
pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended (Rule 144A Securities), or any
successor to such rule; Section 4(2) commercial paper; and
municipal lease obligations. Accordingly, such securities may
not be subject to the foregoing limitation.
(6) The Fund may not invest in companies for the purpose of
exercising control of management.
Under the terms of an exemptive order received from the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Fund
may borrow money from or lend money to other funds that permit
such transactions and for which Janus Capital or one of its
affiliates serves as investment adviser. All such borrowing and
lending will be subject to the above limits and to the limits
and other conditions in such exemptive order. The Fund will
borrow money through the program only when the costs are equal
to or lower than the cost of bank loans. Interfund loans and
borrowings normally extend overnight, but can have a maximum
duration of seven days. The Fund will lend through the program
only when the returns are higher than those available from other
short-term instruments (such as repurchase agreements). The Fund
may have to borrow from a bank at a higher interest rate if an
interfund loan is called or not renewed. Any delay in repayment
to a lending Fund could result in a lost investment opportunity
or additional borrowing costs.
For the purposes of these investment restrictions, the
identification of the issuer of a municipal obligation depends
on the terms and conditions of the security. When assets and
revenues of a political subdivision are separate from those of
the government that created the subdivision and the security is
backed only by the assets and revenues of the subdivision, the
subdivision is deemed to be the sole issuer. Similarly, in the
case of an industrial development bond, if the bond is backed
only by assets and revenues of a nongovernmental user, then the
nongovernmental user would be deemed to be the sole issuer. If,
however, in either case, the creating government or some other
entity guarantees the security, the guarantee would be
considered a separate security that would be treated as an issue
of the guaranteeing entity.
For the purposes of the Funds fundamental policy related
to investments in real estate, the policy does not prohibit the
purchase of securities directly or indirectly secured by real
estate or interests therein, or issued by entities that invest
in real estate or interests therein, such as, but not limited
to, corporations, partnerships, real estate investment trusts
(REITs), and other REIT-like entities, such as
foreign entities that have REIT characteristics.
3
For purposes of the Funds policies on investing in
particular industries, as of the date of this SAI, the Fund
relies primarily on industry or industry group classifications
as published by Bloomberg L.P. To the extent that the Bloomberg
L.P. classifications are so broad that the primary economic
characteristics in a single class are materially different, the
Fund may further classify issuers in accordance with industry
classifications as published by the SEC or relevant SEC staff
interpretations. The Fund intends to change industry or industry
group classifications with respect to equity investments to
Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS), but
would continue to use Bloomberg L.P. for fixed-income
investments. The Fund may change any source used for determining
industry classifications without prior shareholder notice or
approval.
INVESTMENT
STRATEGIES AND RISKS
Diversification
Funds are classified as either diversified or
nondiversified. Diversification is a way to reduce
risk by investing in a broad range of stocks or other
securities. To be classified as diversified under
the 1940 Act, a fund may not, with respect to 75% of its
total assets, invest more than 5% of its total assets in any
issuer and may not own more than 10% of the outstanding voting
securities of an issuer. A fund that is classified as
nondiversified under the 1940 Act is not
subject to the same restrictions and therefore has the ability
to take larger positions in a smaller number of issuers than a
fund that is classified as diversified. This gives a
fund which is classified as nondiversified more flexibility to
focus its investments in companies that a portfolio manager has
identified as the most attractive for the investment objective
and strategy of the fund. However, because the appreciation or
depreciation of a single security may have a greater impact on
the NAV of a fund which is classified as nondiversified, its
share price can be expected to fluctuate more than a comparable
fund which is classified as diversified. This fluctuation, if
significant, may affect the performance of a fund.
Cash
Position
As discussed in the Prospectuses, the Funds cash position
may temporarily increase under various circumstances. Securities
that the Fund may invest in as a means of receiving a return on
idle cash include domestic or foreign currency denominated
commercial paper, certificates of deposit, repurchase
agreements, or other short-term debt obligations. These
securities may include U.S. and foreign short-term cash
instruments. The Fund may also invest in affiliated or
non-affiliated
money market funds. (Refer to Investment Company
Securities.)
Illiquid
Investments
Although the Fund intends to invest in liquid securities, the
Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in illiquid
investments (i.e., securities that are not readily marketable).
The Trustees have authorized Janus Capital to make liquidity
determinations with respect to certain securities, including
Rule 144A Securities, commercial paper, and municipal lease
obligations purchased by the Fund. Under the guidelines
established by the Trustees, Janus Capital will consider the
following factors: (i) the frequency of trades and quoted
prices for the security; (ii) the number of dealers willing
to purchase or sell the security and the number of other
potential purchasers; (iii) the willingness of dealers to
undertake to make a market in the security; and (iv) the
nature of the security and the nature of the marketplace trades,
including the time needed to dispose of the security, the method
of soliciting offers, and the mechanics of the transfer. In the
case of commercial paper, Janus Capital will also consider
whether the paper is traded flat or in default as to principal
and interest and any ratings of the paper by a nationally
recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO).
Investments in Rule 144A Securities could have the effect
of increasing the level of the Funds illiquidity to the
extent that qualified institutional buyers become, for a time,
uninterested in purchasing such securities. Certain securities
previously deemed liquid may become illiquid in any subsequent
assessment of the foregoing factors or other changes affecting
the security. Foreign securities that may be freely traded on or
through the facilities of an offshore exchange or other
established offshore securities market are not restricted under
the Funds liquidity procedures if traded in that market.
Such securities will be treated as restricted if
traded in the United States because foreign securities are not
registered for sale under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as
amended (the 1933 Act).
If illiquid securities exceed 15% of the Funds net assets
after the time of purchase, the Fund will take steps to reduce
its holdings of illiquid securities in an orderly fashion.
Because illiquid securities may not be readily marketable, the
portfolio managers may not be able to dispose of them in a
timely manner. As a result, the Fund may be forced to hold
illiquid securities while their price depreciates. Depreciation
in the price of illiquid securities may cause the NAV of the
Fund to decline.
The Fund may invest up to 5% of its total assets in venture
capital investments measured at the time of an investment. A
later increase or decrease in this percentage resulting from
changes in values of assets will not constitute a violation of
such
4
limitation. The Fund may make an initial investment of up to
0.5% of its total assets in any one venture capital company. The
Fund may not invest in aggregate more than 1% of its total
assets, measured at the time of the subsequent purchase, in any
one venture capital company.
Venture capital investments are investments in new and early
stage companies whose securities are not publicly traded. These
investments may present significant opportunities for capital
appreciation but involve a high degree of risk that can result
in substantial losses. The Fund may not be able to sell such
investments when the portfolio managers deem it appropriate to
do so due to restrictions on their sale. In addition, the Fund
may be forced to sell its venture capital investments at less
than fair market value. Where venture capital investments must
be registered prior to their sale, the Fund may be obligated to
pay all or part of the registration expenses. Any of these
situations may result in a decrease in the Funds NAV.
Securities
Lending
Under procedures adopted by the Trustees, certain funds may seek
to earn additional income by lending securities to qualified
parties (typically brokers or other financial institutions) who
need to borrow securities in order to complete, among other
things, certain transactions such as covering short sales,
avoiding failures to deliver securities, or completing arbitrage
activities. There is the risk of delay in recovering a loaned
security or the risk of loss in collateral rights if the
borrower fails financially. In addition, Janus Capital makes
efforts to balance the benefits and risks from granting such
loans. A fund does not have the right to vote on securities
while they are being lent; however, the fund may attempt to call
back the loan and vote the proxy if time permits. All loans will
be continuously secured by collateral which may consist of cash,
U.S. Government securities, domestic and foreign short-term debt
instruments, letters of credit, time deposits, repurchase
agreements, money market mutual funds or other money market
accounts, or such other collateral as permitted by the SEC. If a
fund is unable to recover a security on loan, the fund may use
the collateral to purchase replacement securities in the market.
There is a risk that the value of the collateral could decrease
below the cost of the replacement security by the time the
replacement investment is made, resulting in a loss to the fund.
Upon receipt of cash collateral, Janus Capital may invest it in
affiliated or non-affiliated cash management vehicles, whether
registered or unregistered entities, as permitted by the 1940
Act and rules promulgated thereunder. Janus Capital currently
intends to invest the cash collateral in a cash management
vehicle for which Janus Capital serves as investment adviser. An
investment in a cash management vehicle is generally subject to
the same risks that shareholders experience when investing in
similarly structured vehicles, such as the potential for
significant fluctuations in assets as a result of the purchase
and redemption activity of the securities lending program, a
decline in the value of the collateral, and possible liquidity
issues. Such risks may delay the return of the cash collateral
and cause a fund to violate its agreement to return the cash
collateral to a borrower in a timely manner. As adviser to the
funds and the affiliated cash management vehicle in which the
cash collateral is invested, Janus Capital has an inherent
conflict of interest as a result of its fiduciary duties to both
the funds and the cash management vehicle. Additionally, Janus
Capital receives an investment advisory fee of 0.05% for
managing the cash management vehicle used for the securities
lending program, but it may not receive a fee for managing
certain other affiliated cash management vehicles in which the
funds may invest, and therefore may have an incentive to
allocate preferred investment opportunities to investment
vehicles for which it is receiving a fee.
Equity
Securities
The Fund may invest in equity securities, which include, but are
not limited to, common and preferred stocks, securities
convertible or exchangeable into common stock, and warrants.
Common Stock.
Common stock represents a
proportionate share of the ownership of a company. Common stocks
sometimes are divided into several classes, with each class
having different voting rights, dividend rights, or other
differences in their rights and priorities. The value of a stock
is based on the markets assessment of the current and
future success of a companys business, any income paid to
stockholders, the value of the companys assets, and
general market conditions. The value of a stock may also be
adversely affected by other factors such as accounting
irregularities, actual or perceived weaknesses in corporate
governance practices of a companys board or management,
and changes in company management. Common stock values can
fluctuate dramatically over short periods.
Preferred Stock.
A preferred stock represents an
ownership interest in a company, but pays dividends at a
specific rate and has priority over common stock in payment of
dividends and liquidation claims. Preferred stock dividends are
generally cumulative, noncumulative, or participating.
Cumulative dividend provisions require all or a
portion of prior unpaid dividends to be paid before dividends
can be paid to the issuers common stock.
Participating preferred stock may be entitled to a
dividend exceeding the stated dividend in certain cases. Like
debt securities, the value of a preferred stock often fluctuates
more in response to changes in interest rates and the
creditworthiness of the issuer, rather than in response to
5
changes in the issuers profitability and business
prospects. Preferred stock is subject to similar risks as common
stock and debt securities.
Convertible Security.
A convertible security is
generally a debt obligation or preferred stock that may be
converted within a specified period of time into a certain
amount of common stock of the same or a different issuer. A
convertible security, such as a convertible preferred
stock, provides a fixed-income stream and the opportunity,
through its conversion feature, to participate in the capital
appreciation resulting from a market price advance in its
underlying common stock. Like a common stock, the value of a
convertible security tends to increase as the market value of
the underlying stock rises, and it tends to decrease as the
market value of the underlying stock declines. As with a
fixed-income security, a convertible security tends to increase
in market value when interest rates decline and decrease in
value when interest rates rise. Because both interest rate and
market movements can influence its value, a convertible security
is not as sensitive to interest rates as a similar fixed-income
security, nor is it as sensitive to changes in share price as
its underlying stock.
Convertible securities generally have less potential for gain or
loss than common stocks. Convertible securities generally
provide yields higher than the underlying common stocks, but
generally lower than comparable non-convertible securities.
Because of this higher yield, convertible securities generally
sell at prices above their conversion value, which
is the current market value of the stock to be received upon
conversion. The difference between this conversion value and the
price of convertible securities will vary over time depending on
changes in the value of the underlying common stocks and
interest rates.
A convertible security may also be called for redemption or
conversion by the issuer after a particular date and under
certain circumstances (including a specified price) established
upon issue. If a convertible security held by the Fund is called
for redemption or conversion, the Fund could be required to
tender it for redemption, convert it into the underlying common
stock, or sell it to a third party.
Warrants.
Warrants constitute options to purchase
equity securities at a specific price and are valid for a
specific period of time. They do not represent ownership of the
equity securities, but only the right to buy them. Warrants have
no voting rights, pay no dividends, and have no rights with
respect to the assets of the corporation issuing them. Warrants
differ from call options in that warrants are issued by the
issuer of the security that may be purchased on their exercise,
whereas call options may be issued by anyone. The prices of
warrants do not necessarily move parallel to the prices of the
underlying equity securities. The price usually represents a
premium over the applicable market value of the common stock at
the time of the warrants issuance. Investments in warrants
involve certain risks, including the possible lack of a liquid
market for the resale of the warrants, potential price
fluctuations as a result of speculation or other factors, and
failure of the price of the common stock to rise. The price of a
warrant may be more volatile than the price of its underlying
security. A warrant becomes worthless if it is not exercised
within the specified time period.
Special Purpose Acquisition Companies.
The Fund may
invest in stock, warrants, and other securities of special
purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) or similar
entities that pool funds to seek potential acquisition
opportunities. Unless and until an acquisition is completed, a
SPAC typically invests its assets (less a portion retained to
cover expenses) in U.S. Government securities, money market
fund securities, and cash. If an acquisition that meets the
requirements for the SPAC is not completed within a
pre-established period of time, the invested funds are returned
to the SPACs shareholders. Because SPACs and similar
entities are in essence blank check companies without an
operating history or ongoing business other than seeking
acquisitions, the value of a SPACs securities is
particularly dependent on the ability of the SPACs
management to timely identify and complete a profitable
acquisition. Some SPACs may pursue acquisitions only within
certain industries or regions, which may increase the volatility
of their prices. To the extent the SPAC is invested in cash or
similar securities while awaiting an acquisition opportunity,
the Funds ability to meet its investment objective may be
negatively impacted. In addition, SPACs, which are typically
traded in the over-the-counter market, may be considered
illiquid and/or be subject to restrictions on resale.
Financial
Services Risk
To the extent that the Fund invests a significant portion of its
assets in the financial services sector, the Fund will have more
exposure to the risks inherent to the financial services sector.
Financial services companies may be adversely affected by
changes in regulatory framework or interest rates that may
negatively affect financial services businesses; exposure of a
financial institution to a nondiversified or concentrated loan
portfolio; exposure to financial leverage and/or investments or
agreements that, under certain circumstances, may lead to
losses; and the risk that a market shock or other unexpected
market, economic, political, regulatory, or other event might
lead to a sudden decline in the values of most or all financial
services companies.
6
Natural
Disasters and Extreme Weather Conditions
Certain areas of the world have historically been prone to and
economically sensitive to environmental events such as, but not
limited to, hurricanes, earthquakes, typhoons, flooding, tidal
waves, tsunamis, erupting volcanoes, wildfires or droughts,
tornadoes, mudslides or other weather-related phenomena. Such
disasters, and the resulting physical or economic damage, could
have a severe and negative impact on the Funds investment
portfolio and, in the longer term, could impair the ability of
issuers in which the Fund invests to conduct their businesses as
they would under normal conditions. Adverse weather conditions
may also have a particularly significant negative effect on
issuers in the agricultural sector and on insurance companies
that insure against the impact of natural disasters.
Foreign
Securities
The Fund will invest in foreign securities either indirectly
(e.g., depositary receipts, depositary shares, and passive
foreign investment companies) or directly in foreign markets,
including emerging markets. Investments in foreign securities,
including securities of foreign and emerging markets
governments, may involve greater risks than investing in
domestic securities because the Funds performance may
depend on factors other than the performance of a particular
company. These factors include:
Currency Risk.
As long as the Fund holds a foreign
security, its value will be affected by the value of the local
currency relative to the U.S. dollar. When the Fund sells a
foreign currency denominated security, its value may be worth
less in U.S. dollars even if the security increases in value in
its home country. U.S. dollar-denominated securities of
foreign issuers may also be affected by currency risk, as the
value of these securities may also be affected by changes in the
issuers local currency.
Political and Economic Risk.
Foreign investments may
be subject to heightened political and economic risks,
particularly in emerging markets which may have relatively
unstable governments, immature economic structures, national
policies restricting investments by foreigners, social
instability, and different and/or developing legal systems. In
some countries, there is the risk that the government may take
over the assets or operations of a company or that the
government may impose withholding and other taxes or limits on
the removal of the Funds assets from that country. In
addition, the economies of emerging markets may be predominately
based on only a few industries, may be highly vulnerable to
changes in local or global trade conditions, and may suffer from
extreme and volatile debt burdens or inflation rates.
Additionally, European markets have recently experienced
volatility and adverse trends due to concerns about economic
downturns, rising government debt levels, and the possible
default of government debt in several European countries,
including Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. A default
or debt restructuring by any European country would adversely
impact holders of that countrys debt and worldwide sellers
of credit default swaps linked to that countrys
creditworthiness. These trends have adversely affected the value
and exchange rate of the euro and may continue to significantly
affect the economies of all European countries, which in turn
may have a material adverse effect on the Funds
investments in such countries, other countries that depend on
European countries for significant amounts of trade or
investment, or issuers with exposure to European debt.
Regulatory Risk.
There may be less government
supervision of foreign markets. As a result, foreign issuers may
not be subject to the uniform accounting, auditing, and
financial reporting standards and practices applicable to
domestic issuers, and there may be less publicly available
information about foreign issuers.
Foreign Market Risk.
Foreign securities markets,
particularly those of emerging market countries, may be less
liquid and more volatile than domestic markets. These securities
markets may trade a small number of securities, may have a
limited number of issuers and a high proportion of shares, or
may be held by a relatively small number of persons or
institutions. Local securities markets may be unable to respond
effectively to increases in trading volume, potentially making
prompt liquidation of substantial holdings difficult or
impossible at times. It is also possible that certain markets
may require payment for securities before delivery, and delays
may be encountered in settling securities transactions. In some
foreign markets, there may not be protection against failure by
other parties to complete transactions. It may not be possible
for the Fund to repatriate capital, dividends, interest, and
other income from a particular country or governmental entity.
In addition, securities of issuers located in countries with
emerging markets may have limited marketability and may be
subject to more abrupt or erratic price movements which could
also have a negative effect on the Fund. Such factors may hinder
the Funds ability to buy and sell emerging market
securities in a timely manner, affecting the Funds
investment strategies and potentially affecting the value of the
Fund.
Geographic Investment Risk.
To the extent that the
Fund invests a significant portion of its assets in a particular
country or geographic region, the Fund will generally have more
exposure to certain risks due to possible political, economic,
social, or
7
regulatory events in that country or region. Adverse
developments in certain regions could also adversely affect
securities of other countries whose economies appear to be
unrelated and could have a negative impact on the Funds
performance.
Transaction Costs.
Costs of buying, selling, and
holding foreign securities, including brokerage, tax, and
custody costs, may be higher than those involved in domestic
transactions.
Emerging Markets.
The Fund may invest its assets in
securities of issuers or companies from or with exposure to one
or more developing countries or emerging
markets. Such countries include, but are not limited to,
countries included in the Morgan Stanley Capital International
(MSCI) Emerging Markets
Index
sm
.
Investing in emerging markets involves certain risks not
typically associated with investing in the United States and
imposes risks greater than, or in addition to, the risks
associated with investing in securities of more developed
foreign countries as previously discussed under Foreign
Securities. The prices of investments in emerging markets
can experience sudden and sharp price swings. In many developing
markets, there is less government supervision and regulation of
business and industry practices (including the potential lack of
strict finance and accounting controls and standards), stock
exchanges, brokers, and listed companies than in more developed
markets, making these investments potentially more volatile in
price and less liquid than investments in developed securities
markets, resulting in greater risk to investors. There is a risk
in developing countries that a future economic or political
crisis could lead to price controls, forced mergers of
companies, expropriation or confiscatory taxation, imposition or
enforcement of foreign ownership limits, seizure,
nationalization, or creation of government monopolies, any of
which may have a detrimental effect on the Funds
investments. Many emerging market countries have experienced
substantial, and in some periods extremely high, rates of
inflation or deflation for many years, and future inflation may
adversely affect the economies and securities markets of such
countries. In addition, the economies of developing countries
tend to be heavily dependent upon international trade and, as
such, have been, and may continue to be, adversely impacted by
trade barriers, exchange controls, managed adjustments in
relative currency values, and other protectionist measures.
These economies also have been, and may continue to be,
adversely affected by economic conditions in the countries with
which they do business.
The securities markets of many of the countries in which the
Fund may invest may also be smaller, less liquid, and subject to
greater price volatility than those in the United States. In the
event of a default on any investments in foreign debt
obligations, it may be more difficult for the Fund to obtain or
to enforce a judgment against the issuers of such securities. In
addition, there may be little financial or accounting
information available with respect to issuers of emerging market
securities, and it may be difficult as a result to assess the
value of an investment in such securities. Further, the
Funds ability to participate fully in the smaller, less
liquid emerging markets may be limited by the policy restricting
its investments in illiquid securities. The Fund may be subject
to emerging markets risk to the extent that it invests in
securities of issuers or companies which are not considered to
be from emerging markets, but which have customers, products, or
transactions associated with emerging markets.
Zero
Coupon, Step Coupon, and
Pay-In-Kind
Securities
Within the parameters of its specific investment policies, the
Fund may invest up to 10% of its net assets in zero coupon, step
coupon, and pay-in-kind securities. Zero coupon bonds are issued
and traded at a discount from their face value. They do not
entitle the holder to any periodic payment of interest prior to
maturity. Step coupon bonds are high-quality issues with
above-market interest rates and a coupon that increases over the
life of the bond. They may pay monthly, semiannual, or annual
interest payments. On the date of each coupon payment, the
issuer decides whether to call the bond at par or whether to
extend it until the next payment date at the new coupon rate.
Pay-in-kind bonds normally give the issuer an option to pay cash
at a coupon payment date or give the holder of the security a
similar bond with the same coupon rate and a face value equal to
the amount of the coupon payment that would have been made. For
the purposes of the Funds restriction on investing in
income-producing securities, income-producing securities include
securities that make periodic interest payments as well as those
that make interest payments on a deferred basis or pay interest
only at maturity (e.g., Treasury bills or zero coupon bonds).
For federal income tax purposes, holders of zero coupon
securities and step coupon securities are required to recognize
income even though the holders receive no cash payments of
interest during the year. Similarly, holders of payment-in-kind
securities must include in their gross income the value of
securities they receive as interest. In order to
qualify as a regulated investment company under
Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended, and the regulations thereunder, the Fund must
distribute its investment company taxable income, including the
original issue discount accrued on zero coupon or step coupon
bonds and non-cash income from payment-in-kind securities.
Because the Fund will not receive cash payments on a current
basis with respect to accrued original-issue discount on zero
coupon bonds or step coupon bonds during the period before
interest payments begin or may receive non-cash interest
payments, in some years the Fund may have to distribute cash
obtained from other sources in order to satisfy the distribution
requirements under the
8
Internal Revenue Code. The Fund may obtain such cash from
selling other portfolio holdings, which may cause the Fund to
incur capital gains or losses on the sale. Additionally, these
actions are likely to reduce the amount of cash available for
investment by the Fund, to reduce the assets to which Fund
expenses could be allocated, and to reduce the rate of return
for the Fund. In some circumstances, such sales might be
necessary in order to satisfy cash distribution requirements
even though investment considerations might otherwise make it
undesirable for the Fund to sell the securities at the time.
Generally, the market prices of zero coupon, step coupon, and
pay-in-kind securities are more volatile than the prices of
securities that pay interest periodically and in cash and are
likely to respond to changes in interest rates to a greater
degree than other types of debt securities having similar
maturities and credit quality.
Pass-Through
Securities
The Fund may invest in various types of pass-through securities,
such as mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed securities,
credit-linked trust certificates, traded custody receipts, and
participation interests. A pass-through security is a share or
certificate of interest in a pool of debt obligations that have
been repackaged by an intermediary, such as a bank or
broker-dealer. The purchaser of a pass-through security receives
an undivided interest in the underlying pool of securities. The
issuers of the underlying securities make interest and principal
payments to the intermediary, which are passed through to
purchasers, such as the Fund. The most common type of
pass-through securities is mortgage-backed securities.
Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie
Mae) Certificates are mortgage-backed securities that
evidence an undivided interest in a pool of mortgage loans.
Ginnie Mae Certificates differ from bonds in that principal is
paid back monthly by the borrowers over the term of the loan
rather than returned in a lump sum at maturity. The Fund will
generally purchase modified pass-through Ginnie Mae
Certificates, which entitle the holder to receive a share of all
interest and principal payments paid and owned on the mortgage
pool, net of fees paid to the issuer and Ginnie Mae,
regardless of whether or not the mortgagor actually makes the
payment. Ginnie Mae Certificates are backed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by the full faith and credit
of the U.S. Government.
The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie
Mac) issues two types of mortgage pass-through securities:
mortgage participation certificates (PCs) and
guaranteed mortgage certificates (GMCs). PCs
resemble Ginnie Mae Certificates in that each PC represents a
pro rata share of all interest and principal payments made and
owned on the underlying pool. Freddie Mac guarantees timely
payments of interest on PCs and the full return of principal.
GMCs also represent a pro rata interest in a pool of mortgages.
However, these instruments pay interest semiannually and return
principal once a year in guaranteed minimum payments. This type
of security is guaranteed by Freddie Mac as to timely payment of
principal and interest, but it is not guaranteed by the full
faith and credit of the U.S. Government.
The Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae) issues guaranteed mortgage pass-through certificates
(Fannie Mae Certificates). Fannie Mae Certificates
resemble Ginnie Mae Certificates in that each Fannie Mae
Certificate represents a pro rata share of all interest and
principal payments made and owned on the underlying pool. This
type of security is guaranteed by Fannie Mae as to timely
payment of principal and interest, but it is not guaranteed by
the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.
In September 2008, the Federal Housing Finance Agency
(FHFA), an agency of the U.S. Government, placed
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac under conservatorship. Under the
conservatorship, the management of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
was replaced. Since 2008, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have
received capital support through U.S. Treasury preferred stock
purchases and Treasury and Federal Reserve purchases of their
mortgage-backed securities. The FHFA and the U.S. Treasury have
imposed strict limits on the size of these entities
mortgage portfolios. The FHFA has the power to cancel any
contract entered into by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac prior to
FHFAs appointment as conservator or receiver, including
the guarantee obligations of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Except for GMCs, each of the mortgage-backed securities
described above is characterized by monthly payments to the
holder, reflecting the monthly payments made by the borrowers
who received the underlying mortgage loans. The payments to the
security holders (such as the Fund), like the payments on the
underlying loans, represent both principal and interest.
Although the underlying mortgage loans are for specified periods
of time, such as 20 or 30 years, the borrowers can, and
typically do, pay them off sooner. Thus, the security holders
frequently receive prepayments of principal in addition to the
principal that is part of the regular monthly payments. The
portfolio managers will consider estimated prepayment rates in
calculating the average-weighted maturity of the Fund, if
relevant. A borrower is more likely to prepay a mortgage that
bears a relatively high rate of interest. This means that in
times of declining interest rates, higher yielding
mortgage-backed securities held by the Fund might be converted
to cash, and the Fund will be forced to accept lower interest
rates when that cash is used to purchase additional securities
in the mortgage-backed securities sector or in other investment
sectors.
9
Additionally, prepayments during such periods will limit the
Funds ability to participate in as large a market gain as
may be experienced with a comparable security not subject to
prepayment.
The Funds investments in mortgage-backed securities may be
backed by subprime mortgages. Subprime mortgages are loans made
to borrowers with weakened credit histories or with a lower
capacity to make timely payments on their mortgages. Investments
in mortgage-backed securities comprised of subprime mortgages
may be subject to a higher degree of credit risk, valuation
risk, and liquidity risk.
Asset-backed securities represent interests in pools of consumer
loans and are backed by paper or accounts receivables originated
by banks, credit card companies, or other providers of credit.
Generally, the originating bank or credit provider is neither
the obligor nor the guarantor of the security, and interest and
principal payments ultimately depend upon payment of the
underlying loans by individuals. Tax-exempt asset-backed
securities include units of beneficial interests in pools of
purchase contracts, financing leases, and sales agreements that
may be created when a municipality enters into an installment
purchase contract or lease with a vendor. Such securities may be
secured by the assets purchased or leased by the municipality;
however, if the municipality stops making payments, there
generally will be no recourse against the vendor. The market for
tax-exempt, asset-backed securities is still relatively new.
These obligations are likely to involve unscheduled prepayments
of principal.
The Fund also may invest in other types of pass-through
securities, such as credit-linked trust certificates, traded
custody receipts, and participation interests. Holders of the
interests are entitled to receive distributions of interest,
principal, and other payments on each of the underlying debt
securities (less expenses), and in some cases distributions of
the underlying debt securities. The underlying debt securities
have a specified maturity but are subject to prepayment risk
because if an issuer prepays the principal, the Fund may have
additional cash to invest at a time when prevailing interest
rates have declined and reinvestment of such additional funds is
made at a lower rate. The value of the underlying debt
securities may change due to changes in market interest rates.
If interest rates rise, the value of the underlying debt
securities, and therefore the value of the pass-through
security, may decline. If the underlying debt securities are
high-yield securities, the risks associated with
high-yield/high-risk securities discussed in this SAI and in the
Funds Prospectuses may apply.
Investment
Company Securities
From time to time, the Fund may invest in securities of other
investment companies, subject to the provisions of the 1940 Act
and any applicable SEC exemptive orders. Section 12(d)(1)
of the 1940 Act prohibits the Fund from acquiring: (i) more
than 3% of another investment companys voting stock;
(ii) securities of another investment company with a value
in excess of 5% of the Funds total assets; or
(iii) securities of such other investment company and all
other investment companies owned by the Fund having a value in
excess of 10% of the Funds total assets. In addition,
Section 12(d)(1) prohibits another investment company from
selling its shares to the Fund if, after the sale: (i) the
Fund owns more than 3% of the other investment companys
voting stock or (ii) the Fund and other investment
companies, and companies controlled by them, own more than 10%
of the voting stock of such other investment company. If the
Fund is an approved underlying fund in a Janus fund of funds,
the Fund may not acquire the securities of other investment
companies or registered unit investment trusts in excess of the
limits of Section 12(d)(1) of the 1940 Act in reliance on
subparagraph (F) or subparagraph (G) of
Section 12(d)(1). The Fund may invest its cash holdings in
affiliated or non-affiliated money market funds as part of a
cash sweep program. The Fund may purchase unlimited shares of
affiliated or non-affiliated money market funds and of other
funds managed by Janus Capital, whether registered or
unregistered entities, as permitted by the 1940 Act and rules
promulgated thereunder
and/or
an
SEC exemptive order. To the extent the Fund invests in money
market funds or other funds, the Fund will be subject to the
same risks that investors experience when investing in such
other funds. These risks may include the impact of significant
fluctuations in assets as a result of the cash sweep program or
purchase and redemption activity by affiliated or non-affiliated
shareholders in such other funds. Additionally, as the adviser
to the Fund and the money market funds or other funds or
investment vehicles in which the Fund may invest, Janus Capital
has an inherent conflict of interest because it has fiduciary
duties to both the Fund and the money market funds and other
funds.
Investment companies may include index-based investments such as
exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which hold
substantially all of their assets in investments representing
specific indices. The main risk of investing in index-based
investments is the same as investing in a portfolio of
investments comprising the index. As a shareholder of another
investment company, the Fund would bear its pro rata portion of
the other investment companys expenses, including advisory
fees, in addition to the expenses the Fund bears directly in
connection with its own operation. The market prices of
index-based investments will fluctuate in accordance with both
changes in the market value of their underlying portfolio
investments and due to supply and demand for the instruments on
the exchanges on which they are traded (which may result in
their trading at a discount or premium to their NAVs).
Index-based investments may not replicate exactly the
performance of their specific
10
index because of transaction costs and because of the temporary
unavailability of certain component securities of the index.
Some ETFs have obtained exemptive orders permitting other
investment companies, such as the Fund, to acquire their
securities in excess of the limits of the 1940 Act.
Exchange-Traded
Notes
The Fund may invest in exchange-traded notes (ETNs),
which are senior, unsecured, unsubordinated debt securities
whose returns are linked to a particular index and provide
exposure to the total returns of various market indices,
including indices linked to stocks, bonds, commodities and
currencies. This type of debt security differs from other types
of bonds and notes. ETN returns are based upon the performance
of a market index minus applicable fees; no period coupon
payments are distributed and no principal protections exist.
ETNs do not pay cash distributions. Instead, the value of
dividends, interest, and investment gains are captured in the
Funds total return. The Fund may invest in these
securities when desiring exposure to debt securities or
commodities. When evaluating ETNs for investment, Janus Capital
or the subadviser, as applicable, will consider the potential
risks involved, expected tax efficiency, rate of return, and
credit risk. When the Fund invests in ETNs, it will bear its
proportionate share of any fees and expenses borne by the ETN.
There may be restrictions on the Funds right to redeem its
investment in an ETN, which are meant to be held until maturity.
The Funds decision to sell its ETN holdings may be limited
by the availability of a secondary market.
Depositary
Receipts
The Fund may invest in sponsored and unsponsored American
Depositary Receipts (ADRs), which are receipts
issued by an American bank or trust company evidencing ownership
of underlying securities issued by a foreign issuer. ADRs, in
registered form, are designed for use in U.S. securities
markets. Unsponsored ADRs may be created without the
participation of the foreign issuer. Holders of these ADRs
generally bear all the costs of the ADR facility, whereas
foreign issuers typically bear certain costs in a sponsored ADR.
The bank or trust company depositary of an unsponsored ADR may
be under no obligation to distribute shareholder communications
received from the foreign issuer or to pass through voting
rights. The Fund may also invest in European Depositary Receipts
(EDRs), Global Depositary Receipts
(GDRs), and in other similar instruments
representing securities of foreign companies. EDRs and GDRs are
securities that are typically issued by foreign banks or foreign
trust companies, although U.S. banks or U.S. trust companies may
issue them. EDRs and GDRs are structured similarly to the
arrangements of ADRs. EDRs, in bearer form, are designed for use
in European securities markets.
Depositary receipts are generally subject to the same sort of
risks as direct investments in a foreign country, such as
currency risk, political and economic risk, regulatory risk,
market risk, and geographic investment risk, because their
values depend on the performance of a foreign security
denominated in its home currency. The risks of foreign investing
are addressed in some detail in the Funds Prospectuses.
U.S.
Government Securities
To the extent permitted by its investment objective and
policies, the Fund may invest in U.S. Government
securities. The 1940 Act defines U.S. Government securities
to include securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S. Government, its agencies, and its instrumentalities.
U.S. Government securities may also include repurchase
agreements collateralized by and municipal securities escrowed
with or refunded with U.S. Government securities.
U.S. Government securities in which the Fund may invest
include U.S. Treasury securities, including Treasury
Inflation Protection Securities (TIPS), and
obligations issued or guaranteed by U.S. Government
agencies and instrumentalities that are backed by the full faith
and credit of the U.S. Government, such as those issued or
guaranteed by the Small Business Administration, Maritime
Administration, Export-Import Bank of the United States, Farmers
Home Administration, Federal Housing Administration, and Ginnie
Mae. In addition, U.S. Government securities in which the
Fund may invest include securities backed only by the rights of
the issuers to borrow from the U.S. Treasury, such as those
issued by the Federal Farm Credit Bank, Federal Intermediate
Credit Banks, Tennessee Valley Authority, and Freddie Mac.
Securities issued by Fannie Mae, the Federal Home Loan Banks,
and the Student Loan Marketing Association (Sallie
Mae) are supported by the discretionary authority of the
U.S. Government to purchase the obligations. There is no
guarantee that the U.S. Government will support securities
not backed by its full faith and credit. Accordingly, although
these securities have historically involved little risk of loss
of principal if held to maturity, they may involve more risk
than securities backed by the full faith and credit of the
U.S. Government because the Fund must look principally to
the agency or instrumentality issuing or guaranteeing the
securities for repayment and may not be able to assert a claim
against the United States if the agency or instrumentality does
not meet its commitment.
