-----BEGIN PRIVACY-ENHANCED MESSAGE----- Proc-Type: 2001,MIC-CLEAR Originator-Name: webmaster@www.sec.gov Originator-Key-Asymmetric: MFgwCgYEVQgBAQICAf8DSgAwRwJAW2sNKK9AVtBzYZmr6aGjlWyK3XmZv3dTINen TWSM7vrzLADbmYQaionwg5sDW3P6oaM5D3tdezXMm7z1T+B+twIDAQAB MIC-Info: RSA-MD5,RSA, SDmd3iNoJbYGKcbwCVOVO4JOuQCrmwAkbvxZ21DwC+NAm0kDgfjlkbN4A+g7h5ig r7sxiOe9mynBW6Qg11qrrA== 0000088053-08-000656.txt : 20080702 0000088053-08-000656.hdr.sgml : 20080702 20080702093834 ACCESSION NUMBER: 0000088053-08-000656 CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: N-CSRS PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 10 CONFORMED PERIOD OF REPORT: 20080430 FILED AS OF DATE: 20080702 DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20080702 EFFECTIVENESS DATE: 20080702 FILER: COMPANY DATA: COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: DWS STRATEGIC INCOME FUND CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0000216314 IRS NUMBER: 362921989 STATE OF INCORPORATION: MA FISCAL YEAR END: 1031 FILING VALUES: FORM TYPE: N-CSRS SEC ACT: 1940 Act SEC FILE NUMBER: 811-02743 FILM NUMBER: 08931810 BUSINESS ADDRESS: STREET 1: 345 PARK AVENUE CITY: NEW YORK STATE: NY ZIP: 10154-0004 BUSINESS PHONE: 212-454-6778 MAIL ADDRESS: STREET 1: 345 PARK AVENUE CITY: NEW YORK STATE: NY ZIP: 10154-0004 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: SCUDDER STRATEGIC INCOME FUND DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 20010625 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: KEMPER DIVERSIFIED INCOME FUND DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19920703 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: KEMPER OPTION INCOME FUND DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19890622 0000216314 S000006114 DWS Strategic Income Fund C000016828 Class A KSTAX C000016829 Class B KSTBX C000016830 Class C KSTCX C000016831 Class S KSTSX N-CSRS 1 sr043008sif.htm SEMIANNUAL REPORT

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, D. C. 20549

 

FORM N-CSRS

 

Investment Company Act file number 811-2743

 

DWS Strategic Income Fund

(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

 

345 Park Avenue

New York, NY 10154-0004

(Address of principal executive offices)             (Zip code)

 

Registrant’s Telephone Number, including Area Code: (212) 454-7190

 

Paul Schubert

345 Park Avenue

New York, NY 10154-0004

(Name and Address of Agent for Service)

 

Date of fiscal year end:

10/31

 

Date of reporting period:

04/30/08

 

 

ITEM 1.           REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS

 

 


 

APRIL 30, 2008

Semiannual Report
to Shareholders

 

 

DWS Strategic Income Fund

sif_cover330

Contents

click here Performance Summary

click here Information About Your Fund's Expenses

click here Portfolio Management Review

click here Portfolio Summary

click here Investment Portfolio

click here Financial Statements

click here Financial Highlights

click here Notes to Financial Statements

click here Shareholder Meeting Results

click here Investment Management Agreement Approval

click here Summary of Management Fee Evaluation by Independent Fee Consultant

click here Account Management Resources

click here Privacy Statement

This report must be preceded or accompanied by a prospectus. To obtain a prospectus for any of our funds, refer to the Account Management Resources information provided in the back of this booklet. We advise you to consider the fund's objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. The prospectus contains this and other important information about the fund. Please read the prospectus carefully before you invest.

Investments in mutual funds involve risk. Some funds have more risk than others. In the current market environment, mortgage-backed securities are experiencing increased volatility. The fund invests in individual bonds whose yields and market values fluctuate so that your investment may be worth more or less than its original cost. Bond investments are subject to interest-rate risk such that when interest rates rise, the prices of the bonds, and thus the value of the bond fund, may decline and the investor may lose principal value. Additionally, investments by the portfolio in lower-rated bonds present greater risk to principal and income than investments in higher-quality securities. Finally, investing in foreign securities and emerging markets presents certain unique risks not associated with domestic investments, such as currency fluctuation, political and economic changes and market risks. All of these factors may result in greater share price volatility. Please read this fund's prospectus for specific details regarding its investments and risk profile.

DWS Scudder is part of Deutsche Asset Management, which is the marketing name in the US for the asset management activities of Deutsche Bank AG, Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas, Deutsche Investment Management Americas Inc. and DWS Trust Company.

NOT FDIC/NCUA INSURED NO BANK GUARANTEE MAY LOSE VALUE NOT A DEPOSIT NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AGENCY

Performance Summary April 30, 2008

Classes A, B and C

All performance shown is historical, assumes reinvestment of all dividend and capital gain distributions, and does not guarantee future results. Investment return and principal value fluctuate with changing market conditions so that, when redeemed, shares may be worth more or less than their original cost. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. Please visit www.dws-scudder.com for the Fund's most recent month-end performance.

The maximum sales charge for Class A shares is 4.5%. For Class B shares, the maximum contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) is 4% within the first year after purchase, declining to 0% after six years. Class C shares have no front-end sales charge but redemptions within one year of purchase may be subject to a CDSC of 1%. Unadjusted returns do not reflect sales charges and would have been lower if they had.

The total annual fund operating expense ratios, gross of any fee waivers or expense reimbursements, as stated in the fee table of the prospectus dated February 1, 2008 are 1.07%, 1.85% and 1.84% for Class A, Class B and Class C shares, respectively. Please see the Information About Your Fund's Expenses, the Financial Highlights and Notes to the Financial Statements (Note C, Related Parties) sections of this report for gross and net expense related disclosure for the period ended April 30, 2008.

To discourage short-term trading, the Fund imposes a 2% redemption fee on shareholders redeeming shares held less than 15 days, which has the effect of lowering total return.

Returns and rankings during all periods shown reflect a fee waiver and/or expense reimbursement. Without this waiver/reimbursement, returns and rankings would have been lower.

Performance figures do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares. Returns and rankings may differ by share class.

Average Annual Total Returns (Unadjusted for Sales Charge) as of 4/30/08

DWS Strategic Income Fund

6-Month

1-Year

3-Year

5-Year

10-Year

Class A

1.20%

3.75%

6.00%

7.61%

5.04%

Class B

.59%

2.91%

5.12%

6.74%

4.10%

Class C

.83%

2.97%

5.13%

6.73%

4.25%

Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index+

4.14%

7.09%

4.82%

4.27%

6.00%

Sources: Lipper Inc. and Deutsche Investment Management Americas Inc.

Total returns shown for periods less than one year are not annualized.

Net Asset Value and Distribution Information

 

Class A

Class B

Class C

Net Asset Value:

4/30/08

$ 4.62

$ 4.62

$ 4.65

10/31/07

$ 4.70

$ 4.71

$ 4.73

Distribution Information:

Six Months as of 4/30/08:

Income Dividends

$ .13

$ .12

$ .12

April Income Dividend

$ .0223

$ .0193

$ .0195

SEC 30-day Yield as of 4/30/08++

4.66%

4.15%

4.13%

Current Annualized Distribution Rate as of 4/30/08++

5.79%

5.01%

5.03%

++ The SEC yield is net investment income per share earned over the month ended April 30, 2008, shown as an annualized percentage of the maximum offering price per share on the last day of the period. The SEC yield is computed in accordance with a standardized method prescribed by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC yield would have been 4.03% for Class B shares, had certain expenses not been reduced. Current annualized distribution rate is the latest monthly dividend shown as an annualized percentage of net asset value on April 30, 2008. Distribution rate simply measures the level of dividends and is not a complete measure of performance. The current annualized distribution rates would have been 4.89% for Class B shares, had certain expenses not been reduced. Yields and distribution rates are historical, not guaranteed, and will fluctuate.

Class A Lipper Rankings — Multi-Sector Income Funds as of 4/30/08

Period

Rank

 

Number of Funds Tracked

Percentile Ranking (%)

1-Year

53

of

134

40

3-Year

42

of

117

36

5-Year

16

of

88

18

10-Year

32

of

62

51

Source: Lipper Inc. Rankings are historical and do not guarantee future results. Rankings are based on total return unadjusted for sales charges with distributions reinvested. If sales charges had been included, results might have been less favorable. Rankings are for Class A shares; other share classes may vary.

Growth of an Assumed $10,000 Investment (Adjusted for Maximum Sales Charge)

[] DWS Strategic Income Fund — Class A

[] Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index+

sif_g10k2b0

Yearly periods ended April 30

The Fund's growth of an assumed $10,000 investment is adjusted for the maximum sales charge of 4.50%. This results in a net initial investment of $9,550.

Comparative Results (Adjusted for Maximum Sales Charge) as of 4/30/08

DWS Strategic Income Fund

1-Year

3-Year

5-Year

10-Year

Class A

Growth of $10,000

$9,908

$11,374

$13,780

$15,622

Average annual total return

-.92%

4.38%

6.62%

4.56%

Class B

Growth of $10,000

$9,998

$11,423

$13,758

$14,948

Average annual total return

-.02%

4.53%

6.59%

4.10%

Class C

Growth of $10,000

$10,297

$11,618

$13,851

$15,167

Average annual total return

2.97%

5.13%

6.73%

4.25%

Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index+
Growth of $10,000

$10,709

$11,517

$12,326

$17,916

Average annual total return

7.09%

4.82%

4.27%

6.00%

The growth of $10,000 is cumulative.

+ The Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index is an unmanaged index comprising intermediate and long-term government and investment-grade corporate debt securities. Index returns, unlike Fund returns, do not reflect any fees or expenses. It is not possible to invest directly into an index.

Class S

Class S shares are generally not available to new investors except under certain circumstances. (Please refer to the Fund's Statement of Additional Information.)

All performance shown is historical, assumes reinvestment of all dividend and capital gain distributions, and does not guarantee future results. Investment return and principal value fluctuate with changing market conditions so that, when redeemed, shares may be worth more or less than their original cost. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. Please visit www.dws-scudder.com for the Fund's most recent month-end performance.

The total annual fund operating expense ratio, gross of any fee waivers or expense reimbursements, as stated in the fee table of the prospectus dated February 1, 2008 is 0.92% for Class S shares. Please see the Information About Your Fund's Expenses, the Financial Highlights and Notes to the Financial Statements (Note C, Related Parties) sections of this report for gross and net expense related disclosure for the period ended April 30, 2008.

To discourage short-term trading, the Fund imposes a 2% redemption fee on shareholders redeeming shares held less than 15 days, which has the effect of lowering total return.

Returns and rankings during all periods shown reflect a fee waiver and/or expense reimbursement. Without this waiver/reimbursement, returns and rankings would have been lower.

Performance figures do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemptions of fund shares. Returns may differ by share class.

Average Annual Total Returns as of 4/30/08

DWS Strategic Income Fund

6-Month

1 Year

3 Year

Life of Class*

Class S

1.52%

4.19%

6.28%

5.47%

Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index+

4.14%

7.09%

4.82%

4.48%

Sources: Lipper Inc. and Deutsche Investment Management Americas Inc.

Total returns shown for periods less than one year are not annualized.
* Class S commenced operations on February 1, 2005. Index returns began on January 31, 2005.

Net Asset Value and Distribution Information

 

Class S

Net Asset Value:

4/30/08

$ 4.62

10/31/07

$ 4.70

Distribution Information:

Six Months as of 4/30/08:

Income Dividends

$ .14

April Income Dividend

$ .0230

SEC 30-day Yield as of 4/30/08++

5.14%

Current Annualized Distribution Rate as of 4/30/08++

5.97%

++ The SEC yield is net investment income per share earned over the month ended April 30, 2008, shown as an annualized percentage of the maximum offering price per share on the last day of the period. The SEC yield is computed in accordance with a standardized method prescribed by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC yield would have been 4.94% for Class S shares, had certain expenses not been reduced. Current annualized distribution rate is the latest monthly dividend shown as an annualized percentage of net asset value on April 30, 2008. Distribution rate simply measures the level of dividends and is not a complete measure of performance. The current annualized distribution rates would have been 5.77% for Class S shares, had certain expenses not been reduced. Yields and distribution rates are historical, not guaranteed, and will fluctuate.

Class S Lipper Rankings — Multi-Sector Income Funds as of 4/30/08

Period

Rank

 

Number of Funds Tracked

Percentile Ranking (%)

1-Year

43

of

134

32

3-Year

31

of

117

27

Source: Lipper Inc. Rankings are historical and do not guarantee future results. Rankings are based on total return with distributions reinvested. Rankings are for Class S shares; other share classes may vary.

Growth of an Assumed $10,000 Investment

[] DWS Strategic Income Fund — Class S

[] Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index+

sif_g10k2a0

 

Comparative Results as of 4/30/08

DWS Strategic Income Fund

1-Year

3-Year

Life of Class*

Class S

Growth of $10,000

$10,419

$12,005

$11,885

Average annual total return

4.19%

6.28%

5.47%

Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index+
Growth of $10,000

$10,709

$11,517

$11,531

Average annual total return

7.09%

4.82%

4.48%

The growth of $10,000 is cumulative.

* Class S commenced operations on February 1, 2005. Index returns began on January 31, 2005.
+ The Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index is an unmanaged index comprising intermediate and long-term government and investment-grade corporate debt securities. Index returns, unlike Fund returns, do not reflect any fees or expenses. It is not possible to invest directly into an index.

Information About Your Fund's Expenses

As an investor of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: ongoing expenses and transaction costs. Ongoing expenses include management fees, distribution and service (12b-1) fees and other Fund expenses. Examples of transaction costs include sales charges (loads), redemption fees and account maintenance fees, which are not shown in this section. The following tables are intended to help you understand your ongoing expenses (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to help you compare these expenses with the ongoing expenses of investing in other mutual funds. In the most recent six-month period, the Fund limited these expenses; had it not done so, expenses would have been higher. The example in the table is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the six-month period and held for the entire period (November 1, 2007 to April 30, 2008).

The tables illustrate your Fund's expenses in two ways:

Actual Fund Return. This helps you estimate the actual dollar amount of ongoing expenses (but not transaction costs) paid on a $1,000 investment in the Fund using the Fund's actual return during the period. To estimate the expenses you paid over the period, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the "Expenses Paid per $1,000" line under the share class you hold.

Hypothetical 5% Fund Return. This helps you to compare your Fund's ongoing expenses (but not transaction costs) with those of other mutual funds using the Fund's actual expense ratio and a hypothetical rate of return of 5% per year before expenses. Examples using a 5% hypothetical fund return may be found in the shareholder reports of other mutual funds. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period.

Please note that the expenses shown in these tables are meant to highlight your ongoing expenses only and do not reflect any transaction costs. The "Expenses Paid per $1,000" line of the tables is useful in comparing ongoing expenses only and will not help you determine the relative total expense of owning different funds. An account maintenance fee of $6.25 per quarter for Class S shares may apply for certain accounts whose balances do not meet the applicable minimum initial investment. This fee is not included in these tables. If it was, the estimate of expenses paid for Class S shares during the period would be higher, and account value during the period would be lower, by this amount.