Municipal
Obligations
The Fund may invest in municipal obligations issued by states,
territories, and possessions of the United States and the
District of Columbia. The value of municipal obligations can be
affected by changes in their actual or perceived credit quality.
11
The credit quality of municipal obligations can be affected by,
among other things, the financial condition of the issuer or
guarantor, the issuers future borrowing plans and sources
of revenue, the economic feasibility of the revenue bond project
or general borrowing purpose, political or economic developments
in the region where the security is issued, and the liquidity of
the security. Because municipal securities are generally traded
over-the-counter, the liquidity of a particular issue often
depends on the willingness of dealers to make a market in the
security. The liquidity of some municipal obligations may be
enhanced by demand features, which would enable the Fund to
demand payment on short notice from the issuer or a financial
intermediary.
Other
Income-Producing Securities
Other types of income-producing securities that the Fund may
purchase include, but are not limited to, the following types of
securities:
Inverse floaters.
Inverse floaters are debt
instruments whose interest bears an inverse relationship to the
interest rate on another security. The Fund will not invest more
than 5% of its assets in inverse floaters. Similar to variable
and floating rate obligations, effective use of inverse floaters
requires skills different from those needed to select most
portfolio securities. If movements in interest rates are
incorrectly anticipated, the Fund could lose money, or its NAV
could decline by the use of inverse floaters.
Standby commitments.
Standby commitments are the
rights to sell a specified underlying security or securities
within a specified period of time and at an exercise price equal
to the amortized cost of the underlying security or securities
plus accrued interest, if any, at the time of exercise, that may
be sold, transferred, or assigned only with the underlying
security or securities. A standby commitment entitles the holder
to receive same day settlement and will be considered to be from
the party to whom the investment company will look for payment
of the exercise price.
Strip bonds.
Strip bonds are debt securities that
are stripped of their interest (usually by a financial
intermediary) after the securities are issued. The market value
of these securities generally fluctuates more in response to
changes in interest rates than interest-paying securities of
comparable maturity.
Tender option bonds.
Tender option bonds are
relatively long-term bonds that are coupled with the option to
tender the securities to a bank, broker-dealer, or other
financial institution at periodic intervals and receive the face
value of the bonds. This investment structure is commonly used
as a means of enhancing a securitys liquidity.
The Fund will purchase standby commitments, tender option bonds,
and instruments with demand features primarily for the purpose
of increasing the liquidity of its portfolio holdings.
Variable and floating rate obligations.
These types
of securities have variable or floating rates of interest and,
under certain limited circumstances, may have varying principal
amounts. Variable and floating rate securities pay interest at
rates that are adjusted periodically according to a specified
formula, usually with reference to some interest rate index or
market interest rate (the underlying index). The
floating rate tends to decrease the securitys price
sensitivity to changes in interest rates. These types of
securities are relatively long-term instruments that often carry
demand features permitting the holder to demand payment of
principal at any time or at specified intervals prior to
maturity.
In order to most effectively use these investments, the
portfolio managers must correctly assess probable movements in
interest rates. This involves different skills than those used
to select most portfolio securities. If the portfolio managers
incorrectly forecast such movements, the Fund could be adversely
affected by the use of variable or floating rate obligations.
Repurchase
and Reverse Repurchase Agreements
In a repurchase agreement, the Fund purchases a security and
simultaneously commits to resell that security to the seller at
an agreed upon price on an agreed upon date within a number of
days (usually not more than seven) from the date of purchase.
The resale price consists of the purchase price plus an agreed
upon incremental amount that is unrelated to the coupon rate or
maturity of the purchased security. A repurchase agreement
involves the obligation of the seller to pay the agreed upon
price, which obligation is in effect secured by the value (at
least equal to the amount of the agreed upon resale price and
marked-to-market daily) of the underlying security or
collateral. A risk associated with repurchase
agreements is the failure of the seller to repurchase the
securities as agreed, which may cause the Fund to suffer a loss
if the market value of such securities declines before they can
be liquidated on the open market. In the event of bankruptcy or
insolvency of the seller, the Fund may encounter delays and
incur costs in liquidating the underlying security. In addition,
the collateral received in the repurchase transaction may become
worthless. To the extent the Funds collateral focuses in
one or more sectors, such as banks and financial services, the
Fund is subject to increased risk as a result of that exposure.
Repurchase
12
agreements that mature in more than seven days are subject to
the 15% limit on illiquid investments. While it is not possible
to eliminate all risks from these transactions, it is the policy
of the Fund to limit repurchase agreements to those parties
whose creditworthiness has been reviewed and found satisfactory
by Janus Capital. There is no guarantee that Janus
Capitals analysis of the creditworthiness of the
counterparty will be accurate, and the underlying collateral
involved in the transaction can expose the Fund to additional
risk regardless of the creditworthiness of the parties involved
in the transaction.
Reverse repurchase agreements are transactions in which the Fund
sells a security and simultaneously commits to repurchase that
security from the buyer, such as a bank or broker-dealer, at an
agreed upon price on an agreed upon future date. The resale
price in a reverse repurchase agreement reflects a market rate
of interest that is not related to the coupon rate or maturity
of the sold security. For certain demand agreements, there is no
agreed upon repurchase date and interest payments are calculated
daily, often based upon the prevailing overnight repurchase
rate. The Fund will use the proceeds of reverse repurchase
agreements only to satisfy unusually heavy redemption requests
or for other temporary or emergency purposes without the
necessity of selling portfolio securities, or to earn additional
income on portfolio securities, such as Treasury bills or notes.
Generally, a reverse repurchase agreement enables the Fund to
recover for the term of the reverse repurchase agreement all or
most of the cash invested in the portfolio securities sold and
to keep the interest income associated with those portfolio
securities. Such transactions are only advantageous if the
interest cost to the Fund of the reverse repurchase transaction
is less than the cost of obtaining the cash otherwise. In
addition, interest costs on the money received in a reverse
repurchase agreement may exceed the return received on the
investments made by the Fund with those monies. Using reverse
repurchase agreements to earn additional income involves the
risk that the interest earned on the invested proceeds is less
than the expense of the reverse repurchase agreement
transaction. This technique may also have a leveraging effect on
the Funds portfolio, although the Funds intent to
segregate assets in the amount of the reverse repurchase
agreement minimizes this effect. While a reverse repurchase
agreement is outstanding, the Fund will maintain cash and
appropriate liquid assets in a segregated custodial account to
cover its obligation under the agreement. The Fund will enter
into reverse repurchase agreements only with parties that Janus
Capital deems creditworthy.
High-Yield/High-Risk
Bonds
Within the parameters of its specific investment policies, the
Fund may invest in bonds that are rated below investment grade
(i.e., bonds rated BB+ or lower by Standard & Poors
Ratings Services and Fitch, Inc., or Ba or lower by Moodys
Investors Service, Inc.). To the extent the Fund invests in
high-yield/high-risk bonds, under normal circumstances, the Fund
will limit its investments in such bonds to 35% or less of its
net assets.
Lower rated bonds involve a higher degree of credit risk, which
is the risk that the issuer will not make interest or principal
payments when due. In the event of an unanticipated default, the
Fund would experience a reduction in its income, and could
expect a decline in the market value of the bonds so affected.
The Fund may also invest in unrated bonds of foreign and
domestic issuers. Unrated bonds will be included in the
Funds limit on investments in bonds rated below investment
grade unless its portfolio managers deem such securities to be
the equivalent of investment grade bonds. Unrated bonds, while
not necessarily of lower quality than rated bonds, may not have
as broad a market. Because of the size and perceived demand of
the issue, among other factors, certain municipalities may not
incur the costs of obtaining a rating. The Funds portfolio
managers will analyze the creditworthiness of the issuer, as
well as any financial institution or other party responsible for
payments on the bond, in determining whether to purchase unrated
municipal bonds.
The secondary market on which high-yield securities are traded
is less liquid than the market for investment grade securities.
The lack of a liquid secondary market may have an adverse impact
on the market price of the security. Additionally, it may be
more difficult to value the securities because valuation may
require more research, and elements of judgment may play a
larger role in the valuation because there is less reliable,
objective data available.
Please refer to the Explanation of Rating Categories
section of this SAI for a description of bond rating categories.
Defaulted
Securities
The Fund may hold defaulted securities if the portfolio managers
believe, based upon an analysis of the financial condition,
results of operations, and economic outlook of an issuer, that
there is potential for resumption of income payments and that
the securities offer an unusual opportunity for capital
appreciation. Defaulted securities will be included in the
Funds limit on investments in bonds rated below investment
grade. Notwithstanding the portfolio managers belief about
the resumption
13
of income, however, the purchase of any security on which
payment of interest or dividends is suspended involves a high
degree of risk. Such risk includes, among other things, the
following:
Financial and Market Risks.
Investments in
securities that are in default involve a high degree of
financial and market risks that can result in substantial or, at
times, even total losses. Issuers of defaulted securities may
have substantial capital needs and may become involved in
bankruptcy or reorganization proceedings. Among the problems
involved in investments in such issuers is the fact that it may
be difficult to obtain information about the condition of such
issuers. The market prices of such securities also are subject
to abrupt and erratic movements and above average price
volatility, and the spread between the bid and asked prices of
such securities may be greater than normally expected.
Disposition of Portfolio Securities.
Although the
Fund generally will purchase securities for which its portfolio
managers expect an active market to be maintained, defaulted
securities may be less actively traded than other securities,
and it may be difficult to dispose of substantial holdings of
such securities at prevailing market prices. The Fund will limit
holdings of any such securities to amounts that the portfolio
managers believe could be readily sold, and holdings of such
securities would, in any event, be limited so as not to limit
the Funds ability to readily dispose of securities to meet
redemptions.
Other.
Defaulted securities require active
monitoring and may, at times, require participation in
bankruptcy or receivership proceedings on behalf of the Fund.
Futures,
Options, and Other Derivative Instruments
The Fund may invest in various types of derivatives, which may
at times result in significant derivative exposure. A derivative
is a financial instrument whose performance is derived from the
performance of another asset. The Fund may invest in derivative
instruments including, but not limited to: futures contracts,
put options, call options, options on future contracts, options
on foreign currencies, swaps, forward contracts, structured
investments, and other equity-linked derivatives.
The Fund may use derivative instruments for hedging (to offset
risks associated with an investment, currency exposure, or
market conditions) or for speculative (to seek to enhance
returns) purposes. When the Fund invests in a derivative for
speculative purposes, the Fund will be fully exposed to the
risks of loss of that derivative, which may sometimes be greater
than the derivatives cost. The Fund may not use any
derivative to gain exposure to an asset or class of assets that
it would be prohibited by its investment restrictions from
purchasing directly. The Funds ability to use derivative
instruments may also be limited by tax considerations. (See
Income Dividends, Capital Gains Distributions, and Tax
Status.)
Investments in derivatives in general are subject to market
risks that may cause their prices to fluctuate over time.
Investments in derivatives may not directly correlate with the
price movements of the underlying instrument. As a result, the
use of derivatives may expose the Fund to additional risks that
it would not be subject to if it invested directly in the
securities underlying those derivatives. The use of derivatives
may result in larger losses or smaller gains than otherwise
would be the case. Derivatives can be volatile and may involve
significant risks, including:
Counterparty risk
the risk that the
counterparty (the party on the other side of the transaction) on
a derivative transaction will be unable to honor its financial
obligation to the Fund.
Currency risk
the risk that changes in the
exchange rate between currencies will adversely affect the value
(in U.S. dollar terms) of an investment.
Leverage risk
the risk associated with
certain types of leveraged investments or trading strategies
pursuant to which relatively small market movements may result
in large changes in the value of an investment. The Fund creates
leverage by using borrowed capital to increase the amount
invested, or investing in instruments, including derivatives,
where the investment loss can exceed the original amount
invested. Certain investments or trading strategies that involve
leverage can result in losses that greatly exceed the amount
originally invested.
Liquidity risk
the risk that certain
securities may be difficult or impossible to sell at the time
that the seller would like or at the price that the seller
believes the security is currently worth.
Index risk
if the derivative is linked to the
performance of an index, it will be subject to the risks
associated with changes in that index. If the index changes, the
Fund could receive lower interest payments or experience a
reduction in the value of the derivative to below what the Fund
paid. Certain indexed securities, including inverse securities
(which move in an opposite direction to the index), may create
leverage, to the extent that they increase or decrease in value
at a rate that is a multiple of the changes in the applicable
index.
14
Derivatives may generally be traded over-the-counter
(OTC) or on an exchange. Derivatives traded
OTC, such as options and structured notes, are agreements that
are individually negotiated between parties and can be tailored
to meet a purchasers needs. OTC derivatives are not
guaranteed by a clearing agency and may be subject to increased
credit risk.
In an effort to mitigate credit risk associated with derivatives
traded OTC, the Fund may enter into collateral agreements with
certain counterparties whereby, subject to certain minimum
exposure requirements, the Fund may require the counterparty to
post collateral if the Fund has a net aggregate unrealized gain
on all OTC derivative contracts with a particular counterparty.
There is no guarantee that counterparty exposure is reduced and
these arrangements are dependent on Janus Capitals ability
to establish and maintain appropriate systems and trading.
Futures Contracts.
The Fund may enter into contracts
for the purchase or sale for future delivery of equity
securities, fixed-income securities, foreign currencies,
commodities, and commodity-linked derivatives (to the extent
permitted by the Fund and the Internal Revenue Code), or
contracts based on financial indices, including indices of
U.S. Government securities, foreign government securities,
commodities, and equity or fixed-income securities. U.S. futures
contracts are traded on exchanges which have been designated
contract markets by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC) and must be executed through a
futures commission merchant (FCM) or brokerage firm,
which are members of a relevant contract market. Through their
clearing corporations, the exchanges guarantee performance of
the contracts as between the clearing members of the exchange.
The buyer or seller of a futures contract is not required to
deliver or pay for the underlying instrument unless the contract
is held until the delivery date. However, both the buyer and
seller are required to deposit initial margin for
the benefit of the FCM when the contract is entered into.
Initial margin deposits are equal to a percentage of the
contracts value, as set by the exchange on which the
contract is traded, and currently are maintained in cash or
certain other liquid assets held by the Fund. Initial margin
payments are similar to good faith deposits or performance
bonds. Unlike margin extended by a securities broker, initial
margin payments do not constitute purchasing securities on
margin for purposes of the Funds investment limitations.
If the value of either partys position declines, that
party will be required to make additional variation
margin payments for the benefit of the FCM to settle the
change in value on a daily basis. The party that has a gain may
be entitled to receive all or a portion of this amount. In the
event of the bankruptcy of the FCM that holds margin on behalf
of the Fund, the Fund may be entitled to return of margin owed
to the Fund only in proportion to the amount received by the
FCMs other customers. Janus Capital or the subadviser will
attempt to minimize the risk by careful monitoring of the
creditworthiness of the FCMs with which the Fund does business.
The Fund has filed a notice of eligibility for exemption from
the definition of the term commodity pool operator
in accordance with Rule 4.5 of the U.S. Commodity
Exchange Act, as amended (Commodity Exchange Act)
and, therefore, the Fund is not subject to regulation as a
commodity pool operator under the Commodity Exchange Act. The
Fund may enter into futures contracts and related options as
permitted under Rule 4.5. Amendments to Rule 4.5
adopted in 2012, however, narrowed the exemption from the
definition of commodity pool operator and effectively imposed
additional restrictions on the Funds use of futures,
options, and swaps. The Fund will become subject to increased
CFTC regulation if the Fund invests more than a prescribed level
of its assets in such instruments, or if the Fund markets itself
as providing investment exposure to these instruments. If the
Fund cannot meet the requirements of Rule 4.5, Janus
Capital and the Fund would need to comply with additional
disclosure, reporting, and recordkeeping requirements, which are
currently pending final rulemaking. Although the ultimate effect
of such rulemaking is uncertain, such additional requirements
could increase the Funds expenses and/or limit the
Funds ability to achieve its investment objective. Janus
Capital is registered as a commodity pool operator in connection
with the operation of one or more other Janus mutual funds which
do not qualify for the Rule 4.5 exemption.
Although the Fund will segregate cash and liquid assets in an
amount sufficient to cover its open futures obligations, the
segregated assets would be available to the Fund immediately
upon closing out the futures position; however, closing out open
futures positions through customary settlement procedures could
take several days. Because the Funds cash that may
otherwise be invested would be held uninvested or invested in
other liquid assets so long as the futures position remains
open, the Funds return could be diminished due to the
opportunity losses of foregoing other potential investments.
The Fund may enter into futures contracts to gain exposure to
the stock market or other markets pending investment of cash
balances or to meet liquidity needs. The Fund may also enter
into futures contracts to protect itself from fluctuations in
the value of individual securities, the securities markets
generally, or interest rate fluctuations, without actually
buying or selling the underlying debt or equity security. For
example, if the Fund anticipates an increase in the price of
stocks, and it intends to purchase stocks at a later time, the
Fund could enter into a futures contract to purchase a stock
index as a temporary
15
substitute for stock purchases. If an increase in the market
occurs that influences the stock index as anticipated, the value
of the futures contracts will increase, thereby serving as a
hedge against the Fund not participating in a market advance.
This technique is sometimes known as an anticipatory hedge. The
Fund may also use this technique with respect to an individual
companys stock. To the extent the Fund enters into futures
contracts for this purpose, the segregated assets maintained to
cover the Funds obligations with respect to the futures
contracts will consist of liquid assets from its portfolio in an
amount equal to the difference between the contract price and
the aggregate value of the initial and variation margin payments
made by the Fund with respect to the futures contracts.
Conversely, if the Fund holds stocks and seeks to protect itself
from a decrease in stock prices, the Fund might sell stock index
futures contracts, thereby hoping to offset the potential
decline in the value of its portfolio securities by a
corresponding increase in the value of the futures contract
position. Similarly, if the Fund holds an individual
companys stock and expects the price of that stock to
decline, the Fund may sell a futures contract on that stock in
hopes of offsetting the potential decline in the companys
stock price. The Fund could protect against a decline in stock
prices by selling portfolio securities and investing in money
market instruments, but the use of futures contracts enables it
to maintain a defensive position without having to sell
portfolio securities.
If the Fund owns interest rate sensitive securities and the
portfolio managers expect interest rates to increase, the Fund
may take a short position in interest rate futures contracts.
Taking such a position would have much the same effect as the
Fund selling such securities in its portfolio. If interest rates
increase as anticipated, the value of the securities would
decline, but the value of the Funds interest rate futures
contract would increase, thereby keeping the NAV of the Fund
from declining as much as it may have otherwise. If, on the
other hand, the portfolio managers expect interest rates to
decline, the Fund may take a long position in interest rate
futures contracts in anticipation of later closing out the
futures position and purchasing the securities. Although the
Fund can accomplish similar results by buying securities with
long maturities and selling securities with short maturities,
given the greater liquidity of the futures market than the cash
market, it may be possible to accomplish the same result more
easily and more quickly by using futures contracts as an
investment tool to reduce risk.
The ordinary spreads between prices in the cash and futures
markets, due to differences in the nature of those markets, are
subject to distortions. First, all participants in the futures
market are subject to initial margin and variation margin
requirements. Rather than meeting additional variation margin
requirements, investors may close out futures contracts through
offsetting transactions which could distort the normal price
relationship between the cash and futures markets. Second, the
liquidity of the futures market depends on participants entering
into offsetting transactions rather than making or taking
delivery of the instrument underlying a futures contract. To the
extent participants decide to make or take delivery, liquidity
in the futures market could be reduced and prices in the futures
market distorted. Third, from the point of view of speculators,
the margin deposit requirements in the futures market are less
onerous than margin requirements in the securities market.
Therefore, increased participation by speculators in the futures
market may cause temporary price distortions. Due to the
possibility of the foregoing distortions, a correct forecast of
general price trends by the portfolio managers still may not
result in a successful use of futures.
Futures contracts entail risks. There is no guarantee that
derivative investments will benefit the Fund. The Funds
performance could be worse than if the Fund had not used such
instruments. For example, if the Fund has hedged against the
effects of a possible decrease in prices of securities held in
its portfolio and prices increase instead, the Fund will lose
part or all of the benefit of the increased value of these
securities because of offsetting losses in its futures
positions. This risk may be magnified for single stock futures
transactions, as the portfolio managers must predict the
direction of the price of an individual stock, as opposed to
securities prices generally. In addition, if the Fund has
insufficient cash, it may have to sell securities from its
portfolio to meet daily variation margin requirements. Those
sales may be, but will not necessarily be, at increased prices
which reflect the rising market and may occur at a time when the
sales are disadvantageous to the Fund.
The prices of futures contracts depend primarily on the value of
their underlying instruments. Because there are a limited number
of types of futures contracts, it is possible that the
standardized futures contracts available to the Fund will not
match exactly the Funds current or potential investments.
The Fund may buy and sell futures contracts based on underlying
instruments with different characteristics from the securities
in which it typically invests for example, by
hedging investments in portfolio securities with a futures
contract based on a broad index of securities which
involves a risk that the futures position will not correlate
precisely with the performance of the Funds investments.
Futures prices can also diverge from the prices of their
underlying instruments, even if the underlying instruments
closely correlate with the Funds investments, such as with
a single stock futures contract. Futures prices are affected by
factors such as current and anticipated short-term interest
rates, changes in volatility of the underlying instruments, and
the time remaining until expiration of the contract. Those
factors may affect securities prices differently from futures
prices. Imperfect correlations between the Funds
investments and its futures positions also may result from
differing levels of demand in the
16
futures markets and the securities markets, from structural
differences in how futures and securities are traded, and from
imposition of daily price fluctuation limits for futures
contracts. The Fund may buy or sell futures contracts with a
greater or lesser value than the securities it wishes to hedge
or is considering purchasing in order to attempt to compensate
for differences in historical volatility between the futures
contract and the securities, although this may not be successful
in all cases. If price changes in the Funds futures
positions are poorly correlated with its other investments, its
futures positions may fail to produce desired gains or result in
losses that are not offset by the gains in the Funds other
investments.
Because futures contracts are generally settled within a day
from the date they are closed out, compared with a settlement
period of three days for some types of securities, the futures
markets can provide superior liquidity to the securities
markets. Nevertheless, there is no assurance that a liquid
secondary market will exist for any particular futures contract
at any particular time. In addition, futures exchanges may
establish daily price fluctuation limits for futures contracts
and may halt trading if a contracts price moves upward or
downward more than the limit in a given day. On volatile trading
days when the price fluctuation limit is reached, it may be
impossible for the Fund to enter into new positions or close out
existing positions. If the secondary market for a futures
contract is not liquid because of price fluctuation limits or
otherwise, the Fund may not be able to promptly liquidate
unfavorable futures positions and potentially could be required
to continue to hold a futures position until the delivery date,
regardless of changes in its value. As a result, the Funds
access to other assets held to cover its futures positions also
could be impaired.
Options on Futures Contracts.
The Fund may buy and
write put and call options on futures contracts. A purchased
option on a future gives the Fund the right (but not the
obligation) to buy or sell a futures contract at a specified
price on or before a specified date. The purchase of a call
option on a futures contract is similar in some respects to the
purchase of a call option on an individual security. As with
other option transactions, securities will be segregated to
cover applicable margin or segregation requirements on open
futures contracts. Depending on the pricing of the option
compared to either the price of the futures contract upon which
it is based or the price of the underlying instrument, ownership
of the option may or may not be less risky than ownership of the
futures contract or the underlying instrument. As with the
purchase of futures contracts, when the Fund is not fully
invested, it may buy a call option on a futures contract to
hedge against a market advance.
The writing of a call option on a futures contract constitutes a
partial hedge against declining prices of a security, commodity,
or foreign currency which is deliverable under, or of the index
comprising, the futures contract. If the futures price at the
expiration of the option is below the exercise price, the Fund
will retain the full amount of the option premium which provides
a partial hedge against any decline that may have occurred in
the Funds portfolio holdings. The writing of a put option
on a futures contract constitutes a partial hedge against
increasing prices of a security, commodity, or foreign currency
which is deliverable under, or of the index comprising, the
futures contract. If the futures price at expiration of the
option is higher than the exercise price, the Fund will retain
the full amount of the option premium which provides a partial
hedge against any increase in the price of securities which the
Fund is considering buying. If a call or put option the Fund has
written is exercised, the Fund will incur a loss which will be
reduced by the amount of the premium it received. Depending on
the degree of correlation between the change in the value of its
portfolio securities and changes in the value of the futures
positions, the Funds losses from existing options on
futures may to some extent be reduced or increased by changes in
the value of portfolio securities.
The purchase of a put option on a futures contract is similar in
some respects to the purchase of protective put options on
portfolio securities. For example, the Fund may buy a put option
on a futures contract to hedge its portfolio against the risk of
falling prices or rising interest rates.
The amount of risk the Fund assumes when it buys an option on a
futures contract is the premium paid for the option plus related
transaction costs. In addition to the correlation risks
discussed above, the purchase of an option also entails the risk
that changes in the value of the underlying futures contract
will not be fully reflected in the value of the options bought.
Forward Contracts.
A forward contract is an
agreement between two parties in which one party is obligated to
deliver a stated amount of a stated asset at a specified time in
the future and the other party is obligated to pay a specified
amount for the asset at the time of delivery. The Fund may enter
into forward contracts to purchase and sell government
securities, equity or income securities, foreign currencies, or
other financial instruments. Currently, the Fund does not intend
to invest in forward contracts other than forward currency
contracts. Forward contracts generally are traded in an
interbank market conducted directly between traders (usually
large commercial banks) and their customers. Unlike futures
contracts, which are standardized contracts, forward contracts
can be specifically drawn to meet the needs of the parties that
enter into them. The
17
parties to a forward contract may agree to offset or terminate
the contract before its maturity, or may hold the contract to
maturity and complete the contemplated exchange.
The following discussion summarizes the Funds principal
uses of forward foreign currency exchange contracts
(forward currency contracts). The Fund may enter
into forward currency contracts with stated contract values of
up to the value of the Funds assets. A forward currency
contract is an obligation to buy or sell an amount of a
specified currency for an agreed price (which may be in
U.S. dollars or a foreign currency). The Fund may invest in
forward currency contracts for nonhedging purposes such as
seeking to enhance return. The Fund will exchange foreign
currencies for U.S. dollars and for other foreign currencies in
the normal course of business and may buy and sell currencies
through forward currency contracts in order to fix a price for
securities it has agreed to buy or sell (transaction
hedge). The Fund also may hedge some or all of its
investments denominated in a foreign currency or exposed to
foreign currency fluctuations against a decline in the value of
that currency relative to the U.S. dollar by entering into
forward currency contracts to sell an amount of that currency
(or a proxy currency whose performance is expected to replicate
or exceed the performance of that currency relative to the U.S.
dollar) approximating the value of some or all of its portfolio
securities denominated in or exposed to that currency
(position hedge) or by participating in options or
futures contracts with respect to the currency. The Fund also
may enter into a forward currency contract with respect to a
currency where the Fund is considering the purchase or sale of
investments denominated in that currency but has not yet
selected the specific investments (anticipatory
hedge). In any of these circumstances the Fund may,
alternatively, enter into a forward currency contract to
purchase or sell one foreign currency for a second currency that
is expected to perform more favorably relative to the U.S.
dollar if the portfolio managers believe there is a reasonable
degree of correlation between movements in the two currencies
(cross-hedge).
In addition, certain funds may cross-hedge their
U.S. dollar exposure in order to achieve a representative
weighted mix of the major currencies in their respective
benchmark index
and/or
to
cover an underweight country or region exposure in their
portfolio.
These types of hedging minimize the effect of currency
appreciation as well as depreciation, but do not eliminate
fluctuations in the underlying U.S. dollar equivalent value of
the proceeds of or rates of return on the Funds foreign
currency denominated portfolio securities. The matching of the
increase in value of a forward contract and the decline in the
U.S. dollar equivalent value of the foreign currency denominated
asset that is the subject of the hedge generally will not be
precise. Shifting the Funds currency exposure from one
foreign currency to another removes the Funds opportunity
to profit from increases in the value of the original currency
and involves a risk of increased losses to the Fund if the
portfolio managers projection of future exchange rates is
inaccurate. Proxy hedges and cross-hedges may protect against
losses resulting from a decline in the hedged currency, but will
cause the Fund to assume the risk of fluctuations in the value
of the currency it purchases which may result in losses if the
currency used to hedge does not perform similarly to the
currency in which hedged securities are denominated. Unforeseen
changes in currency prices may result in poorer overall
performance for the Fund than if it had not entered into such
contracts.
In general, the Fund covers outstanding forward currency
contracts by maintaining liquid portfolio securities denominated
in, or whose value is tied to, the currency underlying the
forward contract or the currency being hedged. To the extent
that the Fund is not able to cover its forward currency
positions with underlying portfolio securities, the Funds
custodian segregates cash or other liquid assets having a value
equal to the aggregate amount of the Funds commitments
under forward contracts entered into with respect to position
hedges, cross-hedges, and anticipatory hedges. If the value of
the securities used to cover a position or the value of
segregated assets declines, the Fund will find alternative cover
or segregate additional cash or other liquid assets on a daily
basis so that the value of the covered and segregated assets
will be equal to the amount of the Funds commitments with
respect to such contracts. As an alternative to segregating
assets, the Fund may buy call options permitting the Fund to buy
the amount of foreign currency being hedged by a forward sale
contract, or the Fund may buy put options permitting it to sell
the amount of foreign currency subject to a forward buy contract.
While forward contracts are not currently regulated by the CFTC,
the CFTC may in the future assert authority to regulate forward
contracts. In such event, the Funds ability to utilize
forward contracts may be restricted. In addition, the Fund may
not always be able to enter into forward contracts at attractive
prices and may be limited in its ability to use these contracts
to hedge Fund assets.
Options on Foreign Currencies.
The Fund may buy and
write options on foreign currencies in a manner similar to that
in which futures or forward contracts on foreign currencies will
be utilized. For example, a decline in the U.S. dollar value of
a foreign currency in which portfolio securities are denominated
will reduce the U.S. dollar value of such securities, even if
their value in the foreign currency remains constant. In order
to protect against such diminutions in the value of portfolio
securities, the Fund may buy put options on the foreign
currency. If the value of the currency declines, the Fund will
have
18
the right to sell such currency for a fixed amount in U.S.
dollars, thereby offsetting, in whole or in part, the adverse
effect on its portfolio.
Conversely, when a rise in the U.S. dollar value of a currency
in which securities to be acquired are denominated is projected,
thereby increasing the cost of such securities, the Fund may buy
call options on the foreign currency. The purchase of such
options could offset, at least partially, the effects of the
adverse movements in exchange rates. As in the case of other
types of options, however, the benefit to the Fund from
purchases of foreign currency options will be reduced by the
amount of the premium and related transaction costs. In
addition, if currency exchange rates do not move in the
direction or to the extent projected, the Fund could sustain
losses on transactions in foreign currency options that would
require the Fund to forego a portion or all of the benefits of
advantageous changes in those rates.
The Fund may also write options on foreign currencies. For
example, to hedge against a potential decline in the U.S. dollar
value of foreign currency denominated securities due to adverse
fluctuations in exchange rates, the Fund could, instead of
purchasing a put option, write a call option on the relevant
currency. If the expected decline occurs, the option will most
likely not be exercised, and the decline in value of portfolio
securities will be offset by the amount of the premium received.
Similarly, instead of purchasing a call option to hedge against
a potential increase in the U.S. dollar cost of securities to be
acquired, the Fund could write a put option on the relevant
currency which, if rates move in the manner projected, should
expire unexercised and allow the Fund to hedge the increased
cost up to the amount of the premium. As in the case of other
types of options, however, the writing of a foreign currency
option will constitute only a partial hedge up to the amount of
the premium. If exchange rates do not move in the expected
direction, the option may be exercised, and the Fund would be
required to buy or sell the underlying currency at a loss which
may not be offset by the amount of the premium. Through the
writing of options on foreign currencies, the Fund also may lose
all or a portion of the benefits which might otherwise have been
obtained from favorable movements in exchange rates.
The Fund may write covered call options on foreign currencies. A
call option written on a foreign currency by the Fund is
covered if the Fund owns the foreign currency
underlying the call or has an absolute and immediate right to
acquire that foreign currency without additional cash
consideration (or for additional cash consideration held in a
segregated account by its custodian) upon conversion or exchange
of other foreign currencies held in its portfolio. A call option
is also covered if the Fund has a call on the same foreign
currency in the same principal amount as the call written if the
exercise price of the call held: (i) is equal to or less
than the exercise price of the call written or (ii) is
greater than the exercise price of the call written, if the
difference is maintained by the Fund in cash or other liquid
assets in a segregated account with the Funds custodian.
The Fund also may write call options on foreign currencies for
cross-hedging purposes. A call option on a foreign currency is
for cross-hedging purposes if it is designed to provide a hedge
against a decline due to an adverse change in the exchange rate
in the U.S. dollar value of a security which the Fund owns or
has the right to acquire and which is denominated in the
currency underlying the option. Call options on foreign
currencies which are entered into for cross-hedging purposes are
not covered. However, in such circumstances, the Fund will
collateralize the option by segregating cash or other liquid
assets in an amount not less than the value of the underlying
foreign currency in U.S. dollars marked-to-market daily.
Eurodollar Instruments.
The Fund may make
investments in Eurodollar instruments. Eurodollar instruments
are U.S. dollar-denominated futures contracts or options thereon
which are linked to the London Interbank Offered Rate
(LIBOR), although foreign currency denominated
instruments are available from time to time. Eurodollar futures
contracts enable purchasers to obtain a fixed rate for the
lending of funds and sellers to obtain a fixed rate for
borrowings. The Fund might use Eurodollar futures contracts and
options thereon to hedge against changes in LIBOR, to which many
interest rate swaps and fixed-income instruments are linked.
Additional Risks of Options on Foreign Currencies, Forward
Contracts, and Foreign Instruments.
Unlike transactions
entered into by the Fund in futures contracts, options on
foreign currencies and forward contracts are not traded on
contract markets regulated by the CFTC or (with the exception of
certain foreign currency options) by the SEC. To the contrary,
such instruments are traded through financial institutions
acting as market-makers, although foreign currency options are
also traded on certain Exchanges, such as the Philadelphia Stock
Exchange and the Chicago Board Options Exchange, subject to SEC
regulation.
Similarly, options on currencies may be traded over-the-counter.
In an OTC trading environment, many of the protections afforded
to Exchange participants will not be available. For example,
there are no daily price fluctuation limits, and adverse market
movements could therefore continue to an unlimited extent over a
period of time. Although the buyer of an option
19
cannot lose more than the amount of the premium plus related
transaction costs, this entire amount could be lost. Moreover,
an option writer and a buyer or seller of futures or forward
contracts could lose amounts substantially in excess of any
premium received or initial margin or collateral posted due to
the potential additional margin and collateral requirements
associated with such positions.
Options on foreign currencies traded on Exchanges are within the
jurisdiction of the SEC, as are other securities traded on
Exchanges. As a result, many of the protections provided to
traders on organized Exchanges will be available with respect to
such transactions. In particular, all foreign currency option
positions entered into on an Exchange are cleared and guaranteed
by the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC), thereby
reducing the risk of credit default. Further, a liquid secondary
market in options traded on an Exchange may be more readily
available than in the OTC market, potentially permitting the
Fund to liquidate open positions at a profit prior to exercise
or expiration or to limit losses in the event of adverse market
movements.
The purchase and sale of exchange-traded foreign currency
options, however, is subject to the risks of the availability of
a liquid secondary market described above, as well as the risks
regarding adverse market movements, margining of options
written, the nature of the foreign currency market, possible
intervention by governmental authorities, and the effects of
other political and economic events. In addition,
exchange-traded options on foreign currencies involve certain
risks not presented by the OTC market. For example, exercise and
settlement of such options must be made exclusively through the
OCC, which has established banking relationships in applicable
foreign countries for this purpose. As a result, the OCC may, if
it determines that foreign governmental restrictions or taxes
would prevent the orderly settlement of foreign currency option
exercises, or would result in undue burdens on the OCC or its
clearing member, impose special procedures on exercise and
settlement, such as technical changes in the mechanics of
delivery of currency, the fixing of dollar settlement prices, or
prohibitions on exercise.
In addition, options on U.S. Government securities, futures
contracts, options on futures contracts, forward contracts, and
options on foreign currencies may be traded on foreign exchanges
and OTC in foreign countries. Such transactions are subject to
the risk of governmental actions affecting trading in or the
prices of foreign currencies or securities. The value of such
positions also could be adversely affected by: (i) other
complex foreign political and economic factors; (ii) lesser
availability than in the United States of data on which to make
trading decisions; (iii) delays in the Funds ability
to act upon economic events occurring in foreign markets during
nonbusiness hours in the United States; (iv) the imposition
of different exercise and settlement terms and procedures and
margin requirements than in the United States; and (v) low
trading volume.
The Fund may from time to time participate on committees formed
by creditors to negotiate with the management of financially
troubled issuers of securities held by the Fund. Such
participation may subject the Fund to expenses such as legal
fees and may make the Fund an insider of the issuer
for purposes of the federal securities laws, which may restrict
the Funds ability to trade in or acquire additional
positions in a particular security or other securities of the
issuer when it might otherwise desire to do so. Participation by
the Fund on such committees also may expose the Fund to
potential liabilities under the federal bankruptcy laws or other
laws governing the rights of creditors and debtors. The Fund
would participate on such committees only when Janus Capital
believes that such participation is necessary or desirable to
enforce the Funds rights as a creditor or to protect the
value of securities held by the Fund.
Options on Securities.
In an effort to increase
current income and to reduce fluctuations in NAV, the Fund may
write covered and uncovered put and call options and buy put and
call options on securities that are traded on U.S. and foreign
securities exchanges and OTC. Examples of covering transactions
include: (i) for a written put, selling short the
underlying instrument at the same or higher price than the
puts exercise price; and (ii) for a written
call, owning the underlying instrument. The Fund may write and
buy options on the same types of securities that the Fund may
purchase directly. The Fund may utilize American-style and
European-style options. An American-style option is an option
contract that can be exercised at any time between the time of
purchase and the options expiration date. A European-style
option is an option contract that can only be exercised on the
options expiration date.
The Fund may cover its obligations on a put option by
segregating cash or other liquid assets with the Funds
custodian for a value equal to: (i) the full notional value
of the put for physically settled options; or (ii) the
in-the-money value of the put for cash settled options. The Fund
may also cover its obligations on a put option by holding a put
on the same security and in the same principal amount as the put
written where the exercise price of the put held: (i) is equal
to or greater than the exercise price of the put written; or
(ii) is less than the exercise price of the put written if the
difference is maintained by the Fund in cash or other liquid
assets in a segregated account with its custodian. The premium
paid by the buyer of an option
20
will normally reflect, among other things, the relationship of
the exercise price to the market price and the volatility of the
underlying security, the remaining term of the option, supply
and demand, and interest rates.
The Fund may cover its obligations on a call option by
segregating cash or other liquid assets with the Funds
custodian for a value equal to: (i) the full notional value of
the call for physically settled options; or (ii) the
in-the-money value of the call for cash settled options. The
Fund may also cover its obligations on a written call option by
(i) owning the underlying security covered by the call or
having an absolute and immediate right to acquire that security
without additional cash consideration (or for additional cash
consideration held in a segregated account by the Funds
custodian) upon conversion or exchange of other securities held
in its portfolio; or (ii) holding a call on the same
security and in the same principal amount as the call written
where the exercise price of the call held: (a) is equal to
or less than the exercise price of the call written; or
(b) is greater than the exercise price of the call written
if the difference is maintained by the Fund in cash or other
liquid assets in a segregated account with its custodian.
The Fund would write a call option for hedging purposes, instead
of writing a covered call option, when the premium to be
received from the cross-hedge transaction would exceed that
which would be received from writing a covered call option and
the portfolio managers believe that writing the option would
achieve the desired hedge.
The premium paid by the buyer of an option will normally
reflect, among other things, the relationship of the exercise
price to the market price and the volatility of the underlying
security, the remaining term of the option, supply and demand,
and interest rates.
The writer of an option may have no control over when the
underlying securities must be sold, in the case of a call
option, or bought, in the case of a put option, since with
regard to certain options, the writer may be assigned an
exercise notice at any time prior to the termination of the
obligation. Whether or not an option expires unexercised, the
writer retains the amount of the premium. This amount, of
course, may, in the case of a covered call option, be offset by
a decline in the market value of the underlying security during
the option period. If a call option is exercised, the writer
experiences a profit or loss from the sale of the underlying
security. If a put option is exercised, the writer must fulfill
the obligation to buy the underlying security at the exercise
price, which will usually exceed the then market value of the
underlying security.
The writer of an option that wishes to terminate its obligation
may effect a closing purchase transaction. This is
accomplished by buying an option of the same series as the
option previously written. The effect of the purchase is that
the writers position will be canceled by the clearing
corporation. However, a writer may not effect a closing purchase
transaction after being notified of the exercise of an option.
Likewise, an investor who is the holder of an option may
liquidate its position by effecting a closing sale
transaction. This is accomplished by selling an option of
the same series as the option previously bought. There is no
guarantee that either a closing purchase or a closing sale
transaction can be effected.
In the case of a written call option, effecting a closing
transaction will permit the Fund to write another call option on
the underlying security with either a different exercise price
or expiration date or both. In the case of a written put option,
such transaction will permit the Fund to write another put
option to the extent that the exercise price is secured by
deposited liquid assets. Effecting a closing transaction also
will permit the Fund to use the cash or proceeds from the
concurrent sale of any securities subject to the option for
other investments. If the Fund desires to sell a particular
security from its portfolio on which it has written a call
option, the Fund will effect a closing transaction prior to or
concurrent with the sale of the security.
The Fund will realize a profit from a closing transaction if the
price of the purchase transaction is less than the premium
received from writing the option or the price received from a
sale transaction is more than the premium paid to buy the
option. The Fund will realize a loss from a closing transaction
if the price of the purchase transaction is more than the
premium received from writing the option or the price received
from a sale transaction is less than the premium paid to buy the
option. Because increases in the market price of a call option
generally will reflect increases in the market price of the
underlying security, any loss resulting from the repurchase of a
call option is likely to be offset in whole or in part by
appreciation of the underlying security owned by the Fund.
An option position may be closed out only where a secondary
market for an option of the same series exists. If a secondary
market does not exist, the Fund may not be able to effect
closing transactions in particular options and the Fund would
have to exercise the options in order to realize any profit. If
the Fund is unable to effect a closing purchase transaction in a
secondary market, it will not be able to sell the underlying
security until the option expires or it delivers the underlying
security upon exercise. The absence of a liquid secondary market
may be due to the following: (i) insufficient trading
interest in certain options; (ii) restrictions imposed by a
national securities exchange (Exchange) on which the
option is traded on
21
opening or closing transactions or both; (iii) trading
halts, suspensions, or other restrictions imposed with respect
to particular classes or series of options or underlying
securities; (iv) unusual or unforeseen circumstances that
interrupt normal operations on an Exchange; (v) the
facilities of an Exchange or of the OCC may not at all times be
adequate to handle current trading volume; or (vi) one or
more Exchanges could, for economic or other reasons, decide or
be compelled at some future date to discontinue the trading of
options (or a particular class or series of options), in which
event the secondary market on that Exchange (or in that class or
series of options) would cease to exist, although outstanding
options on that Exchange that had been issued by the OCC as a
result of trades on that Exchange would continue to be
exercisable in accordance with their terms.
The Fund may write options in connection with buy-and-write
transactions. In other words, the Fund may buy a security and
then write a call option against that security. The exercise
price of such call will depend upon the expected price movement
of the underlying security. The exercise price of a call option
may be below
(in-the-money),
equal to
(at-the-money),
or above
(out-of-the-money)
the current value of the underlying security at the time the
option is written. Buy-and-write transactions using in-the-money
call options may be used when it is expected that the price of
the underlying security will remain flat or decline moderately
during the option period. Buy-and-write transactions using
at-the-money call options may be used when it is expected that
the price of the underlying security will remain fixed or
advance moderately during the option period. Buy-and-write
transactions using out-of-the-money call options may be used
when it is expected that the premiums received from writing the
call option plus the appreciation in the market price of the
underlying security up to the exercise price will be greater
than the appreciation in the price of the underlying security
alone. If the call options are exercised in such transactions,
the Funds maximum gain will be the premium received by it
for writing the option, adjusted upwards or downwards by the
difference between the Funds purchase price of the
security and the exercise price. If the options are not
exercised and the price of the underlying security declines, the
amount of such decline will be offset by the amount of premium
received.
The writing of covered put options is similar in terms of risk
and return characteristics to buy-and-write transactions. If the
market price of the underlying security rises or otherwise is
above the exercise price, the put option will expire worthless
and the Funds gain will be limited to the premium
received. If the market price of the underlying security
declines or otherwise is below the exercise price, the Fund may
elect to close the position or take delivery of the security at
the exercise price and the Funds return will be the
premium received from the put options minus the amount by which
the market price of the security is below the exercise price.
The Fund may buy put options to hedge against a decline in the
value of its portfolio. By using put options in this way, the
Fund will reduce any profit it might otherwise have realized in
the underlying security by the amount of the premium paid for
the put option and by transaction costs.
The Fund may buy call options to hedge against an increase in
the price of securities that it may buy in the future. The
premium paid for the call option plus any transaction costs will
reduce the benefit, if any, realized by the Fund upon exercise
of the option, and, unless the price of the underlying security
rises sufficiently, the option may expire worthless to the Fund.
The Fund may write straddles (combinations of put and call
options on the same underlying security), which are generally a
nonhedging technique used for purposes such as seeking to
enhance return. Because combined options positions involve
multiple trades, they result in higher transaction costs and may
be more difficult to open and close out than individual options
contracts. The straddle rules of the Internal Revenue Code
require deferral of certain losses realized on positions of a
straddle to the extent that the Fund has unrealized gains in
offsetting positions at year end. The holding period of the
securities comprising the straddle will be suspended until the
straddle is terminated.
Options on Securities Indices.
The Fund may also
purchase and write exchange-listed and OTC put and call options
on securities indices. A securities index measures the movement
of a certain group of securities by assigning relative values to
the securities. The index may fluctuate as a result of changes
in the market values of the securities included in the index.
Some securities index options are based on a broad market index,
such as the New York Stock Exchange Composite Index, or a
narrower market index such as the Standard &
Poors 100. Indices may also be based on a particular
industry, market segment, or certain currencies such as the U.S.
Dollar Index or DXY Index.
Options on securities indices are similar to options on
securities except that (1) the expiration cycles of
securities index options are monthly, while those of securities
options are currently quarterly, and (2) the delivery
requirements are different. Instead of giving the right to take
or make delivery of securities at a specified price, an option
on a securities index gives the holder the right to receive a
cash exercise settlement amount equal to
(a) the amount, if any, by which the fixed exercise price
of the option exceeds (in the case of a put) or is less than (in
the case of a call) the closing value of the underlying
22
index on the date of exercise, multiplied by (b) a fixed
index multiplier. Receipt of this cash amount will
depend upon the closing level of the securities index upon which
the option is based being greater than, in the case of a call,
or less than, in the case of a put, the exercise price of the
index and the exercise price of the option times a specified
multiple. The writer of the option is obligated, in return for
the premium received, to make delivery of this amount.
Securities index options may be offset by entering into closing
transactions as described above for securities options.
Options on Non-U.S. Securities Indices.
The Fund may
purchase and write put and call options on foreign securities
indices listed on domestic and foreign securities exchanges. The
Fund may also purchase and write OTC options on foreign
securities indices.
The Fund may, to the extent allowed by federal and state
securities laws, invest in options on non-U.S. securities
indices instead of investing directly in individual non-U.S.
securities. The Fund may also use foreign securities index
options for bona fide hedging and non-hedging purposes.
Options on securities indices entail risks in addition to the
risks of options on securities. The absence of a liquid
secondary market to close out options positions on securities
indices may be more likely to occur, although the Fund generally
will only purchase or write such an option if Janus Capital or
Perkins believes the option can be closed out. Use of options on
securities indices also entails the risk that trading in such
options may be interrupted if trading in certain securities
included in the index is interrupted. The Fund will not purchase
such options unless Janus Capital or Perkins believes the market
is sufficiently developed such that the risk of trading in such
options is no greater than the risk of trading in options on
securities.
Price movements in the Funds portfolio may not correlate
precisely with movements in the level of an index and,
therefore, the use of options on indices cannot serve as a
complete hedge. Because options on securities indices require
settlement in cash, the portfolio managers may be forced to
liquidate portfolio securities to meet settlement obligations.
The Funds activities in index options may also be
restricted by the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code for
qualification as a regulated investment company.
In addition, the hours of trading for options on the securities
indices may not conform to the hours during which the underlying
securities are traded. To the extent that the option markets
close before the markets for the underlying securities,
significant price and rate movements can take place in the
underlying securities markets that cannot be reflected in the
option markets. It is impossible to predict the volume of
trading that may exist in such options, and there can be no
assurance that viable exchange markets will develop or exist.
Other Options.
In addition to the option strategies
described above and in the Prospectuses, the Fund may purchase
and sell a variety of options with non-standard payout
structures or other features (exotic options).
Exotic options are traded OTC and typically have price movements
that can vary markedly from simple put or call options. The
risks associated with exotic options are that they cannot be as
easily priced and may be subject to liquidity risk. While some
exotic options have fairly active markets others are mostly
thinly traded instruments. Some options are pure two-party
transactions and may have no liquidity. The Fund may treat such
instruments as illiquid and will limit its investments in such
instruments to no more than 15% of its net assets, when combined
with all other illiquid investments of the Fund. The Fund may
use exotic options to the extent that they are consistent with
the Funds investment objective and investment policies,
and applicable regulations.
The Fund may purchase and sell exotic options that have values
which are determined by the correlation of two or more
underlying assets. These types of options include, but are not
limited to, outperformance options, yield curve options, or
other spread options.
Outperformance Option
An option that pays the
holder the difference in the performance of two assets. The
value of an outperformance option is based on the relative
difference, i.e. the percentage outperformance of one underlying
security or index compared to another. Outperformance options
allow the Fund to gain leveraged exposure to the percentage
price performance of one security or index over another. The
holder of an outperformance option will only receive payment
under the option contract if a designated underlying asset
outperforms the other underlying asset. If outperformance does
not occur, the holder will not receive payment. The option may
expire worthless despite positive performance by the designated
underlying asset. Outperformance options are typically cash
settled and have European-style exercise provisions.
Yield Curve Options
An option whose value is
based on the yield spread or yield differential between two
securities. In contrast to other types of options, a yield curve
option is based on the difference between the yields of
designated securities, rather than the prices of the individual
securities, and is settled through cash payments. Accordingly, a
yield curve option is
23
profitable to the holder if this differential widens (in the
case of a call) or narrows (in the case of a put), regardless of
whether the yields of the underlying securities increase or
decrease.
Spread Option
A type of option that derives
its value from the price differential between two or more
assets, or the same asset at different times or places. Spread
options can be written on all types of financial products
including equities, bonds and currencies.
Swaps and Swap-Related Products.
The Fund may enter
into swap agreements or utilize swap-related products,
including, but not limited to, total return swaps, equity swaps,
interest rate swaps, caps, and floors (either on an asset-based
or liability-based basis, depending upon whether it is hedging
its assets or its liabilities). Swap agreements are two-party
contracts entered into primarily by institutional investors for
periods ranging from a day to more than one year. The Fund may
enter into swap agreements in an attempt to gain exposure to the
stocks making up an index of securities in a market without
actually purchasing those stocks, or to hedge a position. The
most significant factor in the performance of swap agreements is
the change in value of the specific index, security, or
currency, or other factors that determine the amounts of
payments due to and from the Fund. The Fund will usually enter
into interest rate swaps on a net basis (i.e., the two
payment streams are netted out, with the Fund receiving or
paying, as the case may be, only the net amount of the two
payments). The net amount of the excess, if any, of the
Funds obligations over its entitlement with respect to
each swap will be calculated on a daily basis, and an amount of
cash or other liquid assets having an aggregate NAV at least
equal to the accrued excess will be maintained in a segregated
account by the Funds custodian. If the Fund enters into a
swap on other than a net basis, it would maintain a segregated
account in the full amount accrued on a daily basis of its
obligations with respect to the swap.
Swap agreements entail the risk that a party will default on its
payment obligations to the Fund. If there is a default by the
other party to such a transaction, the Fund normally will have
contractual remedies pursuant to the agreements related to the
transaction. Swap agreements also bear the risk that the Fund
will not be able to meet its obligation to the counterparty.
Swap agreements traditionally were privately negotiated and
entered into in the over-the-counter market. However, the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the
Dodd-Frank Act) of 2010 now requires certain swap
agreements to be cleared through a clearinghouse and traded on
an exchange or swap execution facility. New regulations under
the Dodd-Frank Act could, among other things, increase the cost
of such transactions.
The Fund normally will not enter into any total return, equity,
or interest rate swap, cap, or floor transaction unless the
claims-paying ability of the other party thereto meets
guidelines established by Janus Capital. Janus Capitals
guidelines may be adjusted in accordance with market conditions.
Janus Capital or Perkins will monitor the creditworthiness of
all counterparties on an ongoing basis. Generally, parties that
are rated in the highest short-term rating category by an NRSRO
will meet Janus Capitals guidelines. The ratings of NRSROs
represent their opinions of the claims-paying ability of
entities rated by them. NRSRO ratings are general and are not
absolute standards of quality.
The swap market has grown substantially in recent years, with a
large number of banks and investment banking firms acting both
as principals and as agents utilizing standardized swap
documentation. Janus Capital has determined that, as a result,
the swap market has become relatively liquid. Caps and floors
are more recent innovations for which standardized documentation
has not yet been developed and, accordingly, they are less
liquid than swaps. To the extent the Fund sells
(i.e., writes) caps and floors, it will segregate cash or
other liquid assets having an aggregate NAV at least equal to
the full amount, accrued on a daily basis, of its obligations
with respect to any caps or floors.
There is no limit on the amount of total return, equity, or
interest rate swap transactions that may be entered into by the
Fund. The use of equity swaps is a highly specialized activity
which involves investment techniques and risks different from
those associated with ordinary portfolio securities
transactions. Swap transactions may in some instances involve
the delivery of securities or other underlying assets by the
Fund or its counterparty to collateralize obligations under the
swap. Under the documentation currently used in those markets,
the risk of loss with respect to swaps is limited to the net
amount of the payments that the Fund is contractually obligated
to make. If the other party to a swap that is not collateralized
defaults, the Fund would risk the loss of the net amount of the
payments that it contractually is entitled to receive. The Fund
may buy and sell (i.e., write) caps and floors, without
limitation, subject to the segregation requirement described
above.
Another form of a swap agreement is the credit default swap. The
Fund may enter into various types of credit default swap
agreements (with notional values not to exceed 10% of the net
assets of the Fund) for investment purposes and to add leverage
to its portfolio. As the seller in a credit default swap
contract, the Fund would be required to pay the par value (the
notional value) (or other agreed-upon value) of a
referenced debt obligation to the counterparty in the event of a
default by a third party, such as a U.S. or foreign corporate
issuer, on the debt obligation. In return, the Fund would
receive from the counterparty a periodic stream of payments over
the term of the contract provided that no event of default has
occurred. If
24
no default occurs, the Fund would keep the stream of payments
and would have no payment obligations. As the seller, the Fund
would effectively add leverage to its portfolio because, in
addition to its total net assets, the Fund would be subject to
investment exposure on the notional value of the swap. The
maximum potential amount of future payments (undiscounted) that
the Fund as a seller could be required to make in a credit
default transaction would be the notional amount of the
agreement. The Fund may also purchase credit default swap
contracts in order to hedge against the risk of default of debt
securities held in its portfolio, in which case the Fund would
function as the counterparty referenced in the preceding
paragraph. Credit default swaps could result in losses if the
Fund does not correctly evaluate the creditworthiness of the
company or companies on which the credit default swap is based.
Credit default swap agreements may involve greater risks than if
the Fund had invested in the reference obligation directly
since, in addition to risks relating to the reference
obligation, credit default swaps are subject to illiquidity
risk, counterparty risk, and credit risk. The Fund will
generally incur a greater degree of risk when it sells a credit
default swap option than when it purchases a credit default
swap. As a buyer of a credit default swap, the Fund may lose its
investment and recover nothing should no credit event occur and
the swap is held to its termination date. As seller of a credit
default swap, if a credit event were to occur, the value of any
deliverable obligation received by the Fund, coupled with the
upfront or periodic payments previously received, may be less
than what it pays to the buyer, resulting in a loss of value to
the Fund.
The Fund may invest in funded (notional value of contract paid
up front) or unfunded (notional value only paid in case of
default) credit default swaps that are based on an index of
credit default swaps (CDXs) or other similarly
structured products. CDXs are designed to track segments of the
credit default swap market and provide investors with exposure
to specific reference baskets of issuers of bonds or loans.
These instruments have the potential to allow an investor to
obtain the same investment exposure as an investor who invests
in an individual credit default swap, but with the potential
added benefit of diversification. The CDX reference baskets are
normally priced daily and rebalanced every six months in
conjunction with leading market makers in the credit industry.
The liquidity of the market for CDXs is normally subject to
liquidity in the secured loan and credit derivatives markets.
The Fund investing in CDXs is normally only permitted to take
long positions in these instruments. The Fund holding a long
position in CDXs typically receives income from principal or
interest paid on the underlying securities. The Fund also
normally indirectly bears its proportionate share of any
expenses paid by a CDX in addition to the expenses of the Fund.
By investing in CDXs, the Fund could be exposed to risks
relating to, among other things, the reference obligation,
illiquidity risk, counterparty risk, and credit risk.
Options on Swap Contracts.
Certain funds may
purchase or write covered and uncovered put and call options on
swap contracts (swaptions). Swaption contracts grant
the purchaser the right, but not the obligation, to enter into a
swap transaction at preset terms detailed in the underlying
agreement within a specified period of time. Entering into a
swaption contract involves, to varying degrees, the elements of
credit, market, and interest rate risk, associated with both
option contracts and swap contracts.
Structured Investments.
A structured investment is a
security having a return tied to an underlying index or other
security or asset class. Structured investments generally are
individually negotiated agreements and may be traded
over-the-counter. Structured investments are organized and
operated to restructure the investment characteristics of the
underlying security. This restructuring involves the deposit
with or purchase by an entity, such as a corporation or trust,
or specified instruments (such as commercial bank loans) and the
issuance by that entity of one or more classes of securities
(structured securities) backed by, or representing
interests in, the underlying instruments. The cash flow on the
underlying instruments may be apportioned among the newly issued
structured securities to create securities with different
investment characteristics, such as varying maturities, payment
priorities, and interest rate provisions, and the extent of such
payments made with respect to structured securities is dependent
on the extent of the cash flow on the underlying instruments.
Because structured securities typically involve no credit
enhancement, their credit risk generally will be equivalent to
that of the underlying instruments. Investments in structured
securities are generally of a class of structured securities
that is either subordinated or unsubordinated to the right of
payment of another class. Subordinated structured securities
typically have higher yields and present greater risks than
unsubordinated structured securities. Structured securities are
typically sold in private placement transactions, and there
currently is no active trading market for structured securities.
Investments in government and government-related restructured
debt instruments are subject to special risks, including the
inability or unwillingness to repay principal and interest,
requests to reschedule or restructure outstanding debt, and
requests to extend additional loan amounts. Structured
investments include a wide variety of instruments which are also
subject to special risk such as inverse floaters and
collateralized debt obligations. Inverse floaters involve
leverage which may magnify
25
the Funds gains or losses. The risk of collateral debt
obligations depends largely on the type of collateral securing
the obligations. There is a risk that the collateral will not be
adequate to make interest or other payments related to the debt
obligation the collateral supports.
Structured instruments that are registered under the federal
securities laws may be treated as liquid. In addition, many
structured instruments may not be registered under the federal
securities laws. In that event, the Funds ability to
resell such a structured instrument may be more limited than its
ability to resell other Fund securities. The Fund may treat such
instruments as illiquid and will limit its investments in such
instruments to no more than 15% of the Funds net assets,
when combined with all other illiquid investments of the Fund.
PORTFOLIO
TURNOVER
As of the date of this SAI, portfolio turnover rates are not
available for the Fund because the Fund is new.
PORTFOLIO
HOLDINGS DISCLOSURE POLICIES AND PROCEDURES
The Mutual Fund Holdings Disclosure Policies and Procedures
adopted by Janus Capital and all mutual funds managed within the
Janus fund complex are designed to be in the best interests of
the funds and to protect the confidentiality of the funds
portfolio holdings. The following describes policies and
procedures with respect to disclosure of portfolio holdings.
|
|
|
Full Holdings.
The Fund is required to
disclose its complete holdings in the quarterly holdings report
on
Form N-Q
within 60 days of the end of the first and third fiscal
quarters, and in the annual report and semiannual report to Fund
shareholders. These reports (i) are available on the
SECs website at
http://www.sec.gov;
(ii) may be reviewed and copied at the SECs Public
Reference Room in Washington, D.C. (information on the Public
Reference Room may be obtained by calling
1-800-SEC-0330);
and (iii) are available without charge, upon request, by
calling a Janus representative at
1-800-525-0020
(toll free). Portfolio holdings consisting of at least the names
of the holdings are generally available on a calendar
quarter-end basis with a 30-day lag. Holdings are generally
posted approximately two business days thereafter under Full
Holdings for the Fund at
janus.com/info
(or under the Funds Holdings & Details tab at
janus.com/allfunds
if you hold Class D Shares).
|
The Fund may provide, upon request, historical full holdings on
a monthly basis for periods prior to the previous quarter-end
subject to a written confidentiality agreement.
|
|
|
Top Holdings.
The Funds top portfolio
holdings, in order of position size and as a percentage of the
Funds total portfolio, are available monthly with a
15-day
lag
and on a calendar quarter-end basis with a 15-day lag.
|
|
|
Other Information.
The Fund may occasionally
provide security breakdowns (e.g., industry, sector, regional,
market capitalization, and asset allocation), top performance
contributors/detractors (consisting of security names in
alphabetical order), and specific portfolio level performance
attribution information and statistics monthly with a 15-day lag
and on a calendar quarter-end basis with a 15-day lag. Top
performance contributors/detractors provided at calendar
quarter-end may include the percentage of
contribution/detraction to Fund performance.
|
Full portfolio holdings will remain available on the Janus
websites at least until a
Form N-CSR
or
Form N-Q
is filed with the SEC for the period that includes the date as
of which the website information is current. Funds disclose
their short positions, if applicable, only to the extent
required in regulatory reports. Janus Capital may exclude from
publication on its websites all or any portion of portfolio
holdings or change the time periods of disclosure as deemed
necessary to protect the interests of the Janus funds.
The Janus funds Trustees, officers, and primary service
providers, including investment advisers identified in this SAI,
distributors, administrators, transfer agents, custodians, and
their respective personnel, may receive or have access to
nonpublic portfolio holdings information. In addition, third
parties, including but not limited to those that provide
services to the Janus funds, Janus Capital, and its affiliates,
such as trade execution measurement systems providers,
independent pricing services, proxy voting service providers,
the funds insurers, computer systems service providers,
lenders, counsel, accountants/auditors, and rating and ranking
organizations may also receive or have access to nonpublic
portfolio holdings information. Other recipients of nonpublic
portfolio holdings information may include, but may not be
limited to, third parties such as consultants, data aggregators,
and asset allocation services which calculate information
derived from holdings for use by Janus Capital, and which supply
their analyses (but not the holdings themselves) to their
clients. Such parties, either by agreement or by virtue of their
duties, are required to maintain confidentiality with respect to
such nonpublic portfolio holdings. Any confidentiality agreement
entered into regarding disclosure of a Janus funds
portfolio holdings
26
includes a provision that portfolio holdings are the
confidential property of that fund and may not be shared or used
directly or indirectly for any purpose (except as specifically
provided in the confidentiality agreement), including trading in
fund shares.
Nonpublic portfolio holdings information may be disclosed to
certain third parties upon a good faith determination made by
Janus Capitals Chief Compliance Officer or Ethics
Committee that a Janus fund has a legitimate business purpose
for such disclosure and the recipient agrees to maintain
confidentiality. Preapproval by the Chief Compliance Officer or
Ethics Committee is not required for certain routine service
providers and in response to regulatory, administrative, and
judicial requirements. The Chief Compliance Officer reports to
the Janus funds Trustees regarding material compliance
matters with respect to the portfolio holdings disclosure
policies and procedures.
Under extraordinary circumstances, Janus Capitals Chief
Investment Officer(s) or their delegates have the authority to
waive one or more provisions of, or make exceptions to, the
Mutual Fund Holdings Disclosure Policies and Procedures when in
the best interest of the Janus funds and when such waiver or
exception is consistent with federal securities laws and
applicable fiduciary duties. The frequency with which portfolio
holdings are disclosed, as well as the lag time associated with
such disclosure, may vary as deemed appropriate under the
circumstances. All waivers and exceptions involving any of the
Janus funds shall be pre-approved by the Chief Compliance
Officer or a designee.
To the best knowledge of the Janus funds, as of the date of this
SAI, the following non-affiliated third parties, which consist
of service providers and consultants as described above under
ongoing arrangements with the funds and/or Janus Capital,
receive or may have access to nonpublic portfolio holdings
information, which may include the full holdings of a fund.
Certain of the arrangements below reflect relationships of one
or more subadvisers and their products.
|
|
|
|
|
Name
|
|
Frequency
|
|
Lag Time
|
ACA Compliance Group
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
ALPS Distributors, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
AnchorPath Financial, LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Apex Systems, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Aprimo, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Athena Investment Services
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Barclays Capital Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Barra, Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
BNP Paribas
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
BNP Paribas Prime Brokerage, Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
BNP Securities Corp.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
BNY Mellon Performance and Risk Analytics, LLC
|
|
Monthly
|
|
Current
|
Brockhouse & Cooper Inc.
|
|
Quarterly
|
|
Current
|
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Callan Associates Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Cambridge Associates LLC
|
|
Quarterly
|
|
Current
|
Canterbury Consulting Inc.
|
|
Monthly
|
|
Current
|
Carr Communications NYC, LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Charles River Brokerage, LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Charles River Systems, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
CMS BondEdge
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Compri Consulting, Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Consulting Services Group, LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Corporate Compliance Partners LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Cutter Associates, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Deloitte & Touche LLP
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Deloitte Tax LLP
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
27
|
|
|
|
|
Name
|
|
Frequency
|
|
Lag Time
|
Deutsche Bank AG, New York Branch
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
DTCC Loan/SERV LLC
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Eagle Investment Systems Corp.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Ennis, Knupp & Associates, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Envestnet Asset Management Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Ernst & Young LLP
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
FactSet Research Systems, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Financial Express Limited
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Financial Models Company, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
FlexTrade LLC
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
FT Interactive Data Corporation
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
HeterMedia Services Limited
|
|
Monthly
|
|
Current
|
Hewitt Associates LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Infotech Consulting Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Institutional Shareholder Services, Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
International Data Corporation
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Investment Technology Group, Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
InvestTech Systems Consulting, Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
J.P. Morgan Securities LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Jeffrey Slocum & Associates, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
KFORCE Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
KPMG LLP
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Lipper Inc.
|
|
Quarterly
|
|
Current
|
Marco Consulting Group, Inc.
|
|
Monthly
|
|
Current
|
Marquette Associates
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Markit Loans, Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Mercer Investment Consulting, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Merrill Communications LLC
|
|
Quarterly
|
|
Current
|
Moodys Investors Service Inc.
|
|
Weekly
|
|
7 days or more
|
Morningstar, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
30 days
|
New England Pension Consultants
|
|
Monthly
|
|
Current
|
Nikko AM Americas
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Nomura Funds Research & Technologies America Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Omgeo LLC
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Pacific Life
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Perficient, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Prima Capital Holding, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Prima Capital Management, Inc.
|
|
Quarterly
|
|
15 days
|
Promontory Financial Group, LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Protiviti, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
QuoteVision Limited
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
RR Donnelley and Sons Company
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
R.V. Kuhns & Associates
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Reuters America Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Rocaton Investment Advisors, LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Rogerscasey, Inc.
|
|
Quarterly
|
|
Current
|
Russell/Mellon Analytical Services, LLC
|
|
Monthly
|
|
Current
|
Sapient Corporation
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
28
|
|
|
|
|
Name
|
|
Frequency
|
|
Lag Time
|
SEI Investments
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Serena Software, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
SimCorp USA, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
SS&C Technologies, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Standard & Poors
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Standard & Poors Financial Services
|
|
Weekly
|
|
2 days or more
|
Standard & Poors Securities Evaluation
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
State Street Bank and Trust Company
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
State Street Global Advisors
|
|
Monthly
|
|
Current
|
Stratford Advisory Group, Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Summit Strategies Group
|
|
Monthly; Quarterly
|
|
Current
|
The Ohio National Life Insurance Company
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
The Yield Book Inc.
|
|
Daily
|
|
Current
|
Thrivent Financial for Lutherans
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Top Five Solutions LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Tower Investment
|
|
As needed
|
|
30 days
|
Towers Watson
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
TradingScreen Inc.
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Wachovia Securities LLC
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Wall Street On Demand, Inc.
|
|
Monthly; Quarterly
|
|
30 days; 15 days
|
Wilshire Associates Incorporated
|
|
As needed
|
|
Current
|
Wolters Kluwer Financial Services, Inc.
|
|
Monthly
|
|
Current
|
Yanni Partners, Inc.
|
|
Quarterly
|
|
Current
|
Zephyr Associates, Inc.
|
|
Quarterly
|
|
Current
|
|
|
|
|
|
In addition to the categories of persons and names of persons
described above who may receive nonpublic portfolio holdings
information, brokers executing portfolio trades on behalf of the
funds may receive nonpublic portfolio holdings information.
Janus Capital manages other accounts such as separately managed
accounts, other pooled investment vehicles, and funds sponsored
by companies other than Janus Capital. These other accounts may
be managed in a similar fashion to certain Janus funds and thus
may have similar portfolio holdings. Such accounts may be
subject to different portfolio holdings disclosure policies that
permit public disclosure of portfolio holdings information in
different forms and at different times than the Funds
portfolio holdings disclosure policies. Additionally, clients of
such accounts have access to their portfolio holdings, and may
not be subject to the Funds portfolio holdings disclosure
policies.
29
Investment
adviser and subadviser
INVESTMENT
ADVISER JANUS CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC
As stated in the Prospectuses, the Fund has an Investment
Advisory Agreement with Janus Capital Management LLC,
151 Detroit Street, Denver, Colorado
80206-4805.
Janus Capital is a direct subsidiary of Janus Capital Group Inc.
(JCGI), a publicly traded company with principal
operations in financial asset management businesses. JCGI owns
approximately 95% of Janus Capital, with the remaining 5% held
by Janus Management Holdings Corporation.