Expenses and Value of a $1,000 Investment for the six months ended April 30, 2008

Actual Fund Return

Class A

Class B

Class C

Class S

Beginning Account Value 11/1/07

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,000.00

Ending Account Value 4/30/08

$ 1,012.00

$ 1,005.90

$ 1,008.30

$ 1,015.20

Expenses Paid per $1,000*

$ 5.40

$ 9.48

$ 9.29

$ 4.51

Hypothetical 5% Fund Return

Class A

Class B

Class C

Class S

Beginning Account Value 11/1/07

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,000.00

Ending Account Value 4/30/08

$ 1,019.49

$ 1,015.42

$ 1,015.61

$ 1,020.39

Expenses Paid per $1,000*

$ 5.42

$ 9.52

$ 9.32

$ 4.52

* Expenses are equal to the Fund's annualized expense ratio for each share class, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by 366.

Annualized Expense Ratios

Class A

Class B

Class C

Class S

DWS Strategic Income Fund

1.08%

1.90%

1.86%

.90%

For more information, please refer to the Fund's prospectus.

Portfolio Management Review

In the following interview, the portfolio management team discusses market conditions and DWS Strategic Income Fund's investment strategy during the six-month period ended April 30, 2008.

The views expressed in the following discussion reflect those of the portfolio managers only through the end of the period of the report as stated on the cover. The management team's views are subject to change at any time based on market and other conditions and should not be construed as a recommendation. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Q: How did the bond market perform during the six-month reporting period?

A: The past six months proved to be a good time to be invested in government bonds, but a very challenging period to have exposure to other areas of the bond market. Investor sentiment remained under pressure by concerns that the problems in the housing and credit markets were beginning to spread to the broader economy. The result was a "flight to quality" into government issues, particularly US Treasuries, and a corresponding downturn in other sectors of the bond market.

Looking first at government bonds, concerns about growth and increasingly accommodative central bank policy sparked a rally in US Treasuries. The yield on the two-year Treasury fell from 3.94% to 2.29% during the period, while the yield on the 10-year declined from 4.47% to 3.76%.1 Yields also fell in Europe, Japan and the United Kingdom, making government issues the strongest-performing area within the fixed-income asset class.

1 Yields can move inversely to bond prices.

The environment of elevated investor risk aversion proved to be a negative for other segments of the bond market. Investment- grade corporate debt lagged Treasuries, reflecting concerns that slower economic growth would weigh on companies' earnings and balance sheets. High-yield corporate debt also performed poorly on a relative basis. The Credit Suisse High Yield Index, a measure of the performance of high-yield bonds, returned -0.90% during the period, lagging the broader bond market by a wide margin.2 The weakness in high-yield was evident in the rising yield spread of the asset class relative to US Treasuries.3 On April 30, 2008 the yield spread stood at 674 basis points, or 6.74 percentage points. In comparison, the spread stood under 270 in early June, 2007.

Similarly, emerging-markets debt underperformed due to concerns that slowing growth in the US economy would ultimately spread overseas. The yield spread of the JP Morgan Emerging Markets Bond Index Plus (EMBI+) rose from 186 basis points to 264 basis points during the course of the period.4

2 The Credit Suisse High Yield Index is an unmanaged, trader-priced portfolio constructed to mirror the global high-yield debt market.
3 Source: Credit Suisse. The long-term historical spread is based upon the average monthly yield spread of the Credit Suisse High-Yield Index from January 31, 1986 to April 30, 2008. The yield spread is the difference between the yield of a given fixed-income asset class and the yield on Treasuries. A large spread indicates that investors require yields substantially above those of Treasuries in order to invest in high-yield bonds. This is generally indicative of a higher-risk environment. A smaller spread generally indicates a more positive environment, since investors are less concerned about risk and therefore willing to accept lower yields.
4 The JP Morgan Emerging Markets Bond Index Plus (EMBI+) is an unmanaged index that tracks total returns for traded external debt instruments in the emerging markets. Included in the index are US dollar- and other external-currency-denominated Brady bonds, loans, Eurobonds and local market instruments.
Index returns, unlike fund returns, do not reflect any fees or expenses. It is not possible to invest directly into an index

Despite the variety of issues weighing on investor sentiment, the semiannual period ended on a fairly positive note due to the aggressive actions of the US Federal Reserve Board (the Fed). In addition to cutting the benchmark federal funds rate (the overnight rate banks charge when they borrow money from each other), the central bank took a variety of measures to maintain liquidity in the financial system. The Fed also helped engineer the survival of the troubled broker Bear Stearns, indicating to investors that the Fed will take extraordinary steps to promote stability. The result was a modest recovery for high-yield bonds, investment-grade issues, and emerging-markets debt (based on the performance of the Credit Suisse High Yield Index, the JP Morgan Emerging Markets Bond Index (EMBI) Global Diversified Index and the Lehman Brothers Credit Index.)5. This rally, which began in the latter half of March, carried through the end of April. At the same time, government bonds gave back some ground in a reflection of stronger investor risk appetites.

5 The JP Morgan EMBI Global Diversified is a uniquely-weighted version of the EMBI Global. It limits the weights of those index countries with larger debt stocks by only including specified portions of these countries' eligible current face amounts of debt outstanding. The countries covered in the EMBI Global Diversified are identical to those covered by the EMBI Global.
The Lehman Brothers Credit Index is an unmanaged index providing a general measure of the performance in the corporate bond sectors.

Q: How did the fund perform?

A: The total return of the fund's Class A shares for the six months ended April 30, 2008 was 1.20%. (Returns are unadjusted for sales charges. If sales charges had been included, returns would have been lower. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Please see pages 4 through 9 for complete performance information.)

The fund underperformed both the 4.14% return of its benchmark, the Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index, but outpaced the 0.45% average return of the funds in its Lipper peer group, Multi-Sector Income Funds.6,7 The fund is ahead of its peer group for the one-, three- and five--year periods, and has outpaced its benchmark over the three- and five-year intervals.

6 The Lehman Brothers US Government/Credit Index is an unmanaged index comprising intermediate and long-term government and investment-grade corporate debt securities.
Index returns, unlike fund returns, do not reflect any fees or expenses. It is not possible to invest directly into an index
7 The Lipper Multi-Sector Income Funds category includes funds that seek current income by allocating assets among several different fixed-income securities (with no more than 65% in any one sector except for defensive purposes), including US government and foreign governments, with a significant portion of assets in securities rated below investment grade. Category returns assume reinvestment of dividends. It is not possible to invest directly in the Lipper category.

Q: Please discuss the fund's performance and positioning in high yield.

A: As of April 30, 2008, 32% of the fund's assets were invested in high-yield bonds. This represents a lower weighting than six months earlier, reflecting the fact that we found attractive opportunities in other areas of the domestic bond market.

Performance in this segment of the portfolio was helped by the fact that the fund held a higher-than-normal position in both cash and securities whose performance is similar to that of cash. This provided a measure of insulation against the downturn in the market. Performance also was helped by the fact that two holdings were taken over by investment-grade companies: Triton, which was acquired by Deutsche Telekom, and Rural Cellular Corp., which was purchased by Verizon.8 Outside of these takeovers, a top-performing position was Residential Capital LLC. We elected to buy issues that were both shorter-term and higher in the company's capital structure than the Residential Capital bonds represented in the index, and this was a positive for the fund's relative performance.9 Also performing well for the fund were the bonds issued by Kansas City Southern Railway Co. (KCS) and its subsidiary Kansas City Southern de Mexico SA de CV. We have been positive on this investment given that KCS is an asset-heavy company with the ability to easily refinance its debt, creating what we see as an attractive risk/reward profile. Other top-performing positions included overweights in Hawker Beechcraft, Inc., Ford Motor Credit Co., LLC, Williams Companies, Inc. and Vanguard Health Holding Co. LLC.10 We also added value versus the benchmark by avoiding certain underperforming securities, specifically, bonds issued by Harrah's, Delphi Automotive, Abitibi/Bowater and Hawaiian Telecom.

8 Investment-grade refers to the quality of a company's credit. In order to be considered an investment-grade issue, the company must be rated at "BBB" or higher by Standard & Poor's or Moody's. Anything below this "BBB" rating is considered non-investment- grade. Credit ratings (credit quality) are a measure of a bond issuer's ability to repay interest and principal in a timely manner. Rating agencies assign letter designations such as AAA, AA, BBB, and so forth. The lower the rating, the higher the probability of default.
9 When a bond is higher in the capital structure, it means it will be paid off sooner in the event that the company becomes insolvent.
10 "Overweight" means the fund holds a higher weighting in a given sector or security than the benchmark. "Underweight" means the fund holds a lower weighting.

On the negative side, performance was hurt by the fund's overweight positions in bonds issued by Young Broadcasting, Inc.; Idearc, Inc., a yellow pages company that has been pressured by the notion that the Internet eventually will render the yellow pages obsolete; IdelAire, which manufactures heating and cooling systems that allow truck drivers to shut off their engines at truck stops; the Spanish-language broadcaster Univision Communications, Inc.; and the loans of the restaurant company Buffets, Inc.

The past six months have been characterized by high levels of anxiety among market participants. However, with yield spreads in the 600-700 basis point range we believe investors are being adequately compensated for the elevated level of risk, and we think the possibility of a recession is now fully discounted into the high-yield market. Additionally, the Fed has helped address market risk through its recent interest rate cuts, and financial institutions have been able to raise capital and remove leveraged loans from their balance sheets. With this as the backdrop, we continue to believe that the key to outperformance in high-yield throughout 2008 will be the avoidance of individual credit defaults.

Q: How has the fund been positioned in the US bond market?

A: In this portion of the fund, we have sought to take advantage of rising yields by moving out of US Treasuries and into other segments of the market. For example, rising yields among investment-grade corporates prompted an increase to the fund's weighting in this area. Within corporates, our emphasis has been two-fold: ensuring appropriate diversification and avoiding the financial sector. We have also established a position in municipal bonds. This was not designed as a tax strategy, but rather as a way to take advantage of municipal bond yields, which in our opinion, had moved to levels that were extremely attractive relative to Treasuries.

The result of these moves was that the fund's weighting in Treasuries moved from 14% to 11% over the course of the period. Overall, the fund's Treasury position was helpful to absolute performance given the strong returns of this asset class. On the negative side, the fund's position in commercial mortgage-backed securities, or CMBS, detracted from performance. We elected to reduce this weighting amid the rally in CMBS during the final six weeks of the reporting period.

Q: How is the fund positioned overseas?

A: We increased the weighting in the non-emerging market portion of the fund's overseas holdings throughout the period, from 10% of assets on October 31 to 25% on April 30. This reflects our view that, while the US Federal Reserve has already cut interest rates significantly, foreign central banks will soon have to play catch-up — likely a positive for their bond markets. Within this portion of the fund, we maintained a relatively stable positioning throughout the period. Our goal has been to keep the fund's duration — or interest rate sensitivity — in line with that of the benchmark. At the same time, we have sought to invest the fund in the most attractive spots on the yield curve in each individual region. For instance, in the United Kingdom — where the central bank is cutting interest rates — we hold shorter-term bonds, while in Japan our concentration is in longer-term issues, reflecting our view that its interest rates are relatively stable versus other economies. In this way, we keep overall duration about even with the benchmark, while at the same time taking advantage of country-specific situations.

Meanwhile, the emerging markets segment of the portfolio moved from 19% of assets to 18% during the past six months. Again, this reflected our view that better investment opportunities had become available in the developed markets. We continue to focus on more stable credits within the asset class, such as Brazil and Russia. This worked to the benefit of the fund, since both countries performed well: Brazil as a result of being upgraded to investment grade by Standard & Poor's, and Russia due to the price increases for oil and other commodities. At the same time, we continue to avoid the more volatile countries, such as Pakistan, Iraq, and Lebanon. We continue to hold a large position in the emerging markets, which are benefiting from the commodity rally, increasing foreign reserves, positive fiscal policies, the development of domestic bond markets, and the strong economic growth in the emerging market economies.

Q: How did the global portable alpha strategy affect performance?

A: In addition to the fund's fixed-income investments, we also use a global portable alpha strategy in an effort to enhance the fund's return. This strategy is designed to take advantage of short-term and medium mispricings within global equity, bond and currency markets. The strategy is implemented through the use of derivatives, which are contracts or other instruments whose value is based on other securities. It primarily utilizes global bond futures, forward currency contracts and other derivative instruments, and is expected to have a low correlation to the fund's security holdings. This is intended to generate returns for the fund that exceed those that could be achieved without its use. During the semiannual period, this strategy detracted from the fund's return. The strategy's positions in the global bond markets had a modestly positive impact on performance, but its positions in currencies detracted.

Q: Do you have any closing thoughts for investors?

A: Our ability to invest across a wide range of asset classes, geographic regions and yield curve positions provides a high level of flexibility to find opportunities.

We believe the current environment offers fertile ground for such an approach. While in early 2007 it was difficult to find value relative to Treasuries because yields were so low, yields in many asset classes have, in our opinion, since recovered to levels where investors are being adequately compensated for taking risk. With this as the backdrop, we continue to look for opportunities to use market volatility to take advantage of values and improve the diversification of the fund. From a broader standpoint, we continue to monitor the global economy as well as the relative value provided by sovereign, emerging markets, and high-yield issuers. We believe that DWS Strategic Income Fund remains an attractive vehicle for investors seeking high current return from a broad-based, actively managed fixed-income portfolio.

Portfolio Summary

Asset Allocation (As a % of Investment Portfolio excluding Securities Lending Collateral)

4/30/08

10/31/07

 

 

 

Government & Agency Obligations

52%

47%

Corporate Bonds

32%

37%

Cash Equivalents

6%

8%

Commerical and Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities

3%

4%

Loan Participation & Assignments

3%

2%

Municipal Bonds & Notes

2%

Open End Investment Companies

1%

1%

Asset Backed

1%

1%

 

100%

100%

Quality (Excludes Securities Lending Collateral)

4/30/08

10/31/07

 

 

 

AAA*

33%

30%

AA

1%

1%

A

10%

3%

BBB

4%

5%

BB

17%

18%

B

21%

22%

CCC and CC

6%

9%

Not Rated

8%

12%

 

100%

100%

* Includes cash equivalents

Interest Rate Sensitivity

4/30/08

10/31/07

 

 

 

Effective maturity

7.6 years

6.5 years

Average duration

5.1 years

5.4 years

Asset allocation, quality and interest rate sensitivity are subject to change.

The quality ratings represent the lower of Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") or Standard & Poor's Corporation ("S&P") credit ratings. The ratings of Moody's and S&P represent their opinions as to the quality of the securities they rate. Ratings are relative and subjective and are not absolute standards of quality. The Fund's credit quality does not remove market risk.

For more complete details about the Fund's investment portfolio, see page 20. A quarterly Fact Sheet is available upon request. Information concerning portfolio holdings of the Fund as of month end will be posted to www.dws-scudder.com on or after the last day of the following month. Please see the Account Management Resources section for contact information.