The Funds Advisory Agreement will continue in effect for
an initial term through February 1, 2015, and then from
year to year thereafter so long as such continuance is approved
annually by a majority of the Funds Trustees who are not
parties to the Advisory Agreement or interested
persons (as defined by the 1940 Act) of any such party
(the Independent Trustees), and by either a majority
of the outstanding voting shares of the Fund or the Trustees of
the Fund. The Advisory Agreement: (i) may be terminated
without the payment of any penalty by the Fund or Janus Capital
on 60 days written notice; (ii) terminates
automatically in the event of its assignment; and
(iii) generally, may not be amended without the approval by
vote of a majority of the Trustees, including a majority of the
Independent Trustees and, to the extent required by the 1940
Act, the vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities
of the Fund.
The Advisory Agreement provides that Janus Capital will furnish
continuous advice and recommendations concerning the Funds
investments, provide office space for the Fund, and certain
other advisory-related services. The Fund pays custodian fees
and expenses, any brokerage commissions and dealer spreads, and
other expenses in connection with the execution of portfolio
transactions, legal and audit expenses, interest and taxes, a
portion of trade or other investment company dues and expenses,
expenses of shareholders meetings, mailing of
prospectuses, statements of additional information, and reports
to shareholders, fees and expenses of all Fund Trustees, other
costs of complying with applicable laws regulating the sale of
Fund shares, compensation to the Funds transfer agent, and
other costs, including shareholder servicing costs. As discussed
in this section, Janus Capital has delegated certain management
duties for the Fund to Perkins pursuant to a subadvisory
agreement (Sub-Advisory Agreement) between Janus
Capital and Perkins.
Janus Capital also serves as administrator and is authorized to
perform, or cause others to perform, the administration services
necessary for the operation of the Fund, including, but not
limited to, NAV determination, portfolio accounting,
recordkeeping, blue sky registration and monitoring services,
preparation of prospectuses and other Fund documents, and other
services for which the Fund reimburses Janus Capital for its
out-of-pocket costs. The Fund also pays for the salaries, fees,
and expenses of certain Janus Capital employees and Fund
officers, with respect to certain specified administration
functions they perform on behalf of the Fund. Administration
costs are separate and apart from advisory fees and other
expenses paid in connection with the investment advisory
services Janus Capital (or any subadviser) provides to the Fund.
Some expenses related to compensation payable to the Funds
Chief Compliance Officer and compliance staff are shared with
the Fund.
Many of these costs vary from year to year which can make it
difficult to predict the total impact to your Funds
expense ratio, in particular during times of declining asset
values of the Fund. Certain costs may be waived and/or
reimbursed by Janus Capital to the Fund pursuant to an expense
limitation agreement with the Fund.
A discussion regarding the basis for the Trustees approval
of the Funds Investment Advisory Agreement and
Sub-Advisory
Agreement will be included in the Funds next annual or
semiannual report to shareholders, following such approval. You
can request the Funds annual or semiannual reports (as
they become available), free of charge, by contacting your plan
sponsor, broker-dealer, or financial intermediary, or by
contacting a Janus representative at 1-877-335-2687 (or
1-800-525-3713
if you hold Class D Shares). The reports are also
available, free of charge, at janus.com/info (or
janus.com/reports if you hold Class D Shares).
The Fund pays a monthly investment advisory fee to Janus Capital
for its services. The fee is based on the average daily net
assets of the Fund and is calculated at the annual rate of 0.80%.
EXPENSE
LIMITATION
Janus Capital agreed by contract to waive the advisory fee
payable by the Fund in an amount equal to the amount, if any,
that the Funds normal operating expenses in any fiscal
year, including the investment advisory fee, but excluding the
distribution and shareholder servicing fees
(12b-1)
applicable to Class A Shares, Class C Shares, and
Class S Shares, the administrative services fees payable
pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement, brokerage
commissions, interest, dividends, taxes, acquired fund fees and
expenses, and extraordinary expenses, exceed the annual rate
shown below. For information about how this expense limit
affects the total expenses of each class of the Fund, refer to
the Fees and Expenses of the
30
Fund table in the Fund Summary of each Prospectus.
Provided that Janus Capital remains investment adviser to the
Fund, Janus Capital has agreed to continue the waiver until at
least February 1, 2015.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expense Limit
|
Fund Name
|
|
Percentage (%)
|
Perkins International Value Fund
|
|
|
0.98
|
(1)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
Janus Capital will be entitled to recoup such reimbursement or
fee reduction from the Fund for a three-year period commencing
with the operations of the Fund (April 1, 2013), provided
that at no time during such period shall the normal operating
expenses allocated to the Fund, with the exceptions previously
noted, exceed the percentage stated.
|
As of the date of this SAI, no advisory fees were paid because
the Fund is new.
SUBADVISER
PERKINS INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT LLC
Janus Capital has entered into a Sub-Advisory Agreement with
Perkins Investment Management LLC, 311 S. Wacker Drive, Suite
6000, Chicago, Illinois 60606, on behalf of the Fund.
Perkins and its predecessors have been in the investment
advisory business since 1984. Perkins also serves as investment
adviser or subadviser to separately managed accounts and other
registered investment companies. Janus Capital owns
approximately 78% of Perkins. Perkins has the option to require
Janus Capital to purchase all or part of their remaining
ownership interests following certain anniversary dates. On
February 1, 2013, Perkins exercised their rights to put 98%
of their interests to Janus Capital. The transaction is expected
to close in August 2013.
Under the
Sub-Advisory
Agreement between Janus Capital and Perkins, Perkins is
responsible for the
day-to-day
investment operations of the Fund. Investments will be acquired,
held, disposed of or loaned, consistent with the investment
objectives, policies and restrictions established by the
Trustees and set forth in the Trusts registration
statement. Perkins: (i) manages the investment operations
of the Fund; (ii) keeps Janus Capital fully informed as to
the valuation of assets of the Fund, its condition, investment
decisions and considerations; (iii) maintains all books and
records required under federal securities law relating to
day-to-day
portfolio management of the Fund; (iv) performs certain
limited related administrative functions; and (v) provides
the Trustees and Janus Capital with economic, operational, and
investment data and reports. The
Sub-Advisory
Agreement provides that Perkins shall not be liable for any
error of judgment or mistake of law or for any loss arising out
of any investment or for any act or omission taken with respect
to the Fund, except for willful malfeasance, bad faith, or gross
negligence in the performance of its duties, or by reason of
reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under the
Sub-Advisory
Agreement and except to the extent otherwise provided by law.
Under the
Sub-Advisory
Agreement, Janus Capital pays Perkins a fee equal to 50% of the
advisory fee payable by Perkins International Value Fund to
Janus Capital (calculated after any applicable fee waivers and
expense reimbursements).
The
Sub-Advisory
Agreement with Perkins will continue in effect for an initial
term through February 1, 2015, and then from year to year
thereafter if such continuation is specifically approved at
least annually by the Trustees or by vote of a majority of the
outstanding shares of the Fund, and in either case by vote of a
majority of the Independent Trustees of the Fund. The
Sub-Advisory
Agreement is subject to termination at any time by the Trustees,
a majority of outstanding voting securities of the Fund, or
Janus Capital upon 60 days advance written notice, or
by Perkins by giving 90 days advance written notice
to the other party (Perkins shall allow up to an additional
90 days at the request of Janus Capital or the Trust in
order to find a replacement for Perkins) or by Janus Capital or
the Trust without advance notice if Perkins is unable to
discharge its duties and obligations. The Funds
Sub-Advisory
Agreement terminates automatically in the event of the
assignment or termination of the Funds Investment Advisory
Agreement.
Under the Sub-Advisory Agreement, Perkins is compensated
according to the following schedule:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fund Name
|
|
Subadviser
|
|
Subadvisory Fee
Rate
(1)
(%)
|
Perkins International Value Fund
|
|
Perkins
|
|
|
0.40
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
Prior to any fee reimbursement, if applicable.
|
Perkins International Value Fund pays no fees directly to
Perkins. Janus Capital pays the subadvisory fee out of the
Funds advisory fee. As of the date of this SAI, no
subadvisory fees were paid to Perkins because the Fund is new.
31
PAYMENTS
TO FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES BY JANUS CAPITAL OR ITS
AFFILIATES
In addition to payments made under
12b-1
plans,
Janus Capital and its affiliates also may make payments out of
their own assets to selected broker-dealer firms or other
financial intermediaries that sell Class A and Class C
Shares of Janus funds for distribution, marketing, promotional,
or related services. Such payments may be based on gross sales,
assets under management, or transactional charges, or on a
combination of these factors. Payments based primarily on sales
create an incentive to make new sales of shares, while payments
based on assets create an incentive to retain previously sold
shares. Payments based on transactional charges may include the
payment or reimbursement of all or a portion of ticket
charges. Ticket charges are fees charged to salespersons
purchasing through a financial intermediary firm in connection
with mutual fund purchases, redemptions, or exchanges. The
payment or reimbursement of ticket charges creates an incentive
for salespersons of an intermediary to sell shares of Janus
funds over shares of funds for which there is lesser or no
payment or reimbursement of any applicable ticket charge. Janus
Capital and its affiliates consider a number of factors in
making payments to financial intermediaries. Criteria may
include, but are not limited to, the distribution capabilities
of the intermediary, the overall quality of the relationship,
expected gross and/or net sales generated by the relationship,
redemption and retention rates of assets held through the
intermediary, the willingness to cooperate with Janus
Capitals marketing efforts, access to sales personnel, and
the anticipated profitability of sales through the institutional
relationship. These factors and their weightings may differ from
one intermediary to another and may change from time to time. As
of the date of this SAI, the broker-dealer firms with which
Janus Capital or its affiliates have agreements or are currently
negotiating agreements to make payments out of their own assets
related to the acquisition or retention of shareholders for
Class A and Class C Shares are AIG Advisor Group, Inc.
and its broker-dealer subsidiaries; Ameriprise Financial
Services, Inc.; Citigroup Global Markets Inc.; Lincoln Financial
Advisors Corporation; LPL Financial Corporation; Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated; Morgan Stanley
Smith Barney, LLC; Oppenheimer & Co., Inc.; Raymond
James & Associates, Inc.; Raymond James Financial Services,
Inc.; UBS Financial Services Inc.; and Wells Fargo
Advisors, LLC. These fees may be in addition to fees paid from
the Funds assets to them or other financial
intermediaries. Any additions, modifications, or deletions to
the broker-dealer firms identified that have occurred since that
date are not reflected.
In addition, for all share classes (with the exception of
Class D Shares), Janus Capital, Janus Distributors LLC
(Janus Distributors), or their affiliates may pay,
from their own assets, brokerage firms, banks, financial
advisors, retirement plan service providers, and other financial
intermediaries fees for providing other marketing or
distribution-related services, as well as recordkeeping,
subaccounting, transaction processing, and other shareholder or
administrative services in connection with investments in the
Janus funds. These fees are in addition to any fees that may be
paid from the Funds assets to these financial
intermediaries. Janus Capital or its affiliates may have
numerous agreements to make payments to financial institutions
which perform recordkeeping or other administrative services
with respect to shareholder accounts. Contact your financial
intermediary if you wish to determine whether it receives such
payments.
Janus Capital or its affiliates may also share certain marketing
expenses with intermediaries, or pay for, or sponsor
informational meetings, seminars, client awareness events,
support for marketing materials, sales reporting, or business
building programs for such financial intermediaries to raise
awareness of the Fund. Janus Capital or its affiliates may make
payments to participate in intermediary marketing support
programs which may provide Janus Capital or its affiliates with
one or more of the following benefits: attendance at sales
conferences, participation in meetings or training sessions,
access to or information about intermediary personnel, use of an
intermediarys marketing and communication infrastructure,
fund analysis tools, business planning and strategy sessions
with intermediary personnel, information on industry- or
platform-specific developments, trends and service providers,
and other marketing-related services. Such payments may be in
addition to, or in lieu of, the payments described above. These
payments are intended to promote the sales of Janus funds and to
reimburse financial intermediaries, directly or indirectly, for
the costs that they or their salespersons incur in connection
with educational seminars, meetings, and training efforts about
the Janus funds to enable the intermediaries and their
salespersons to make suitable recommendations, provide useful
services, and maintain the necessary infrastructure to make the
Janus funds available to their customers.
The receipt of (or prospect of receiving) payments,
reimbursements, and other forms of compensation described above
may provide a financial intermediary and its salespersons with
an incentive to favor sales of Janus funds shares over
sales of other mutual funds (or non-mutual fund investments) or
to favor sales of one class of Janus funds shares over
sales of another Janus funds share class, with respect to
which the financial intermediary does not receive such payments
or receives them in a lower amount. The receipt of these
payments may cause certain financial intermediaries to elevate
the prominence of the Janus funds within such financial
intermediarys organization by, for example, placement on a
list of preferred or
32
recommended funds
and/or
the
provision of preferential or enhanced opportunities to promote
the Janus funds in various ways within such financial
intermediarys organization.
From time to time, certain financial intermediaries approach
Janus Capital to request that Janus Capital make contributions
to certain charitable organizations. In these cases, Janus
Capitals contribution may result in the financial
intermediary, or its salespersons, recommending Janus funds over
other mutual funds (or non-mutual fund investments).
The payment arrangements described above will not change the
price an investor pays for Shares nor the amount that a Janus
fund receives to invest on behalf of the investor. You should
consider whether such arrangements exist when evaluating any
recommendations from an intermediary to purchase or sell Shares
of the Fund and, if applicable, when considering which share
class of the Fund is most appropriate for you.
ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION ABOUT JANUS CAPITAL AND THE SUBADVISER
Janus Capital acts as subadviser for a number of private-label
mutual funds and provides separate account advisory services for
institutional accounts. Janus Capital may also manage its own
proprietary accounts, as well as other pooled investment
vehicles, such as hedge funds. Janus Capital has a fiduciary
responsibility to manage all client accounts in a fair and
equitable manner. As such, investment decisions for each account
managed by Janus Capital, including the Fund, are made
independently from those for any other account that is or may in
the future become managed by Janus Capital or its affiliates.
If, however, a number of accounts managed by Janus Capital are
contemporaneously engaged in the purchase or sale of the same
security, the orders may be aggregated and/or the transactions
may be averaged as to price and allocated to each account in
accordance with allocation procedures adopted by Janus Capital.
Partial fills for the accounts of two or more portfolio managers
will be allocated pro rata under procedures adopted by Janus
Capital. Circumstances may arise under which Janus Capital may
determine that, although it may be desirable and/or suitable
that a particular security or other investment be purchased or
sold for more than one account, there exists a limited supply or
demand for the security or other investment. Janus Capital seeks
to allocate the opportunity to purchase or sell that security or
other investment among accounts on an equitable basis by taking
into consideration factors including, but not limited to, size
of the portfolio, concentration of holdings, investment
objectives and guidelines, purchase costs, and cash
availability. Janus Capital, however, cannot assure equality of
allocations among all its accounts, nor can it assure that the
opportunity to purchase or sell a security or other investment
will be proportionally allocated among accounts according to any
particular or predetermined standards or criteria. In some
cases, these allocation procedures may adversely affect the
price paid or received by an account or the size of the position
obtained or liquidated for an account. In others, however, the
accounts ability to participate in volume transactions may
produce better executions and prices for the accounts.
With respect to allocations of initial public offerings of
equity securities or syndicate offerings of bonds (each a
Primary Offering), under Primary Offering allocation
procedures adopted by Janus Capital and Perkins, an account may
participate in a Primary Offering if the portfolio managers
believe the Primary Offering is an appropriate investment based
on the accounts investment restrictions, risk profile,
asset composition, and/or cash levels. For equity securities,
these Primary Offering allocation procedures generally require
that all shares purchased in a Primary Offering be allocated on
a pro rata basis to all participating accounts based upon the
total assets of each account. For syndicated bond offerings, the
Primary Offering procedures generally require that all bonds
purchased be allocated on a pro rata basis to all participating
accounts within the same investment strategy (as opposed to pro
rata across all participating accounts). To the extent a fund,
such as a new fund, has only affiliated shareholders, such as a
portfolio manager or an adviser, and the fund participates in a
Primary Offering, those shareholders may be perceived as
receiving a benefit and, as a result, may have a conflict with
management of the fund.
Janus Capital is permitted to adjust its allocation procedures
to address fractional shares, odd lots, or minimum issue sizes
and has the discretion to deviate from its allocation procedures
in certain circumstances. For example, additional securities may
be allocated to the portfolio managers who are instrumental in
originating or developing an investment opportunity or to comply
with the portfolio managers request to ensure that their
accounts receive sufficient securities to satisfy specialized
investment objectives. Participation in Primary Offerings may
impact performance. In particular, the allocation of securities
may have the unintended consequence of having a greater impact
(positive or negative) on the performance of one or more
accounts compared to other accounts.
Janus Capital manages long and short portfolios. The
simultaneous management of long and short portfolios creates
potential conflicts of interest in fund management and creates
potential risks such as the risk that short sale activity could
adversely affect the market value of long positions in one or
more Janus funds (and vice versa), the risk arising from the
sequential
33
orders in long and short positions, and the risks associated
with the trade desk receiving opposing orders in the same
security at the same time.
Janus Capital has adopted procedures that it believes are
reasonably designed to mitigate these and other potential
conflicts and risks. Among other things, Janus Capital has trade
allocation procedures in place as previously described. In
addition, procedures prohibit a portfolio manager from executing
a short sale on a security held long in any other portfolio that
he or she manages but not held long in the account the manager
is placing the short in. Note this does not prohibit shorting
against the box. The procedures also require approvals of Janus
Capital senior management in other situations that raise
potential conflicts of interest, as well as periodic monitoring
of long and short trading activity of the Janus funds and
accounts.
Perkins, the subadviser for the Fund, may buy and sell
securities or engage in other investments on behalf of multiple
clients, including the Fund. Perkins seeks to allocate trades
among its clients on an equitable basis, taking into
consideration such factors as the size of the clients
portfolio, concentration of holdings, investment objectives and
guidelines, purchase costs, and cash availability.
The Fund and other funds advised by Janus Capital or its
affiliates may also transfer daily uninvested cash balances into
one or more joint trading accounts. Assets in the joint trading
accounts are invested in money market instruments and the
proceeds are allocated to the participating funds on a pro rata
basis.
Pursuant to the provisions of the 1940 Act, Janus mutual funds
may participate in an affiliated or non-affiliated cash sweep
program. In the cash sweep program, uninvested cash balances of
Janus funds may be used to purchase shares of affiliated or
non-affiliated money market funds or cash management pooled
investment vehicles. All Janus funds are eligible to participate
in the cash sweep program (the Investing Funds). As
adviser, Janus Capital has an inherent conflict of interest
because of its fiduciary duties to the affiliated money market
funds or cash management pooled investment vehicles and the
Investing Funds. In addition, Janus Capital receives an
investment advisory fee for managing the cash management vehicle
used for its securities lending program, but it may not receive
a fee for managing certain other affiliated cash management
vehicles, and therefore may have an incentive to allocate
preferred investment opportunities to investment vehicles for
which it is receiving a fee.
Each account managed by Janus Capital or the subadviser has its
own investment objective and policies and is managed accordingly
by the respective portfolio managers. As a result, from time to
time, two or more different managed accounts may pursue
divergent investment strategies with respect to investments or
categories of investments.
The officers and Trustees of the Janus funds may also serve as
officers and Trustees of the Janus funds of funds,
which are funds that primarily invest in other Janus mutual
funds. Conflicts may arise as the officers and Trustees seek to
fulfill their fiduciary responsibilities to both the Janus funds
of funds and the other Janus mutual funds. The Trustees intend
to address any such conflicts as deemed appropriate.
Janus
Ethics Rules
Janus Capital, Perkins and Janus Distributors currently have in
place Ethics Rules, which are comprised of the Personal Trading
Policy, Gift and Entertainment Policy, and Outside Business
Activity Policy. The Ethics Rules are designed to ensure Janus
Capital, Perkins and Janus Distributors personnel:
(i) observe applicable legal (including compliance with
applicable federal securities laws) and ethical standards in the
performance of their duties; (ii) at all times place the
interests of the Fund shareholders first; (iii) disclose
all actual or potential conflicts; (iv) adhere to the
highest standards of loyalty, candor, and care in all matters
relating to the Fund shareholders; (v) conduct all personal
trading, including transactions in the Fund and other
securities, consistent with the Ethics Rules and in such a
manner as to avoid any actual or potential conflict of interest
or any abuse of their position of trust and responsibility; and
(vi) refrain from using any material nonpublic information
in securities trading. The Ethics Rules are on file with and
available from the SEC through the SEC website at
http://www.sec.gov.
Under the Personal Trading Policy, all Janus Capital, Perkins
and Janus Distributors personnel, as well as the Trustees and
Officers of the Fund, are required to conduct their personal
investment activities in a manner that Janus Capital believes is
not detrimental to the Fund. In addition, Janus Capital, Perkins
and Janus Distributors personnel are not permitted to transact
in securities held by the Fund for their personal accounts
except under circumstances specified in the Personal Trading
Policy. All personnel of Janus Capital, Perkins Janus
Distributors, and the Fund, as well as certain other designated
employees deemed to have access to current trading information,
are required to pre-clear all transactions in securities not
34
otherwise exempt. Requests for trading authorization will be
denied when, among other reasons, the proposed personal
transaction would be contrary to the provisions of the Personal
Trading Policy.
In addition to the pre-clearance requirement described above,
the Personal Trading Policy subjects such personnel to various
trading restrictions and reporting obligations. All reportable
transactions are reviewed for compliance with the Personal
Trading Policy and under certain circumstances Janus Capital,
Perkins and Janus Distributors personnel may be required to
forfeit profits made from personal trading.
PROXY
VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES
The Funds Trustees have delegated to Janus Capital or the
Funds subadviser, as applicable, the authority to vote all
proxies relating to the Funds portfolio securities in
accordance with Janus Capitals or the subadvisers
own policies and procedures. Summaries of Janus Capitals
and the subadvisers policies and procedures are available
without charge: (i) upon request, by calling
1-800-525-0020;
(ii) on the Funds website at janus.com/proxyvoting;
and (iii) on the SECs website at
http://www.sec.gov.
A complete copy of Janus Capitals proxy voting policies
and procedures, including specific guidelines, is available at
janus.com/proxyvoting.
The Funds proxy voting record for the one-year period
ending each June 30th is available, free of charge,
through janus.com/proxyvoting and from the SEC through the SEC
website at
http://www.sec.gov.
JANUS
CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC
PROXY VOTING SUMMARY FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
Janus Capital seeks to vote proxies in the best interest of its
shareholders and without regard to any other Janus Capital
relationship (business or otherwise). Janus Capital will not
accept direction as to how to vote individual proxies for which
it has voting responsibility from any other person or
organization other than the research and information provided by
its independent proxy voting service (Proxy Voting
Service), subject to specific provisions in a
clients account documentation related to exception voting.
Proxy
Voting Procedures
Janus Capital has developed proxy voting guidelines (the
Janus Guidelines) that outline how Janus Capital
generally votes proxies on securities held by the portfolios
Janus Capital manages. The Janus Guidelines, which include
recommendations on most major corporate issues, have been
developed by the Janus Proxy Voting Committee (the Proxy
Voting Committee) in consultation with Janus
Capitals portfolio managers. In creating proxy voting
recommendations, the Proxy Voting Committee analyzes proxy
proposals, from the Proxy Voting Service, from the prior year
and evaluates whether those proposals would adversely or
beneficially affect shareholders interests. The Proxy
Voting Committee also reviews policy rationale provided by the
Proxy Voting Service related to voting recommendations for the
upcoming proxy season. Once the Proxy Voting Committee
establishes its recommendations and revises the Janus
Guidelines, they are distributed to Janus Capitals
portfolio managers for review and implementation. Mutual fund
proxies are generally voted in accordance with the Janus
Guidelines. However, upon request, certain non-mutual fund
client proxies are voted in accordance with the Proxy Voting
Services Taft-Hartley guidelines (the Taft-Hartley
Guidelines), which were developed in conjunction with the
AFL-CIO and have a worker-owner view of long-term corporate
value.
While the Proxy Voting Committee sets the Janus Guidelines and
serves as a resource for Janus Capitals portfolio
managers, it does not have proxy voting authority for any
proprietary or nonproprietary mutual fund. In addition, Janus
Capital has engaged the Proxy Voting Service to assist in the
voting of proxies. The Proxy Voting Service provides research
and recommendations on proxy issues. Janus Capitals
portfolio managers are responsible for proxy votes on securities
they own in the portfolios they manage. The portfolio managers
do not have the right to vote on securities while they are being
lent; however, the portfolio managers may attempt to call back
the loan and vote the proxy if time permits. Most portfolio
managers vote consistently with the Janus Guidelines; however, a
portfolio manager has discretion to vote differently than the
Janus Guidelines.
The Proxy Voting Committees oversight responsibilities
include monitoring for, and resolving, material conflicts of
interest with respect to proxy voting. Janus Capital believes
that application of the Janus Guidelines to vote mutual fund
proxies should, in most cases, adequately address any possible
conflicts of interest since the Janus Guidelines are
predetermined. However, the potential for conflicts of interest
exists to the extent the portfolio managers have discretion to
vote differently
35
than the Janus Guidelines. On a quarterly basis, the Proxy
Voting Committee reviews records of any votes that were cast
differently than the Janus Guidelines and the related rationales
for such votes. Additionally, and in instances where a portfolio
manager proposes to vote a proxy inconsistent with the Janus
Guidelines and a potential conflict is identified, the Proxy
Voting Committee will review the proxy votes in order to
determine whether a portfolio managers voting rationale
appears reasonable. If the Proxy Voting Committee does not agree
that a portfolio managers rationale is reasonable, the
Proxy Voting Committee will refer the matter to the appropriate
Chief Investment Officer(s) (or Director of Research in his/her
absence) to determine how to vote.
Proxy
Voting Policies
As discussed above, the Proxy Voting Committee has developed the
Janus Guidelines for use in voting proxies. Below is a summary
of some of the Janus Guidelines.
Board
of Directors Issues
Janus Capital: (i) will generally vote in favor of slates
of director candidates that are comprised of a majority of
independent directors; (ii) will generally vote in favor of
proposals to increase the minimum number of independent
directors; and (iii) will generally oppose non-independent
directors who serve on the audit, compensation, and/or
nominating committees of the board.
Auditor
Issues
Janus Capital will generally oppose proposals asking for
approval of auditors that have a financial interest in or
association with the company and are therefore not independent.
Executive
Compensation Issues
Janus Capital reviews executive compensation plans on a
case-by-case basis using research provided by the Proxy Voting
Service. The research is designed to estimate the total cost of
a proposed plan. If the proposed cost is above an allowable cap
as identified by the Proxy Voting Service, the proposed
equity-based compensation plan will generally be opposed. In
addition, proposals regarding the re-pricing of underwater
options (stock options in which the price the employee is
contracted to buy shares is higher than the current market
price) and the issuance of reload options (stock options that
are automatically granted if outstanding stock options are
exercised during a window period) will generally be opposed.
General
Corporate Issues
Janus Capital: (i) will generally oppose proposals
regarding supermajority voting rights (for example, to approve
acquisitions or mergers); (ii) will generally oppose
proposals for different classes of stock with different voting
rights; and (iii) will generally oppose proposals seeking
to implement measures designed to prevent or obstruct corporate
takeovers, unless such measures are designed primarily as a
short-term means to protect a tax benefit. Janus Capital will
review proposals relating to mergers, acquisitions, tender
offers, and other similar actions on a
case-by-case
basis.
Shareholder
Proposals
If a shareholder proposal is specifically addressed by the Janus
Guidelines, Janus Capital will generally vote pursuant to that
Janus Guideline. Janus Capital will generally abstain from
voting shareholder proposals that are social, moral, or ethical
in nature or place arbitrary constraints on the board or
management of a company. Janus Capital will solicit additional
research from its Proxy Voting Service for proposals outside the
scope of the Janus Guidelines.
|
|
PERKINS
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
LLC
PROXY VOTING SUMMARY FOR MUTUAL FUNDS
|
|
Perkins seeks to vote proxies in the best interest of its
shareholders and without regard to any other Perkins
relationship (business or otherwise). Perkins will not accept
direction as to how to vote individual proxies for which it has
voting responsibility from any other person or organization
other than the research and information provided by the Proxy
Voting Service, subject to specific provisions in a
clients account documentation related to exception voting.
Proxy
Voting Procedures
Perkins has developed proxy voting guidelines (the Perkins
Guidelines) that outline how Perkins generally votes
proxies on securities held by the portfolios Perkins manages.
The Perkins Guidelines, which include recommendations on most
major corporate issues, have been developed by the Perkins Proxy
Voting Committee. Perkins portfolio managers are responsible for
proxy votes on securities they own in the portfolios they
manage. Most portfolio managers vote consistently with the
Perkins Guidelines; however, a portfolio manager has discretion
to vote differently than the Perkins Guidelines. Perkins has
delegated the administration of its proxy voting to Janus
Capital. Janus Capital, on Perkins behalf, has engaged the
Proxy Voting
36
Service to assist in the voting of proxies. The Proxy Voting
Service also provides research and recommendations on proxy
issues. Mutual fund proxies are generally voted in accordance
with the Perkins Guidelines. However, upon request, certain
non-mutual fund client proxies are voted in accordance with the
Proxy Voting Services Taft-Hartley guidelines (the
Taft-Hartley Guidelines), which were developed in
conjunction with the AFL-CIO and have a worker-owner view of
long-term corporate value.
The role of the Perkins Proxy Voting Committee is to develop the
Perkins Guidelines. The Perkins Proxy Voting Committee also
serves as a resource to portfolio management with respect to
proxy voting and oversees the proxy voting process. The Perkins
Proxy Voting Committees oversight responsibilities include
monitoring for, and resolving, material conflicts of interest
with respect to proxy voting. Perkins believes that application
of the Perkins Guidelines to vote mutual fund proxies should, in
most cases, adequately address any possible conflicts of
interest since the Perkins Guidelines are predetermined.
However, the potential for conflicts of interest exists to the
extent the portfolio managers have discretion to vote
differently than the Perkins Guidelines. For proxy votes that
are inconsistent with the Perkins Guidelines and a potential
conflict is identified, the Perkins Proxy Voting Committee will
review the proxy votes in order to determine whether the
portfolio managers voting rationale appears reasonable. If
the Perkins Proxy Voting Committee does not agree that the
portfolio managers rationale is reasonable, the Perkins
Proxy Voting Committee will refer the matter to the appropriate
Chief Investment Officer(s) (or the Director of Research in
his/her absence) to determine how to vote.
Proxy
Voting Policies
As discussed above, the Perkins Proxy Voting Committee has
developed the Perkins Guidelines for use in voting proxies.
Below is a summary of some of the Perkins Guidelines.
Board
of Directors Issues
Perkins: (i) will generally vote in favor of slates of
director candidates that are comprised of a majority of
independent directors; (ii) will generally vote in favor of
proposals to increase the minimum number of independent
directors; and (iii) will generally oppose
non-independent
directors who serve on the audit, compensation, and/or
nominating committees of the board.
Auditor
Issues
Perkins will generally oppose proposals asking for approval of
auditors that have a financial interest in or association with
the company and are therefore not independent.
Executive
Compensation Issues
Perkins reviews executive compensation plans on a case-by-case
basis using research provided by the Proxy Voting Service. The
research is designed to estimate the total cost of a proposed
plan. If the proposed cost is above an allowable cap, as
identified by the Proxy Voting Service, the proposed
equity-based compensation plan will generally be opposed. In
addition, proposals regarding the re-pricing of underwater
options (stock options in which the price the employee is
contracted to buy shares is higher than the current market
price) and the issuance of reload options (stock options that
are automatically granted if outstanding stock options are
exercised during a window period) will generally be opposed.
General
Corporate Issues
Perkins: (i) will generally oppose proposals regarding
supermajority voting rights (for example, to approve
acquisitions or mergers); (ii) will generally oppose
proposals for different classes of stock with different voting
rights; and (iii) will generally oppose proposals seeking
to implement measures designed to prevent or obstruct corporate
takeovers, unless such measures are designed primarily as a
short-term means to protect a tax benefit. Perkins will review
proposals relating to mergers, acquisitions, tender offers, and
other similar actions on a case-by-case basis.
Shareholder
Proposals
If a shareholder proposal is specifically addressed by the
Perkins Guidelines, Perkins will generally vote pursuant to that
Perkins Guideline. Perkins will generally abstain from voting
shareholder proposals that are social, moral, or ethical in
nature or place arbitrary constraints on the board or management
of a company. Perkins will solicit additional research from its
Proxy Voting Service for proposals outside the scope of the
Perkins Guidelines.
37
Custodian,
transfer agent, and certain affiliations
State Street Bank and Trust Company (State Street),
P.O. Box 0351, Boston, Massachusetts
02117-0351
is the custodian of the domestic securities and cash of the Fund
and an affiliated cash management pooled investment vehicle.
State Street is the designated Foreign Custody Manager (as the
term is defined in
Rule 17f-5
under the 1940 Act) of the Funds securities and cash held
outside the United States. The Funds Trustees have
delegated to State Street certain responsibilities for such
assets, as permitted by
Rule 17f-5.
State Street and the foreign subcustodians selected by it hold
the Funds assets in safekeeping and collect and remit the
income thereon, subject to the instructions of the Fund.
Janus Services LLC (Janus Services),
151 Detroit Street, Denver, Colorado
80206-4805,
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Janus Capital, is the Funds
transfer agent. In addition, Janus Services provides or arranges
for the provision of certain other administrative services
including, but not limited to, recordkeeping, accounting, order
processing, and other shareholder services for the Fund.
Certain, but not all, intermediaries may charge administrative
fees to investors in Class A Shares, Class C Shares,
and Class I Shares for administrative services provided on
behalf of such investors. These administrative fees are paid by
the Class A Shares, Class C Shares, and Class I
Shares of the Fund to Janus Services, which uses such fees to
reimburse intermediaries. Consistent with the Transfer Agency
Agreement between Janus Services and the Fund, Janus Services
may negotiate the level, structure,
and/or
terms
of the administrative fees with intermediaries requiring such
fees on behalf of the Fund. Janus Capital and its affiliates
benefit from an increase in assets that may result from such
relationships.
Class D Shares of the Fund pay an annual administrative
services fee of 0.12% of net assets. These administrative
services fees are paid by Class D Shares of the Fund for
shareholder services provided by Janus Services.
Janus Services receives an administrative services fee at an
annual rate of 0.25% of the average daily net assets of
Class S Shares and Class T Shares of the Fund for
providing or procuring administrative services to investors in
Class S Shares and Class T Shares of the Fund. Janus
Services expects to use all or a significant portion of this fee
to compensate retirement plan service providers, broker-dealers,
bank trust departments, financial advisors, and other financial
intermediaries for providing these services. Janus Services or
its affiliates may also pay fees for services provided by
intermediaries to the extent the fees charged by intermediaries
exceed the 0.25% of net assets charged to Class S Shares
and Class T Shares of the Fund. Janus Services may keep
certain amounts retained for reimbursement of out-of-pocket
costs incurred for servicing clients of Class S Shares and
Class T Shares.
Services provided by these financial intermediaries may include,
but are not limited to, recordkeeping, subaccounting, order
processing, providing order confirmations, periodic statements,
forwarding prospectuses, shareholder reports, and other
materials to existing customers, answering inquiries regarding
accounts, and other administrative services. Order processing
includes the submission of transactions through the National
Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) or similar
systems, or those processed on a manual basis with Janus.
As of the date of this SAI, Janus Services did not receive any
administrative services fees from Class D Shares,
Class S Shares, or Class T Shares of the Fund because
the Fund is new.
Janus Services is compensated for its services related to
Class D Shares, and receives reimbursement for its
out-of-pocket costs on all other share classes. Included in
out-of-pocket
expenses are the expenses Janus Services incurs for serving as
transfer agent and providing servicing to shareholders.
Through Janus Services, the Fund pays DST Systems, Inc.