Following the Fund's fiscal first and third quarter-end, a complete portfolio holdings listing is filed with the SEC on Form N-Q. The form will be available on the SEC's Web site at www.sec.gov, and it also may be reviewed and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. Information on the operation of the SEC's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling (800) SEC-0330.

Investment Portfolio as of April 30, 2008 (Unaudited)

 

Principal Amount ($)(a)

Value ($)

 

 

Corporate Bonds 31.6%

Consumer Discretionary 4.8%

AMC Entertainment, Inc., 8.0%, 3/1/2014

500,000

446,250

American Achievement Corp., 8.25%, 4/1/2012

115,000

101,200

American Achievement Group Holding Corp., 14.75%, 10/1/2012 (PIK)

185,054

136,940

Asbury Automotive Group, Inc.:

 

 

7.625%, 3/15/2017

270,000

224,100

8.0%, 3/15/2014

115,000

104,075

Ashtead Holdings PLC, 144A, 8.625%, 8/1/2015 (b)

295,000

255,175

Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse Corp., 11.125%, 4/15/2014

230,000

195,500

Cablevision Systems Corp., Series B,
7.133%**, 4/1/2009

90,000

90,675

CanWest MediaWorks LP, 144A, 9.25%, 8/1/2015

190,000

173,375

Carrols Corp., 9.0%, 1/15/2013 (b)

120,000

110,400

Charter Communications Holdings LLC,
11.0%, 10/1/2015

402,000

312,555

Charter Communications, Inc., 144A,
10.875%, 9/15/2014

365,000

385,987

Cirsa Capital Luxembourg, 144A, 7.875%, 7/15/2012 EUR

165,000

217,705

Cooper-Standard Automotive, Inc.,
7.0%, 12/15/2012 (b)

155,000

142,135

CSC Holdings, Inc.:

 

 

7.25%, 7/15/2008

170,000

170,213

Series B, 7.625%, 4/1/2011

230,000

231,725

Series B, 8.125%, 7/15/2009

220,000

224,400

Series B, 8.125%, 8/15/2009

435,000

443,700

Denny's Holdings, Inc., 10.0%, 10/1/2012

80,000

76,300

Dollarama Group LP, 10.579%**, 8/15/2012

196,000

193,060

EchoStar DBS Corp.:

 

 

6.375%, 10/1/2011

45,000

44,775

6.625%, 10/1/2014

335,000

327,462

7.125%, 2/1/2016

260,000

255,450

Fontainebleau Las Vegas Holdings LLC, 144A, 10.25%, 6/15/2015

305,000

218,838

Foot Locker, Inc., 8.5%, 1/15/2022

80,000

74,800

General Motors Corp.:

 

 

7.2%, 1/15/2011

785,000

694,725

7.4%, 9/1/2025

145,000

102,225

Great Canadian Gaming Corp., 144A,
7.25%, 2/15/2015

235,000

225,600

Group 1 Automotive, Inc., 8.25%, 8/15/2013

115,000

110,400

Hanesbrands, Inc., Series B, 8.204%**, 12/15/2014

350,000

329,875

Hertz Corp.:

 

 

8.875%, 1/1/2014

480,000

483,600

10.5%, 1/1/2016 (b)

115,000

115,719

Idearc, Inc., 8.0%, 11/15/2016

1,485,000

965,250

Indianapolis Downs LLC & Capital Corp., 144A, 11.0%, 11/1/2012

155,000

139,500

ION Media Networks, Inc., 144A, 8.963%**, 1/15/2013

65,000

39,000

Isle of Capri Casinos, Inc., 7.0%, 3/1/2014

265,000

204,050

Jarden Corp., 7.5%, 5/1/2017 (b)

190,000

174,800

Kabel Deutschland GmbH, 10.625%, 7/1/2014

260,000

270,400

Lamar Media Corp., Series C, 6.625%, 8/15/2015

155,000

146,088

Liberty Media LLC:

 

 

5.7%, 5/15/2013

30,000

26,857

8.25%, 2/1/2030

190,000

168,579

8.5%, 7/15/2029 (b)

310,000

278,480

Mediacom Broadband LLC, 8.5%, 10/15/2015 (b)

15,000

13,800

MediMedia USA, Inc., 144A, 11.375%, 11/15/2014

120,000

122,400

MGM MIRAGE:

 

 

6.75%, 9/1/2012

365,000

339,450

8.375%, 2/1/2011 (b)

245,000

243,775

MTR Gaming Group, Inc., Series B, 9.75%, 4/1/2010

335,000

325,787

Norcraft Holdings, Step-up Coupon, 0% to 9/1/2008, 9.75% to 9/1/2012

565,000

519,800

Penske Automotive Group, Inc., 7.75%, 12/15/2016

575,000

523,250

Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc., 8.75%, 10/1/2013 (b)

240,000

243,600

Quebecor Media, Inc., 7.75%, 3/15/2016

160,000

154,000

Quebecor World, Inc., 144A, 9.75%, 1/15/2015*

180,000

88,200

Quiksilver, Inc., 6.875%, 4/15/2015

330,000

273,900

Reader's Digest Association, Inc., 144A, 9.0%, 2/15/2017

180,000

128,700

Sabre Holdings Corp., 8.35%, 3/15/2016

200,000

158,000

Seminole Hard Rock Entertainment, Inc., 144A, 5.3%**, 3/15/2014

275,000

230,313

Shaw Communications, Inc., 8.25%, 4/11/2010

420,000

436,800

Shingle Springs Tribal Gaming Authority, 144A, 9.375%, 6/15/2015

190,000

168,150

Simmons Co.:

 

 

Step-up Coupon, 0% to 12/15/2009, 10.0% to 12/15/2014

725,000

520,187

7.875%, 1/15/2014

170,000

150,017

Sinclair Television Group, Inc., 8.0%, 3/15/2012 (b)

115,000

116,581

Sirius Satellite Radio, Inc., 9.625%, 8/1/2013

335,000

282,237

Sonic Automotive, Inc., Series B, 8.625%, 8/15/2013 (b)

225,000

213,750

Station Casinos, Inc., 6.5%, 2/1/2014

445,000

291,475

Travelport LLC:

 

 

7.701%**, 9/1/2014

170,000

147,050

9.875%, 9/1/2014

215,000

207,744

Trump Entertainment Resorts, Inc., 8.5%, 6/1/2015

465,000

298,762

United Components, Inc., 9.375%, 6/15/2013

40,000

39,500

Unity Media GmbH:

 

 

144A, 8.75%, 2/15/2015 EUR

280,000

415,346

144A, 10.375%, 2/15/2015

175,000

166,250

Univision Communications, Inc., 144A, 9.75%, 3/15/2015 (PIK)

400,000

288,000

UPC Holding BV:

 

 

144A, 7.75%, 1/15/2014 EUR

235,000

353,181

144A, 8.0%, 11/1/2016 EUR

120,000

176,600

Vitro SAB de CV:

 

 

9.125%, 2/1/2017

815,000

699,677

11.75%, 11/1/2013

100,000

103,000

XM Satellite Radio, Inc., 9.75%, 5/1/2014

440,000

423,500

Young Broadcasting, Inc., 8.75%, 1/15/2014

1,220,000

713,700

 

19,208,425

Consumer Staples 1.5%

Alliance One International, Inc., 8.5%, 5/15/2012

120,000

114,000

Delhaize America, Inc.:

 

 

8.05%, 4/15/2027

75,000

82,023

9.0%, 4/15/2031

510,000

631,073

General Nutrition Centers, Inc.,
7.199%**, 3/15/2014 (PIK)

145,000

126,513

Harry & David Holdings, Inc., 8.076%**, 3/1/2012

190,000

159,600

North Atlantic Trading Co., 144A, 10.0%, 3/1/2012

873,750

723,028

Pierre Foods, Inc., 9.875%, 7/15/2012

140,000

67,200

Reynolds American, Inc., 6.75%, 6/15/2017

2,400,000

2,430,516

Rite Aid Corp., 7.5%, 3/1/2017

370,000

343,175

Smithfield Foods, Inc., 7.75%, 7/1/2017 (b)

210,000

208,425

Viskase Companies, Inc., 11.5%, 6/15/2011

1,330,000

1,057,350

 

5,942,903

Energy 3.9%

Atlas Energy Resources LLC, 144A,
10.75%, 2/1/2018

95,000

100,938

Belden & Blake Corp., 8.75%, 7/15/2012

1,150,000

1,178,750

Bristow Group, Inc., 7.5%, 9/15/2017

260,000

268,450

Chaparral Energy, Inc.:

 

 

8.5%, 12/1/2015

375,000

341,250

8.875%, 2/1/2017 (b)

140,000

128,100

Chesapeake Energy Corp.:

 

 

6.25%, 1/15/2018

145,000

141,375

6.875%, 1/15/2016

635,000

641,350

7.75%, 1/15/2015 (b)

105,000

108,413

Cimarex Energy Co., 7.125%, 5/1/2017

185,000

187,775

Delta Petroleum Corp., 7.0%, 4/1/2015

490,000

433,650

Dynegy Holdings, Inc.:

 

 

6.875%, 4/1/2011

75,000

75,563

8.375%, 5/1/2016

410,000

427,425

El Paso Corp., 9.625%, 5/15/2012

180,000

197,054

Energy Partners Ltd., 9.75%, 4/15/2014

200,000

185,000

EXCO Resources, Inc., 7.25%, 1/15/2011

355,000

353,225

Frontier Oil Corp., 6.625%, 10/1/2011

180,000

179,100

Gaz Capital (Gazprom), 144A, 6.51%, 3/7/2022

785,000

718,275

KCS Energy, Inc., 7.125%, 4/1/2012

690,000

669,300

Mariner Energy, Inc.:

 

 

7.5%, 4/15/2013 (b)

215,000

212,312

8.0%, 5/15/2017

265,000

260,362

OPTI Canada, Inc.:

 

 

7.875%, 12/15/2014

325,000

330,687

8.25%, 12/15/2014

590,000

609,175

Pemex Project Funding Master Trust, Series REG S, 6.375%, 8/5/2016 EUR

100,000

161,157

Petrobras International Finance Co., 5.875%, 3/1/2018

330,000

328,607

Petrohawk Energy Corp., 9.125%, 7/15/2013

250,000

264,375

Petronas Capital Ltd., Series REG S,
7.875%, 5/22/2022

290,000

354,442

Plains Exploration & Production Co.,
7.0%, 3/15/2017 (b)

220,000

216,700

Quicksilver Resources, Inc., 7.125%, 4/1/2016

640,000

633,600

Sabine Pass LNG LP:

 

 

7.25%, 11/30/2013

100,000

92,500

7.5%, 11/30/2016

905,000

828,075

Southwestern Energy Co., 144A, 7.5%, 2/1/2018

320,000

339,200

Stallion Oilfield Services Ltd., 144A, 9.75%, 2/1/2015

140,000

116,550

Stone Energy Corp.:

 

 

6.75%, 12/15/2014

730,000

684,375

8.25%, 12/15/2011

435,000

437,175

Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co., 7.625%, 4/1/2037

190,000

205,097

Tesoro Corp., 6.5%, 6/1/2017

180,000

165,150

Whiting Petroleum Corp.:

 

 

7.0%, 2/1/2014

255,000

255,637

7.25%, 5/1/2012

450,000

451,125

7.25%, 5/1/2013

110,000

110,275

Williams Companies, Inc.:

 

 

8.125%, 3/15/2012

695,000

761,025

8.75%, 3/15/2032

1,010,000

1,194,325

Williams Partners LP, 7.25%, 2/1/2017

190,000

196,175

 

15,543,094

Financials 6.8%

Algoma Acquisition Corp., 144A, 9.875%, 6/15/2015

625,000

568,750

Ashton Woods USA LLC, 9.5%, 10/1/2015

540,000

297,000

Buffalo Thunder Development Authority, 144A, 9.375%, 12/15/2014

115,000

78,200

Caterpillar Financial Services Corp., 5.45%, 4/15/2018

750,000

760,738

CEVA Group PLC, 144A, 8.5%, 12/1/2014 EUR

180,000

230,470

CIT Group, Inc., 5.4%, 2/13/2012

1,600,000

1,343,045

Citigroup, Inc., Series E, 8.4%, 4/29/2049

235,000

237,839

Conproca SA de CV, Series REG S, 12.0%, 6/16/2010

885,000

1,008,900

Firekeepers Development Authority, 144A, 13.875%, 5/1/2015

230,000

233,450

Ford Motor Credit Co., LLC:

 

 

7.25%, 10/25/2011

1,395,000

1,256,291

7.375%, 10/28/2009

2,680,000

2,579,843

7.875%, 6/15/2010

685,000

652,007

GMAC LLC, 6.875%, 9/15/2011

2,960,000

2,466,636

Hawker Beechcraft Acquisition Co., LLC:

 

 

8.5%, 4/1/2015

435,000

458,925

8.875%, 4/1/2015 (PIK)

350,000

366,625

9.75%, 4/1/2017 (b)

405,000

427,275

Hexion US Finance Corp., 9.75%, 11/15/2014

125,000

135,781

Inmarsat Finance PLC, Step-up Coupon, 0% to 11/15/2008, 10.375% to 11/15/2012

750,000

739,687

iPayment, Inc., 9.75%, 5/15/2014

165,000

141,900

John Deere Capital Corp., Series D, 5.35%, 4/3/2018

1,390,000

1,391,546

Kreditanstalt fuer Wiederaufbau, 2.05%, 2/16/2026 JPY

700,000,000

6,342,040

Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc., Series I,
6.875%, 5/2/2018

1,260,000

1,288,655

Local TV Finance LLC, 144A, 9.25%, 6/15/2015 (PIK)

185,000

148,000

Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., 6.875%, 4/25/2018

1,465,000

1,476,956

New ASAT (Finance) Ltd., 9.25%, 2/1/2011

340,000

210,800

Petroplus Finance Ltd., 144A, 6.75%, 5/1/2014 (b)

200,000

188,000

Residential Capital LLC:

 

 

3.49%**, 6/9/2008

80,000

74,500

6.37%**, 11/21/2008

610,000

506,300

Tropicana Entertainment LLC, 9.625%, 12/15/2014*

440,000

216,700

UCI Holdco, Inc., 10.3%**, 12/15/2013 (PIK)

267,156

243,112

Universal City Development Partners,
11.75%, 4/1/2010

955,000

990,812

Yankee Acquisition Corp., Series B, 8.5%, 2/15/2015

70,000

59,150

 

27,119,933

Health Care 1.9%

Advanced Medical Optics, Inc., 7.5%, 5/1/2017

480,000

434,400

Bausch & Lomb, Inc., 144A, 9.875%, 11/1/2015

335,000

356,775

Boston Scientific Corp., 6.0%, 6/15/2011

295,000

291,312

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., 6.125%, 5/1/2038

1,100,000

1,109,819

Community Health Systems, Inc., 8.875%, 7/15/2015

1,530,000

1,591,200

HCA, Inc.:

 

 

9.125%, 11/15/2014

305,000

323,300

9.25%, 11/15/2016

990,000

1,064,250

9.625%, 11/15/2016 (PIK)