(DST) fees for the use of DSTs shareholder
accounting system, as well as for certain broker-controlled
accounts and closed accounts. These fees are in addition to any
administrative services fees paid to Janus Services. The Fund
also uses and pays for DST systems to track and process
contingent deferred sales charges. These fees are only charged
to classes of the Fund with contingent deferred sales charges,
as applicable.
Janus Distributors, 151 Detroit Street, Denver, Colorado
80206-4805,
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Janus Capital, is the principal
underwriter for the Fund. Janus Distributors is registered as a
broker-dealer under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is a
member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
Janus Distributors acts as the agent of the Fund in connection
with the sale of its Shares in all states in which such Shares
are registered and in which Janus Distributors is qualified as a
broker-dealer. Under the Distribution Agreement, Janus
Distributors continuously offers the Funds Shares and
accepts orders at NAV per share of the relevant class. The
cash-compensation amount or rate at which Janus
Distributors registered representatives are paid for sales
of products may differ based on a type of fund or a specific
trust or the distribution channel or platform. The receipt of
(or prospect of receiving) compensation described above may
provide an incentive for a registered representative to favor
sales of funds, or certain share classes of a fund, for which
they receive a
38
higher compensation amount or rate. You should consider these
arrangements when evaluating any recommendations of your
registered representative.
39
Portfolio
transactions and brokerage
Janus Capital places all portfolio transactions of the Fund
solely upon Perkins direction. Janus Capital and Perkins
have a policy of seeking to obtain the best
execution of all portfolio transactions (the best net
prices under the circumstances based upon a number of factors
including and subject to the factors discussed below) provided
that Janus Capital and Perkins may occasionally pay higher
commissions for research services as described below. The Fund
may trade foreign securities in foreign countries because the
best available market for these securities is often on foreign
exchanges. In transactions on foreign stock exchanges,
brokers commissions are frequently fixed and are often
higher than in the United States, where commissions are
negotiated.
Janus Capital considers a number of factors in seeking best
execution in selecting brokers and dealers and in negotiating
commissions on agency transactions. In seeking best execution on
trades for the Fund, subadvised by Perkins, Janus Capital acts
on behalf of and in consultation with Perkins. Those factors
include, but are not limited to: Janus Capitals and
Perkins knowledge of currently available negotiated
commission rates or prices of securities currently available and
other current transaction costs; the nature of the security
being traded; the size and type of the transaction; the nature
and character of the markets for the security to be purchased or
sold; the desired timing of the trade; the activity existing and
expected in the market for the particular security;
confidentiality, including trade anonymity; liquidity; the
quality of the execution, clearance, and settlement services;
financial stability of the broker or dealer; the existence of
actual or apparent operational problems of any broker or dealer;
rebates of commissions by a broker to the Fund or to a third
party service provider to the Fund to pay Fund expenses; and the
value of research products or services provided by brokers. In
recognition of the value of the foregoing factors, and as
permitted by Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934, as amended, Janus Capital may place portfolio
transactions with a broker or dealer with whom it has negotiated
a commission that is in excess of the commission another broker
or dealer would have charged for effecting that transaction if
Janus Capital (or Janus Capital acting on behalf of and in
consultation with Perkins) determines in good faith that such
amount of commission was reasonable in light of the value of the
brokerage and research services provided by such broker or
dealer viewed in terms of either that particular transaction or
of the overall responsibilities of Janus Capital or Perkins, as
applicable. To constitute eligible research
services, such services must qualify as
advice, analyses, or
reports. To determine that a service constitutes
research services, Janus Capital or Perkins, as applicable, must
conclude that it reflects the expression of reasoning or
knowledge relating to the value of securities,
advisability of effecting transactions in securities or
analyses, or reports concerning issuers, securities, economic
factors, investment strategies, or the performance of accounts.
To constitute eligible brokerage services, such
services must effect securities transactions and functions
incidental thereto, and include clearance, settlement, and the
related custody services. Additionally, brokerage services have
been interpreted to include services relating to the execution
of securities transactions. Research received from brokers or
dealers is supplemental to Janus Capitals and
Perkins own research efforts. Because Janus Capital and
Perkins receive a benefit from research they receive from
broker-dealers, Janus Capital and Perkins may have an incentive
to continue to use those broker-dealers to effect transactions.
Janus Capital and Perkins do not consider a broker-dealers
sale of Fund shares when choosing a broker-dealer to effect
transactions.
Cross trades, in which one Janus Capital account
sells a particular security to another account (potentially
saving transaction costs for both accounts), may also pose a
potential conflict of interest. Cross trades may be seen to
involve a potential conflict of interest if, for example, one
account is permitted to sell a security to another account at a
higher price than an independent third party would pay. Janus
Capital and the funds Trustees have adopted compliance
procedures that provide that any transactions between the Fund
and another Janus-advised account are to be made at an
independent current market price, as required by law. There is
also a potential conflict of interest when cross trades involve
a Janus fund that has substantial ownership by Janus Capital. At
times, Janus Capital may have a controlling interest of a fund
involved in a cross trade.
Janus Capital and Perkins do not guarantee any broker the
placement of a predetermined amount of securities transactions
in return for the research or brokerage services it provides.
Janus Capital and Perkins do, however, have internal procedures
for allocating transactions in a manner consistent with their
execution policies to brokers that they have identified as
providing research, research-related products or services, or
execution-related services of a particular benefit to their
clients. Janus Capital and Perkins have entered into client
commission agreements (CCAs) with certain
broker-dealers under which the broker-dealers may use a portion
of their commissions to pay third parties or other
broker-dealers that provide Janus Capital and Perkins with
research or brokerage services, as permitted under
Section 28(e) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934.
CCAs allow Janus Capital and Perkins to direct broker-dealers to
pool commissions that are generated from orders executed at that
broker-dealer, and then periodically direct the broker-dealer to
pay third parties or other broker-dealers for research or
brokerage services. All uses of CCAs by Janus Capital and
Perkins are subject to applicable law and their best execution
obligations. Brokerage and research products and services
furnished by brokers may be used in servicing any or all
40
of the clients of Janus Capital or Perkins, and such research
may not necessarily be used by Janus Capital or Perkins in
connection with the same accounts that paid commissions to the
broker providing such brokerage and research products and
services. Such products and services may not always be used in
connection with management of the Fund. Similarly, research and
brokerage services paid for with commissions generated by equity
trades may be used for fixed-income clients that normally do not
pay brokerage commissions or other clients whose commissions
are generally not used to obtain such research and brokerage
services. Perkins may make its own separate arrangements with
and maintain internal allocation procedures for allocating
transactions to brokers who provide research products and
services to encourage them to provide services expected to be
useful to Perkins clients, including Perkins International
Value Fund.
Janus Capital and Perkins may also use step-out transactions in
order to receive research products and related services. In a
step-out transaction, Janus Capital or Perkins directs trades to
a broker-dealer with the instruction that the broker-dealer
execute the transaction, but step-out all or a
portion of the transaction or commission in favor of another
broker-dealer that provides such products and/or services. The
second broker-dealer may clear and settle and receive
commissions for the stepped-in portion. In a new issue
designation, Janus Capital or Perkins directs purchase orders to
a broker-dealer that is a selling group member or underwriter of
an equity or fixed-income new issue offering. Janus Capital or
Perkins directs that broker-dealer to designate a portion of the
broker-dealers commission on the new issue purchase to a
second broker-dealer(s) that provides such products and/or
services. Given Janus Capitals and Perkins receipt
of such products and services in connection with step-out
transactions and new issue designations, Janus Capital and
Perkins have an incentive to continue to engage in such
transactions; however, Janus Capital and Perkins only intend to
utilize step-out transactions and new issue designations when
they believe that doing so would not hinder best execution
efforts.
When the Fund purchases or sells a security in the
over-the-counter
market, the transaction takes place directly with a principal
market-maker, without the use of a broker, except in those
circumstances where, in the opinion of Janus Capital or Perkins,
better prices and executions will be achieved through the use of
a broker.
As of the date of this SAI, the Fund did not pay any brokerage
commissions because the Fund is new.
Brokerage commissions paid by the Fund may vary significantly
from year to year because of portfolio turnover rates,
shareholder, broker-dealer, or other financial intermediary
purchase/redemption activity, varying market conditions, changes
to investment strategies or processes, and other factors.
41
Trustees
and officers
The following are the Trustees and officers of the Trust,
together with a brief description of their principal occupations
during the last five years (principal occupations for certain
Trustees may include periods over five years). As of the date of
this SAI, none of the Trustees are interested
persons of Janus Capital as that term is defined by the
1940 Act.
Each Trustee has served in that capacity since he or she was
originally elected or appointed. The Trustees do not serve a
specified term of office. Each Trustee will hold office until
the termination of the Trust or his or her earlier death,
resignation, retirement, incapacity, or removal. Under the
Funds Governance Procedures and Guidelines, the policy is
for Trustees to retire no later than the end of the calendar
year in which the Trustee turns 72. The Trustees review the
Funds Governance Procedures and Guidelines from time to
time and may make changes they deem appropriate. The Funds
Nominating and Governance Committee will consider nominees for
the position of Trustee recommended by shareholders.
Shareholders may submit the name of a candidate for
consideration by the Committee by submitting their
recommendations to the Trusts Secretary. Each Trustee is
currently a Trustee of one other registered investment company
advised by Janus Capital: Janus Aspen Series. As of the date of
this SAI, collectively, the two registered investment companies
consist of 57 series or funds.
The Trusts officers are elected annually by the Trustees
for a one-year term. Certain officers also serve as officers of
Janus Aspen Series. Certain officers of the Fund may also be
officers and/or directors of Janus Capital. Fund officers
receive no compensation from the Fund, except for the
Funds Chief Compliance Officer, as authorized by the
Trustees.
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TRUSTEES
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Name, Address,
and Age
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Positions
Held with
the Trust
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Length of
Time Served
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Principal Occupations
During the Past Five Years
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Number of
Portfolios/Funds
in Fund Complex
Overseen by
Trustee
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Other Directorships
Held by Trustee
During the Past Five Years
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Independent Trustees
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William F. McCalpin
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1957
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Chairman
Trustee
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1/08-Present
6/02-Present
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Managing Director, Holos Consulting LLC (provides consulting
services to foundations and other nonprofit organizations).
Formerly, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
of The Rockefeller Brothers Fund (a private family foundation)
(1998-2006).
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57
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Chairman of the Board and Director of The Investment Fund for
Foundations Investment Program (TIP) (consisting of
2 funds); and Director of the F.B. Heron Foundation
(a private grantmaking foundation).
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Alan A. Brown
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1962
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Trustee
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1/13-Present
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Managing Director, Institutional Markets, of Dividend Capital
Group (private equity real estate investment management firm)
(since 2012). Formerly, Executive Vice President and Co-Head,
Global Private Client Group (2007-2010), Executive Vice
President, Mutual Funds (2005-2007), and Chief Marketing Officer
(2001-2005) of Nuveen Investments, Inc. (asset management).
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57
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Director of MotiveQuest LLC (strategic social market research
company) (since 2003); and Director of WTTW (PBS affiliate)
(since 2003). Formerly, Director of Nuveen Global Investors LLC
(2007-2011); Director of Communities in Schools (2004-2010); and
Director of Mutual Fund Education Alliance (until 2010).
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42
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TRUSTEES
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Name, Address,
and Age
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Positions
Held with
the Trust
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Length of
Time Served
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Principal Occupations
During the Past Five Years
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Number of
Portfolios/Funds
in Fund Complex
Overseen by
Trustee
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Other Directorships
Held by Trustee
During the Past Five Years
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Independent Trustees (contd.)
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William D. Cvengros
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1948
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Trustee
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1/11-Present
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Managing Member and Chief Executive Officer of SJC Capital, LLC
(a personal investment company and consulting firm) (since
2002). Formerly, Venture Partner for The Edgewater Funds (a
middle market private equity firm) (2002-2004); Chief Executive
Officer and President of PIMCO Advisors Holdings L.P. (a
publicly traded investment management firm) (1994-2000); and
Chief Investment Officer of Pacific Life Insurance Company (a
mutual life insurance and annuity company) (1987-1994).
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57
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Chairman, National Retirement Partners, Inc. (formerly a network
of advisors to 401(k) plans) (since 2005). Formerly, Director of
Prospect Acquisition Corp. (a special purpose acquisition
corporation) (2007-2009); Director of RemedyTemp, Inc.
(temporary help services company) (1996-2006); and Trustee of
PIMCO Funds Multi-Manager Series (1990-2000) and Pacific Life
Variable Life & Annuity Trusts (1987-1994).
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James T. Rothe
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1943
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Trustee
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1/97-Present
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Co-founder and Managing Director of Roaring Fork Capital SBIC,
LP (SBA SBIC fund focusing on private investment in public
equity firms), and Professor Emeritus of Business of the
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, CO (since 2004).
Formerly, Professor of Business of the University of Colorado
(2002-2004); and Distinguished Visiting Professor of Business
(2001-2002) of Thunderbird (American Graduate School of
International Management), Glendale, AZ.
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57
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Director of Red Robin Gourmet Burgers, Inc. (RRGB) (since 2004).
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43
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TRUSTEES
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Name, Address,
and Age
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Positions
Held with
the Trust
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Length of
Time Served
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Principal Occupations
During the Past Five Years
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Number of
Portfolios/Funds
in Fund Complex
Overseen by
Trustee
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Other Directorships
Held by Trustee
During the Past Five Years
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Independent Trustees (contd.)
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William D. Stewart
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1944
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Trustee
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6/84-Present
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Retired. Formerly, Corporate Vice President and General Manager
of MKS Instruments HPS Products, Boulder, CO (a
manufacturer of vacuum fittings and valves) and PMFC Division,
Andover, MA (manufacturing pressure measurement and flow
products) (1976-2012).
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57
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None
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Linda S. Wolf
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1947
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Trustee
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11/05-Present
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Retired. Formerly, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Leo
Burnett (Worldwide) (advertising agency) (2001-2005).
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57
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Director of Chicago Convention & Tourism Bureau, Chicago
Council on Global Affairs, The Field Museum of Natural History
(Chicago, IL), InnerWorkings (U.S. provider of print
procurement solutions to corporate clients), Lurie
Childrens Hospital (Chicago, IL), Rehabilitation Institute
of Chicago, Walmart, and Wrapports, LLC (technology company).
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44
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OFFICERS
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Name, Address,
and Age
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Positions Held with the Trust
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Term of
Office* and
Length of
Time Served
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Principal Occupations
During the Past Five Years
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Robin C. Beery
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1967
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President and Chief Executive Officer
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4/08-Present
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Executive Vice President and Head of U.S. Distribution of Janus
Capital Group Inc., Janus Capital, Janus Distributors LLC, and
Janus Services LLC; Director of The Janus Foundation; Director
of Perkins Investment Management LLC; and Working Director of
INTECH Investment Management LLC. Formerly, Head of Intermediary
Distribution, Global Marketing and Product of Janus Capital
Group Inc., Janus Capital, Janus Distributors LLC, and Janus
Services LLC (2009-2010); Chief Marketing Officer of Janus
Capital Group Inc. and Janus Capital (2002-2009); and President
of The Janus Foundation (2002-2007).
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Stephanie
Grauerholz-Lofton
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1970
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Chief Legal Counsel and Secretary
Vice President
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1/06-Present
3/06-Present
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Vice President and Assistant General Counsel of Janus Capital,
and Vice President and Assistant Secretary of Janus Distributors
LLC.
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David R. Kowalski
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1957
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Vice President, Chief Compliance Officer, and
Anti-Money Laundering Officer
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6/02-Present
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Senior Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer of Janus
Capital, Janus Distributors LLC, and Janus Services LLC; and
Vice President of INTECH Investment Management LLC and Perkins
Investment Management LLC. Formerly, Chief Compliance Officer of
Bay Isle Financial LLC (2003-2008).
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Jesper Nergaard
151 Detroit Street
Denver, CO 80206
DOB: 1962
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Chief Financial Officer
Vice President, Treasurer, and Principal Accounting Officer
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3/05-Present
2/05-Present
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Vice President of Janus Capital and Janus Services LLC.
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*
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Officers are elected at least annually by the Trustees for a
one-year term and may also be elected from time to time by the
Trustees for an interim period.
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As discussed below, the Boards Nominating and Governance
Committee is responsible for identifying and recommending
candidates for nomination or election by the Board based on a
variety of diverse criteria. In its most recent evaluation of
the qualifications of each Trustee in 2012, the Committee and
the Board considered the totality of the information available
to them, including the specific experience, qualifications,
attributes or skills, as noted below, and concluded that each of
the Trustees should serve as members of the Board of Trustees
based on the Trusts business structure. In reaching these
conclusions, the Committee and the Board, in the exercise of
their reasonable business judgment, evaluated each Trustee based
on his or her specific experience, qualifications, attributes
and/or skills on an individual basis and in combination with the
other Trustees, none of which by itself was considered
dispositive.
Alan A. Brown:
Service as Executive Vice President
and as Chief Marketing Officer of a leading investment
management firm, a corporate and fund director, and as an
executive with a private equity real estate investment
management firm.
William D. Cvengros:
Service as Chief Executive
Officer and President of a leading publicly traded investment
management firm, Chief Investment Officer of a major life
insurance company, a corporate and fund director, and in various
capacities with private investment firms, and a Fund Independent
Trustee since 2011.
William F. McCalpin:
Service as Chief Operating
Officer of a large private family foundation, Chairman and
Director of an unaffiliated fund complex, and a Fund Independent
Trustee since 2002 and Independent Chairman of the Board of
Trustees since 2008.
45
James T. Rothe:
Co-founder and Managing Director of
a private investment firm, former business school professor,
service as a corporate director, and a Fund Independent Trustee
since 1997.
William D. Stewart:
Service as a corporate vice
president of a NASDAQ-listed industrial manufacturer and a Fund
Independent Trustee since 1984.
Linda S. Wolf:
Service as Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of a global advertising firm, service on
multiple corporate and nonprofit boards, and a Fund Independent
Trustee since 2005.
General
Information Regarding the Board of Trustees and Leadership
Structure
The Trust is governed by the Board of Trustees, which is
responsible for and oversees the management and operations of
the Trust and each of the Janus funds on behalf of fund
shareholders. Each member of the Board is an Independent
Trustee, including the Boards Chairman. The Boards
responsibilities include, but are not limited to, oversight of
the Janus funds officers and service providers, including
Janus Capital, which is responsible for the Trusts
day-to-day operations. The Trustees approve all of the
agreements entered into with the Janus funds service
providers, including the investment management agreements with
Janus Capital and any applicable subadviser. The Trustees are
also responsible for determining or changing each Janus
funds investment objective(s), policies, and available
investment techniques, as well as for overseeing the funds
Chief Compliance Officer. In carrying out these
responsibilities, the Trustees are assisted by the Trusts
independent auditor (who reports directly to the Trusts
Audit Committee), independent counsel, an independent fee
consultant, and other specialists as appropriate, all of whom
are selected by the Trustees. The Trustees also meet regularly
without representatives of Janus Capital or its affiliates
present.
The Trustees discharge their responsibilities collectively as a
Board, as well as through Board committees, each of which
operates pursuant to a Board-approved charter that delineates
the specific responsibilities of that committee. For example,
the Board as a whole is responsible for oversight of the annual
process by which the Board considers and approves each
funds investment advisory agreement with Janus Capital,
but specific matters related to oversight of the Janus
funds independent auditors have been delegated by the
Board to its Audit Committee, subject to approval of the Audit
Committees recommendations by the Board. The members and
responsibilities of each Board committee are summarized below.
In addition to serving on certain committees, the Chairman of
the Board (Board Chairman) is responsible for
presiding at all meetings of the Board, and has other duties as
may be assigned by the Trustees from time to time. The Board
Chairman also serves as the Boards liaison to Janus
Capital with respect to all matters related to the Janus funds
that are not otherwise delegated to the chair of a Board
committee. The Board has determined that this leadership
structure is appropriate based on (1) the number of Janus
funds overseen and the various investment objectives of those
funds; (2) the manner in which the Janus funds shares
are marketed and distributed; and (3) the responsibilities
entrusted to Janus Capital and its affiliates to oversee the
Trusts day-to-day operations, including the management of
each Janus funds holdings and the distribution of fund
shares. On an annual basis, the Board conducts a self-evaluation
that considers, among other matters, whether the Board and its
committees are functioning effectively and whether, given the
size and composition of the Board and each of its committees,
the Trustees are able to oversee effectively the number of Janus
funds in the complex.
46
Committees
of the Board
The Board of Trustees has six standing committees that each
perform specialized functions: an Audit Committee, Brokerage
Committee, Investment Oversight Committee, Legal and Regulatory
Committee, Nominating and Governance Committee, and Pricing
Committee. The table below shows the committee members as of the
date of this SAI. The composition of certain committees was
different throughout the fiscal year. Each committee is
comprised entirely of Independent Trustees. Information about
each committees functions is provided in the following
table:
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Summary of Functions
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|
|
Members
(Independent Trustees)
|
|
|
Number of Meetings
Held During Last
Fiscal Year Ended
September 30,
2012
(1)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Audit Committee
|
|
|
Reviews the financial reporting process, the system of internal
controls over financial reporting, disclosure controls and
procedures, Form N-CSR filings, and the audit process. The
Committees review of the audit process includes, among
other things, the appointment, compensation, and oversight of
the Trusts independent auditor and preapproval of all
audit and nonaudit services.
|
|
|
William D. Cvengros (Chair)
William D. Stewart
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Brokerage Committee
|
|
|
Reviews and makes recommendations regarding matters related to
the Trusts use of brokerage commissions and placement of
portfolio transactions.
|
|
|
James T. Rothe (Chair)
William D. Stewart
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment Oversight
Committee
(2)
|
|
|
Oversees the investment activities of the Trusts non-money
market funds and reviews various matters related to the
operations of the Janus money market funds, including compliance
with their Money Market Fund Procedures.
|
|
|
William F. McCalpin (Chair)
William D. Cvengros
James T. Rothe
William D. Stewart
Linda S. Wolf
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Legal and Regulatory
Committee
|
|
|
Oversees compliance with various procedures adopted by the
Trust, reviews certain regulatory filings made with the SEC,
oversees the implementation and administration of the
Trusts Proxy Voting Guidelines.
|
|
|
Linda S. Wolf (Chair)
William F. McCalpin
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Nominating and
Governance Committee
|
|
|
Identifies and recommends individuals for election as Trustee,
consults with Management in planning Trustee meetings, and
oversees the administration of, and ensures compliance with, the
Trusts Governance Procedures and Guidelines, which
includes review of proposed changes to Trustee compensation.
|
|
|
James T. Rothe (Chair)
William F. McCalpin
Linda S. Wolf
|
|
|
9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pricing Committee
|
|
|
Determines a fair value of restricted and other securities for
which market quotations are not readily available or are deemed
not to be reliable, pursuant to procedures adopted by the
Trustees and reviews other matters related to the pricing of
securities.
|
|
|
William D. Stewart (Chair)
James T. Rothe
Linda S. Wolf
|
|
|
7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
The Fund commenced operations April 1, 2013.
|
|
|
(2)
|
Effective January 1, 2013, the Trustees eliminated the Money
Market Committee and transferred applicable oversight
responsibilities to the Investment Oversight Committee.
|
Board
Oversight of Risk Management
Janus Capital, as part of its responsibilities for the
day-to-day operations of the Janus funds, is responsible for
day-to-day risk management for the funds. The Board, as part of
its overall oversight responsibilities for the Janus funds
operations, oversees Janus Capitals risk management
efforts with respect to the funds. The Board, in the exercise of
its reasonable business judgment, also separately considers
potential risks that may impact the Janus funds. The Board
discharges its oversight duties
47
and considers potential risks in a number of different ways,
including, but not limited to, receiving reports on a regular
basis, either directly or through an appropriate committee, from
Janus Capital and its officers. Reports received include those
from, among others, Janus Capitals (1) senior
managers responsible for oversight of global risk;
(2) senior managers responsible for oversight of fund
construction and trading risk; (3) Chief Compliance
Officer; and (4) Director of Internal Audit. At the time
these reports are presented, the Board or the committee
receiving the report will, as it deems necessary, invite the
presenter to participate in an executive session to discuss
matters outside the presence of any other officers or
representatives of Janus Capital or its affiliates. The Board
also receives reports from other entities and individuals
unaffiliated with Janus Capital, including reports from the
Janus funds other service providers and from independent
consultants hired by the Board.
Various Board committees also will consider particular risk
items as the committee addresses items and issues specific to
the jurisdiction of that committee. For example, the Pricing
Committee will consider valuation risk as part of its regular
oversight responsibilities, and similarly, the Brokerage
Committee will consider counterparty risk associated with Janus
fund transactions. The Board also may be apprised of particular
risk management matters in connection with its general oversight
and approval of various Janus fund matters brought before the
Board. The Board has appointed a Chief Compliance Officer for
the Janus funds (Fund CCO) who (1) reports
directly to the Board and (2) provides a comprehensive
written report annually and presents quarterly at the
Boards regular meetings. The Fund CCO, who also serves as
Janus Capitals Chief Compliance Officer, discusses
relevant risk issues that may impact the Janus funds
and/or
Janus
Capitals services to the funds, and routinely meets with
the Board in private without representatives of Janus Capital or
its affiliates present. The Fund CCO also provides the Board
with updates on the application of the Janus funds
compliance policies and procedures, including how these
procedures are designed to mitigate risk and what, if any,
changes have been made to enhance the procedures. The Fund CCO
may also report to the Board on an
ad hoc
basis in
the event that he identifies issues associated with the Janus
funds compliance policies and procedures that could expose
the funds to additional risk or adversely impact the ability of
Janus Capital to provide services to the funds.
The Board believes that its leadership structure permits it to
effectively discharge its oversight responsibilities with
respect to the Janus funds risk management process.
Additional
Information About Trustees
Under the Trusts Governance Procedures and Guidelines, the
Trustees are expected to invest in one or more (but not
necessarily all) funds advised by Janus Capital for which they
serve as Trustee, to the extent they are directly eligible to do
so. These investments may include amounts held under a deferred
compensation plan that are valued based on shadow
investments in such funds. Such investments, including the
amount and which funds, are dictated by each Trustees
individual financial circumstances and investment goals.
As of December 31, 2012, the Trustees owned securities of
the Fund described in this SAI in the dollar range shown in the
following table. The last column of the table reflects each
Trustees aggregate dollar range of securities of all
mutual funds advised by Janus Capital and overseen by the
Trustees (collectively, the Janus Funds).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name of Trustee
|
|
|
Dollar Range of Equity Securities in the Fund
|
|
|
Aggregate Dollar Range of Equity Securities in All Registered
Investment Companies Overseen by Trustee in Janus Funds
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Independent Trustees
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William F. McCalpin
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
|
Over $100,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Alan A.
Brown
(1)
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
|
$50,001-$100,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William D. Cvengros
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
|
Over $100,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
James T. Rothe
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
|
Over $100,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William D. Stewart
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
|
Over $100,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Linda S. Wolf
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
|
Over
$100,000
(2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
Mr. Brown joined the Board as a new Trustee effective
January 14, 2013.
|
|
|
(2)
|
Ownership shown includes amounts held under a deferred
compensation plan that are valued based on shadow
investments in one or more funds.
|
The Trust pays each Independent Trustee an annual retainer plus
a fee for each regular in-person meeting of the Trustees
attended, a fee for
in-person
meetings of committees attended if convened on a date other than
that of a regularly scheduled meeting, and a fee for telephone
meetings of the Trustees and committees. In addition, committee
chairs and the Chairman of the Board of Trustees receive an
additional supplemental retainer. Each current Independent
Trustee also receives fees from other Janus funds for serving as
Trustee of those funds. Janus Capital pays persons who are
directors, officers, or employees
48
of Janus Capital or any affiliate thereof, or any Trustee
considered an interested Trustee, for their services
as Trustees or officers. The Trust and other funds managed by
Janus Capital may pay all or a portion of the compensation and
related expenses of the Funds Chief Compliance Officer and
compliance staff, as authorized from time to time by the
Trustees.
The following table shows the aggregate compensation paid to
each Independent Trustee by the Fund described in this SAI and
all Janus Funds for the periods indicated. None of the Trustees
receives any pension or retirement benefits from the Fund or the
Janus Funds. Effective January 1, 2006, the Trustees
established a deferred compensation plan under which the
Trustees may elect to defer receipt of all, or a portion, of the
compensation they earn for their services to the Fund, in lieu
of receiving current payments of such compensation. Any deferred
amount is treated as though an equivalent dollar amount has been
invested in shares of one or more funds advised by Janus Capital
(shadow investments).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Aggregate
|
|
Total
|
|
|
Compensation from
|
|
Compensation from
|
|
|
the Fund for
|
|
the Janus Funds for
|
|
|
fiscal year ended
|
|
calendar year ended
|
Name of Person,
Position
|
|
September 30,
2012
(1)
|
|
December 31,
2012
(2)(3)
|
Independent Trustees
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William F. McCalpin, Chairman and
Trustee
(4)(5)
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
$
|
403,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Alan A. Brown,
Trustee
(6)
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William D. Cvengros,
Trustee
(5)
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
$
|
285,333
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
John P. McGonigle,
Trustee
(5)(7)
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
$
|
282,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
James T. Rothe,
Trustee
(5)
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
$
|
292,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William D. Stewart,
Trustee
(5)
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
$
|
290,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Linda S. Wolf,
Trustee
(5)
|
|
|
N/A
|
|
|
$
|
295,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
Since the Fund is new, no fees were paid during the fiscal year
ended September 30, 2012. The aggregate compensation paid
by the Fund is estimated for its initial fiscal period ending
September 30, 2013 and for its first full fiscal year,
October 1, 2013 through September 30, 2014, as
follows: William F. McCalpin $57; Alan A. Brown $42; William D.
Cvengros $39; James T. Rothe $42; William D. Stewart $42; and
Linda S. Wolf $42.
|
|
|
(2)
|
For all Trustees (with the exception of Mr. Brown),
includes compensation for service on the boards of two Janus
trusts comprised of 57 portfolios.
|
|
|
(3)
|
Total Compensation received from the Janus Funds includes any
amounts deferred under the deferred compensation plan. The
deferred compensation amounts for the year are as follows: John
P. McGonigle $84,600.
|
(4)
|
Total Compensation received from all Janus Funds includes
additional compensation paid for service as Independent Chairman
of the Board of Trustees.
|
(5)
|
Total Compensation received from all Janus Funds includes
additional compensation paid for service as chair of one or more
committees of the Board of Trustees during certain periods.
|
|
|
(6)
|
Mr. Brown joined the Board as a new Trustee effective
January 14, 2013.
|
|
|
(7)
|
Effective January 1, 2013, Mr. McGonigle retired from
his positions with the Board of Trustees.
|
49
PERKINS
INVESTMENT PERSONNEL
Other
Accounts Managed
To the best knowledge of the Trust, the following table provides
information relating to other accounts managed by the portfolio
managers as of January 31, 2013. To the extent that any of
the accounts pay advisory fees based on account performance,
information on those accounts is separately listed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other Registered
|
|
Other Pooled
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment
|
|
Investment
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Companies
|
|
Vehicles
|
|
Other Accounts
|
Tadd H. Chessen
|
|
Number of Other Accounts Managed
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Assets in Other Accounts Managed
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
J. Christian Kirtley
|
|
Number of Other Accounts Managed
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Assets in Other Accounts Managed
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
Gregory R. Kolb
|
|
Number of Other Accounts Managed
|
|
|
3
|
(1)
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
Assets in Other Accounts Managed
|
|
$
|
204,138,190
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
One of the accounts included in the total, consisting of
$152,582,613 of the total assets in the category, has a
performance-based advisory fee.
|
Material
Conflicts
As shown in the table above, the Funds portfolio managers
may manage other funds and accounts with investment strategies
similar to the Fund. Fees earned by the adviser may vary among
these accounts, the portfolio managers may personally invest in
some but not all of these accounts, and certain of these
accounts may have a greater impact on the portfolio
managers compensation than others. These factors could
create conflicts of interest because a portfolio manager may
have incentives to favor certain accounts over others, resulting
in the potential for other accounts outperforming the Fund. A
conflict may also exist if a portfolio manager identifies a
limited investment opportunity that may be appropriate for more
than one account, but the Fund is not able to take full
advantage of that opportunity due to the need to allocate that
opportunity among multiple accounts. In addition, the portfolio
managers may execute transactions for another account that may
adversely impact the value of securities held by the Fund.
However, Perkins believes that these conflicts may be mitigated
to a certain extent by the fact that accounts with like
investment strategies managed by the portfolio managers are
generally managed in a similar fashion, subject to a variety of
exceptions, for example, to account for particular investment
restrictions or policies applicable only to certain accounts,
certain portfolio holdings that may be transferred in-kind when
an account is opened, differences in cash flows and account
sizes, and similar factors. Information regarding Perkins
trade allocation procedures is described under Additional
Information About Janus Capital and the Subadviser.
Compensation
Information
The following describes the structure and method of calculating
a portfolio managers compensation.
The portfolio managers and, if applicable, co-portfolio managers
(portfolio manager or portfolio
managers) are compensated for managing the Fund and any
other funds, portfolios, or accounts for which they have
exclusive or shared responsibilities (collectively, the
Managed Funds) through two components: fixed
compensation and variable compensation. Certain portfolio
managers are eligible to receive additional discretionary
compensation in recognition of their continued analyst
responsibilities. In addition, certain portfolio managers who
have an ownership interest or profits interest in Perkins may
receive compensation through those interests.
Fixed Compensation:
Fixed compensation is paid in
cash and is comprised of an annual base salary based on factors
such as the complexity of managing funds and other accounts and
scope of responsibility (including assets under management).
Variable Compensation:
Variable compensation is
paid in the form of cash and long-term incentive awards
(potentially consisting of all or a mixture of JCGI restricted
stock and/or a cash-deferred award that is credited with income,
gains, and losses based on the performance of mutual fund
investments selected by the portfolio manager). The overall
Perkins compensation pool is funded each year based
primarily upon a percentage of the total eligible revenue
received by Perkins, with a potential increase in funding based
on Perkins aggregate revenue-weighted Lipper peer group
performance ranking on a trailing three-year basis.
From the overall Perkins compensation pool described
above, variable compensation is paid to a portfolio manager
based primarily on the Managed Funds performance, with
additional discretionary compensation opportunities. The size of
the discretionary bonus pool fluctuates depending on both the
revenue derived from firm-wide managed assets and the investment
performance of such firm-wide managed assets. Compensation from
the discretionary bonus pool is allocated
50
among the eligible respective participants at the discretion of
Perkins management based upon, among other things:
(i) teamwork and support of team culture;
(ii) mentoring of analysts; (iii) contributions to the
sales process; and (iv) client relationships.
Analyst Variable Compensation:
If a portfolio
manager also has analyst responsibilities, then such portfolio
manager is further eligible to participate in the Perkins
discretionary bonus pool. The discretionary bonus pool is
allocated among the eligible analysts at the discretion of
Perkins based on factors which may include performance of
investment recommendations, performance of an analyst run
paper-based portfolio, individual and team contributions, scope
of coverage, and other subjective criteria.
The Funds Lipper peer group for compensation purposes is
shown in the following table:
|
|
|
Fund Name
|
|
Lipper Peer Group
|
Perkins International Value Fund
|
|
International Funds
|
|
|
|
OWNERSHIP
OF SECURITIES
Since the Fund is new, the Funds portfolio managers did
not own Shares of the Fund as of the date of this SAI. The
portfolio managers may, however, own shares of certain other
Janus mutual funds which have comparable investment objectives
and strategies to the Fund.