335,000

359,706

HEALTHSOUTH Corp., 10.75%, 6/15/2016

180,000

193,500

IASIS Healthcare LLC, 8.75%, 6/15/2014

275,000

281,875

Psychiatric Solutions, Inc., 7.75%, 7/15/2015

185,000

189,163

Surgical Care Affiliates, Inc., 144A, 8.875%, 7/15/2015 (PIK)

225,000

180,000

The Cooper Companies, Inc., 7.125%, 2/15/2015 (b)

385,000

367,675

Vanguard Health Holding Co. I, LLC, Step-up Coupon, 0% to 10/1/2009, 11.25% to 10/1/2015

270,000

226,800

Vanguard Health Holding Co. II, LLC, 9.0%, 10/1/2014

590,000

600,325

 

7,570,100

Industrials 3.3%

Actuant Corp., 144A, 6.875%, 6/15/2017

150,000

150,375

Allied Security Escrow Corp., 11.375%, 7/15/2011

300,000

258,000

Allied Waste North America, Inc., 6.5%, 11/15/2010

155,000

156,356

American Color Graphics, Inc.:

 

 

10.0%, 6/15/2010

285,000

128,963

144A, Promissory Note due 6/15/2008 (h)

17,100

7,738

American Railcar Industries, Inc., 7.5%, 3/1/2014

215,000

193,500

ARAMARK Corp., 6.739%**, 2/1/2015

260,000

250,250

Baldor Electric Co., 8.625%, 2/15/2017

195,000

198,900

Belden, Inc., 7.0%, 3/15/2017

195,000

193,294

Bombardier, Inc., 144A, 6.75%, 5/1/2012

100,000

102,000

Browning-Ferris Industries, Inc., 7.4%, 9/15/2035

540,000

491,400

Building Materials Corp. of America, 7.75%, 8/1/2014

260,000

193,700

Cenveo Corp., 7.875%, 12/1/2013

320,000

268,000

Congoleum Corp., 8.625%, 8/1/2008*

480,000

360,000

DRS Technologies, Inc.:

 

 

6.625%, 2/1/2016

105,000

103,950

6.875%, 11/1/2013 (b)

525,000

521,062

7.625%, 2/1/2018

635,000

647,700

Education Management LLC, 8.75%, 6/1/2014

160,000

142,400

Esco Corp.:

 

 

144A, 6.675%**, 12/15/2013

285,000

259,350

144A, 8.625%, 12/15/2013

360,000

358,200

General Cable Corp.:

 

 

5.073%**, 4/1/2015

305,000

270,687

7.125%, 4/1/2017 (b)

195,000

190,125

Gibraltar Industries, Inc., Series B, 8.0%, 12/1/2015

195,000

158,925

Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co., 7.75%, 12/15/2013

175,000

161,875

Harland Clarke Holdings Corp., 9.5%, 5/15/2015 (b)

185,000

149,388

K. Hovnanian Enterprises, Inc.:

 

 

6.25%, 1/15/2016

320,000

222,400

8.875%, 4/1/2012

665,000

458,850

Kansas City Southern de Mexico SA de CV:

 

 

144A, 7.375%, 6/1/2014

185,000

175,519

7.625%, 12/1/2013

520,000

497,250

9.375%, 5/1/2012

650,000

677,625

Kansas City Southern Railway Co.:

 

 

7.5%, 6/15/2009

160,000

164,000

9.5%, 10/1/2008

1,430,000

1,444,300

Mobile Services Storage Group, Inc., 9.75%, 8/1/2014

370,000

355,200

Navios Maritime Holdings, Inc., 9.5%, 12/15/2014 (b)

290,000

298,700

R.H. Donnelley Corp., 144A, 8.875%, 10/15/2017

1,155,000

744,975

Rainbow National Services LLC, 144A, 10.375%, 9/1/2014

39,000

41,925

RBS Global & Rexnord Corp., 9.5%, 8/1/2014

170,000

170,000

Titan International, Inc., 8.0%, 1/15/2012

730,000

730,000

TransDigm, Inc., 7.75%, 7/15/2014

115,000

117,588

U.S. Concrete, Inc., 8.375%, 4/1/2014

210,000

170,100

United Rentals North America, Inc.:

 

 

6.5%, 2/15/2012

455,000

426,562

7.0%, 2/15/2014

570,000

473,100

Vought Aircraft Industries, Inc., 8.0%, 7/15/2011 (b)

140,000

133,000

 

13,217,232

Information Technology 1.2%

Alion Science & Technology Corp., 10.25%, 2/1/2015

205,000

130,431

Freescale Semiconductor, Inc., 8.875%, 12/15/2014

870,000

765,600

L-3 Communications Corp.:

 

 

5.875%, 1/15/2015

625,000

606,250

Series B, 6.375%, 10/15/2015

270,000

266,963

Lucent Technologies, Inc., 6.45%, 3/15/2029

775,000

581,250

MasTec, Inc., 7.625%, 2/1/2017

270,000

236,250

Sanmina-SCI Corp., 144A, 5.55%**, 6/15/2010

93,000

91,838

Seagate Technology HDD Holdings, 6.8%, 10/1/2016

380,000

362,900

SunGard Data Systems, Inc., 10.25%, 8/15/2015

525,000

557,812

Vangent, Inc., 9.625%, 2/15/2015

155,000

130,200

Xerox Corp., 6.35%, 5/15/2018

1,260,000

1,266,364

 

4,995,858

Materials 3.2%

Appleton Papers, Inc., Series B, 8.125%, 6/15/2011

110,000

107,250

ARCO Chemical Co., 9.8%, 2/1/2020

1,740,000

1,522,500

Associated Materials, Inc., Step-up Coupon, 0% to 3/1/2009, 11.25% to 3/1/2014

365,000

260,975

Cascades, Inc., 7.25%, 2/15/2013 (b)

560,000

515,200

Chemtura Corp., 6.875%, 6/1/2016

350,000

311,500

Clondalkin Acquisition BV, 144A, 4.8%**, 12/15/2013

215,000

180,600

CPG International I, Inc., 10.5%, 7/1/2013

490,000

418,950

Exopack Holding Corp., 11.25%, 2/1/2014

580,000

553,900

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc.,
8.375%, 4/1/2017

310,000

342,550

GEO Specialty Chemicals, Inc.:

 

 

144A, 10.698%**, 12/31/2009

719,000

538,351

144A, 10.698%**, 3/31/2015

423,313

316,956

Georgia-Pacific LLC:

 

 

144A, 7.125%, 1/15/2017

130,000

128,700

9.5%, 12/1/2011

185,000

195,175

Hexcel Corp., 6.75%, 2/1/2015

790,000

785,062

Huntsman LLC, 11.625%, 10/15/2010

892,000

938,830

Ineos Group Holdings PLC, 144A, 7.875%, 2/15/2016 EUR

140,000

163,406

Innophos, Inc., 8.875%, 8/15/2014

100,000

99,500

Jefferson Smurfit Corp., 8.25%, 10/1/2012

295,000

268,450

Koppers Holdings, Inc., Step-up Coupon, 0% to 11/15/2009, 9.875% to 11/15/2014

520,000

455,000

Metals USA Holdings Corp., 8.698%**, 7/1/2012 (PIK)

265,000

217,300

Millar Western Forest Products Ltd.,
7.75%, 11/15/2013

110,000

73,700

Momentive Performance Materials, Inc., 9.75%, 12/1/2014 (b)

420,000

407,400

NewMarket Corp., 7.125%, 12/15/2016

455,000

443,625

NewPage Corp., 144A, 10.0%, 5/1/2012 (b)

405,000

432,337

OI European Group BV, 144A, 6.875%, 3/31/2017 EUR

220,000

336,649

Pliant Corp., 11.625%, 6/15/2009 (PIK)

5

5

Radnor Holdings Corp., 11.0%, 3/15/2010*

100,000

125

Rhodia SA, 144A, 7.497%**, 10/15/2013 EUR

280,000

403,323

Smurfit-Stone Container Enterprises, Inc.:

 

 

8.0%, 3/15/2017 (b)

210,000

177,450

8.375%, 7/1/2012

185,000

169,275

Steel Dynamics, Inc.:

 

 

6.75%, 4/1/2015

295,000

291,312

144A, 7.375%, 11/1/2012

75,000

76,313

Terra Capital, Inc., Series B, 7.0%, 2/1/2017

440,000

437,800

The Mosaic Co., 144A, 7.625%, 12/1/2014

625,000

671,875

Witco Corp., 6.875%, 2/1/2026

135,000

93,150

Wolverine Tube, Inc., 10.5%, 4/1/2009

325,000

299,000

 

12,633,494

Telecommunication Services 2.1%

BCM Ireland Preferred Equity Ltd., 144A, 11.34%**, 2/15/2017 (PIK) EUR

207,042

212,084

Centennial Communications Corp.:

 

 

10.0%, 1/1/2013

270,000

272,700

10.125%, 6/15/2013

315,000

328,388

Cincinnati Bell, Inc.:

 

 

7.25%, 7/15/2013

400,000

402,000

8.375%, 1/15/2014 (b)

220,000

218,900

Cricket Communications, Inc., 144A,
9.875%, 11/1/2014

475,000

466,094

Embratel, Series B, 11.0%, 12/15/2008 (b)

79,000

82,832

Grupo Iusacell Celular SA de CV, 10.0%, 3/31/2012

108,955

105,686

Intelsat Jackson Holdings Ltd.:

 

 

9.25%, 6/15/2016

110,000

110,963

11.25%, 6/15/2016

310,000

314,263

iPCS, Inc., 5.364%**, 5/1/2013

110,000

91,575

MetroPCS Wireless, Inc., 9.25%, 11/1/2014

565,000

555,112

Millicom International Cellular SA, 10.0%, 12/1/2013

1,010,000

1,078,175

Nortel Networks Ltd., 6.963%**, 7/15/2011

345,000

325,163

Orascom Telecom Finance, 144A, 7.875%, 2/8/2014

140,000

133,000

Qwest Corp.:

 

 

7.25%, 9/15/2025

70,000

64,225

7.875%, 9/1/2011

415,000

425,375

Rural Cellular Corp., 9.875%, 2/1/2010

350,000

362,250

Stratos Global Corp., 9.875%, 2/15/2013 (b)

150,000

157,500

SunCom Wireless Holdings, Inc., 8.5%, 6/1/2013

958,000

997,517

US Unwired, Inc., Series B, 10.0%, 6/15/2012 (b)

455,000

431,112

Virgin Media Finance PLC:

 

 

8.75%, 4/15/2014

475,000

459,562

8.75%, 4/15/2014 EUR

335,000

496,278

West Corp., 9.5%, 10/15/2014

220,000

210,100

 

8,300,854

Utilities 2.9%

AES Corp.:

 

 

8.0%, 10/15/2017

395,000

411,787

144A, 8.75%, 5/15/2013

1,067,000

1,113,681

9.5%, 6/1/2009

150,000

155,438

Allegheny Energy Supply Co., LLC, 144A,
8.25%, 4/15/2012

1,360,000

1,448,400

CMS Energy Corp., 8.5%, 4/15/2011 (b)

880,000

942,438

Edison Mission Energy, 7.0%, 5/15/2017

335,000

338,350

Energy Future Holdings Corp., 144A,
10.875%, 11/1/2017

600,000

639,000

Intergas Finance BV, Series REG S,
6.875%, 11/4/2011 (b)

1,145,000

1,109,219

IPALCO Enterprises, Inc., 144A, 7.25%, 4/1/2016

205,000

211,150

Mirant Americas Generation LLC, 8.3%, 5/1/2011

485,000

503,187

Mirant North America LLC, 7.375%, 12/31/2013

150,000

155,625

NRG Energy, Inc.:

 

 

7.25%, 2/1/2014

705,000

724,387

7.375%, 2/1/2016

1,475,000

1,519,250

Oncor Electric Delivery Co., 7.0%, 9/1/2022

185,000

181,200

Regency Energy Partners LP, 8.375%, 12/15/2013

293,000

305,453

Reliant Energy, Inc., 7.875%, 6/15/2017 (b)

370,000

385,725

Sierra Pacific Resources:

 

 

6.75%, 8/15/2017

470,000

463,238

8.625%, 3/15/2014

100,000

104,633

Texas Competitive Electric Holdings Co., LLC, 144A, 10.25%, 11/1/2015

875,000

912,187

 

11,624,348

Total Corporate Bonds (Cost $131,943,480)

126,156,241

 

Asset Backed 0.8%

Credit Card Receivables

Washington Mutual Master Note Trust, "C1", Series 2007-C1, 144A, 3.116%**, 5/15/2014 (Cost $3,625,735)

3,800,000

3,021,000

 

Commercial and Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities 2.8%

Credit Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates, "A2", Series 2007-C1, 5.268%, 2/15/2040

3,719,000

3,679,812

JPMorgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., "F", Series 2004-LN2, 144A, 5.631%**, 7/15/2041

2,000,000

1,644,087

Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust, "A4", Series 2007-HQ11, 5.447%, 2/12/2044

2,280,000

2,209,811

Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust, "A2", Series 2007-C32, 5.924%**, 6/15/2049

3,600,000

3,606,585

Total Commercial and Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities (Cost $11,051,445)

11,140,295

 

Government & Agency Obligations 50.9%

Sovereign Bonds 38.2%

Aries Vermogensverwaltung GmbH, Series C, REG S, 9.6%, 10/25/2014

2,250,000

2,897,100

Dominican Republic:

 

 

144A, 8.625%, 4/20/2027

125,000

133,125

Series REG S, 9.5%, 9/27/2011

745,438

782,710

Federal Republic of Germany:

 

 

Series 06, 4.0%, 7/4/2016 EUR

2,000,000

3,093,016

Series 98, 4.125%, 7/4/2008 EUR

3,000,000

4,678,919

Series 94, 6.25%, 1/4/2024 EUR

7,500,000

13,944,498

Federal Republic of Nigeria, Promissory Note, Series RC, 5.092%, 1/5/2010

32,000

4,240

Federative Republic of Brazil:

 

 

6.0%, 1/17/2017 (b)

4,745,000

4,958,525

7.125%, 1/20/2037 (b)

1,045,000

1,193,913

7.875%, 3/7/2015

1,045,000

1,206,975

8.75%, 2/4/2025

830,000

1,062,400

8.875%, 10/14/2019

950,000

1,224,265

11.0%, 1/11/2012 (b)

2,270,000

2,780,750

11.0%, 8/17/2040 (b)

2,295,000

3,128,085

12.5%, 1/5/2016 BRL

1,155,000

691,195

Government of Canada, 4.25%, 12/1/2008 CAD

4,000,000

4,008,738

Government of Ukraine:

 

 

144A, 6.75%, 11/14/2017

1,010,000

995,648

Series REG S, 7.65%, 6/11/2013

785,000

841,520

Kingdom of Spain, 3.15%, 1/31/2016 EUR

4,600,000

6,666,958

Province of Quebec, Series PO, 1.6%, 5/9/2013 JPY

1,600,000,000

15,567,768

Republic of Argentina:

 

 

3.092%**, 8/3/2012 (PIK)

3,285,000

1,760,237

5.83%, 12/31/2033 (PIK) ARS

377

112

Republic of Colombia:

 

 

8.25%, 12/22/2014

85,000

98,643

10.0%, 1/23/2012 (b)

1,245,000

1,469,100

10.75%, 1/15/2013

335,000

414,563

Republic of El Salvador, 144A, 7.65%, 6/15/2035

2,245,000

2,402,150

Republic of Ghana, 144A, 8.5%, 10/4/2017

125,000

130,313

Republic of Greece:

 

 

3.6%, 7/20/2016 EUR

5,500,000

8,070,898

4.5%, 9/20/2037 EUR

6,000,000

8,466,218

Republic of Indonesia, 144A, 6.875%, 3/9/2017 (b)

1,470,000

1,495,725

Republic of Panama:

 

 

7.125%, 1/29/2026

630,000

696,150

9.375%, 1/16/2023

2,075,000

2,718,250

Republic of Peru:

 

 

6.55%, 3/14/2037 (b)

1,600,000

1,680,000

7.35%, 7/21/2025 (b)

3,805,000

4,442,337

Republic of Philippines:

 

 

7.75%, 1/14/2031

295,000

332,613

8.0%, 1/15/2016 (b)

1,955,000

2,238,475

8.375%, 2/15/2011

465,000

512,058

9.375%, 1/18/2017

490,000

611,863

Republic of Turkey:

 

 

7.0%, 9/26/2016

1,690,000

1,730,138

7.25%, 3/15/2015

360,000

374,850

11.75%, 6/15/2010

2,045,000

2,336,412

12.375%, 6/15/2009

1,020,000

1,111,800

Republic of Uruguay:

 

 

7.625%, 3/21/2036

605,000

638,275

8.0%, 11/18/2022

955,000

1,060,050

9.25%, 5/17/2017

735,000

889,350

Republic of Venezuela, 10.75%, 9/19/2013

3,250,000

3,355,625

Russian Federation, Series REG S, 7.5%, 3/31/2030

4,905,300

5,640,555

Russian Ministry of Finance, Series VII,
3.0%, 5/14/2011

310,000

296,336

Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 144A,
6.875%, 1/15/2016

2,050,000

2,152,500

United Kingdom Treasury Bond, 5.75%, 12/7/2009 GBP

12,000,000

24,372,592

United Mexican States:

 

 

5.625%, 1/15/2017 (b)

499,000

524,449

Series A, 6.75%, 9/27/2034

318,000

352,026

 

152,235,011

US Government Sponsored Agencies 0.5%

Federal Home Loan Bank, 7.869%**, 6/26/2015

1,500,000

1,458,000

Federal National Mortgage Association,
8.45%**, 2/27/2023

750,000

750,000

 

2,208,000

US Treasury Obligations 12.2%

US Treasury Bill, 1.08%***, 7/17/2008 (d)

3,056,000

3,047,403

US Treasury Bonds:

 

 

5.0%, 5/15/2037

1,900,000

2,059,125

5.25%, 11/15/2028

4,590,000

5,033,940

US Treasury Notes:

 

 

2.0%, 2/28/2010

23,000,000

22,899,118

2.5%, 3/31/2013

11,147,000

10,877,031

3.5%, 2/15/2018

4,712,000

4,611,870

 

48,528,487

Total Government & Agency Obligations (Cost $198,971,024)

202,971,498

 

Loan Participations and Assignments 2.8%

Sovereign Loans 0.7%

Credit Suisse (City of Kyiv Ukraine), 144A, 8.25%, 11/26/2012

2,115,000

2,161,530

CSFB International (Exim Ukraine), 6.8%, 10/4/2012

690,000

663,021

 

2,824,551

Senior Loans** 2.1%

Advanced Medical Optics, Inc., Term Loan B, LIBOR plus 1.75%, 4.829%, 4/2/2014

108,900

101,414

Algoma Steel, Inc., Term Loan, LIBOR plus 2.5%, 5.579%, 6/30/2013

67,487

62,425

Bausch & Lomb, Inc.:

 

 

Term Delay Draw, LIBOR plus 3.25%, 6.329%, 4/11/2015

40,000

39,555

Term Loan B, LIBOR plus 3.25%, 6.329%, 4/11/2015

319,200

316,249

Buffets, Inc.:

 

 

Letter of Credit, 4.73%, 5/1/2013

71,054

40,572

Term Loan B, 9.954%, 1/13/2011

532,555

304,089

Charter Communications Operations:

 

 

Term Loan, LIBOR plus 2.0%, 5.079%, 3/6/2014

419,000

419,350

Term Loan B, LIBOR plus 3.25%, 6.329%, 4/27/2011

594,000

527,065

Energy Future Holdings Corp.:

 

 

Term Loan B1, LIBOR plus 3.5%, 6.579%, 10/10/2014

1,820,850

1,745,631

Term Loan B3, LIBOR plus 3.5%, 6.579%, 10/10/2014

1,189,025

1,137,748

General Nutrition Centers, Inc., Term Loan B, LIBOR plus 2.25%, 5.329%, 9/16/2013

119,396

106,711

Golden Nugget, Inc., 6.05%, 6/16/2014

230,000

165,600

Hawker Beechcraft, Inc.:

 

 

Letter of Credit, LIBOR plus 2.0%, 5.079%, 3/26/2014

7,214

6,893

Term Loan B, LIBOR plus 2.0%, 5.079%, 3/26/2014

123,794

118,326

HCA, Inc., Term Loan A1, 4.19%, 11/18/2012

644,171

609,997

Hexion Specialty Chemicals:

 

 

Term Loan C1, LIBOR plus 2.25%, 5.329%, 5/5/2013

458,883

437,658

Term Loan C2, LIBOR plus 2.25%, 5.329%, 5/5/2013

136,324

129,621

Local TV On Satellite LLC, Term Loan B, LIBOR plus 2.25%, 5.329%, 5/7/2013

119,100

103,022

Longview Power LLC:

 

 

Demand Draw, 4.938%, 4/1/2014

53,667

45,516

Letter of Credit, 5.0%, 4/1/2014

15,333

13,005

Term Loan B, 5.0%, 4/1/2014

46,000

39,014

NewPage Corp., Term Loan B, LIBOR plus 3.0%, 6.079%, 11/5/2014

49,875

49,663

Sabre, Inc., Term Loan B, LIBOR plus 2.25%, 5.329%, 9/30/2014

179,784

152,667

Symbion, Inc.:

 

 

Term Loan A, 6.149%, 8/23/2013

96,300

85,948

Term Loan B, 6.149%, 8/23/2014

96,300

85,827

Telesat Canada, Inc.:

 

 

Term Loan B, LIBOR plus 3.0%, 6.079%, 10/31/2014

429,342

405,488

Term Loan, 5.9%, 9/1/2014

140,551

132,742

Term Loan, 9.0%, 10/31/2008

595,000

511,700

Tribune Co., Term Loan B, 5.542%, 5/24/2014

367,225

272,435

 

8,165,931

Total Loan Participations and Assignments (Cost $11,591,716)

10,990,482

 

Municipal Bonds and Notes 1.9%

Clark County, NV, General Obligation, School District, Series B, 5.0%, 6/15/2026

1,600,000

1,668,208

Colorado, Department of Transportation, Revenue Anticipation Notes, 6.0%, 6/15/2015 (c)

2,400,000

2,589,288

Georgia, State Road & Tollway Authority Revenue, Federal Highway Grant Anticipation Bonds, 5.0%, 6/1/2013 (c)

3,200,000

3,486,016

Total Municipal Bonds and Notes (Cost $7,782,344)

7,743,512

 

Preferred Securities 0.0%

Xerox Capital Trust I, 8.0%, 6/23/2008**** (Cost $124,875)

120,000

119,734

 


Units

Value ($)

 

 

Other Investments 0.1%

Hercules, Inc., (Bond Unit), 6.5%, 6/30/2029 (Cost $271,671)

315,000

250,671

 


Shares

Value ($)

 

 

Common Stocks 0.0%

GEO Specialty Chemicals, Inc.*

10,608

9,017

GEO Specialty Chemicals, Inc. 144A*

966

821

Total Common Stocks (Cost $131,040)

9,838

 

Convertible Preferred Stocks 0.0%

Consumer Discretionary

ION Media Networks, Inc., 144A, 12.0%* (Cost $13,911)

1

750

 

Warrants 0.0%

Dayton Superior Corp., 144A, Expiration Date 6/15/2009*

40

0

DeCrane Aircraft Holdings, Inc., 144A, Expiration Date 9/30/2008*

2,740

0

New Asat (Finance) Ltd., Expiration Date 2/1/2011*

52,000

14,434

Total Warrants (Cost $1)

14,434

 

Open End Investment Company 1.2%

DWS Floating Rate Plus Fund, "Institutional" (e) (Cost $5,199,492)

534,949

4,857,334

 

Securities Lending Collateral 6.8%

Daily Assets Fund Institutional, 2.88% (f) (g) (Cost $26,948,205)

26,948,205

26,948,205

 

Cash Equivalents 6.0%

Cash Management QP Trust, 2.54% (f) (Cost $24,129,093)

24,129,093

24,129,093

 

% of Net Assets

Value ($)

 

 

Total Investment Portfolio (Cost $421,784,032)+

104.9

418,353,087

Other Assets and Liabilities, Net

(4.9)

(19,599,856)

Net Assets

100.0

398,753,231

* Non-income producing security. In the case of a bond, generally denotes that the issuer has defaulted on the payment of principal or the interest or has filed for bankruptcy. The following table represents bonds that are in default:

Securities

Coupon

Maturity Date

Principal Amount ($)

Acquisition Cost ($)

Value ($)

Congoleum Corp.

8.625%

8/1/2008

480,000

USD

451,750

360,000

Quebecor World, Inc.

9.75%

1/15/2015

180,000

USD

180,000

88,200

Radnor Holdings Corp.

11.0%

3/15/2010

100,000

USD

88,363

125

Tropicana Entertainment LLC

9.625%

12/15/2014

440,000

USD

409,525

216,700

 

 

 

 

 

1,129,638

665,025

** Floating rate notes are securities whose yields vary with a designated market index or market rate, such as the coupon-equivalent of the US Treasury bill rate. These securities are shown at their current rate as of April 30, 2008.
*** Annualized yield at time of purchase; not a coupon rate.
**** Date shown is call date; not a maturity date for the perpetual preferred securities.
+ The cost for federal income tax purposes was $423,914,873. At April 30, 2008, net unrealized depreciation for all securities based on tax cost was $5,561,786. This consisted of aggregate gross unrealized appreciation for all securities in which there was an excess of value over tax cost of $7,694,899 and aggregate gross unrealized depreciation for all securities in which there was an excess of tax cost over value of $13,256,685.
(a) Principal amount stated in US dollars unless otherwise noted.
(b) All or a portion of these securities were on loan (see Notes to Financial Statements). The value of all securities loaned at April 30, 2008 amounted to $26,034,190 which is 6.5% of net assets.
(c) Bond is insured by one of these companies:

Insurance Coverage

As a % of Total Investment Portfolio

Ambac Financial Group, Inc.

0.6%

MBIA Corp.

0.8%

(d) At April 30, 2008, this security has been pledged, in whole or in part, to cover initial margin requirements for open futures contracts.
(e) Affiliated fund managed by Deutsche Investment Management Americas Inc.
(f) Affiliated fund managed by Deutsche Investment Management Americas Inc. The rate shown is the annualized seven-day yield at period end.
(g) Represents collateral held in connection with securities lending. Income earned by the Fund is net of borrower rebates.
(h) Security issued in lieu of interest payment due 12/15/2007, which has been deferred until 6/15/2008. This security is deemed to be non-income producing.

144A: Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers.

LIBOR: Represents the London InterBank Offered Rate.

PIK: Denotes that all or a portion of the income is paid in-kind.

At April 30, 2008, the Fund had unfunded loan commitments of $59,509, which could be extended at the option of the borrower, pursuant to the following loan agreement:

Borrower

Unfunded Loan Commitment ($)

Value ($)

Unrealized Depreciation ($)

Bausch & Lomb, Inc., Term Delay Draw, 4/11/2015

39,800

39,555

(245)

Telesat Canada, Inc., Term Loan B, 10/31/2014

19,709

18,876

(833)

Total

59,509

58,431

(1,078)

At April 30, 2008, open futures contracts purchased were as follows:

Futures

Expiration Date

Contracts

Aggregated Face Value ($)

Value ($)

Unrealized Appreciation/ (Depreciation) ($)

10 Year Canadian Government Bond

6/19/2008

127

14,579,534

14,916,920

337,386

2 Year Federal Republic of Germany Bond

6/6/2008

123

20,224,021

19,943,351

(280,670)

United Kingdom Treasury Bond

6/26/2008

225

48,469,325

48,445,447

(23,878)

10 Year US Treasury Note

6/19/2008

355

41,195,626

41,113,437

(82,189)

2 Year US Treasury Note

6/30/2008

35

7,463,497

7,444,063

(19,434)

Total net unrealized depreciation

(68,785)

At April 30, 2008, open futures contracts sold were as follows:

Futures

Expiration Date

Contracts

Aggregated Face Value ($)

Value ($)

Unrealized Appreciation ($)

10 Year Australian Treasury Bond

6/16/2008

8

747,410

737,914

9,496

10 Year Federal Republic of Germany Bond

6/6/2008

231

41,479,954

41,144,497

335,457

10 Year Japanese Government Bond

6/11/2008

35

46,899,088

45,826,321

1,072,767

Total unrealized appreciation

1,417,720

At April 30, 2008, open credit default swap contract sold was as follows:

Effective/
Expiration Date

Notional Amount ($)

Cash Flows Received by the Fund

Underlying Debt Obligation

Unrealized Appreciation/ (Depreciation) ($)

10/4/2007
12/20/2008

200,0001

Fixed — 3.1%

Ford Motor Co., 6.5%, 8/1/2018

251

10/5/2007
12/20/2008

120,0002

Fixed — 3.15%

Ford Motor Co., 6.5%, 8/1/2018

220

10/22/2007
12/20/2008

395,0003

Fixed — 3.05%

Ford Motor Co., 6.5%, 8/1/2018

883

10/13/2007
12/20/2009

225,0004

Fixed — 3.85%

Ford Motor Co., 6.5%, 8/1/2018

(7,291)

12/13/2007
12/20/2009

220,0004

Fixed — 5.05%

Ford Motor Co., 6.5%, 8/1/2018

(605)

10/4/2007
12/20/2008

210,0005

Fixed — 2.6%

General Motors Corp., 7.125%, 7/15/2013

(3,266)

10/22/2007
12/20/2008

395,0003

Fixed — 3.06%

General Motors Corp., 7.125%, 7/15/2013

(4,204)

10/3/2007
12/20/2008

200,0002

Fixed — 3.2%

General Motors Corp., 7.125%, 7/15/2013

(1,783)

1/28/2008
3/20/2009

305,0003

Fixed — 2.65%

HCA, Inc., 7.7%, 3/20/2009

4,494

2/19/2008
3/20/2009

225,0004

Fixed — 3.8%

HCA, Inc., 7.7%, 6/20/2009

6,363

1/29/2008
3/20/2013

185,0003

Fixed — 3.0%

HCA, Inc., 7.7%, 3/20/2009

5,294

11/21/2007
12/20/2008

220,0004

Fixed — 4.02%

Tenet Healthcare Corp., 7.375%, 2/1/2013

6,852

2/26/2008
3/20/2009

275,0004

Fixed — 5.0%

Tenet Healthcare Corp., 7.375%, 2/1/2013

9,716

12/19/2007
12/20/2008

290,0003

Fixed — 2.9%

Tenet Healthcare Corp., 7.375%, 2/1/2013

5,025

Total net unrealized appreciation

21,949

Counterparties:
1 Goldman Sachs and Co.
2 JPMorgan Chase
3 Lehman Brothers, Inc.
4 Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Teaner & Smith, Inc.
5 Citigroup Global Markets, Inc.