51
Shares
of the trust
NET ASSET
VALUE DETERMINATION
As stated in the Funds Prospectuses, the net asset value
(NAV) of the Shares of each class of the Fund is
determined once each day the New York Stock Exchange (the
NYSE) is open, as of the close of its regular
trading session (normally 4:00 p.m., New York time, Monday
through Friday). The per share NAV for each class of the Fund is
computed by dividing the total value of securities and other
assets allocated to the class, less liabilities allocated to
that class, by the total number of outstanding shares for the
class. In determining NAV, securities listed on an Exchange, the
NASDAQ National Market, and foreign markets are generally valued
at the closing prices on such markets. If such price is lacking
for the trading period immediately preceding the time of
determination, such securities are valued at their current bid
price. Municipal securities held by the Fund are traded
primarily in the over-the-counter markets. Valuations of such
securities are furnished by one or more pricing services
employed by the Fund and approved by the Trustees and are based
upon a computerized matrix system or appraisals obtained by a
pricing service, in each case in reliance upon information
concerning market transactions and quotations from recognized
municipal securities dealers. Other securities that are traded
on the over-the-counter markets are generally valued at their
closing bid prices. Foreign securities and currencies are
converted to U.S. dollars using the applicable exchange rate in
effect at the close of the NYSE. The Fund will determine the
market value of individual securities held by it by using prices
provided by one or more professional pricing services which may
provide market prices to other funds or, as needed, by obtaining
market quotations from independent broker-dealers. Short-term
securities maturing within 60 days or less are valued on an
amortized cost basis. Debt securities with a remaining maturity
of greater than 60 days are valued in accordance with the
evaluated bid price supplied by the pricing service. The
evaluated bid price supplied by the pricing service is an
evaluation that reflects such factors as security prices,
yields, maturities, and ratings.
Securities for which market quotations are not readily available
or are deemed unreliable are valued at fair value determined in
good faith under procedures established by and under the
supervision of the Trustees (the Valuation
Procedures). Circumstances in which fair value pricing may
be utilized include, but are not limited to: (i) a
significant event that may affect the securities of a single
issuer, such as a merger, bankruptcy, or significant
issuer-specific development; (ii) an event that may affect
an entire market, such as a natural disaster or significant
governmental action; (iii) a nonsignificant event such as a
market closing early or not opening, or a security trading halt;
and (iv) pricing of a nonvalued security and a restricted or
nonpublic security. The Fund may use systematic fair valuation
models provided by independent third parties to value
international equity securities in order to adjust for stale
pricing, which may occur between the close of certain foreign
exchanges and the close of the NYSE.
Trading in securities on European and Far Eastern securities
exchanges and over-the-counter markets is normally completed
well before the close of business on each business day in
New York (i.e., a day on which the NYSE is open). In
addition, European or Far Eastern securities trading generally
or in a particular country or countries may not take place on
all business days in New York. Furthermore, trading takes
place in Japanese markets on certain Saturdays and in various
foreign markets on days which are not business days in
New York and on which the Funds NAV is not
calculated. The Fund calculates its NAV per share, and therefore
effects sales, redemptions, and repurchases of its shares, as of
the close of the NYSE once each day on which the NYSE is open.
Such calculation may not take place contemporaneously with the
determination of the prices of the foreign portfolio securities
used in such calculation. If an event that is expected to affect
the value of a portfolio security occurs after the close of the
principal exchange or market on which that security is traded,
and before the close of the NYSE, then that security may be
valued in good faith under the Valuation Procedures.
To the extent there are any errors in the Funds NAV
calculation, Janus Capital may, at its discretion, reprocess
individual shareholder transactions so that each
shareholders account reflects the accurate corrected NAV.
PURCHASES
With the exception of Class D Shares and Class I
Shares, Shares of the Fund can generally be purchased only
through institutional channels such as financial intermediaries
and retirement platforms. Class D Shares and Class I
Shares may be purchased directly with the Fund in certain
circumstances as provided in the Funds Prospectuses. Not
all financial intermediaries offer all classes. Shares or
classes of the Fund may be purchased without upfront sales
charges by certain retirement plans and clients of investment
advisers, but these clients will typically pay asset-based fees
for their investment advisers advice, which are on top of
the Funds expenses. Certain Shares or classes of the Fund
may also be purchased without upfront sales charges or
transactional charges by persons who invest through mutual fund
supermarket programs of certain financial
intermediaries that typically do not provide investment
recommendations or the assistance of an investment professional.
For an analysis of fees associated with an investment in each
share class or other similar funds,
52
please visit
www.finra.org/fundanalyzer.
Under certain circumstances, the Fund may permit an
in-kind
purchase of Class A Shares, Class C Shares,
Class I Shares, Class N Shares, Class S Shares,
or Class T Shares at the discretion of Janus Capital.
Certain designated organizations are authorized to receive
purchase orders on the Funds behalf and those
organizations are authorized to designate their agents and
affiliates as intermediaries to receive purchase orders.
Purchase orders are deemed received by the Fund when authorized
organizations, their agents, or affiliates receive the order
provided that such designated organizations or their agents or
affiliates transmit the order to the Fund within contractually
specified periods. The Fund is not responsible for the failure
of any designated organization or its agents or affiliates to
carry out its obligations to its customers. In order to receive
a days price, your order for any class of Shares must be
received in good order by the close of the regular trading
session of the NYSE as described above in Net Asset Value
Determination. Your financial intermediary may charge you
a separate or additional fee for processing purchases of Shares.
Your financial intermediary, plan documents, or the Funds
Prospectuses will provide you with detailed information about
investing in the Fund.
The Trust has established an Anti-Money Laundering Compliance
Program (the Program) as required by the Uniting and
Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to
Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001
(USA PATRIOT Act). In an effort to ensure
compliance with this law, the Trusts Program provides for
the development of internal practices, procedures and controls,
designation of anti-money laundering compliance officers, an
ongoing training program, and an independent audit function to
determine the effectiveness of the Program.
Procedures to implement the Program include, but are not limited
to, determining that financial intermediaries have established
proper anti-money laundering procedures, reporting suspicious
and/or fraudulent activity, checking shareholder names against
designated government lists, including the Office of Foreign
Asset Control (OFAC), and a review of all new
account applications. The Trust does not intend to transact
business with any person or entity whose identity cannot be
adequately verified under the provisions of the USA PATRIOT
Act.
Class A
Shares
The price you pay for Class A Shares is the public offering
price, which is the NAV next determined after the Fund or its
agent receives in good order your order plus an initial sales
charge, if applicable, based on the amount invested as set forth
in the table. The Fund receives the NAV. The sales charge is
allocated between your financial intermediary and Janus
Distributors, the Trusts distributor, as shown in the
table, except where Janus Distributors, in its discretion,
allocates up to the entire amount to your financial
intermediary. Sales charges, as expressed as a percentage of
offering price, a percentage of your net investment, and as a
percentage of the sales charge reallowed to financial
intermediaries, are shown in the table. The dollar amount of
your initial sales charge is calculated as the difference
between the public offering price and the NAV of those shares.
Since the offering price is calculated to two decimal places
using standard rounding criteria, the number of shares purchased
and the dollar amount of your sales charge as a percentage of
the offering price and of your net investment may be higher or
lower than the amounts set forth in the table depending on
whether there was a downward or upward rounding. Although you
pay no initial sales charge on purchases of $1,000,000 or more,
Janus Distributors may pay, from its own resources, a commission
to your financial intermediary on such investments.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sales Charge as a
|
|
Sales Charge as a
|
|
Amount of Sales Charge Reallowed
|
|
|
Percentage of
|
|
Percentage of Net
|
|
to Financial Intermediaries as a
|
Amount of Purchase at Offering
Price
|
|
Offering Price*
|
|
Amount Invested
|
|
Percentage of Offering
Price
|
Under $50,000
|
|
|
5.75
|
%
|
|
|
6.10
|
%
|
|
|
5.00
|
%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$50,000 but under $100,000
|
|
|
4.50
|
%
|
|
|
4.71
|
%
|
|
|
3.75
|
%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$100,000 but under $250,000
|
|
|
3.50
|
%
|
|
|
3.63
|
%
|
|
|
2.75
|
%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$250,000 but under $500,000
|
|
|
2.50
|
%
|
|
|
2.56
|
%
|
|
|
2.00
|
%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$500,000 but under $1,000,000
|
|
|
2.00
|
%
|
|
|
2.04
|
%
|
|
|
1.60
|
%
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
$1,000,000 and above
|
|
|
None
|
**
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
None
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*
|
Offering Price includes the initial sales charge.
|
**
|
A contingent deferred sales charge of 1.00% may apply to Class A
Shares purchased without an initial sales charge if redeemed
within 12 months of purchase.
|
As described in the Prospectus, there are several ways you can
combine multiple purchases of Class A Shares of the Fund
and other Janus funds that are offered with a sales charge to
take advantage of lower sales charges.
53
As of the date of this SAI, Janus Distributors did not receive
any underwriting commissions from the Fund because the Fund is
new.
Class C
Shares, Class D Shares, Class I Shares, Class N
Shares, Class S Shares, and Class T Shares
Class C Shares, Class D Shares, Class I Shares,
Class N Shares, Class S Shares, and Class T
Shares of the Fund are purchased at the NAV per share as
determined at the close of the regular trading session of the
NYSE next occurring after a purchase order is received in good
order by the Fund or its authorized agent.
Janus Distributors also receives amounts pursuant to
Class A Share, Class C Share, and Class S Share
12b-1
plans
and, from Class A Shares and Class C Shares, proceeds
of contingent deferred sales charges paid by investors upon
certain redemptions, as detailed in the Distribution and
Shareholder Servicing Plans and Redemptions
sections, respectively, of this SAI.
Commission
on Class C Shares
Janus Distributors may compensate your financial intermediary at
the time of sale at a commission rate of up to 1.00% of the NAV
of the Class C Shares purchased. Service providers to
qualified plans will not receive this amount if they receive
12b-1
fees
from the time of initial investment of qualified plan assets in
Class C Shares.
DISTRIBUTION
AND SHAREHOLDER SERVICING PLANS
Class A
Shares and Class S Shares
As described in the Prospectus, Class A Shares and
Class S Shares have each adopted distribution and
shareholder servicing plans (the Class A Plan
and Class S Plan, respectively) in accordance
with
Rule 12b-1
under the 1940 Act. The Plans are compensation type plans and
permit the payment at an annual rate of up to 0.25% of the
average daily net assets of Class A Shares and Class S
Shares of the Fund for activities that are primarily intended to
result in the sale and/or shareholder servicing of Class A
Shares or Class S Shares of the Fund, including, but not
limited to, printing and delivering prospectuses, statements of
additional information, shareholder reports, proxy statements,
and marketing materials related to Class A Shares and
Class S Shares to prospective and existing investors;
providing educational materials regarding Class A Shares
and Class S Shares; providing facilities to answer
questions from prospective and existing investors about the
Fund; receiving and answering correspondence; complying with
federal and state securities laws pertaining to the sale of
Class A Shares and Class S Shares; assisting investors
in completing application forms and selecting dividend and other
account options; and any other activities for which
service fees may be paid under Rule 2830 of the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(FINRA) Conduct Rules. Payments under the Plans are
not tied exclusively to actual distribution and shareholder
service expenses, and the payments may exceed distribution and
shareholder service expenses actually incurred. Payments are
made to Janus Distributors, the Funds distributor, who may
make ongoing payments to financial intermediaries based on the
value of Fund shares held by such intermediaries
customers. On December 5, 2008, the Trustees unanimously
approved a distribution plan with respect to each of the
Class A Shares and Class S Shares, which became
effective on July 6, 2009.
Class C
Shares
As described in the Prospectus, Class C Shares have adopted
a distribution and shareholder servicing plan (the
Class C Plan) in accordance with
Rule 12b-1
under the 1940 Act. The Class C Plan is a compensation type
plan and permits the payment at an annual rate of up to 0.75% of
the average daily net assets of Class C Shares of the Fund
for activities which are primarily intended to result in the
sale of Class C Shares of the Fund. In addition, the Plan
permits the payment of up to 0.25% of the average daily net
assets of Class C Shares of the Fund for shareholder
servicing activities including, but not limited to, providing
facilities to answer questions from existing investors about the
Fund; receiving and answering correspondence; assisting
investors in changing dividend and other account options and any
other activities for which service fees may be paid
under Rule 2830 of the FINRA Conduct Rules. Payments under
the Class C Plan are not tied exclusively to actual
distribution and shareholder service expenses, and the payments
may exceed distribution and shareholder service expenses
actually incurred. On December 5, 2008, the Trustees
unanimously approved the Class C Plan, which became
effective on July 6, 2009.
The Plans and any
Rule 12b-1
related agreement that is entered into by the Fund or Janus
Distributors in connection with the Plans will continue in
effect for a period of more than one year only so long as
continuance is specifically approved at least annually by a vote
of a majority of the Trustees, and of a majority of the Trustees
who are not interested persons (as defined in the 1940 Act) of
the Trust and who have no direct or indirect financial interest
in the operation of the Plans or any related agreements
(12b-1
Trustees). All material amendments to any Plan must be
approved by a majority vote of the Trustees, including a
majority of the
12b-1
Trustees, at a meeting called for that purpose. In addition, any
Plan may be
54
terminated as to the Fund at any time, without penalty, by vote
of a majority of the outstanding Shares of that Class of the
Fund or by vote of a majority of the
12b-1 Trustees.
Janus Distributors is entitled to retain all fees paid under the
Class C Plan for the first 12 months on any investment
in Class C Shares to recoup its expenses with respect to
the payment of commissions on sales of Class C Shares. Financial
intermediaries will become eligible for compensation under the
Class C Plan beginning in the 13th month following the
purchase of Class C Shares, although Janus Distributors
may, pursuant to a written agreement between Janus Distributors
and a particular financial intermediary, pay such financial
intermediary
12b-1
fees
prior to the 13th month following the purchase of Class C
Shares.
As of the date of this SAI, Janus Distributors did not receive
any
12b-1
fees from Class A Shares, Class C Shares, or
Class S Shares of the Fund because the Fund is new.
REDEMPTIONS
Redemptions, like purchases, may generally be effected only
through institutional channels such as financial intermediaries
and retirement platforms. Class D Shares and, in certain
circumstances, Class I Shares may be redeemed directly with
the Fund. Certain designated organizations are authorized to
receive redemption orders on the Funds behalf and those
organizations are authorized to designate their agents and
affiliates as intermediaries to receive redemption orders.
Redemption orders are deemed received by the Fund when
authorized organizations, their agents, or affiliates receive
the order. The Fund is not responsible for the failure of any
designated organization or its agents or affiliates to carry out
its obligations to its customers.
Certain accounts or Janus affiliates may from time to time own
(beneficially or of record) or control a significant percentage
of the Funds Shares. Redemptions by these accounts of
their holdings in the Fund may impact the Funds liquidity
and NAV. These redemptions may also force the Fund to sell
securities, which may negatively impact the Funds
brokerage costs.
Shares normally will be redeemed for cash, although the Fund
retains the right to redeem some or all of its shares in-kind
under unusual circumstances, in order to protect the interests
of remaining shareholders, to accommodate a request by a
particular shareholder that does not adversely affect the
interests of the remaining shareholders, or in connection with
the liquidation of a fund, by delivery of securities selected
from its assets at its discretion. However, the Fund is governed
by
Rule 18f-1
under the 1940 Act, which requires the Fund to redeem shares
solely for cash up to the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the NAV of
the Fund during any
90-day
period for any one shareholder. Should redemptions by any
shareholder exceed such limitation, the Fund will have the
option of redeeming the excess in cash or in-kind. If shares are
redeemed in-kind, the redeeming shareholder may incur brokerage
costs in converting the assets to cash, whereas such costs are
borne by the Fund for cash redemptions. The method of valuing
securities used to make redemptions in-kind will be the same as
the method of valuing portfolio securities described under
Shares of the Trust Net Asset Value
Determination and such valuation will be made as of the
same time the redemption price is determined.
The Fund reserves the right to postpone payment of redemption
proceeds for up to seven calendar days. Additionally, the right
to require the Fund to redeem its Shares may be suspended, or
the date of payment may be postponed beyond seven calendar days,
whenever: (i) trading on the NYSE is restricted, as
determined by the SEC, or the NYSE is closed (except for
holidays and weekends); (ii) the SEC permits such
suspension and so orders; or (iii) an emergency exists
as determined by the SEC so that disposal of securities or
determination of NAV is not reasonably practicable.
Class A
Shares
A contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) of 1.00%
will be deducted with respect to Class A Shares purchased
without a sales load and redeemed within 12 months of
purchase, unless waived, as discussed in the Prospectus. Any
applicable CDSC will be 1.00% of the lesser of the original
purchase price or the value of the redemption of the
Class A Shares redeemed.
Class C
Shares
A CDSC of 1.00% will be deducted with respect to Class C
Shares redeemed within 12 months of purchase, unless
waived, as discussed in the Prospectus. Any applicable CDSC will
be 1.00% of the lesser of the original purchase price or the
value of the redemption of the Class C Shares redeemed.
Janus Distributors receives the proceeds of contingent deferred
sales charges paid by investors upon certain redemptions of
Class A Shares and Class C Shares. As of the date of
this SAI, Janus Distributors did not receive any proceeds of
contingent deferred sales charges paid by investors in
Class A Shares and Class C Shares because the Fund is
new.
55
Processing
or Service Fees
Broker-dealers may charge their customers a processing or
service fee in connection with the purchase or redemption of
Fund shares. Each individual dealer determines and should
disclose to its customers the amount and applicability of such a
fee. Processing or service fees typically are fixed, nominal
dollar amounts and are in addition to the sales and other
charges described in the Prospectus and this SAI. Consult your
broker-dealer for specific information about any processing or
service fees you may be charged.
56
Income
dividends, capital gains distributions, and tax status
The following is intended to be a general summary of certain
U.S. federal income tax consequences of investing in the
Fund. It is not intended to be a complete discussion of all such
federal income tax consequences, nor does it purport to deal
with all categories of investors. This discussion reflects
applicable tax laws of the United States as of the date of this
SAI. However, tax laws may change or be subject to new
interpretation by the courts or the IRS, possibly with
retroactive effect. Investors are therefore advised to consult
with their own tax advisers before making an investment in the
Fund.
It is a policy of the Funds Shares to make distributions
of substantially all of their respective investment income and
any net realized capital gains. Any capital gains realized
during each fiscal year, as defined by the Internal Revenue
Code, are normally declared and payable to shareholders in
December but, if necessary, may be distributed at other times as
well. The Fund declares and makes annual distributions of income
(if any).
The Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company by
satisfying certain requirements prescribed by Subchapter M
of the Internal Revenue Code. If the Fund failed to qualify as a
regulated investment company in any taxable year, the Fund may
be subject to federal income tax on its taxable income at
corporate rates. In addition, all distributions from earnings
and profits, including any distributions of net tax-exempt
income and net long-term capital gains, would generally be
taxable to shareholders as ordinary income but may, at least in
part, qualify for the dividends received deduction applicable to
corporations or the reduced rate of taxation applicable to
noncorporate holders for qualified dividend income.
In addition, the Fund could be required to recognize unrealized
gains, pay taxes and interest, and make distributions before
requalifying as a regulated investment company that is accorded
special tax treatment.
All income dividends and capital gains distributions, if any, on
the Funds Shares are reinvested automatically in
additional shares of the same class of Shares of the Fund at the
NAV determined on the first business day following the record
date.
The Fund may purchase securities of certain foreign corporations
considered to be passive foreign investment companies by the
Internal Revenue Code. In order to avoid taxes and interest that
must be paid by the Fund, the Fund may make various elections
permitted by the tax laws. However, these elections could
require that the Fund recognize taxable income, which in turn
must be distributed even though the Fund may not have received
any income upon such an event.
Some foreign securities purchased by the Fund may be subject to
foreign taxes which could reduce the yield on such securities.
If the amount of foreign taxes is significant in a particular
year and the Fund qualifies under Section 853 of the
Internal Revenue Code, the Fund may elect to pass through such
taxes to shareholders, who will each decide whether to deduct
such taxes or claim a foreign tax credit. If such election is
not made by the Fund, any foreign taxes paid or accrued will
represent an expense to the Fund, which will reduce its
investment company taxable income.
The Funds investments in REIT equity securities, if any,
may require the Fund to accrue and distribute income not yet
received. In order to generate sufficient cash to make the
requisite distributions, the Fund may be required to sell
securities at a time when fundamental investment considerations
would not favor such sales. The Funds investments in REIT
equity securities may result in the receipt of cash in excess of
the REITs earnings. If the Fund distributes such amounts,
such distribution could constitute a return of capital to
shareholders for federal income tax purposes.
Some REITs are permitted to hold residual interests
in real estate mortgage investment conduits
(REMICs). Pursuant to the IRS rules, a portion of
the Funds income from a REIT or excess inclusion
income that is attributable to the REIT may be subject to
federal income tax. Excess inclusion income will normally be
allocated to shareholders in proportion to the dividends
received by such shareholders. There may be instances in which
the Fund may be unaware of a REITs excess inclusion income.
As a result of excess inclusion income, the Fund may be subject
to additional tax depending on the type of record holder of Fund
shares, such as certain federal, state, and foreign governmental
entities, tax exempt organizations, and certain rural electrical
and telephone cooperatives (disqualified
organizations). This may impact the Funds
performance.
Please consult a tax adviser regarding tax consequences of Fund
distributions and to determine whether you will need to file a
tax return.
Certain fund transactions involving short sales, futures,
options, swap agreements, hedged investments, and other similar
transactions, if any, may be subject to special provisions of
the Internal Revenue Code that, among other things, may affect
the character, amount, and timing of distributions to
shareholders. The Fund will monitor its transactions and may
make certain tax elections where applicable in order to mitigate
the effect of these provisions, if possible. Certain
transactions or strategies utilized by the Fund may generate
nonqualified income that can impact an investors taxes.
57
Principal
shareholders
As of the date of this SAI, all of the outstanding Shares of the
Fund were owned by Janus Capital or an affiliate, which provided
seed capital for the Fund. A fund that has only affiliated
shareholders may be perceived as obtaining a benefit of any
investments that contribute positively to its performance.
58
Miscellaneous
information
The Fund is a series of the Trust, an
open-end
management investment company registered under the 1940 Act
and organized as a Massachusetts business trust on
February 11, 1986. As of the date of this SAI, the Trust
offers 45 series of shares, known as Funds.
Each Fund presently offers interests in different classes of
shares as described in the table below.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Class A
|
|
Class C
|
|
Class D
|
|
Class I
|
|
Class L
|
|
Class N
|
|
Class R
|
|
Class S
|
|
Class T
|
Fund Name
|
|
Shares
|
|
Shares
|
|
Shares
|
|
Shares
|
|
Shares
|
|
Shares
|
|
Shares
|
|
Shares
|
|
Shares
|
INTECH Global Dividend Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
INTECH International Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
INTECH U.S. Core Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
INTECH U.S. Growth Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
INTECH U.S. Value Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Asia Equity Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Balanced Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Contrarian Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Diversified Alternatives Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Emerging Markets Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Enterprise Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Flexible Bond Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Forty Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Global Allocation Fund Conservative
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Global Allocation Fund Growth
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Global Allocation Fund Moderate
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Global Bond Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Global Life Sciences Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Global Real Estate Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Global Research Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Global Select Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Global Technology Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Government Money Market Fund
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Growth and Income Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus High-Yield Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus International Equity Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Money Market Fund
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Overseas Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Protected Series Global
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Protected Series Growth
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Real Return Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Research Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Short-Term Bond Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Triton Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Twenty Fund
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus Venture Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Janus World Allocation Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Perkins Global Value Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Perkins International Value Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Perkins Large Cap Value Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Perkins Mid Cap Value Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Perkins Select Value Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Perkins Small Cap Value Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
Perkins Value Plus Income Fund
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
59
On July 6, 2009, the funds of the Janus Adviser Series
trust reorganized into the Trust. As a result, certain funds
assumed the assets and liabilities of the corresponding Janus
Adviser Series funds. The Fund has a fiscal year end of
September 30.
Janus Capital reserves the right to the name Janus.
In the event that Janus Capital does not continue to provide
investment advice to the Fund, the Fund must cease to use the
name Janus as soon as reasonably practicable.
Under Massachusetts law, shareholders of the Fund could, under
certain circumstances, be held liable for the obligations of the
Fund. However, the Amended and Restated Agreement and
Declaration of Trust disclaims shareholder liability for acts or
obligations of the Fund and requires that notice of this
disclaimer be given in each agreement, obligation, or instrument
entered into or executed by the Fund or the Trustees. The
Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust also
provides for indemnification from the assets of the Fund for all
losses and expenses of any Fund shareholder held liable for the
obligations of the Fund. Thus, the risk of a shareholder
incurring a financial loss on account of their liability as a
shareholder of the Fund is limited to circumstances in which the
Fund would be unable to meet its obligations. The possibility
that these circumstances would occur is remote. The Trustees
intend to conduct the operations of the Fund to avoid, to the
extent possible, liability of shareholders for liabilities of
the Fund.
It is important to know that, pursuant to the Trusts
Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust and in
accordance with any applicable regulations and laws, such as the
1940 Act, the Trustees have the authority to merge, liquidate,
and/or
reorganize the Fund into another fund without seeking
shareholder vote or consent. Any such consolidation, merger, or
reorganization may be authorized at any time by a vote of a
majority of the Trustees then in office.
SHARES OF
THE TRUST
The Trust is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares
of beneficial interest with a par value of one cent per share
for each series of the Trust. Shares of each series of the Trust
are fully paid and nonassessable when issued. Shares of the Fund
participate equally in dividends and other distributions by the
Shares of the same class of the Fund, and in residual assets of
that class of the Fund in the event of liquidation. Shares of
the Fund have no preemptive, conversion, or
subscription rights. Shares of the Fund may be transferred
by endorsement or stock power as is customary, but the Fund is
not bound to recognize any transfer until it is recorded on its
books.
SHAREHOLDER
MEETINGS
The Trust does not intend to hold annual or regular shareholder
meetings unless otherwise required by the Amended and Restated
Agreement and Declaration of Trust or the 1940 Act. Special
meetings may be called for a specific fund or for the Trust as a
whole for purposes such as changing fundamental policies,
electing or removing Trustees, making any changes to the Amended
and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust that would
materially adversely affect shareholders rights,
determining whether to bring certain derivative actions, or for
any other purpose requiring a shareholder vote under applicable
law or the Trusts governing documents, or as the Trustees
consider necessary or desirable.
Under the Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of
Trust, special meetings of shareholders of the Trust or of any
fund shall be called subject to certain conditions, upon written
request of shareholders owning shares representing at least 10%
of the shares then outstanding. The Fund will assist these
shareholders in communicating with other shareholders in
connection with such a meeting similar to that referred to in
Section 16(c) of the 1940 Act.
VOTING
RIGHTS
The Trustees of the Trust (excluding Mr. Cvengros, and Mr.
Brown, a new Trustee) were elected at a Special Meeting of
Shareholders on June 10, 2010. Under the Amended and
Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust, each Trustee will
continue in office until the termination of the Trust or his or
her earlier death, retirement, resignation, incapacity, or
removal. Vacancies will be filled by appointment by a majority
of the remaining Trustees, subject to the 1940 Act.
As a shareholder, you are entitled to one vote for each whole
dollar and a proportionate fractional vote for each fractional
dollar of NAV of the Fund that you own. Generally, all funds and
classes vote together as a single group, except where a separate
vote of one or more funds or classes is required by law or where
the interests of one or more funds or classes are affected
differently from other funds or classes. Shares of all series of
the Trust have noncumulative voting rights, which means that the
holders of more than 50% of the value of shares of all series of
the Trust voting for the election of Trustees can elect 100% of
the Trustees if they choose to do so. In such event, the holders
of the remaining value of shares will not be able to elect
any Trustees.
60
MASTER/FEEDER
OPTION
The Trust may in the future seek to achieve a funds
objective by investing all of that funds assets in another
investment company having the same investment objective and
substantially the same investment policies and restrictions as
those applicable to that fund. Unless otherwise required by law,
this policy may be implemented by the Trustees without
shareholder approval.
INDEPENDENT
REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, 1900 16th Street,
Suite 1600, Denver, Colorado 80202, the Independent
Registered Public Accounting Firm for the Fund, audits the
Funds annual financial statements and compiles its tax
returns.
REGISTRATION
STATEMENT
The Trust has filed with the SEC, Washington, D.C., a
Registration Statement under the 1933 Act with respect to the
securities to which this SAI relates. If further information is
desired with respect to the Fund or such securities, reference
is made to the Registration Statement and the exhibits filed as
a part thereof.
61
Financial
statements
No financial statements are available for the Fund because the
Fund is new.
62
Appendix
A
EXPLANATION
OF RATING CATEGORIES
The following is a description of credit ratings issued by three
of the major credit rating agencies. Credit ratings evaluate
only the safety of principal and interest payments, not the
market value risk of lower quality securities. Credit rating
agencies may fail to change credit ratings to reflect subsequent
events on a timely basis. Although Janus Capital and Perkins
consider security ratings when making investment decisions, they
also perform their own investment analyses and do not rely
solely on the ratings assigned by credit agencies.
STANDARD &
POORS RATINGS SERVICES
|
|
|
Bond Rating
|
|
Explanation
|
|
Investment Grade
|
|
|
AAA
|
|
Highest rating; extremely strong capacity to pay principal and
interest.
|
AA
|
|
High quality; very strong capacity to pay principal and interest.
|
A
|
|
Strong capacity to pay principal and interest; somewhat more
susceptible to the adverse effects of changing circumstances and
economic conditions.
|
BBB
|
|
Adequate capacity to pay principal and interest; normally
exhibit adequate protection parameters, but adverse economic
conditions or changing circumstances more likely to lead to a
weakened capacity to pay principal and interest than for higher
rated bonds.
|
Non-Investment Grade
|
|
|
BB
|
|
Less vulnerable to nonpayment than other speculative issues;
major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to adverse business,
financial, or economic conditions which could lead to the
obligors inadequate capacity to meet its financial
commitment on the obligation.
|
B
|
|
More vulnerable to nonpayment than obligations rated
BB, but capacity to meet its financial commitment on
the obligation; adverse business, financial, or economic
conditions will likely impair the obligors capacity or
willingness to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
|
CCC
|
|
Currently vulnerable to nonpayment, and is dependent upon
favorable business, financial, and economic conditions for the
obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
|
CC
|
|
Currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment.
|
C
|
|
Currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment; a bankruptcy petition
may have been filed or similar action taken, but payments on the
obligation are being continued.
|
D
|
|
In default.
|
63
FITCH,
INC.
|
|
|
Long-Term Bond Rating
|
|
Explanation
|
|
Investment Grade
|
|
|
AAA
|
|
Highest credit quality. Denotes the lowest expectation of credit
risk. Exceptionally strong capacity for payment of financial
commitments.
|
AA
|
|
Very high credit quality. Denotes expectations of very low
credit risk. Very strong capacity for payment of financial
commitments.
|
A
|
|
High credit quality. Denotes expectations of low credit risk.
Strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. May be
more vulnerable to changes in circumstances or in economic
conditions than is the case for higher ratings.
|
BBB
|
|
Good credit quality. Currently expectations of low credit risk.
Capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered
adequate, but adverse changes in circumstances and economic
conditions are more likely to impair this capacity than is the
case for higher ratings.
|
Non-Investment Grade
|
|
|
BB
|
|
Speculative. Indicates possibility of credit risk developing,
particularly as the result of adverse economic change over time.
Business or financial alternatives may be available to allow
financial commitments to be met.
|
B
|
|
Highly speculative. May indicate distressed or defaulted
obligations with potential for extremely high recoveries.
|
CCC
|
|
May indicate distressed or defaulted obligations with potential
for superior to average levels of recovery.
|
CC
|
|
May indicate distressed or defaulted obligations with potential
for average or below-average levels of recovery.
|
C
|
|
May indicate distressed or defaulted obligations with potential
for below-average to poor recoveries.
|
D
|
|
In default.
|
|
|
|
Short-Term Bond Rating
|
|
Explanation
|
|
F-1+
|
|
Exceptionally strong credit quality. Issues assigned this rating
are regarded as having the strongest degree of assurance for
timely payment.
|
F-1
|
|
Very strong credit quality. Issues assigned this rating reflect
an assurance for timely payment only slightly less in degree
than issues rated F-1+.
|
F-2
|
|
Good credit quality. Issues assigned this rating have a
satisfactory degree of assurance for timely payments, but the
margin of safety is not as great as the
F-1+
and F-1
ratings.
|
64
MOODYS
INVESTORS SERVICE, INC.
|
|
|
Bond Rating
|
|
Explanation
|
|
Investment Grade
|
|
|
Aaa
|
|
Highest quality, smallest degree of investment risk.
|
Aa
|
|
High quality; together with Aaa bonds, they compose the
high-grade bond group.
|
A
|
|
Upper to medium-grade obligations; many favorable investment
attributes.
|
Baa
|
|
Medium-grade obligations; neither highly protected nor poorly
secured. Interest and principal appear adequate for the present
but certain protective elements may be lacking or may be
unreliable over any great length of time.
|
Non-Investment Grade
|
|
|
Ba
|
|
More uncertain, with speculative elements. Protection of
interest and principal payments not well safeguarded during good
and bad times.
|
B
|
|
Lack characteristics of desirable investment; potentially low
assurance of timely interest and principal payments or
maintenance of other contract terms over time.
|
Caa
|
|
Poor standing, may be in default; elements of danger with
respect to principal or interest payments.
|
Ca
|
|
Speculative in a high degree; could be in default or have other
marked shortcomings.
|
C
|
|
Lowest rated; extremely poor prospects of ever attaining
investment standing.
|
Unrated securities will be treated as non-investment grade
securities unless a portfolio manager determines that such
securities are the equivalent of investment grade securities.
When calculating the quality assigned to securities that receive
different ratings from two or more agencies (split-rated
securities), the security will receive: (i) the
middle rating from the three reporting agencies if three
agencies provide a rating for the security or (ii) the
lowest rating if only two agencies provide a rating for the
security.
65
151 Detroit Street
Denver, Colorado 80206-4805
1-877-335-2687
JANUS INVESTMENT FUND
PART C OTHER INFORMATION
ITEM 28.