As of April 30, 2008, the Fund had the following open forward foreign currency exchange contracts:

Contracts to Deliver

 

In Exchange For

 

Settlement Date

Unrealized Appreciation ($)

USD

9,902,202

 

AUD

10,703,000

 

6/18/2008

116,479

CHF

18,205,000

 

USD

18,042,616

 

6/18/2008

565,819

EUR

1,836,700

 

USD

2,881,984

 

5/7/2008

14,920

USD

19,053,053

 

EUR

12,274,000

 

6/18/2008

12,967

EUR

499,000

 

USD

775,691

 

6/18/2008

561

GBP

6,400,000

 

USD

12,920,448

 

5/19/2008

235,438

JPY

917,797,000

 

USD

9,180,495

 

6/18/2008

374,650

JPY

467,683,000

 

USD

4,598,201

 

6/18/2008

110,995

USD

7,975,948

 

NOK

41,425,000

 

6/18/2008

76,542

USD

33,470,855

 

SGD

46,000,000

 

6/18/2008

478,487

Total unrealized appreciation

1,986,858

Contracts to Deliver

 

In Exchange For

 

Settlement Date

Unrealized Depreciation ($)

AUD

12,098,000

 

USD

10,886,627

 

6/18/2008

(437,861)

USD

8,353,418

 

CAD

8,249,000

 

6/18/2008

(183,850)

CAD

1,514,000

 

USD

1,482,904

 

6/18/2008

(16,518)

USD

5,182,364

 

CHF

5,253,000

 

6/18/2008

(139,485)

EUR

40,800

 

USD

63,448

 

5/2/2008

(60)

GBP

3,600,000

 

USD

7,080,829

 

5/16/2008

(55,917)

USD

2,263,983

 

GBP

1,121,000

 

6/18/2008

(46,740)

USD

7,443,799

 

JPY

750,000,000

 

5/19/2008

(260,733)

USD

11,453,541

 

NOK

58,649,000

 

6/18/2008

(52,925)

SEK

16,277,000

 

USD

2,670,037

 

6/18/2008

(38,558)

Total unrealized depreciation

(1,232,647)

Currency Abbreviations

AUD Australian Dollar
ARS Argentine Peso
BRL Brazilian Real
CAD Canadian Dollar
CHF Swiss Franc
EUR Euro
GBP British Pound
JPY Japanese Yen
NOK Norwegian Krone
SEK Swedish Krona
SGD Singapore Dollar
USD United States Dollar

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

Financial Statements

Statement of Assets and Liabilities as of April 30, 2008 (Unaudited)

Assets

Investments:

Investments in securities, at value (cost $365,507,242) — including $26,034,190 of securities loaned

$ 362,418,455

Investment in DWS Floating Rate Plus Fund (cost $5,199,492)

4,857,334

Investment in Daily Assets Fund Institutional (cost $26,948,205)*

26,948,205

Investment in Cash Management QP Trust (cost $24,129,093)

24,129,093

Total investments, at value (cost $421,784,032)

418,353,087

Cash

881,084

Foreign currency, at value (cost $758,300)

745,657

Receivable for investments sold

3,114,411

Receivable for Fund shares sold

261,691

Receivable for variation margin on open futures contracts

126,825

Interest receivable

6,217,099

Unrealized appreciation on forward foreign currency exchange contracts

1,986,858

Unrealized appreciation on credit default swap contracts

21,949

Foreign taxes recoverable

259,035

Other assets

51,651

Total assets

432,019,347

Liabilities

Payable for investments purchased

3,792,268

Payable upon return of securities loaned

26,948,205

Payable for Fund shares redeemed

459,932

Unrealized depreciation on unfunded loan commitments

1,078

Unrealized depreciation on forward foreign currency exchange contracts

1,232,647

Net payable on closed forward foreign currency exchange contracts

171,910

Accrued management fee

188,967

Other accrued expenses and payables

471,109

Total liabilities

33,266,116

Net assets, at value

$ 398,753,231

* Represents collateral on securities loaned.

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

Statement of Assets and Liabilities as of April 30, 2008 (Unaudited) (continued)

Net Assets Consist of

Distributions in excess of net investment income

(1,567,676)

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:

Investments

(3,430,945)

Credit default swaps

21,949

Unfunded loan commitments

(1,078)

Futures

1,348,935

Foreign currency

665,564

Accumulated net realized gain (loss)

(93,552,226)

Paid-in capital

495,268,708

Net assets, at value

$ 398,753,231

Net Asset Value

Class A

Net Asset Value and redemption price(a) per share ($350,891,962 ÷ 75,925,326 outstanding shares of beneficial interest, $.01 par value, unlimited number of shares authorized)

$ 4.62

Maximum offering price per share (100 ÷ 95.50 of $4.62)

$ 4.84

Class B

Net Asset Value, offering and redemption price(a) (subject to contingent deferred sales charge) per share ($14,727,005 ÷ 3,185,357 outstanding shares of beneficial interest, $.01 par value, unlimited number of shares authorized)

$ 4.62

Class C

Net Asset Value, offering and redemption price(a) (subject to contingent deferred sales charge) per share ($29,345,126 ÷ 6,308,101 outstanding shares of beneficial interest, $.01 par value, unlimited number of shares authorized)

$ 4.65

Class S

Net Asset Value, offering and redemption price(a) per share ($3,789,138 ÷ 819,284 outstanding shares of beneficial interest, $.01 par value, unlimited number of shares authorized)

$ 4.62

(a) Redemption price per share for shares held less than 15 days is equal to net asset value less a 2% redemption fee.

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

Statement of Operations for the six months ended April 30, 2008 (Unaudited)

Investment Income

Income:
Dividends from DWS Floating Rate Plus Fund

$ 157,591

Interest (net of foreign taxes withheld of $2,267)

10,851,404

Interest — Cash Management QP Trust

773,648

Securities lending income, including income from Daily Assets Fund Institutional, net of borrower rebates

83,288

Total Income

11,865,931

Expenses:
Management fee

1,115,556

Services to shareholders

316,126

Custodian fee

21,256

Distribution and service fees

599,497

Professional fees

54,352

Trustees' fees and expenses

27,861

Reports to shareholders and shareholder meeting

184,352

Registration fees

24,658

Other

49,705

Total expenses before expense reductions

2,393,363

Expense reductions

(44,809)

Total expenses after expense reductions

2,348,554

Net investment income

9,517,377

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

Net realized gain (loss) from:
Investments

1,697,669

Credit default swaps

53,915

Futures

977,771

Foreign currency

627,332

Payments by affiliates (see Note I)

250

Capital gain distribution from DWS Floating Rate Plus Fund

16,234

 

3,373,171

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:
Investments

(5,499,825)

Credit default swaps

20,985

Unfunded loan commitments

(2,858)

Futures

91,394

Foreign currency

(3,058,292)

 

(8,448,596)

Net gain (loss)

(5,075,425)

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

$ 4,441,952

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

Six Months Ended April 30, 2008 (Unaudited)

Year Ended October 31, 2007

Operations:
Net investment income

$ 9,517,377

$ 19,556,711

Net realized gain (loss)

3,373,171

952,738

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(8,448,596)

5,026,175

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

4,441,952

25,535,624

Distributions to shareholders from:
Net investment income:

Class A

(10,055,575)

(19,404,896)

Class B

(389,830)

(991,297)

Class C

(725,188)

(1,284,943)

Class S

(102,573)

(145,958)

Net realized gains:

Class A

(1,414,866)

Class B

(98,942)

Class C

(101,090)

Class S

(7,878)

Total distributions

(11,273,166)

(23,449,870)

Fund share transactions:
Proceeds from shares sold

48,486,326

88,409,315

Reinvestment of distributions

8,397,993

16,725,128

Cost of shares redeemed

(44,322,559)

(73,618,453)

Redemption fees

3,332

18,633

Net increase (decrease) in net assets from Fund share transactions

12,565,092

31,534,623

Increase (decrease) in net assets

5,733,878

33,620,377

Net assets at beginning of period

393,019,353

359,398,976

Net assets at end of period (including distributions in excess of net investment income and undistributed net investment income of $1,567,676 and $188,113, respectively)

$ 398,753,231

$ 393,019,353

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

Financial Highlights

Class A

Years Ended October 31,

2008a

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

Selected Per Share Data

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 4.70

$ 4.68

$ 4.69

$ 4.76

$ 4.53

$ 4.08

Income (loss) from investment operations:

Net investment incomeb

.11

.25

.24

.26

.28

.27

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

(.06)

.07

.13

(.05)

.25

.49

Total from investment operations

.05

.32

.37

.21

.53

.76

Less distributions from:

Net investment income

(.13)

(.28)

(.38)

(.28)

(.30)

(.10)

Net realized gains

(.02)

Tax return of capital

(.21)

Total distributions

(.13)

(.30)

(.38)

(.28)

(.30)

(.31)

Redemption fees

.00***

.00***

.00***

.00***

Net asset value, end of period

$ 4.62

$ 4.70

$ 4.68

$ 4.69

$ 4.76

$ 4.53

Total Return (%)c

1.20d**

7.01d

8.37d

4.48

12.01

19.05

Ratios to Average Net Assets and Supplemental Data

Net assets, end of period ($ millions)

351

345

314

320

334

329

Ratio of expenses before expense reductions (%)

1.10*

1.08

1.14

1.16

1.05

1.12

Ratio of expenses after expense reductions (%)

1.08*

1.07

1.13

1.16

1.05

1.12

Ratio of net investment income (%)

4.97*

5.30

5.24

5.53

6.01

6.11

Portfolio turnover rate (%)

80**

137

175

130

169

180

a For the six months ended April 30, 2008 (Unaudited).
b Based on average shares outstanding during the period.
c Total return does not reflect the effect of any sales charges.
d Total return would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced.
* Annualized
** Not annualized
*** Amount is less than $.005.

Class B

Years Ended October 31,

2008a

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

Selected Per Share Data

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 4.71

$ 4.68

$ 4.69

$ 4.76

$ 4.52

$ 4.08

Income (loss) from investment operations:

Net investment incomeb

.09

.21

.20

.22

.24

.23

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

(.06)

.08

.13

(.05)

.25

.48

Total from investment operations

.03

.29

.33

.17

.49

.71

Less distributions from:

Net investment income

(.12)

(.24)

(.34)

(.24)

(.25)

(.08)

Net realized gains

(.02)

Tax return of capital

(.19)

Total distributions

(.12)

(.26)

(.34)

(.24)

(.25)

(.27)

Redemption fees

.00***

.00***

.00***

.00***

Net asset value, end of period

$ 4.62

$ 4.71

$ 4.68

$ 4.69

$ 4.76

$ 4.52

Total Return (%)c

.59d**

6.37d

7.45d

3.53d

11.03

18.08

Ratios to Average Net Assets and Supplemental Data

Net assets, end of period ($ millions)

15

17

22

29

46

71

Ratio of expenses before expense reductions (%)

1.97*

1.86

2.16

2.22

1.94

1.94

Ratio of expenses after expense reductions (%)

1.90*

1.85

1.94

2.04

1.94

1.94

Ratio of net investment income (%)

4.15*

4.52

4.43

4.65

5.12

5.29

Portfolio turnover rate (%)

80**

137

175

130

169

180

a For the six months ended April 30, 2008 (Unaudited).
b Based on average shares outstanding during the period.
c Total return does not reflect the effect of any sales charges.
d Total return would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced.
* Annualized
** Not annualized
*** Amount is less than $.005.

Class C

Years Ended October 31,

2008a

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

Selected Per Share Data

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 4.73

$ 4.71

$ 4.72

$ 4.79

$ 4.56

$ 4.11

Income (loss) from investment operations:

Net investment incomeb

.10

.21

.20

.22

.24

.24

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

(.06)

.07

.13

(.05)

.25

.49

Total from investment operations

.04

.28

.33

.17

.49

.73

Less distributions from:

Net investment income

(.12)

(.24)

(.34)

(.24)

(.26)

(.09)

Net realized gains

(.02)

Tax return of capital

(.19)

Total distributions

(.12)

(.26)

(.34)

(.24)

(.26)

(.28)

Redemption fees

.00***

.00***

.00***

.00***

Net asset value, end of period

$ 4.65

$ 4.73

$ 4.71

$ 4.72

$ 4.79

$ 4.56

Total Return (%)c

.83d**

6.16d

7.41d

3.58

11.08

18.20

Ratios to Average Net Assets and Supplemental Data

Net assets, end of period ($ millions)

29

28

22

20

20

20

Ratio of expenses before expense reductions (%)

1.88*

1.84

1.94

2.04

1.90

1.79

Ratio of expenses after expense reductions (%)

1.86*

1.84

1.93

2.04

1.90

1.79

Ratio of net investment income (%)

4.19*

4.53

4.44

4.65

5.16

5.44

Portfolio turnover rate (%)

80**

137

175

130

169

180

a For the six months ended April 30, 2008 (Unaudited).
b Based on average shares outstanding during the period.
c Total return does not reflect the effect of any sales charges.
d Total return would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced.
* Annualized
** Not annualized
*** Amount is less than $.005.

Class S

Years Ended October 31,

2008a

2007

2006

2005b

Selected Per Share Data

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 4.70

$ 4.68

$ 4.69

$ 4.88

Income (loss) from investment operations:

Net investment incomec

.12

.26

.25

.20

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

(.06)

.07

.13

(.17)

Total from investment operations

.06

.33

.38

.03

Less distributions from:

Net investment income

(.14)

(.29)

(.39)

(.22)

Net realized gains

(.02)

Total distributions

(.14)

(.31)

(.39)

(.22)

Redemption fees

.00***

.00***

.00***

.00***

Net asset value, end of period

$ 4.62

$ 4.70

$ 4.68

$ 4.69

Total Return (%)

1.52d**

7.25d

8.57d

.54**

Ratios to Average Net Assets and Supplemental Data

Net assets, end of period ($ millions)

4

3

2

1

Ratio of expenses before expense reductions (%)

.96*

.92

.96

1.01*

Ratio of expenses after expense reductions (%)

.90*

.90

.95

1.01*

Ratio of net investment income (%)

5.15*

5.47

5.42

5.76*

Portfolio turnover rate (%)

80**

137

175

130

a For the six months ended April 30, 2008 (Unaudited).
b For the period from February 1, 2005 (commencement of operations of Class S shares) to October 31, 2005.
c Based on average shares outstanding during the period.
d Total return would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced.
* Annualized
** Not annualized
*** Amount is less than $.005.