Exhibits
Exhibit (a) Articles of Incorporation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)(1)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Agreement and
Declaration of Trust,
dated March 18, 2003,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
1(ii) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 109,
filed on April 17, 2003
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)(2)
|
|
Certificate of
Amendment Establishing
and Designating Series,
dated September 16,
2003, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 1(jj) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 110,
filed on December 23,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)(3)
|
|
Form of Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation for Janus
Research Fund and Janus
Explorer Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(kk) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)(4)
|
|
Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Explorer Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(ll) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 113,
filed on February 24,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)(5)
|
|
Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Flexible Income Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(mm) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)(6)
|
|
Form of Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Janus
Smart Portfolios is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(nn) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)(7)
|
|
Form of Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Risk-Managed Stock Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
1(oo) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(8)
|
|
Certificate of
Amendment of the
Amended and Restated
Agreement and
Declaration of Trust is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(a) to N-14/A
Pre-Effective Amendment
No. 1, filed on August
8, 2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-1
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(a)(9)
|
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Certificate of
Amendment of the
Amended and Restated
Agreement and
Declaration of Trust is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(b) to N-14/A
Pre-Effective Amendment
No. 1, filed on August
8, 2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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(a)(10)
|
|
Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Core Equity Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 1(pp) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(11)
|
|
Certificate of
Amendment of the
Amended and Restated
Agreement and
Declaration of Trust is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(qq) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(12)
|
|
Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Mercury Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(tt) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 120,
filed on February 28,
2007 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(13)
|
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Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Research Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(uu) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 120,
filed on February 28,
2007 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(14)
|
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Certificate
Redesignating Janus Mid
Cap Value Fund, dated
December 23, 2008, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(vv) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(15)
|
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Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Small Cap Value Fund,
dated December 23,
2008, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 1(ww) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(16)
|
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Amendment to
Certificate
Redesignating Janus Mid
Cap Value Fund, dated
December 30, 2008, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(xx) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(17)
|
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Amendment to
Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Small Cap Value Fund,
dated December 30,
2008, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 1(yy) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(18)
|
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Certificate
Redesignating INTECH
Risk-Managed Stock
Fund, dated February
24, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
1(zz) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-2
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(a)(19)
|
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Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Fundamental Equity
Fund, dated February
24, 2009 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(aaa) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(a)(20)
|
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Form of Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(20) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(a)(21)
|
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Form of Certificate of
Establishment,
Designation and
Redesignation of Share
Classes is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(21) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(a)(22)
|
|
Form of Certificate of
Establishment,
Designation and
Redesignation of Share
Classes is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(22) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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(a)(23)
|
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Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Global Opportunities
Fund, dated July 7,
2010, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(23) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(a)(24)
|
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Form of Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes
(Perkins Value Plus
Income Fund) is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(24) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(a)(25)
|
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Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Smart Portfolio
Growth, Janus Smart
Portfolio Moderate,
and Janus Smart
Portfolio
Conservative, dated
July 22, 2010, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(25) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 133,
filed on August 25,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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(a)(26)
|
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Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Modular Portfolio
Construction Fund,
dated August 26, 2010,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(a)(26) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 134,
filed on October 15,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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(a)(27)
|
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Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Orion Fund, dated
September 14, 2010, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(27) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 134,
filed on October 15,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-3
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(a)(28)
|
|
Certificate of
Termination of Janus
International Forty
Fund, dated August 23,
2010, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(28) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 134,
filed on October 15,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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(a)(29)
|
|
Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes
(Janus Emerging Markets
Fund and Janus Global
Bond Fund) is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(29) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
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|
(a)(30)
|
|
Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes
(Janus Protected Growth
Fund) is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(30) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 146,
filed on April 21, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
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|
(a)(31)
|
|
Form of Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Share
Classes (Janus Venture
Fund) is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(31) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 148,
filed on May 2, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
(a)(32)
|
|
Form of Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Protected Growth Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(a)(32) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 149,
filed on May 3, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
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|
(a)(33)
|
|
Form of Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes
(Janus Real Return
Allocation Fund) is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(33) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
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|
(a)(34)
|
|
Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes
(Janus Asia Equity
Fund) is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(34) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 157,
filed on July 29, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
(a)(35)
|
|
Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Dynamic Allocation Fund
and Janus Long/Short
Fund, dated September
28, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(35) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 163,
filed on October 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
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|
(a)(36)
|
|
Certificate
Redesignating INTECH
Risk-Managed Core Fund,
INTECH Risk-Managed
Growth Fund, INTECH
Risk-Managed Value
Fund, and INTECH
Risk-Managed
International Fund,
dated December 2, 2011,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(a)(36) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-4
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|
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|
(a)(37)
|
|
Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes
(INTECH Global Dividend
Fund and Perkins Select
Value Fund), dated
December 2, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(37) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)(38)
|
|
Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes
(Janus Protected Series
Global), dated
December 2, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(38) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 168,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
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|
(a)(39)
|
|
Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Share
Class (Class N Shares),
dated May 22, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(a)(39) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 175,
filed on May 31, 2012
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
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|
(a)(40)
|
|
Certificate of
Termination of Janus
Global Market Neutral
Fund, dated October 8,
2012, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(40) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 179,
filed on October 26,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(a)(41)
|
|
Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Real Return Allocation
Fund, dated October 8,
2012, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(41) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 179,
filed on October 26,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(a)(42)
|
|
Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes
(Janus Diversified
Alternatives Fund),
dated December 18,
2012, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (a)(42) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 182,
filed on December 28,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
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|
|
(a)(43)
|
|
Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Conservative Allocation
Fund, Janus Growth
Allocation Fund, and
Janus Moderate
Allocation Fund, dated
February 11, 2013, is
filed herein as Exhibit
(a)(43).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(a)(44)
|
|
Certificate of
Termination of Janus
Global Research Fund,
dated March 18, 2013,
is filed herein as
Exhibit (a)(44).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(a)(45)
|
|
Certificate
Redesignating Janus
Worldwide Fund, dated
March 11, 2013, is
filed herein as Exhibit
(a)(45).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(a)(46)
|
|
Certificate of
Establishment and
Designation of Series
and Share Classes
(Perkins International
Value Fund), dated
March 20, 2013, is
filed herein as Exhibit
(a)(46).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(a)(47)
|
|
Form of Certificate of
Termination of Janus
World Allocation Fund
is filed herein as
Exhibit (a)(47).
|
C-5
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|
|
Exhibit (b) By-laws
|
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|
(b)(1)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Bylaws are incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 2(e) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
(b)(2)
|
|
First Amendment to the
Amended and Restated
Bylaws is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 2(f) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
(b)(3)
|
|
Second Amendment to the
Amended and Restated
Bylaws is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 2(g) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
Exhibit (c) Instruments Defining Rights of Security Holders
|
|
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|
|
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|
(c)(1)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Fund
(1)
is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(a) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 79, filed
on December 18, 1996
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(c)(2)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Growth and Income Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(b) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 79, filed
on December 18, 1996
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(c)(3)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Worldwide Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(c) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 79, filed
on December 18, 1996
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(c)(4)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Twenty
Fund
(1)
is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(d) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 80, filed
on February 14, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(c)(5)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Flexible Income
Fund
(1)
is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(e) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 80, filed
on February 14, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(c)(6)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Intermediate Government
Securities
Fund
(1)
filed as Exhibit 4(f)
to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 46, filed
on June 18, 1992 (File
No. 2-34393), has been
withdrawn.
|
|
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|
|
|
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|
(c)(7)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Venture Fund
(1)
is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(g) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 80, filed
on February 14, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
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|
|
(c)(8)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Enterprise Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(h) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 80, filed
on February 14, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
(1)
|
|
Outstanding certificates representing shares of
predecessor entity to this series of the Trust are deemed to represent shares
of this series.
|
C-6
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|
(c)(9)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Balanced Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(i) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 80, filed
on February 14, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(c)(10)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Short-Term Bond Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(j) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 80, filed
on February 14, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(c)(11)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Federal Tax-Exempt Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(k) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(c)(12)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Mercury Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(l) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(c)(13)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Overseas Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to
Exhibit 4(m) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(c)(14)
|
|
Revised Specimen Stock
Certificates for Janus
High-Yield Fund and
Janus Olympus Fund are
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(n) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 79, filed
on December 18, 1996
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(c)(15)
|
|
Revised Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Equity Income Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to
Exhibit 4(o) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 79, filed
on December 18, 1996
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(c)(16)
|
|
Revised Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Special Situations Fund
filed as Exhibit 4(p)
to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 79, filed
on December 18, 1996
(File No. 2-34393), has
been withdrawn.
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(c)(17)
|
|
Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Global Life Sciences
Fund filed as Exhibit
4(q) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 82, filed
on September 16, 1997
(File No. 2-34393), has
been withdrawn.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(c)(18)
|
|
Form of Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Global Life Sciences
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 3(r) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 85, filed
on September 10, 1998
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(c)(19)
|
|
Form of Specimen Stock
Certificate for Janus
Global Technology Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
3(s) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 85, filed
on September 10, 1998
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-7
|
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|
|
Exhibit (d) Investment Advisory Contracts
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(1)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Fund dated July 1,
1997, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 5(a) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(2)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreements for Janus
Growth and Income Fund
and Janus Worldwide
Fund dated July 1,
1997, are incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 5(b) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(3)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreements for Janus
Twenty Fund and Janus
Venture Fund dated July
1, 1997, are
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
5(c) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(4)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Flexible Income Fund
dated July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
5(d) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(5)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreements for Janus
Enterprise Fund, Janus
Balanced Fund, and
Janus Short-Term Bond
Fund dated July 1,
1997, are incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 5(e) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(6)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreements for Janus
Federal Tax-Exempt Fund
and Janus Mercury Fund
dated July 1, 1997, are
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
5(f) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(7)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Overseas Fund dated
July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
5(g) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(8)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreements for Janus
Money Market Fund,
Janus Government Money
Market Fund, and Janus
Tax-Exempt Money Market
Fund dated July 1,
1997, are incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 5(h) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
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(d)(9)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
High-Yield Fund dated
July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
5(i) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
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C-8
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(d)(10)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Equity Income Fund
dated July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to
Exhibit 5(k) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(11)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Life Sciences
Fund filed as Exhibit
5(m) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 82, filed
on September 16, 1997
(File No. 2-34393), has
been withdrawn.
|
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|
(d)(12)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Life
Sciences Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(n) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 85, filed
on September 10, 1998
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(d)(13)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Technology
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(o) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 85, filed
on September 10, 1998
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(d)(14)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Strategic Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(p) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 88, filed
on November 15, 1999
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(d)(15)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Fund dated July 1,
1997, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(q) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(16)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Growth and Income Fund
dated July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(r) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(17)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Twenty Fund dated July
1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(s) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(18)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Enterprise Fund dated
July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(t) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(19)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Balanced Fund dated
July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(u) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-9
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(d)(20)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Overseas Fund dated
July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(v) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(21)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Equity Income Fund
dated July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(w) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(22)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Life Sciences
Fund dated September
14, 1998, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(x) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(23)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Technology Fund
dated September 14,
1998, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(y) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(24)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Mercury Fund dated July
1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(z) of Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(25)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Strategic Value Fund
dated September 14,
1999, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(cc) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(26)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Venture Fund dated July
1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(dd) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(27)
|
|
Amendment dated January
31, 2000 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Worldwide Fund dated
July 1, 1997, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ee) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 90, filed
on January 31, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(28)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Orion Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ff) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 92, filed
on March 17, 2000 (File
No. 2-34393).
|
C-10
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|
(d)(29)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Value Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(hh) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 98, filed
on March 15, 2001 (File
No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(30)
|
|
Form of Amendment dated
July 31, 2001 to the
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Equity Income Fund
dated July 1, 1997, as
amended January 31,
2000, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(ii) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 99, filed
on June 1, 2001 (File
No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(d)(31)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Risk-Managed
Stock Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(kk) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 105,
filed on December 13,
2002 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(32)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Risk-Managed Stock Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(ll) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 105,
filed on December 13,
2002 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
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|
(d)(33)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Small Cap Value
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(mm) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(34)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Small Cap Value Fund
(pre-acquisition
version) is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(nn) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(35)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Small Cap Value Fund
(post-acquisition
version) is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(oo) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(36)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Mid Cap Value
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(pp) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(37)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Mid Cap
Value Fund
(pre-acquisition
version) is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(qq) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-11
|
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|
|
(d)(38)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Mid Cap
Value Fund
(post-acquisition
version) is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(rr) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(39)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Value Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(ss) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 110, filed on December 23,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(40)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Balanced Fund dated
July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(tt) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(41)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Core Equity Fund dated
July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(uu) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(42)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Enterprise Fund dated
July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(vv) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(43)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Flexible Income Fund
dated July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(xx) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(44)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Life Sciences
Fund dated July 1, 2004
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(yy) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(45)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Opportunities
Fund dated July 1, 2004
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(zz) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(46)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Technology Fund
dated July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(aaa) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(47)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Growth and Income Fund
dated July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(bbb) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-12
|
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|
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|
|
(d)(48)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
High-Yield Fund dated
July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ccc) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(49)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Fund dated July 1, 2004
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(ddd) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(50)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Mercury Fund dated July
1, 2004 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(eee) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(51)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus Mid
Cap Value Fund dated
July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(fff) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(52)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Orion Fund dated July
1, 2004 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(hhh) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(53)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Overseas Fund dated
July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(iii) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(54)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Risk-Managed Stock Fund
dated July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(jjj) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(55)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Short-Term Bond Fund
dated July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(kkk) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(56)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Small Cap Value Fund
dated July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(lll) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(57)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Special Equity Fund
dated July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(mmm) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-13
|
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|
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|
|
(d)(58)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Twenty Fund dated July
1, 2004 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(nnn) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(59)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Venture Fund dated July
1, 2004 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(ooo) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(60)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Worldwide Fund dated
July 1, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ppp) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(61)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Special Equity
Fund dated September
30, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(qqq) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(62)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Explorer Fund dated
December 2, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(rrr) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(63)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Research Fund dated
December 2, 2004 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(sss) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(64)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Explorer Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ttt) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 113,
filed on February 24,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(65)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Flexible Income
Fund dated February 28,
2005 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(uuu) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(66)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Smart Portfolio
Growth is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(vvv) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(67)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Smart Portfolio
Moderate is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(www) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-14
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(68)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Smart Portfolio
Conservative is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(xxx) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(69)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Fund dated July 1,
2004, as amended
February 1, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(yyy) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(70)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Enterprise Fund dated
July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(zzz) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(71)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Mercury Fund dated July
1, 2004, as amended
February 1, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(aaaa) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(72)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Orion Fund dated July
1, 2004, as amended
February 1, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(cccc) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(73)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Triton Fund dated
December 2, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(dddd) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(74)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Twenty Fund dated July
1, 2004, as amended
February 1, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(eeee) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(75)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Venture Fund dated July
1, 2004, as amended
February 1, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ffff) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(76)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Life Sciences
Fund dated July 1,
2004, as amended
February 1, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(gggg) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-15
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(77)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Technology Fund
dated July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(hhhh) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(78)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Balanced Fund dated
July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(iiii) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(79)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Contrarian Fund dated
July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(jjjj) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(80)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Core Equity Fund dated
July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(kkkk) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(81)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Growth and Income Fund
dated July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(llll) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(82)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Research Fund dated
December 2, 2004, as
amended January 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(mmmm) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(83)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Risk-Managed Stock Fund
dated July 1, 2004, as
amended January 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(nnnn) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(84)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus Mid
Cap Value Fund dated
July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(oooo) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(85)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Opportunities
Fund dated July 1,
2004, as amended
February 1, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(pppp) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-16
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(d)(86)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Overseas Fund dated
July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(qqqq) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(87)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Worldwide Fund dated
July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(rrrr) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(88)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Flexible Bond Fund
dated July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(ssss) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(89)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
High-Yield Fund dated
July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(tttt) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(90)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Short-Term Bond Fund
dated July 1, 2004, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(uuuu) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(91)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Money Market Fund dated
April 3, 2002, as
amended February 1,
2006, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(wwww) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(92)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Government Money Market
Fund dated April 3,
2002, as amended
February 1, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(xxxx) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(93)
|
|
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Janus Risk-Managed
Stock Fund dated July
1, 2004, as amended
January 1, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(aaaaa) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(94)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Risk-Managed Stock Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(bbbbb) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-17
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(d)(95)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Janus Risk-Managed
Stock Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ccccc) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(96)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Balanced Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ddddd) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(97)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Contrarian Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(eeeee) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(98)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Core Equity Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(fffff) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(99)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Enterprise Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ggggg) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(100)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Flexible Bond
Fund dated June 14,
2006 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(iiiii) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(101)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Fund dated June
14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(jjjjj) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(102)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Life
Sciences Fund dated
June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(kkkkk) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(103)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global
Opportunities Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(lllll) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(104)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Technology
Fund dated June 14,
2006 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(mmmmm) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-18
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|
(d)(105)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Growth and Income
Fund dated June 14,
2006 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(nnnnn) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(106)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus High-Yield Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ooooo) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(107)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Mercury Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ppppp) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(108)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Mid Cap Value
Fund dated June 14,
2006 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(qqqqq) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(109)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Orion Fund dated
June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(rrrrr) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(110)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Overseas Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(sssss) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(111)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Research Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ttttt) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(112)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
Stock Fund dated June
14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(uuuuu) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(113)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Short-Term Bond
Fund dated June 14,
2006 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(vvvvv) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(114)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Small Cap Value
Fund dated June 14,
2006 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(wwwww) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-19
|
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|
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|
(d)(115)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Smart Portfolio -
Conservative dated June
14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(xxxxx) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(116)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Smart Portfolio -
Growth dated June 14,
2006 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(yyyyy) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(117)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Smart Portfolio -
Moderate dated June 14,
2006 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(zzzzz) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(118)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Triton Fund dated
June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(aaaaaa) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(119)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Twenty Fund dated
June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(bbbbbb) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(120)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Venture Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(cccccc) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(121)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Worldwide Fund
dated June 14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(dddddd) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(122)
|
|
Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Janus Mid Cap Value
Fund dated June 14,
2006 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 4(eeeeee) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(123)
|
|
Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Janus Small Cap
Value Fund dated June
14, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(ffffff) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(124)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Core Equity Fund
dated June 30, 2006 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(gggggg) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-20
|
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|
(d)(125)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Mercury Fund
dated December 31, 2006
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(iiiiii) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 120,
filed on February 28,
2007 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(126)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Research Fund
dated December 31, 2006
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(jjjjjj) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 120,
filed on February 28,
2007 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(127)
|
|
Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for INTECH Risk-Managed
Stock Fund dated
January 1, 2008 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(kkkkkk) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 122,
filed on February 28,
2008 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(128)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Perkins
Mid Cap Value Fund
dated December 31, 2008
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(llllll) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(129)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Perkins
Small Cap Value Fund
dated December 31, 2008
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
4(mmmmmm) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(130)
|
|
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Perkins Mid Cap
Value Fund dated
December 31, 2008 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(nnnnnn) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(131)
|
|
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Perkins Small Cap
Value Fund dated
December 31, 2008 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
4(oooooo) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(132)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
Stock Fund, dated
February 27, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(132) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(133)
|
|
Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for INTECH Risk-Managed
Stock Fund, dated
December 9, 2008, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(133) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(134)
|
|
Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for INTECH Risk-Managed
Stock Fund, dated
February 27, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(134) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-21
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|
(d)(135)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Investment Advisory
Agreement for INTECH
Risk-Managed Core Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(135) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(136)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Contrarian Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(136) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
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|
|
(d)(137)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Research Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(137) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(138)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Research Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(138) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
|
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|
|
(d)(139)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Worldwide Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(139) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
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|
|
(d)(140)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Perkins
Mid Cap Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(140) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
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|
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|
|
(d)(141)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Perkins
Small Cap Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(141) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
(d)(142)
|
|
Form of Amended and
Restated Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Flexible Bond
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(142) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(143)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
Growth Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(143) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(144)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
International Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(144) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-22
|
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|
|
(d)(145)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(145) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(146)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Forty Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(146) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(147)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Real
Estate Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(147) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(148)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus International
Equity Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(148) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(149)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus International
Forty Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(149) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(150)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Long/Short Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(150) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
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|
|
(d)(151)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Modular Portfolio
Construction Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(151) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
(d)(152)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Perkins Large Cap Value
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(152) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
(d)(153)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for INTECH
Risk-Managed Growth
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(153) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(154)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for INTECH
Risk-Managed
International Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(154) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-23
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(d)(155)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for INTECH
Risk-Managed Value Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(155) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(156)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Perkins
Large Cap Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(156) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(157)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Forty Fund dated July
1, 2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(157) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(158)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Fund dated July 1, 2010
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(158) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(159)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Global Real Estate Fund
dated July 1, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(159) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(160)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Overseas Fund dated
August 1, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(160) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(161)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Twenty Fund dated July
1, 2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(161) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(162)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Perkins
Global Value Fund dated
July 1, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(162) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(163)
|
|
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Perkins Global
Value Fund dated July
1, 2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(163) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(164)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Perkins Value Plus
Income Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(164) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-24
|
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|
(d)(165)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Perkins
Value Plus Income Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(165) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(166)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Smart Portfolio
Conservative dated
August 2, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(166) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 133,
filed on August 25,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(167)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Smart Portfolio
Growth dated August 2,
2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(167) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 133,
filed on August 25,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(168)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Smart Portfolio
Moderate dated August
2, 2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(168) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 133,
filed on August 25,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(169)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Modular Portfolio
Construction Fund dated
September 15, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(169) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 134,
filed on October 15,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(170)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Orion Fund dated
September 15, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(170) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 134,
filed on October 15,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(171)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Emerging Markets
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(171) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(172)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Bond Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(172) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(173)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Growth and Income
Fund dated June 24,
2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(173) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-25
|
|
|
|
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|
|
(d)(174)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Overseas Fund dated
August 1, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(174) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(175)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
Core Fund dated
December 3, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(175) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(176)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Contrarian Fund
dated December 3, 2010
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(176) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(177)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Forty Fund dated
December 3, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(177) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(178)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Fund dated
December 3, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(178) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(179)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Real
Estate Fund dated
December 3, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(179) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(180)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Global Research
Fund dated December 3,
2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(180) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(181)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus International
Equity Fund dated
December 3, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(181) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(182)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Overseas Fund
dated December 3, 2010
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(182) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(183)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Research Fund
dated December 3, 2010
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(183) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-26
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(184)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Twenty Fund dated
December 3, 2010 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(184) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(185)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Worldwide Fund
dated December 3, 2010
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(185) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(186)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Perkins Global Value
Fund dated December 3,
2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(186) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(187)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Perkins Large Cap Value
Fund dated December 3,
2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(187) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(188)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Perkins Mid Cap Value
Fund dated December 3,
2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(188) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(189)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Perkins Small Cap Value
Fund dated December 3,
2010 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(189) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(190)
|
|
Investment Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Emerging Markets Fund
dated December 28, 2010
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(190) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(191)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Protected Growth
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(191) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 146,
filed on April 21, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(192)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Real Return
Allocation Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(192) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(193)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Real Return
Subsidiary, Ltd. is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(193) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-27
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(194)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Real Return Allocation
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(194) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(195)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Real Return Subsidiary,
Ltd. is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(195) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(196)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Asia Equity Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(196) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 157,
filed on July 29, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(197)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Janus
Asia Equity Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(197) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 157,
filed on July 29, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(198)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Protected Series
Growth is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(198) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 149,
filed on May 3, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(199)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Long/Short Fund,
dated September 30,
2011, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(199) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 163,
filed on October 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(200)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Dynamic
Allocation Fund, dated
September 30, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(200) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 163,
filed on October 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(201)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
Core Fund, dated
December 7, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(201) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(202)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for INTECH Risk-Managed
Core Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(202) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-28
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(203)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
Growth Fund, dated
December 7, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(203) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(204)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for INTECH Risk-Managed
Growth Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(204) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(205)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
International Fund,
dated December 7, 2011,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(d)(205) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(206)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for INTECH Risk-Managed
International Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(206) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(207)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Risk-Managed
Value Fund, dated
December 7, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(207) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(208)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for INTECH Risk-Managed
Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(208) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(209)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
INTECH Global Dividend
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(209) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(210)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for INTECH
Global Dividend Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(210) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(211)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Perkins Select Value
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(211) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 167,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-29
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(212)
|
|
Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Perkins
Select Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(212) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 167,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(213)
|
|
Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Protected Series
Global is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(213) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 168,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(214)
|
|
Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Real Return
Allocation Fund, dated
October 15, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(214) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 179,
filed on October 26,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(d)(215)
|
|
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Janus Emerging
Markets Fund, dated
August 20, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(215) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 180,
filed on November 13,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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(d)(216)
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Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Diversified
Alternatives Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(216) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 182,
filed on December 28,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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(d)(217)
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Form of Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Diversified
Alternatives
Subsidiary, Ltd. is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(217) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 182,
filed on December 28,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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(d)(218)
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Form of Sub-Advisory
Agreement for Janus
International Equity
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (d)(218) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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(d)(219)
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Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Perkins Global
Value Fund, dated
December 7, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(219) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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(d)(220)
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Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Perkins Large Cap
Value Fund, dated
December 7, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(220) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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(d)(221)
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Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Perkins Mid Cap
Value Fund, dated
December 7, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(221) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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C-30
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(d)(222)
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Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Perkins Small Cap
Value Fund, dated
December 7, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(222) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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(d)(223)
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Amendment to
Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Perkins Value Plus
Income Fund, dated
December 7, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(d)(223) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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(d)(224)
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Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Janus International
Equity Fund, dated
March 14, 2013, is
filed herein as Exhibit
(d)(224).
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(d)(225)
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Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Conservative
Allocation Fund, dated
February 15, 2013, is
filed herein as Exhibit
(d)(225).
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(d)(226)
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Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Growth Allocation
Fund, dated February
15, 2013, is filed
herein as Exhibit
(d)(226).
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(d)(227)
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Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Moderate
Allocation Fund, dated
February 15, 2013, is
filed herein as Exhibit
(d)(227).
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(d)(228)
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Amendment to Investment
Advisory Agreement for
Janus Worldwide Fund,
dated March 18, 2013,
is filed herein as
Exhibit (d)(228).
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(d)(229)
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Investment Advisory
Agreement for Perkins
International Value
Fund, dated April 1,
2013, is filed herein
as Exhibit (d)(229).
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(d)(230)
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Sub-Advisory Agreement
for Perkins
International Value
Fund, dated April 1,
2013, is filed herein
as Exhibit (d)(230).
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Exhibit (e) Underwriting Contracts
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(e)(1)
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Distribution Agreement
between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Distributors,
Inc., dated July 1,
1997, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 6 to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 83, filed
on December 15, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
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(e)(2)
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Distribution Agreement
between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Distributors LLC,
dated June 18, 2002, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
5(b) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 105,
filed on December 13,
2002 (File No.
2-34393).
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C-31
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(e)(3)
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Amendment to Amended
and Restated
Distribution Agreement
between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Distributors LLC,
dated June 14, 2006, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
5(c) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(e)(4)
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Amendment to Amended
and Restated
Distribution Agreement
between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Distributors LLC,
dated January 1, 2008,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
5(d) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 122,
filed on February 28,
2008 (File No.
2-34393).
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(e)(5)
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Form of Amended and
Restated Distribution
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Distributors LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(e)(5) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(e)(6)
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Form of Intermediary
Services Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(e)(6) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(e)(7)
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Form of Amended and
Restated Distribution
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Distributors LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(e)(7) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(e)(8)
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Amended and Restated
Distribution Agreement
between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Distributors LLC,
dated May 31, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(e)(8) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 175,
filed on May 31, 2012
(File No. 2-34393).
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Exhibit (f) Bonus or Profit Sharing Contracts (Not Applicable)
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Exhibit (g) Custodian Agreements
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(g)(1)
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Global Custody Services
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Money
Market Fund, Janus
Government Money Market
Fund and Janus
Tax-Exempt Money Market
Fund, and Citibank,
N.A. dated March 15,
1999 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 7(q) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 88, filed
on November 15, 1999
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(2)
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Foreign Custody
Amendment to State
Street Bank and Trust
Company Custodian
Contract dated December
5, 2000 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 7(u) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 96, filed
on December 18, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
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C-32
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(g)(3)
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Foreign Custody Manager
Addendum to Global
Custodial Services
Agreement dated
December 5, 2000 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
7(v) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 96, filed
on December 18, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(4)
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Form of Amendment to
State Street Bank and
Trust Company Custodian
Contract dated December
5, 2000 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 7(w) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 96, filed
on December 18, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(5)
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Form of Amendment to
State Street Bank and
Trust Company Custodian
Contract dated
December 5, 2000 is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
7(x) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 96, filed
on December 18, 2000
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(6)
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Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Citibank, N.A.
Custodian Contract is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
7(cc) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 104,
filed on February 28,
2002 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(7)
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Form of Amendment to
Subcustodian Contract
between Citibank, N.A.
and State Street Bank
and Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
7(dd) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 104,
filed on February 28,
2002 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(8)
|
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Amendment to Custodian
Contract dated January
21, 2005, between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of its
Portfolios, and State
Street Bank and Trust
Company is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 7(ii) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 113,
filed on February 24,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(9)
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Amendment to Global
Custodial Services
Agreement dated January
14, 2005, between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Money
Market Fund, Janus
Government Money Market
Fund and Janus
Tax-Exempt Money Market
Fund, and Citibank,
N.A. is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 7(jj) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 113,
filed on February 24,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(10)
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Amended and Restated
Custodian Contract
dated August 1, 2005,
between Janus
Investment Fund and
State Street Bank and
Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
7(mm) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(11)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement in regards to
Janus Smart Portfolio
Growth, Janus Smart
Portfolio Moderate
and Janus Smart
Portfolio
Conservative, with
State Street Bank and
Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
7(nn) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
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C-33
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(g)(12)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with State
Street Bank and Trust
Company regarding Janus
Risk-Managed Stock Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
7(oo) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(13)
|
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Letter Agreement in
regards to Janus Core
Equity Fund, with State
Street Bank and Trust
Company is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 7(pp) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(14)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with regard
to INTECH Risk-Managed
Growth Fund, INTECH
Risk-Managed
International Fund,
INTECH Risk-Managed
Value Fund, Janus Forty
Fund, Janus Global Real
Estate Fund, Janus
International Equity
Fund, Janus
International Forty
Fund, Janus Long/Short
Fund, Janus Modular
Portfolio Construction
Fund, and Perkins Large
Cap Value Fund with
State Street Bank and
Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(g)(14) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(15)
|
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus Money
Market Fund and Janus
Government Money Market
Fund with State Street
Bank and Trust Company
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(g)(15) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(16)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with regard
to Perkins Value Plus
Income Fund with State
Street Bank and Trust
Company is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (g)(16) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(17)
|
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus
Emerging Markets Fund
and Janus Global Bond
Fund with State Street
Bank and Trust Company
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(g)(17) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(18)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with regard
to Janus Protected
Growth Fund with State
Street Bank and Trust
Company is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (g)(18) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 146,
filed on April 21, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(19)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with regard
to Janus Protected
Series Growth with
State Street Bank and
Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(g)(19) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 149,
filed on May 3, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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C-34
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(g)(20)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with regard
to Janus Real Return
Allocation Fund with
State Street Bank and
Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(g)(20) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(21)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with regard
to Janus Asia Equity
Fund with State Street
Bank and Trust Company
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(g)(21) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 157,
filed on July 29, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(g)(22)
|
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus Smart
Portfolio-Growth, Janus
Smart
Portfolio-Moderate, and
Janus Smart
Portfolio-Conservative
with State Street Bank
and Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(g)(22) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(23)
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus Modular
Portfolio Construction
Fund with State Street
Bank and Trust Company
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(g)(23) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(24)
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus Orion
Fund with State Street
Bank and Trust Company
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(g)(24) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(25)
|
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus Dynamic
Allocation Fund with
State Street Bank and
Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(g)(25) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(26)
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus
Long/Short Fund with
State Street Bank and
Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(g)(26) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(27)
|
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Letter Agreement with
regard to INTECH
Risk-Managed Core Fund,
INTECH Risk-Managed
Growth Fund, INTECH
Risk-Managed
International Fund, and
INTECH Risk-Managed
Value Fund with State
Street Bank and Trust
Company is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (g)(27) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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C-35
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(g)(28)
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Letter Agreement with
regard to INTECH Global
Dividend Fund and
Perkins Select Value
Fund with State Street
Bank and Trust Company
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(g)(28) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(29)
|
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus
Protected Series
Global with State
Street Bank and Trust
Company is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (g)(29) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 168,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(30)
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus Real
Return Allocation Fund
with State Street Bank
and Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(g)(30) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 179,
filed on October 26,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(31)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with regard
to Janus Diversified
Alternatives Fund with
State Street Bank and
Trust Company is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(g)(31) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 182,
filed on December 28,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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(g)(32)
|
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Letter Agreement with
regard to Janus
Conservative Allocation
Fund, Janus Moderate
Allocation Fund, and
Janus Growth Allocation
Fund with State Street
Bank and Trust Company
is filed herein as
Exhibit (g)(32).
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(g)(33)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with regard
to Janus Worldwide Fund
and Janus Global
Research Fund with
State Street Bank and
Trust Company is filed
herein as Exhibit
(g)(33).
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(g)(34)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement with regard
to Perkins
International Value
Fund with State Street
Bank and Trust Company
is filed herein as
Exhibit (g)(34).
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Exhibit (h) Other Material Contracts
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(h)(1)
|
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Form of Administration
Agreement with Janus
Capital Corporation for
Janus Money Market
Fund, Janus Government
Money Market Fund, and
Janus Tax-Exempt Money
Market Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
9(c) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(h)(2)
|
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Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement dated June
18, 2002, between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Services LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(u) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 105,
filed on December 13,
2002 (File No.
2-34393).