Notes to Financial Statements (Unaudited)

A. Significant Accounting Policies

DWS Strategic Income Fund (the ``Fund'') is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the ``1940 Act''), as an open-end, diversified management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust.

The Fund offers multiple classes of shares which provide investors with different purchase options. Class A shares are offered to investors subject to an initial sales charge. Class B shares are offered to investors without an initial sales charge but are subject to higher ongoing expenses than Class A shares and a contingent deferred sales charge payable upon certain redemptions. Class B shares automatically convert to Class A shares six years after issuance. Class C shares are offered to investors without an initial sales charge but are subject to higher ongoing expenses than Class A shares and a contingent deferred sales charge payable upon certain redemptions within one year of purchase. Class C shares do not convert into another class. Class S shares are not subject to initial or contingent deferred sales charges and are generally not available to new investors except under certain circumstances.

Investment income, realized and unrealized gains and losses, and certain fund-level expenses and expense reductions, if any, are borne pro rata on the basis of relative net assets by the holders of all classes of shares, except that each class bears certain expenses unique to that class such as distribution and service fees, services to shareholders and certain other class-specific expenses. Differences in class-level expenses may result in payment of different per share dividends by class. All shares of the Fund have equal rights with respect to voting subject to class-specific arrangements.

The Fund's financial statements are prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America which require the use of management estimates. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The policies described below are followed consistently by the Fund in the preparation of its financial statements.

Security Valuation. Investments are stated at value determined as of the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange on each day the exchange is open for trading. Debt securities are valued by independent pricing services approved by the Trustees of the Fund. If the pricing services are unable to provide valuations, securities are valued at the most recent bid quotation or evaluated price, as applicable, obtained from a broker-dealer. Such services may use various pricing techniques which take into account appropriate factors such as yield, quality, coupon rate, maturity, type of issue, trading characteristics and other data, as well as broker quotes.

Equity securities are valued at the most recent sale price or official closing price reported on the exchange (US or foreign) or over-the-counter market on which the security is traded most extensively. Securities for which no sales are reported are valued at the calculated mean between the most recent bid and asked quotations on the relevant market or, if a mean cannot be determined, at the most recent bid quotation.

Money market instruments purchased with an original or remaining maturity of sixty days or less, maturing at par, are valued at amortized cost. Investments in open-end investment companies and Cash Management QP Trust are valued at their net asset value each business day.

Securities and other assets for which market quotations are not readily available or for which the above valuation procedures are deemed not to reflect fair value are valued in a manner that is intended to reflect their fair value as determined in accordance with procedures approved by the Trustees.

New Accounting Pronouncements. In September 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") released Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157, "Fair Value Measurements" ("FAS 157"). FAS 157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and expands disclosures about fair value measurements. FAS 157 is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. As of April 30, 2008, management does not believe the adoption of FAS 157 will impact the amounts reported in the financial statements, however, additional disclosures will be required about the inputs used to develop the measurements of fair value and the effect of certain of the measurements reported in the statement of operations for a fiscal period.

In addition, in March 2008, FASB issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 161 ("FAS 161") Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities, an amendment of FASB Statement No. 133. FAS 161 requires enhanced disclosure about an entity's derivative and hedging activities. FAS 161 is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2008. Management is currently evaluating the impact the adoption of FAS 161 will have on the Fund's financial statement disclosures.

Securities Lending. The Fund may lend securities to financial institutions. The Fund retains beneficial ownership of the securities it has loaned and continues to receive interest and dividends paid by the issuer of securities and to participate in any changes in their market value. The Fund requires the borrowers of the securities to maintain collateral with the Fund consisting of liquid, unencumbered assets having a value at least equal to the value of the securities loaned. The Fund may invest the cash collateral into a joint trading account in an affiliated money market fund pursuant to Exemptive Orders issued by the SEC. The Fund receives compensation for lending its securities either in the form of fees or by earning interest on invested cash collateral net of borrower rebates and fees paid to the lending agent. Either the Fund or the borrower may terminate the loan. The Fund is subject to all investment risks associated with the value of any cash collateral received, including, but not limited to, interest rate, credit and liquidity risk associated with such investments.

Senior Bank Debt. Senior loans are portions of loans originated by banks and sold in pieces to investors. These US dollar-denominated fixed and floating rate loans ("Loans") in which the Fund invests, are arranged through private negotiations between the borrower and one or more financial institutions ("Lenders"). The Fund invests in such Loans in the form of participations in Loans ("Participations") or assignments of all or a portion of loans from third parties ("Assignments"). Participations typically result in the Fund having a contractual relationship only with the Lender, not with the borrower. The Fund has the right to receive payments of principal, interest and any fees to which it is entitled from the Lender selling the Participation and only upon receipt by the Lender of the payments from the borrower. In connection with purchasing Participations, the Fund generally has no right to enforce compliance by the borrower with the terms of the loan agreement relating to the Loan, nor any rights of set-off against the borrower, and the Fund will not benefit directly from any collateral supporting the Loan in which it has purchased the Participation. As a result, the Fund assumes the credit risk of both the borrower and the Lender that is selling the Participation. Assignments typically result in the Fund having a direct contractual relationship with the borrower, and the Fund may enforce compliance by the borrower with the terms of the loan agreement. All Senior Loans involve interest rate risk, liquidity risk and credit risk, including the potential default or insolvency of the borrower.

Credit Default Swap Contracts. A credit default swap is a contract between a buyer and a seller of protection against a pre-defined credit event. The Fund may buy or sell credit default swap contracts to seek to increase the Fund's income, to add leverage to the portfolio, or to hedge the risk of default on portfolio securities. As a seller in the credit default swap contract, the Fund would be required to pay the par (or other agreed-upon) value of the referenced debt obligation to the counterparty in the event of a default by a third party, such as a US or foreign corporate issuer, on the debt obligation, which would likely result in a loss to the Fund. 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 no default occurs, the Fund would keep the stream of payments and would have no payment obligations. The Fund may also buy credit default swap contracts in order to hedge against the risk of default of debt securities, in which case the Fund would function as the counterparty referenced above. This would involve the risk that the contract may expire worthless. It would also involve credit risk — that the seller may fail to satisfy its payment obligations to the Fund in the event of a default. When the Fund sells a credit default swap contract it will "cover" its commitment. This may be achieved by, among other methods, maintaining cash or liquid assets equal to the aggregate notional value of the underlying debt obligations for all outstanding credit default swap contracts sold by the Fund.

Credit default swap contracts are marked to market daily based upon quotations from the counterparty and the change in value, if any, is recorded daily as unrealized gain or loss. An upfront payment made by the Fund, if any, is recorded as an asset on the statement of assets and liabilities. An upfront payment received by the Fund, if any, is recorded as a liability on the statement of assets and liabilities. Under the terms of the credit default swap contracts, the Fund receives or makes payments semi-annually based on a specified interest rate on a fixed notional amount. These payments are recorded as a realized gain or loss on the statement of operations. Payments received or made as a result of a credit event or termination of the contract are recognized, net of a proportional amount of the upfront payment, as realized gains or losses.

Foreign Currency Translations. The books and records of the Fund are maintained in US dollars. Investment securities and other assets and liabilities denominated in a foreign currency are translated into US dollars at the prevailing exchange rates at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and expenses are translated into US dollars at the prevailing exchange rates on the respective dates of the transactions.

Net realized and unrealized gains and losses on foreign currency transactions represent net gains and losses between trade and settlement dates on securities transactions, the disposition of forward foreign currency exchange contracts and foreign currencies, and the difference between the amount of net investment income accrued and the US dollar amount actually received. That portion of both realized and unrealized gains and losses on investments that results from fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates is not separately disclosed but is included with net realized and unrealized gain/appreciation and loss/depreciation on investments.

Forward Foreign Currency Exchange Contracts. A forward foreign currency exchange contract ("forward currency contract") is a commitment to purchase or sell a foreign currency at the settlement date at a negotiated rate. The Fund may enter into forward currency contracts in order to hedge its exposure to changes in foreign currency exchange rates on its foreign currency denominated portfolio holdings and to facilitate transactions in foreign currency denominated securities.

Forward currency contracts are valued at the prevailing forward exchange rate of the underlying currencies and unrealized gain (loss) is recorded daily. Sales and purchases of forward currency contracts having the same settlement date and broker are offset and any gain (loss) is realized on the date of offset; otherwise, gain (loss) is realized on settlement date. Realized and unrealized gains and losses which represent the difference between the value of a forward currency contract to buy and a forward currency contract to sell are included in net realized and unrealized gain (loss) from foreign currency related transactions.

Certain risks may arise upon entering into forward currency contracts from the potential inability of counterparties to meet the terms of their contracts. Additionally, when utilizing forward currency contracts to hedge, the Fund gives up the opportunity to profit from favorable exchange rate movements during the term of the contract.

Futures Contracts. A futures contract is an agreement between a buyer or seller and an established futures exchange or its clearinghouse in which the buyer or seller agrees to take or make a delivery of a specific amount of a financial instrument at a specified price on a specific date (settlement date). The Fund may enter into futures contracts part of the Fund's global tactical asset allocation strategy.

Upon entering into a futures contract, the Fund is required to deposit with a financial intermediary an amount ("initial margin") equal to a certain percentage of the face value indicated in the futures contract. Subsequent payments ("variation margin") are made or received by the Fund dependent upon the daily fluctuations in the value of the underlying security and are recorded for financial reporting purposes as unrealized gains or losses by the Fund. When entering into a closing transaction, the Fund will realize a gain or loss equal to the difference between the value of the futures contract to sell and the futures contract to buy. Futures contracts are valued at the most recent settlement price.

Certain risks may arise upon entering into futures contracts, including the risk that an illiquid secondary market will limit the Fund's ability to close out a futures contract prior to the settlement date and that a change in the value of a futures contract may not correlate exactly with the changes in the value of the securities or currencies hedged. When utilizing futures contracts to hedge, the Fund gives up the opportunity to profit from favorable price movements in the hedged positions during the term of the contract.

Options. An option contract is a contract in which the writer of the option grants the buyer of the option the right to purchase from (call option), or sell to (put option), the writer a designated instrument at a specified price within a specified period of time. Certain options, including options on indices, will require cash settlement by the Fund if the option is exercised. The Fund may enter into option contracts in order to hedge against potential adverse price movements in the value of portfolio assets; as a temporary substitute for selling selected investments; to lock in the purchase price of a security or currency which it expects to purchase in the near future; as a temporary substitute for purchasing selected investments; and to enhance potential gain.

The liability representing the Fund's obligation under an exchange traded written option or investment in a purchased option is valued at the last sale price or, in the absence of a sale, the mean between the closing bid and asked prices or at the most recent asked price (bid for purchased options) if no bid and asked price are available. Over-the-counter written or purchased options are valued using dealer supplied quotations. Gain or loss is recognized when the option contract expires or is closed.

If the Fund writes a covered call option, the Fund foregoes, in exchange for the premium, the opportunity to profit during the option period from an increase in the value of the underlying security above the exercise price. If the Fund writes a put option it accepts the risk of a decline in the value of the underlying security below the exercise price. Over-the-counter options have the risk of the potential inability of counterparties to meet the terms of their contracts. The Fund's maximum exposure to purchased options is limited to the premium initially paid. In addition, certain risks may arise upon entering into option contracts including the risk that an illiquid secondary market will limit the Fund's ability to close out an option contract prior to the expiration date and that a change in the value of the option contract may not correlate exactly with changes in the value of the securities or currencies hedged.

Federal Income Taxes. The Fund's policy is to comply with the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended, which are applicable to regulated investment companies, and to distribute all of its taxable income to its shareholders.

At October 31, 2007, the Fund had a net tax basis capital loss carryforward of approximately $93,950,000 which may be applied against any realized net taxable capital gains of each succeeding year until fully utilized or until October 31, 2008 ($25,665,000), October 31, 2009 ($20,682,000), October 31, 2010 ($38,904,000), October 31, 2011 ($2,469,000), October 31, 2012 ($1,247,000) and October 31, 2014 ($4,983,000), the respective expiration dates, whichever occurs first.

The Fund has reviewed the tax positions for each of the three open tax years as of October 31, 2007 and has determined that no provision for income tax is required in the Fund's financial statements. The Fund's federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remain subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service.

Distribution of Income and Gains. Net investment income of the Fund is declared and distributed to shareholders monthly. Net realized gains from investment transactions, in excess of available capital loss carryforwards, would be taxable to the Fund if not distributed, and, therefore, will be distributed to shareholders at least annually.

The timing and characterization of certain income and capital gains distributions are determined annually in accordance with federal tax regulations which may differ from accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These differences primarily relate to certain securities sold at a loss, premium amortization on debt securities, investments in futures, forward currency contracts and recognition of certain foreign currency gain (loss) as ordinary income. As a result, net investment income (loss) and net realized gain (loss) on investment transactions for a reporting period may differ significantly from distributions during such period. Accordingly, the Fund may periodically make reclassifications among certain of its capital accounts without impacting the net asset value of the Fund.

The tax character of current year distributions will be determined at the end of the current fiscal year.

Redemption Fees. The Fund imposes a redemption fee of 2% of the total redemption amount on all Fund shares redeemed or exchanged within 15 days of buying them, either by purchase or exchange. This fee is assessed and retained by the Fund for the benefit of the remaining shareholders. The redemption fee is accounted for as an addition to paid-in capital.

Contingencies. In the normal course of business, the Fund may enter into contracts with service providers that contain general indemnification clauses. The Fund's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may be made against the Fund that have not yet been made. However, based on experience, the Fund expects the risk of loss to be remote.

Other. Investment transactions are accounted for on a trade date plus one basis for daily net asset value calculations. However, for financial reporting purposes, investment transactions are reported on trade date. Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis net of foreign withholding taxes. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date net of foreign withholding taxes. Certain dividends from foreign securities may be recorded subsequent to the ex-dividend date as soon as the Fund is informed of such dividends. Realized gains and losses from investment transactions are recorded on an identified cost basis. All premiums and discounts are amortized/accreted for financial reporting purposes, with the exception of securities in default of principal.

B. Purchases and Sales of Securities

During the six months ended April 30, 2008, purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term investments and US Treasury securities) aggregated $96,579,226 and $70,125,415, respectively. Purchases and sales of US Treasury securities aggregated $199,094,275 and $211,562,662, respectively.

C. Related Parties

Management Agreement. Under the Investment Management Agreement with Deutsche Investment Management Americas Inc. ("DIMA" or the "Advisor"), an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Deutsche Bank AG, the Advisor directs the investments of the Fund in accordance with its investment objectives, policies and restrictions. The Advisor determines the securities, instruments and other contracts relating to investments to be purchased, sold or entered into by the Fund. In addition to portfolio management services, the Advisor provides certain administrative services in accordance with the Investment Management Agreement.