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C-36
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(h)(3)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(v) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 105,
filed on December 13,
2002 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(4)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(w) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(5)
|
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Form of Agreement
regarding
Administrative Services
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund
with respect to Janus
Mid Cap Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(z) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(6)
|
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Form of Agreement
regarding
Administrative Services
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund
with respect to Janus
Small Cap Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(aa) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(7)
|
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Letter Agreement dated
September 17, 2003
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement and
Janus Overseas Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(bb) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 110,
filed on December 23,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(8)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(uu) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(9)
|
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Letter Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund
regarding Janus
Explorer Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(vv) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 113,
filed on February 24,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(10)
|
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Letter Agreement
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(ww) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 113,
filed on February 24,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(11)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
February 9, 2005,
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(xx) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-37
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(h)(12)
|
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Letter Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund
regarding Janus
Flexible Income Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(yy) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(13)
|
|
Form of Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Smart
Portfolio Growth,
Janus Smart Portfolio
Moderate and Janus
Smart Portfolio
Conservative, and Janus
Capital Management LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
8(fff) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 114,
filed on October 14,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(14)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(kkk) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 117,
filed on February 27,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(15)
|
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Letter Agreement dated
April 18, 2006
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(lll) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(16)
|
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Amendment dated June
14, 2006 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus
Government Money Market
Fund, and Janus Capital
Management LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(mmm) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(17)
|
|
Amendment dated June
14, 2006 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Money
Market Fund, and Janus
Capital Management LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
8(ooo) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(18)
|
|
Amendment dated June
14, 2006 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Smart
Portfolio Growth,
Janus Smart Portfolio
Moderate, Janus Smart
Portfolio
Conservative, and Janus
Capital Management LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
8(ppp) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(19)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
November 1, 2006
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(sss) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-38
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(h)(20)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
December 14, 2006
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(ttt) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 119,
filed on December 19,
2006 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(21)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
December 20, 2006
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(uuu) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 120,
filed on February 28,
2007 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(22)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
February 23, 2007
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(xxx) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 120,
filed on February 28,
2007 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(23)
|
|
First Amendment dated
December 14, 2007 to
the Amended and
Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement,
between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Services LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(yyy) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 122,
filed on February 28,
2008 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(24)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
December 21, 2007
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(zzz) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 122,
filed on February 28,
2008 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(25)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
February 26, 2008
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(aaaa) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 122,
filed on February 28,
2008 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(26)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
August 29, 2008
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(bbbb) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(27)
|
|
Second Amendment dated
October 2, 2008 to the
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement, between
Janus Investment Fund
and Janus Services LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
8(cccc) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-39
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(h)(28)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
October 2, 2008
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(dddd) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(29)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
December 29, 2008
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
8(eeee) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(30)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Adviser funds, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(30) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(31)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of INTECH
Risk-Managed Core Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(31) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(32)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Balanced Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(32) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(33)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Contrarian Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(33) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(34)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Enterprise Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(34) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(35)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Flexible Bond Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(35) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-40
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(h)(36)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(36) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(37)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Growth and Income Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(37) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(38)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
High-Yield Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(38) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(39)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Orion Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(39) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(40)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Overseas Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(40) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(41)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Research Core Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(41) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(42)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Triton Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(42) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(43)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Janus
Worldwide Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(43) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-41
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(h)(44)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Perkins
Mid Cap Value Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(44) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(h)(45)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and among Janus
Adviser Series and
Janus Investment Fund,
on behalf of Perkins
Small Cap Value Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(45) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(h)(46)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding INTECH
Risk-Managed Growth
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(46) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(47)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding INTECH
Risk-Managed
International Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(47) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(48)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding INTECH
Risk-Managed Value
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(48) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(49)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Forty
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(49) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(50)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Global
Real Estate Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(50) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(51)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
International Equity
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(51) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-42
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(h)(52)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
International Forty
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(52) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(53)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Long/Short Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(53) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(54)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Modular
Portfolio Construction
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(54) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(55)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Perkins Large
Cap Value Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(55) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(56)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding INTECH
Risk-Managed Core Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(56) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(h)(57)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding INTECH
Risk-Managed Growth
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(57) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(58)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding INTECH
Risk-Managed
International Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(58) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(h)(59)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding INTECH
Risk-Managed Value
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(59) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-43
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(h)(60)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Balanced Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(60) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(61)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Contrarian Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(61) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(62)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Enterprise Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(62) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(h)(63)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Flexible Bond Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(63) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(64)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Forty
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(64) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(65)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(65) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(66)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Global
Real Estate Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(66) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(h)(67)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Global
Research Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(67) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-44
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(h)(68)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Growth
and Income Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(68) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(69)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
High-Yield Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(69) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(70)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
International Equity
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(70) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(h)(71)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
International Forty
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(71) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(72)
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Long/Short Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(72) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(73)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Modular
Portfolio Construction
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(73) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(74)
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Orion
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(74) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(75)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Overseas Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(75) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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C-45
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(h)(76)
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Research Core Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(76) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(77)
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Short-Term Bond Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(77) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(78)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Smart
Portfolio
Conservative, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(78) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(79)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Smart
Portfolio Growth, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(79) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(80)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Smart
Portfolio Moderate,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(80) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(81)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Triton
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(81) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(82)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Worldwide Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(82) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(83)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Perkins Large
Cap Value Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(83) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-46
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(h)(84)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Perkins Mid
Cap Value Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(84) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(85)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Perkins Small
Cap Value Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(85) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(86)
|
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Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(86) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(87)
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Amendment dated
February 23, 2007 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus
Government Money Market
Fund, and Janus Capital
Management LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(87) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 127,
filed on November 24,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(88)
|
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Amendment dated
February 23, 2007 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Money
Market Fund, and Janus
Capital Management LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(88) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 127,
filed on November 24,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(89)
|
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Amendment dated
February 27, 2009 to
Expense Allocation
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding Janus
Fundamental Equity
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(89) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 127,
filed on November 24,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(90)
|
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Amendment dated
February 27, 2009 to
Expense Allocation
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding INTECH
Risk-Managed Stock
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(90) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 127,
filed on November 24,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-47
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(h)(91)
|
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Amendment dated July 6,
2009 to Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus
Government Money Market
Fund, and Janus Capital
Management LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(91) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 127,
filed on November 24,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(92)
|
|
Amendment dated July 6,
2009 to Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Money
Market Fund, and Janus
Capital Management LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(92) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 127,
filed on November 24,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(93)
|
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Amendment dated July 6,
2009 to Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Perkins Mid
Cap Value Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(93) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 127,
filed on November 24,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(94)
|
|
Amendment dated July 6,
2009 to Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Perkins Small
Cap Value Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(94) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 127,
filed on November 24,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(95)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(95) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(96)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus
Government Money Market
Fund, and Janus Capital
Management LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(96) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(97)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Money
Market Fund, and Janus
Capital Management LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(97) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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(h)(98)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Expense Allocation
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding INTECH
Risk-Managed Core Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(98) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-48
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(h)(99)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Expense Allocation
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding Perkins
Mid Cap Value Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(99) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(100)
|
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Form of Amendment to
Expense Allocation
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding Perkins
Small Cap Value Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(100) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(101)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
July 1, 2010 regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(101) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(102)
|
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Amendment to Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Global
Opportunities Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(102) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(103)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Perkins Value
Plus Income Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(103) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(104)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Expense Allocation
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding Perkins
Value Plus Income Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(104) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(105)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(105) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(106)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
August 2, 2010
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(106) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 133,
filed on August 25,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-49
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(h)(107)
|
|
Amendment dated August
2, 2010 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Smart
Portfolio Growth,
Janus Smart Portfolio
Moderate, and Janus
Smart Portfolio
Conservative, and Janus
Capital Management LLC
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(107) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 133,
filed on August 25,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(108)
|
|
Amendment dated
September 15, 2010 to
Expense Allocation
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding Janus
Modular Portfolio
Construction Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(108) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 134,
filed on October 15,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(109)
|
|
Amendment dated
September 15, 2010 to
Expense Allocation
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding Janus
Orion Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(109) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 134,
filed on October 15,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(110)
|
|
Letter Agreement dated
September 15, 2010
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(110) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 134,
filed on October 15,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(111)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Emerging Markets Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(111) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(112)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Global
Bond Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(112) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(113)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Emerging Markets Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(113) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-50
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(h)(114)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Global
Bond Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(114) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(115)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(115) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(116)
|
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Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus
Research Core Fund and
Janus Growth and Income
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(116) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 138,
filed on January 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(117)
|
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Expense Limitation
Agreement dated March
17, 2011 between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding Janus
Protected Growth Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(117) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 146,
filed on April 21, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(118)
|
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Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Protected Growth Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(118) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 146,
filed on April 21, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(119)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(119) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 146,
filed on April 21, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(120)
|
|
Form of Capital
Protection Agreement
for Janus Protected
Growth Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(120) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 146,
filed on April 21, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(121)
|
|
Expense Limitation
Agreement dated March
17, 2011 between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding Janus
Venture Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(121) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 148,
filed on May 2, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-51
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(h)(122)
|
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Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Protected Series
Growth, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(122) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 149,
filed on May 3, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(123)
|
|
Form of Expense
Allocation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Protected Series
Growth, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(123) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 149,
filed on May 3, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(h)(124)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(124) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 149,
filed on May 3, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(h)(125)
|
|
Form of Capital
Protection Agreement
for Janus Protected
Series Growth is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(125) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 150,
filed on May 4, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(126)
|
|
Form of Amended and
Restated Parent
Guaranty for Janus
Protected Series
Growth is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(126) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(h)(127)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Real
Return Allocation Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(127) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(h)(128)
|
|
Form of Administration
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, on behalf of
Janus Real Return
Allocation Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(128) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(129)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(129) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(130)
|
|
Form of Administration
Servicing Agreement
between State Street
Bank and Trust Company
and Janus Investment
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(130) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
C-52
|
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(h)(131)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Asia
Equity Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(131) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 157,
filed on July 29, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(132)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(132) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 157,
filed on July 29, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(133)
|
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Form of Capital
Protection Agreement
for Janus Protected
Series Global is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(133) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 162,
filed on September 30,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(134)
|
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Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Capital
Management LLC, dated
June 23, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(134) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 163,
filed on October 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(135)
|
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Amendment dated
September 28, 2011 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Capital
Management LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(135) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 163,
filed on October 28,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(136)
|
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Letter Agreement dated
September 28, 2011
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(136) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(137)
|
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Amendment dated
December 7, 2011 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Capital
Management LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(137) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(138)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement dated
December 7, 2011
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(138) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-53
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(h)(139)
|
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Letter Agreement dated
December 15, 2011
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(139) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(140)
|
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Expense Limitation
Agreement dated
September 14, 2011,
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding INTECH Global
Dividend Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(140) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(141)
|
|
Amendment dated
December 15, 2011 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Capital
Management LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(141) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(142)
|
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Expense Limitation
Agreement dated
September 14, 2011,
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Perkins
Select Value Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(142) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 167,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(143)
|
|
Expense Limitation
Agreement dated
September 14, 2011,
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Protected Series
Global, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(143) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 168,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(144)
|
|
Amended and Restated
Parent Guaranty for
Janus Protected Series
Global, dated
September 29, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(144) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 168,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(145)
|
|
Expense Limitation
Agreement dated March
15, 2012, between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund, regarding INTECH
Global Dividend Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(145) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 175,
filed on May 31, 2012
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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|
|
(h)(146)
|
|
Letter Agreement
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated
October 15, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(146) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 179,
filed on October 26,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-54
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(h)(147)
|
|
Letter Agreement
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated
March 10, 2010, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(147) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 180,
filed on November 13,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(148)
|
|
Letter Agreement
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated
October 15, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(148) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 180,
filed on November 13,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(149)
|
|
Amendment to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Capital
Management LLC, dated
October 15, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(149) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 180,
filed on November 13,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(150)
|
|
Letter Agreement
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated
March 15, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(150) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 182,
filed on December 28,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(151)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Diversified
Alternatives Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(151) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 182,
filed on December 28,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(152)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(152) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 182,
filed on December 28,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
(h)(153)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Capital
Management LLC is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(153) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 182,
filed on December 28,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(154)
|
|
Amendment No. 1 to the
Capital Protection
Agreement for Janus
Protected Series
Growth, dated August
31, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(154) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-55
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(h)(155)
|
|
Waiver and Amendment
No. 2 to the Capital
Protection Agreement
for Janus Protected
Series Growth, dated
November 4, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(155) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(156)
|
|
Waiver and Amendment
No. 1 to the Capital
Protection Agreement
for Janus Protected
Series Global, dated
November 8, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(156) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
(h)(157)
|
|
Waiver and Amendment
No. 3 to the Capital
Protection Agreement
for Janus Protected
Series Growth, dated
November 8, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(157) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(158)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Asia
Equity Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(158) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(159)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Balanced Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(159) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(160)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Contrarian Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(160) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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|
(h)(161)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Emerging Markets Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(161) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(162)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Enterprise Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(162) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-56
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(h)(163)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Forty
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(163) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
(h)(164)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Fund,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(h)(164) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(165)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Global
Real Estate Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(165) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(166)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Global
Research Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(166) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
(h)(167)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Global
Select Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(167) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(168)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Growth
and Income Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(168) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
|
(h)(169)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
International Equity
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(169) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(170)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Overseas Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(170) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
C-57
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(h)(171)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Protected Series
Global, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(171) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(172)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Protected Series
Growth, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(172) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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(h)(173)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Triton
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(173) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(174)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus Venture
Fund, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (h)(174) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(h)(175)
|
|
Form of Expense
Limitation Agreement
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Janus
Worldwide Fund, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(h)(175) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 185,
filed on January 28,
2013 (File No.
2-34393).
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(h)(176)
|
|
Form of Agreement and
Plan of Reorganization
by and between Janus
Investment Fund, on
behalf of Janus Global
Research Fund and Janus
Worldwide Fund, is
filed herein as Exhibit
(h)(176).
|
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(h)(177)
|
|
Form of Custody
Agreement between HSBC
and Janus Capital
Management LLC is filed
herein as Exhibit
(h)(177).
|
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|
(h)(178)
|
|
Letter Agreement
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated
February 15, 2013, is
filed herein as Exhibit
(h)(178).
|
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|
|
(h)(179)
|
|
Amendment dated
February 15, 2013 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Capital
Management LLC is filed
herein as Exhibit
(h)(179).
|
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|
(h)(180)
|
|
Letter Agreement
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated
March 18, 2013, is
filed herein as Exhibit
(h)(180).
|
C-58
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(h)(181)
|
|
Amendment dated March
18, 2013 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Capital
Management LLC is filed
herein as Exhibit
(h)(181).
|
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|
(h)(182)
|
|
Expense Limitation
Agreement dated
December 7, 2012,
between Janus Capital
Management LLC and
Janus Investment Fund,
regarding Perkins
International Value
Fund, is filed herein
as Exhibit (h)(182).
|
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|
(h)(183)
|
|
Letter Agreement
regarding Janus
Services LLC Amended
and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated
April 1, 2013, is filed
herein as Exhibit
(h)(183).
|
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(h)(184)
|
|
Amendment dated April
1, 2013 to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and
Janus Capital
Management LLC is filed
herein as Exhibit
(h)(184).
|
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|
(h)(185)
|
|
Form of Letter
Agreement regarding
Janus Services LLC
Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency
Agreement is filed
herein as Exhibit
(h)(185).
|
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(h)(186)
|
|
Form of Amendment to
Administration
Agreement between Janus
Capital Management LLC
and Janus Investment
Fund is filed herein as
Exhibit (h)(186).
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Exhibit (i) Legal Opinion
|
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(i)(1)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Messrs. Davis, Graham &
Stubbs with respect to
shares of Janus Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
10(a) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 79, filed
on December 18, 1996
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(2)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus Growth
and Income Fund and
Janus Worldwide Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
10(b) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 79, filed
on December 18, 1996
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(3)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus
Enterprise Fund, Janus
Balanced Fund and Janus
Short-Term Bond Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
10(c) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 80, filed
on February 14, 1997
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(4)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Messrs. Sullivan and
Worcester with respect
to shares of Janus
Twenty Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
10(d) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
|
C-59
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(i)(5)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Messrs. Sullivan and
Worcester with respect
to shares of Janus
Venture Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
10(e) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(i)(6)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Messrs. Sullivan and
Worcester with respect
to shares of Janus
Flexible Income Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
10(f) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(i)(7)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus
Overseas Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to
Exhibit 10(i) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(i)(8)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus Money
Market Fund, Janus
Government Money Market
Fund and Janus
Tax-Exempt Money Market
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 10(j) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(i)(9)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Institutional Shares of
Janus Money Market
Fund, Janus Government
Money Market Fund, and
Janus Tax-Exempt Money
Market Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to
Exhibit 10(k) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 81, filed
on June 26, 1997 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(i)(10)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus
High-Yield Fund and
Janus Olympus Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to
Exhibit 10(l) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 68, filed
on September 14, 1995
(File No. 2-34393).
|
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(i)(11)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus Equity
Income Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to
Exhibit 10(m) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 72, filed
on March 15, 1996 (File
No. 2-34393).
|
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(i)(12)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus Money
Market Fund, Janus
Government Money Market
Fund, and Janus
Tax-Exempt Money Market
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 10(o) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 76, filed
on September 23, 1996
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(13)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus Global
Life Sciences Fund
filed as Exhibit 10(p)
to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 82, filed
on September 16, 1997
(File No. 2-34393), has
been withdrawn.
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C-60
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(i)(14)
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus Global
Life Sciences Fund and
Janus Global Technology
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 9(q) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 85, filed
on September 10, 1998
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(15)
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus
Strategic Value Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
9(r) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 88, filed
on November 15, 1999
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(16)
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
shares of Janus Orion
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 9(s) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 92, filed
on March 17, 2000 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(i)(17)
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Global Value Fund
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
9(u) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 98, filed
on March 15, 2001 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(i)(18)
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Risk-Managed
Stock Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
9(w) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 105,
filed on December 13,
2002 (File No.
2-34393).
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(i)(19)
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Mid Cap Value
Fund and Janus Small
Cap Value Fund dated
April 17, 2003, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
9(x) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 109,
filed on April 17, 2003
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(20)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Explorer Fund and
Janus Research Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
9(y) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 112,
filed on December 10,
2004 (File No.
2-34393).
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(i)(21)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Smart Portfolio
Growth, Janus Smart
Portfolio Moderate
and Janus Smart
Portfolio
Conservative is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
9(z) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 116,
filed on December 30,
2005 (File No.
2-34393).
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(i)(22)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Investment Fund
Class A, C, R, S, and I
Shares, as applicable,
dated July 2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(22) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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C-61
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(i)(23)
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Forty Fund, dated
July 2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(23) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(24)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Global Real
Estate Fund, dated July
2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(24) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(25)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
INTECH Risk-Managed
Growth Fund, dated July
2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(25) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(26)
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
INTECH Risk-Managed
International Fund,
dated July 2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(26) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(i)(27)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
INTECH Risk-Managed
Value Fund, dated July
2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(27) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(i)(28)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus International
Equity Fund, dated July
2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(28) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(i)(29)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus International
Forty Fund, dated July
2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(29) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(30)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Long/Short Fund,
dated July 2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(30) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(i)(31)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Modular Portfolio
Construction Fund,
dated July 2, 2009, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(31) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(32)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Perkins Large Cap Value
Fund, dated July 2,
2009, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (i)(32) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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C-62
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(i)(33)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Perkins Value Plus
Income Fund, dated July
30, 2010, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(33) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 132,
filed on July 30, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(34)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Emerging Markets
Fund, dated December
28, 2010, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(34) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(i)(35)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Global Bond Fund,
dated December 28,
2010, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (i)(35) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
|
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|
(i)(36)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Protected Growth
Fund, dated April 20,
2011, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (i)(36) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 146,
filed on April 21, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(i)(37)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Protected Series
Growth, dated May 2,
2011, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (i)(37) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 149,
filed on May 3, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(i)(38)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Real Return
Allocation Fund, dated
May 5, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(38) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(i)(39)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Asia Equity Fund,
dated July 29, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(39) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 157,
filed on July 29, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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|
(i)(40)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
INTECH Global Dividend
Fund, dated December
15, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(40) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 166,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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(i)(41)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Perkins Select Value
Fund, dated December
15, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(41) to
Post-Effective Amend
No. 167, filed on
December 15, 2011 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(i)(42)
|
|
Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Protected Series
Global, dated
December 15, 2011, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(42) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 168,
filed on December 15,
2011 (File No.
2-34393).
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C-63
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(i)(43)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Investment Fund
Class N Shares, dated
May 31, 2012, is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(i)(43) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 175,
filed on May 31, 2012
(File No. 2-34393).
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(i)(44)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Janus Diversified
Alternatives Fund,
dated December 27,
2012, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (i)(44) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 182,
filed on December 28,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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(i)(45)
|
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Opinion and Consent of
Counsel with respect to
Perkins International
Value Fund, dated March
28, 2013, is filed
herein as Exhibit
(i)(45).
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Exhibit (j) Other Opinions
|
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(j)(1)
|
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Consent of
PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP is filed herein as
Exhibit (j)(1).
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Exhibit (k) Omitted Financial Statements
|
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(k)(1)
|
|
BNP Statement of
Financial Condition is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(k)(1) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 146,
filed on April 21, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(k)(2)
|
|
BNP Statement of
Financial Condition as
of December 31, 2011,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(k)(2) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 180,
filed on November 13,
2012 (File No.
2-34393).
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Exhibit (l) Initial Capital Agreements (Not Applicable)
|
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Exhibit (m) Rule 12b-1 Plan
|
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(m)(1)
|
|
Form of Distribution
and Shareholder
Servicing Plan for
Class A Shares is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(m)(1) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(m)(2)
|
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Form of Distribution
and Shareholder
Servicing Plan for
Class C Shares is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(m)(2) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(m)(3)
|
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Form of Distribution
and Shareholder
Servicing Plan for
Class R Shares is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(m)(3) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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C-64
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(m)(4)
|
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Form of Distribution
and Shareholder
Servicing Plan for
Class S Shares is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(m)(4) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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Exhibit (n) Rule 18f-3 Plan
|
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(n)(1)
|
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Form of plan for Janus
Money Market Fund,
Janus Government Money
Market Fund, and Janus
Tax-Exempt Money Market
Fund pursuant to Rule
18f-3 setting forth the
separate arrangement
and expense allocation
of each class of such
Funds filed as
Exhibit 18 to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 66, filed
on April 13, 1995 (File
No. 2-34393), has been
withdrawn.
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(n)(2)
|
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Restated form of Rule
18f-3 Plan for Janus
Money Market Fund,
Janus Government Money
Market Fund, and Janus
Tax-Exempt Money Market
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 18(b) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 69, filed
on September 28, 1995
(File No. 2-34393).
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(n)(3)
|
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Amended and Restated
form of Rule 18f-3 Plan
for Janus Money Market
Fund, Janus Government
Money Market Fund, and
Janus Tax-Exempt Money
Market Fund is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
18(c) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 78, filed
on December 16, 1996
(File No. 2-34393).
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(n)(4)
|
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Form of Amended and
Restated Rule 18f-3
Plan for Janus Money
Market Fund, Janus
Government Money Market
Fund, and Janus
Tax-Exempt Money Market
Fund dated June 12,
2001 is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 14(d) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 99, filed
on June 1, 2001 (File
No. 2-34393).
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(n)(5)
|
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Rule 18f-3 Plan for
Janus Investment Fund
with respect to Janus
Mid Cap Value Fund and
Janus Small Cap Value
Fund is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 14(e) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 106,
filed on January 3,
2003 (File No.
2-34393).
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(n)(6)
|
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Form of Amended Rule
18f-3 Plan is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(n)(6) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(n)(7)
|
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Form of Amended Rule
18f-3 Plan is
incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit
(n)(7) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(n)(8)
|
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Form of Rule 18f-3 Plan
for Janus Investment
Fund with respect to
the Money Market Funds
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(n)(8) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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C-65
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(n)(9)
|
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Amended Rule 18f-3
Plan, dated March 15,
2012, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (n)(9) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 175,
filed on May 31, 2012
(File No. 2-34393).
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Exhibit (o) Reserved
|
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Exhibit (p) Codes of Ethics
|
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(p)(1)
|
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Janus Ethics Rules,
revised February 18,
2009, are incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit 16(x) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 123,
filed on February 27,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(p)(2)
|
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Form of Janus Ethics
Rules, revised July 6,
2009, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (p)(2) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 126,
filed on July 2, 2009
(File No. 2-34393).
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(p)(3)
|
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Janus Ethics Rules,
revised August 25,
2009, are incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (p)(3) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 127,
filed on November 24,
2009 (File No.
2-34393).
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(p)(4)
|
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Janus Ethics Rules,
revised January 5,
2010, are incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (p)(4) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 130,
filed on February 16,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(p)(5)
|
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Appendix C to Revised
Janus Ethics Rules,
revised March 11, 2010,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(p)(5) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 131,
filed on May 14, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
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(p)(6)
|
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Appendix D to Revised
Janus Ethics Rules,
revised March 11, 2010,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(p)(6) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 131,
filed on May 14, 2010
(File No. 2-34393).
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(p)(7)
|
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Janus Ethics Rules,
revised August 3, 2010,
are incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(p)(7) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 134,
filed on October 15,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(p)(8)
|
|
Janus Ethics Rules,
revised December 3,
2010, are incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (p)(8) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 137,
filed on December 27,
2010 (File No.
2-34393).
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(p)(9)
|
|
Janus Ethics Rules,
revised March 17, 2011,
are incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(p)(9) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 144,
filed on April 15, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(p)(10)
|
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Form of Armored Wolf,
LLC Personal Investment
and Trading Policy,
Statement on Insider
Trading and Code of
Ethics is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (p)(10) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 152,
filed on May 13, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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C-66
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(p)(11)
|
|
Janus Ethics Rules,
revised June 23, 2011,
are incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(p)(11) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 157,
filed on July 29, 2011
(File No. 2-34393).
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(p)(12)
|
|
Janus Ethics Rules,
revised February 7,
2012, is incorporated
herein by reference to
Exhibit (p)(12) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 174,
filed on March 23, 2012
(File No. 2-34393).
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(p)(13)
|
|
Janus Ethics Rules,
revised March 15, 2012,
is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit
(p)(13) to
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 175,
filed on May 31, 2012
(File No. 2-34393).
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Exhibit (q) Power of Attorney
|
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(q)(1)
|
|
Powers of Attorney,
dated as of April 1,
2013, are filed herein
as Exhibit (q)(1).
|
ITEM 29.
Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control with Registrant
The Board of Trustees of Janus Investment Fund is the same as that of Janus Aspen Series. Each
such Trust has Janus Capital Management LLC as its investment adviser. In addition, the officers of
the two Trusts are substantially identical. Nonetheless, Janus Investment Fund takes the position
that it is not under common control with other Janus funds because the power residing in the
respective boards and officers arises as the result of an official position with each respective
Trust.
ITEM 30.
Indemnification
Article VI of Janus Investment Funds Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust
provides for indemnification of certain persons acting on behalf of the Funds. In general,
Trustees, officers and Advisory Board members will be indemnified against liability and against all
expenses of litigation incurred by them in connection with any claim, action, suit or proceeding
(or settlement of the same) in which they become involved by virtue of their connection with the
Funds, unless their conduct is determined to constitute willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross
negligence or reckless disregard of their duties. A determination that a person covered by the
indemnification provisions is entitled to indemnification may be made by the court or other body
before which the proceeding is brought, or by either a vote of a majority of a quorum of Trustees
who are neither interested persons of the Trust nor parties to the proceeding or by an
independent legal counsel in a written opinion. The Funds also may advance money for these
expenses, provided that the Trustee or officer undertakes to repay the Funds if his or her conduct
is later determined to preclude indemnification, and that either he or she provide security for the
undertaking, the Trust be insured against losses resulting from lawful advances or a majority of a
quorum of disinterested Trustees, or independent counsel in a written opinion, determines that he
or she ultimately will be found to be entitled to indemnification. The Trust also maintains a
liability insurance policy covering its Trustees, officers and any Advisory Board members.
ITEM 31.
Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser
The only business of Janus Capital Management LLC is to serve as the investment adviser of the
Registrant and as investment adviser or subadviser to several other mutual funds, unregistered
investment companies, and for individual, charitable, corporate, private, and retirement accounts.
Business backgrounds of the principal executive officers and directors of the adviser that also
hold positions with
C-67
the Registrant are included under Trustees and Officers in the Statement(s)
of Additional Information included in this Registration Statement. Business backgrounds of the
principal executive officers of the investment adviser and their position(s) with the adviser and
affiliated entities (in the last two years) are listed in Schedule A of the advisers Form ADV as
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (File
No. 801-13991, dated March 28, 2013, which information from such
schedule is incorporated herein by reference.
The only business of INTECH Investment Management LLC (and its predecessors) (INTECH), Janus
Capital Singapore Pte, Limited (Janus Singapore), and Perkins Investment Management LLC (and its
predecessors) (Perkins) is to serve as a subadviser of the Registrant and investment adviser or
subadviser to mutual funds, institutional and individual separate accounts, separately managed
accounts, and other registered and unregistered investment companies. Business backgrounds of the
principal executive officers of each subadviser and their position(s) with each respective
subadviser and its affiliated entities (in the last two years) are listed in Schedule A of each
subadvisers Form ADV as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (INTECH File No.
801-60987, dated March 28, 2013; Janus Singapore File
No. 801-72309, dated March 28, 2013; Perkins File No. 801-62042, dated March
28, 2013), which information from such schedule is incorporated herein by reference.
ITEM 32.
Principal Underwriters
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(a)
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Janus Distributors LLC (Janus Distributors) serves as principal underwriter
for the Registrant and Janus Aspen Series.
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(b)
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The principal business address, positions with Janus Distributors and positions
with the Registrant of Robin C. Beery, Stephanie Grauerholz-Lofton, and David R.
Kowalski, officers and directors of Janus Distributors, are also described under
Trustees and Officers in the Statement(s) of Additional Information included in this
Registration Statement. The principal executive officers of Janus Distributors are as
follows:
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Name
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Position(s) with Janus Distributors
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George S. Batejan
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Executive Vice President
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Robin C. Beery
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Executive Vice President and Head of U.S.
Distribution
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Michael Drew Elder
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Senior Vice President
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Stephanie
Grauerholz-Lofton
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Vice President
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David W. Grawemeyer
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Executive Vice President
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Kelly F. Hagg
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Vice President
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Heidi W. Hardin
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General Counsel and Senior Vice President
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Brennan A. Hughes
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Senior Vice President
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John E. Ingram
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President
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Bruce L. Koepfgen
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Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President
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David R. Kowalski
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Chief Compliance Officer and Senior Vice President
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Karlene J. Lacy
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Senior Vice President
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Douglas J. Laird
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Senior Vice President
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John J. Mari
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Vice President
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Kristin B. Mariani
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Vice President
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Michelle R. Rosenberg
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Vice President
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C-68
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Name
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Position(s) with Janus Distributors
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Russell P. Shipman
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Senior Vice President
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Gibson Smith
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Executive Vice President
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Richard M. Weil
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Executive Vice President
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Messrs. Batejan, Elder, Grawemeyer, Hagg, Hughes, Ingram, Koepfgen, Laird, Mari,
Shipman, and Weil, and Mses. Hardin, Lacy, Mariani, and Rosenberg do not hold any
positions with the Registrant. Their principal business address is 151 Detroit
Street, Denver, Colorado 80206-4805.
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(c)
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Not Applicable.
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ITEM 33.
Location of Accounts and Records
The accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by Section 31(a) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and the rules promulgated thereunder are maintained by
Janus Capital Management LLC, 151 Detroit Street, Denver, Colorado 80206-4805 and 720 South
Colorado Blvd., Denver, Colorado 80206-1929; Iron Mountain, 5155 E. 46
th
Avenue, Denver,
Colorado 80216 and 11333 E. 53
rd
Avenue, Denver, Colorado 80239; Janus Services LLC, 720
South Colorado Blvd., Denver, Colorado 80206-1929; State Street Bank and Trust Company, P.O. Box
0351, Boston, Massachusetts 02117-0351; and Deutsche Bank AG, New York Branch, 1301 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, New York 10019. Certain records relating to the day-to-day portfolio management
of INTECH Global Dividend Fund, INTECH International Fund, INTECH U.S. Core Fund, INTECH U.S.
Growth Fund, and INTECH U.S. Value Fund are kept at the offices of the subadviser, INTECH
Investment Management LLC, CityPlace Tower, 525 Okeechobee Boulevard, Suite 1800, West Palm Beach,
Florida 33401. Certain records relating to the day-to-day portfolio management of Janus Asia Equity
Fund, Janus Emerging Markets Fund, and Janus International Equity Fund are kept at the offices of
the subadviser, Janus Capital Singapore Pte. Limited, #36-02 AXA Tower, 8 Shenton Way, Singapore
068811. Certain records relating to the day-to-day portfolio management of Perkins Global Value
Fund, Perkins International Value Fund, Perkins Large Cap Value Fund, Perkins Mid Cap Value Fund,
Perkins Select Value Fund, Perkins Small Cap Value Fund, and Perkins Value Plus Income Fund are
kept at the offices of the subadviser, Perkins Investment Management LLC, 311 S. Wacker Drive,
Suite 6000, Chicago, Illinois 60606.
ITEM 34.
Management Services
The Registrant has no management-related service contracts that are not discussed in Part A or
Part B of this form.
ITEM 35.
Undertakings
Not Applicable.
C-69
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended, the Registrant certifies that it meets all of the requirements for
effectiveness of this Amendment to its Registration Statement pursuant to Rule 485(b) under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and has duly caused this Amendment to its Registration
Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereto duly authorized, in the City of
Denver, and State of Colorado, on the 29
th
day of March, 2013.
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JANUS INVESTMENT FUND
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By:
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/s/ Robin C. Beery
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Robin C. Beery, President and
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Chief Executive Officer
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Janus Investment Fund is organized under an Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of
Trust dated March 18, 2003 (Declaration of Trust), a copy of which is on file with the Secretary
of State of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The obligations of the Registrant hereunder are not
binding upon any of the Trustees, shareholders, nominees, officers, agents or employees of the
Registrant personally, but bind only the trust property of the Registrant, as provided in the
Declaration of Trust of the Registrant. The execution of this Amendment to the Registration
Statement has been authorized by the Trustees of the Registrant and this Amendment to the
Registration Statement has been signed by an authorized officer of the Registrant, acting as such,
and neither such authorization by such Trustees nor such execution by such officer shall be deemed
to have been made by any of them personally, but shall bind only the trust property of the
Registrant as provided in its Declaration of Trust.
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, this Amendment to the
Registration Statement has been signed below by the following persons in the capacities and on the
dates indicated.
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Signature
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Title
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Date
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/s/ Robin C. Beery
Robin C. Beery
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President and Chief Executive
Officer (Principal Executive
Officer)
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March 29, 2013
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/s/ Jesper Nergaard
Jesper Nergaard
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Vice President, Chief Financial
Officer, Treasurer and Principal
Accounting Officer (Principal
Financial Officer and Principal
Accounting Officer)
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March 29, 2013
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C-70
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Signature
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Title
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Date
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William F. McCalpin*
William F. McCalpin
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Chairman and Trustee
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March 29, 2013
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Alan A. Brown*
Alan A. Brown
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Trustee
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March 29, 2013
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William D. Cvengros*
William D. Cvengros
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Trustee
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March 29, 2013
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James T. Rothe*
James T. Rothe
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Trustee
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March 29, 2013
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William D. Stewart*
William D. Stewart
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Trustee
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March 29, 2013
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Linda S. Wolf*
Linda S. Wolf
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Trustee
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March 29, 2013
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/s/ Stephanie Grauerholz-Lofton
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*By:
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Stephanie Grauerholz-Lofton
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Attorney-in-Fact
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Pursuant to Powers of Attorney, dated April 1, 2013, filed herein as Exhibit (q)(1).
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C-71
INDEX OF EXHIBITS
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Exhibit Number
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Exhibit Title
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Exhibit (a)(43)
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Certificate Redesignating Janus Conservative Allocation Fund, Janus Growth
Allocation Fund, and Janus Moderate Allocation Fund, dated February 11, 2013
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Exhibit (a)(44)
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Certificate of Termination of Janus Global Research Fund, dated March 18, 2013
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Exhibit (a)(45)
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Certificate Redesignating Janus Worldwide Fund, dated March 11, 2013
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Exhibit (a)(46)
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Certificate of Establishment and Designation of Series and Share Classes
(Perkins International Value Fund), dated March 20, 2013
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Exhibit (a)(47)
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Form of Certificate of Termination of Janus World Allocation Fund
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Exhibit (d)(224)
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Sub-Advisory Agreement for Janus International Equity Fund, dated March 14, 2013
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Exhibit (d)(225)
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Amendment to Investment Advisory Agreement for Janus Conservative Allocation
Fund, dated February 15, 2013
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Exhibit (d)(226)
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Amendment to Investment Advisory Agreement for Janus Growth Allocation Fund,
dated February 15, 2013
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Exhibit (d)(227)
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Amendment to Investment Advisory Agreement for Janus Moderate Allocation Fund,
dated February 15, 2013
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Exhibit (d)(228)
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Amendment to Investment Advisory Agreement for Janus Worldwide Fund, dated
March 18, 2013
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Exhibit (d)(229)
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Investment Advisory Agreement for Perkins International Value Fund, dated April
1, 2013
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Exhibit (d)(230)
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Sub-Advisory Agreement for Perkins International Value Fund, dated April 1, 2013
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Exhibit (g)(32)
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Letter Agreement with regard to Janus Conservative Allocation Fund, Janus
Moderate Allocation Fund, and Janus Growth Allocation Fund with State Street
Bank and Trust Company
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Exhibit (g)(33)
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Form of Letter Agreement with regard to Janus Worldwide Fund and Janus Global
Research Fund with State Street Bank and Trust Company
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Exhibit (g)(34)
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Form of Letter Agreement with regard to Perkins International Value Fund with
State Street Bank and Trust Company
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Exhibit (h)(176)
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Form of Agreement and Plan of Reorganization by and between Janus Investment
Fund, on behalf of Janus Global Research Fund and Janus Worldwide Fund
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Exhibit (h)(177)
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Form of Custody Agreement between HSBC and Janus Capital Management LLC
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Exhibit (h)(178)
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Letter Agreement regarding Janus Services LLC Amended and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated February 15, 2013
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Exhibit (h)(179)
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Amendment dated February 15, 2013 to Administration Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and Janus Capital Management LLC
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Exhibit (h)(180)
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Letter Agreement regarding Janus Services LLC Amended and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated March 18, 2013
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Exhibit (h)(181)
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Amendment dated March 18, 2013 to Administration Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and Janus Capital Management LLC
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Exhibit (h)(182)
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Expense Limitation Agreement dated December 7, 2012, between Janus Capital
Management LLC and Janus Investment Fund, regarding Perkins International Value
Fund
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Exhibit (h)(183)
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Letter Agreement regarding Janus Services LLC Amended and Restated Transfer
Agency Agreement, dated April 1, 2013
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Exhibit (h)(184)
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Amendment dated April 1, 2013 to Administration Agreement between Janus
Investment Fund and Janus Capital Management LLC
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Exhibit (h)(185)
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Form of Letter Agreement regarding Janus Services LLC Amended and Restated
Transfer Agency Agreement
|
C-72
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Exhibit Number
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Exhibit Title
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Exhibit (h)(186)
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Form of Amendment to Administration Agreement between Janus Capital Management
LLC and Janus Investment Fund
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Exhibit (i)(45)
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Opinion and Consent of Counsel with respect to Perkins International Value
Fund, dated March 28, 2013
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Exhibit (j)(1)
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Consent of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
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Exhibit (q)(1)
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Powers of Attorney, dated as of April 1, 2013
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C-73
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