Under the Investment Management Agreement with the Advisor, the Fund pays a monthly management fee based on the Fund's average daily net assets, computed and accrued daily and payable monthly at the following annual rates:

First $250 million of the Fund's average daily net assets

.580%

Next $750 million of such net assets

.550%

Next $1.5 billion of such net assets

.530%

Next $2.5 billion of such net assets

.510%

Next $2.5 billion of such net assets

.480%

Next $2.5 billion of such net assets

.460%

Next $2.5 billion of such net assets

.440%

Over $12.5 billion of such net assets

.420%

The Fund did not impose a portion of its management fees by an amount equal to the amount of management fee borne by the Fund as a shareholder of the DWS Floating Rate Plus Fund ("DWS affiliated mutual fund").

Accordingly, for the six months ended April 30, 2008, the Advisor waived a portion of its management fee pursuant to the Investment Management Agreement aggregating $15,633 and the amount charged aggregated $1,099,923 which was equivalent to an annualized effective rate of 0.56% of the Fund's average daily net assets.

For the period from November 1, 2007 through September 30, 2008, the Advisor has contractually agreed to waive all or a portion of its management fee and reimburse or pay certain operating expenses of the Fund (excluding certain expenses such as extraordinary expenses, taxes, brokerage, interest and indirect expenses of underlying DWS funds) to the extent necessary to maintain the operating expenses of each class as follows:

Class A

1.12%

Class B

1.87%

Class C

1.87%

Class S

.87%

Service Provider Fees. DWS Scudder Investments Service Company ("DWS-SISC"), an affiliate of the Advisor, is the transfer agent, dividend-paying agent and shareholder service agent of the Fund. Pursuant to a sub-transfer agency agreement between DWS-SISC and DST Systems, Inc. ("DST"), DWS-SISC has delegated certain transfer agent, dividend-paying agent and shareholder service agent functions to DST. DWS-SISC compensates DST out of the shareholder servicing fee it receives from the Fund. For the six months ended April 30, 2008, the amounts charged to the Fund by DWS-SISC were as follows:

Service Provider Fee

Total Aggregated

Waived

Unpaid at April 30, 2008

Class A

$ 207,327

$ —

$ 87,337

Class B

16,960

4,154

7,839

Class C

18,065

8,559

Class S

2,732

580

409

 

$ 245,084

$ 4,734

$ 104,144

Distribution and Service Fees. Under the Fund's Class B and Class C 12b-1 Plans, DWS Scudder Distributors, Inc. ("DWS-SDI"), an affiliate of the Advisor, receives a fee ("Distribution Fee") of 0.75% of average daily net assets of each of Class B and C shares. In accordance with the Fund's Underwriting and Distribution Services Agreement, DWS-SDI enters into related selling group agreements with various firms at various rates for sales of Class B and C shares. For the six months ended April 30, 2008, the Distribution Fee was as follows:

Distribution Fee

Total Aggregated

Unpaid at April 30, 2008

Class B

$ 58,382

$ 8,826

Class C

106,976

18,311

 

$ 165,358

$ 27,137

In addition, DWS-SDI provides information and administrative services for a fee ("Service Fee") to Class A, B and C shareholders at an annual rate of up to 0.25% of average daily net assets for each such class. DWS-SDI in turn has various agreements with financial services firms that provide these services and pays these fees based upon the assets of shareholder accounts the firms service. For the six months ended April 30, 2008, the Service Fee was as follows:

Service Fee

Total Aggregated

Unpaid at April 30, 2008

Annualized Effective Rate

Class A

$ 379,449

$ 132,801

.22%

Class B

19,332

6,025

.25%

Class C

35,358

11,841

.25%

 

$ 434,139

$ 150,667

 

Underwriting and Contingent Deferred Sales Charge. DWS-SDI is the principal underwriter for the Fund. Underwriting commissions paid in connection with the distribution of Class A shares for the six months ended April 30, 2008 aggregated $17,868.

In addition, DWS-SDI receives any contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC") from Class B share redemptions occurring within six years of purchase and Class C share redemptions occurring within one year of purchase. There is no such charge upon redemption of any share appreciation or reinvested dividends. The CDSC is based on declining rates ranging from 4% to 1% for Class B and 1% for Class C, of the value of the shares redeemed. For the six months ended April 30, 2008, the CDSC for Class B and C shares aggregated $14,728 and $1,846, respectively. A deferred sales charge of up to 0.85% is assessed on certain redemptions of Class A shares. For the six months ended April 30, 2008, DWS-SDI received $843 for Class A shares.

Typesetting and Filing Service Fees. Under an agreement with DIMA, DIMA is compensated for providing typesetting and certain regulatory, filing services to the Fund. For the six months ended April 30, 2008, the amount charged to the Fund by DIMA included in the Statement of Operations under "reports to shareholders and shareholder meeting" aggregated $21,438, of which $10,964 is unpaid.

Trustees' Fees and Expenses. The Fund paid each Trustee not affiliated with the Advisor retainer fees plus specified amounts for various committee services and for the Board Chairperson.

In connection with the board consolidation on April 1, 2008, of the two DWS Funds Boards of Trustees, certain Independent Board Members retired prior to their normal retirement date, and received a one-time retirement benefit. DIMA has agreed to reimburse the Funds for the cost of this benefit. During the period ended April 30, 2008, the Fund paid its allocated portion of the retirement benefit of $19,545 to the non-continuing Independent Board Members, and the Fund was reimbursed by DIMA for this payment.

Cash Management QP Trust. Pursuant to an Exemptive Order issued by the SEC, the Fund may invest in the Cash Management QP Trust (the "QP Trust") and other affiliated funds managed by the Advisor. The QP Trust seeks to provide as high a level of current income as is consistent with the preservation of capital and the maintenance of liquidity. The QP Trust does not pay the Advisor a management fee for the affiliated funds' investments in the QP Trust.

D. Fee Reductions

For the six months ended April 30, 2008, the Advisor agreed to reimburse the Fund $875, which represented a portion of the expected fee savings for the Advisor through December 31, 2007, related to the outsourcing by the Advisor of certain administrative services to an unaffiliated service provider.

In addition, the Fund has entered into an arrangement with its custodian and transfer agent whereby credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances are used to reduce a portion of the Fund's custodian expenses. During the six months ended April 30, 2008, the Fund's custodian fee was reduced by $2,204 and $1,818, respectively, for the custody and transfer agent credits earned.

E. Line of Credit

The Fund and other affiliated funds (the ``Participants'') share in a $490 million revolving credit facility administered by JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. for temporary or emergency purposes, including the meeting of redemption requests that otherwise might require the untimely disposition of securities. The Participants are charged an annual commitment fee which is allocated based on net assets, among each of the Participants. Interest is calculated at the Federal Funds Rate plus 0.35 percent. The Fund may borrow up to a maximum of 33 percent of its net assets under the agreement.

F. Investing in High-Yield Securities

Investing in high-yield securities may involve greater risks and considerations not typically associated with investing in US Government bonds and other high quality fixed-income securities. These securities are non-investment grade securities, often referred to as "junk bonds." Economic downturns may disrupt the high-yield market and impair the ability of issuers to repay principal and interest. Also, an increase in interest rates would likely have an adverse impact on the value of such obligations. Moreover, high-yield securities may be less liquid due to the extent that there is no established retail secondary market and because of a decline in the value of such securities.

G. Investing in Emerging Markets

Investing in emerging markets may involve special risks and considerations not typically associated with investing in the United States of America. These risks include revaluation of currencies, high rates of inflation, repatriation restrictions on income and capital, and future adverse political, social and economic developments. Moreover, securities issued in these markets may be less liquid, subject to government ownership controls or delayed settlements and may have prices more volatile than those of comparable securities of issuers in the United States of America.

H. Share Transactions

The following table summarizes share and dollar activity in the Fund:

 

Six Months Ended April 30, 2008

Year Ended October 31, 2007

 

Shares

Dollars

Shares

Dollars

Shares sold

Class A

8,540,144

$ 39,512,408

15,141,528

$ 70,645,230

Class B

448,314

2,068,068

730,944

3,401,588

Class C

1,230,482

5,718,043

2,660,083

12,472,733

Class S

256,314

1,187,807

404,542

1,889,764

 

 

$ 48,486,326

 

$ 88,409,315

Shares issued to shareholders in reinvestment of distributions

Class A

1,652,977

$ 7,580,517

3,210,062

$ 14,954,294

Class B

56,951

261,516

152,724

712,112

Class C

103,030

475,904

201,434

944,367

Class S

17,449

80,056

24,546

114,355

 

 

$ 8,397,993

 

$ 16,725,128

Shares redeemed

Class A

(7,640,627)

$ (35,242,229)

(12,057,676)

$ (56,147,373)

Class B

(936,924)

(4,327,279)

(2,039,653)

(9,494,648)

Class C

(950,140)

(4,409,828)

(1,534,319)

(7,191,030)

Class S

(74,424)

(343,223)

(167,698)

(785,402)

 

 

$ (44,322,559)

 

$ (73,618,453)

Redemption fees

 

$ 3,332

 

$ 18,633

Net increase (decrease)

Class A

2,552,494

$ 11,852,377

6,293,914

$ 29,469,301

Class B

(431,659)

(1,997,695)

(1,155,985)

(5,380,914)

Class C

383,372

1,785,770

1,327,198

6,227,461

Class S

199,339

924,640

261,390

1,218,775

 

 

$ 12,565,092

 

$ 31,534,623

I. Payments made by Affiliates

During the six months ended April 30, 2008, the Advisor fully reimbursed the Fund $250 for losses incurred on trades executed incorrectly. The amount of the loss was less than 0.01% of the Fund's average net assets thus having no impact on the Fund's total return.

Shareholder Meeting Results

The Special Meeting of Shareholders of DWS Strategic Income Fund (the "Fund") was held on March 31, 2008 at the offices of Deutsche Asset Management, 345 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10154. The following matters were voted upon by the shareholders of said Fund (the resulting votes are presented below):

1. Election of the Board of Trustees.

 

Number of Votes:

Trustee

For

Withheld

John W. Ballantine

53,270,725.4991

1,993,287.8030

Henry P. Becton, Jr.

53,259,450.3381

2,004,562.9640

Dawn-Marie Driscoll

53,288,660.6081

1,975,352.6940

Keith R. Fox

53,277,391.4051

1,986,621.8970

Paul K. Freeman

53,292,983.0801

1,971,030.2220

Kenneth C. Froewiss

53,290,376.5101

1,973,636.7920

Richard J. Herring

53,300,557.7231

1,963,455.5790

William McClayton

53,285,719.4731

1,978,293.8290

Rebecca W. Rimel

53,289,559.3301

1,974,453.9720

William N. Searcy, Jr.

53,278,905.3891

1,985,107.9130

Jean Gleason Stromberg

53,292,475.2791

1,971,538.0230

Robert H. Wadsworth

53,279,803.7631

1,984,209.5390

Axel Schwarzer

53,277,474.4911

1,986,538.8110

2. Approval of an Amended and Restated Investment Management Agreement.

Number of Votes:

For

Against

Abstain

39,172,748.8701

1,539,446.9440

2,706,339.4880

3. Approval of a Subadvisor Approval Policy.

Number of Votes:

For

Against

Abstain

39,001,945.4221

1,709,820.3130

2,706,769.5670

4. Approval of the Revised Fundamental Investment Policy regarding Commodities.

Number of Votes:

For

Against

Abstain

38,995,423.9561

1,654,088.5000

2,769,022.8460

Investment Management Agreement Approval

On November 14, 2007, the Board, including all the Independent Trustees, approved an Amended and Restated Investment Management Agreement (the "Amended Management Agreement") with respect to the Fund. The Amended Management Agreement and an Administrative Services Agreement were presented to the Board and considered by it as part of a broader program initiated by DIMA to simplify and standardize the expense structures and related contracts for the DWS Funds.

The Board conducted a thorough review of the potential implications of the Amended Management Agreement and Administrative Services Agreement on the Fund's shareholders. The Independent Trustees met on several occasions to review and discuss the Amended Management Agreement and Administrative Services Agreement, both among themselves and with representatives of DIMA. They were assisted in this review by their independent legal counsel.

In approving the Amended Management Agreement, the Board considered the following factors, among others:

The proposed arrangements would facilitate uniformity and conform management and administrative fee structures across all DWS Funds.

The standardization and simplification of contract provisions and fees charged to the DWS Funds would reduce the risks of operational and compliance errors.

The aggregate fee paid by the Fund to DIMA will remain the same under the Amended Management Agreement and Administrative Services Agreement, although the separation of the investment management services and general administrative services provided by DIMA into two separate contracts, as is currently the case for certain other DWS Funds, would provide greater flexibility in the future to adjust the administrative services arrangements of the Fund, including increasing the fees paid for administrative services, without incurring the cost of a shareholder meeting.

The overall scope of the services being provided by DIMA and the standard of care applicable to those services would not be reduced as a result of restructuring the agreements.

The current expense limitation agreement would remain in place for the Fund.

The Board also considered that it renewed the Current Investment Management Agreement (the "Current Management Agreement") for the Fund as part of its annual contract renewal process in September 2007. As part of that renewal process, the Board requested and evaluated all information it deemed reasonably necessary to evaluate the Current Management Agreement. Over the course of several months, the Contract Review Committee, in coordination with the Fixed-Income Oversight Committee and the Operations Committee of the Board, reviewed comprehensive materials received from DIMA, independent third parties and independent legal counsel. These materials included an analysis of the Fund's performance, fees and expenses, and profitability compiled by an independent fee consultant. The Board also received extensive information throughout the year regarding performance and operating results for the Fund. Based on their evaluation of the information provided, the Committees presented their findings and recommendations to the Independent Trustees as a group. The Independent Trustees then reviewed the Committees' findings and recommendations and presented their recommendations to the Board. Throughout their consideration of the Current Management Agreement, the Independent Trustees were advised by their independent legal counsel and by an independent fee consultant.

In connection with its review of the Amended Management Agreement, the Board considered DIMA's representation that the Board may rely on and take into account the information provided in connection with the renewal of the Current Management Agreement for the Fund. Accordingly, the Board took note of the following factors, among others, that it considered in approving the renewal of the Current Management Agreement for the Fund: (1) the nature, quality and extent of services provided by DIMA; (2) the management fee rate, operating expenses and total expense ratios; (3) the pre-tax profits realized by DIMA in managing the Fund; (4) the benefits to the Fund from any economies of scale; and (5) the character and amount of other incidental benefits realized by DIMA and its affiliates. With respect to these factors, the Board reached the following conclusions in approving the renewal of the Current Management Agreement for the Fund: (1) the nature, quality and extent of services provided by DIMA historically have been and continue to be satisfactory; (2) the management fees, coupled with DIMA's commitment to cap expenses, were reasonable and appropriate in light of the nature, quality and extent of services provided by DIMA; (3) the pre-tax profits realized by DIMA were not unreasonable; (4) the management fee schedule, together with the expense cap, reflects an appropriate level of sharing of any economies of scale; and (5) the management fees were reasonable in light of the fallout benefits to DIMA. The Board believes that the factors considered and the conclusions that were reached in connection with the renewal of the Current Management Agreement are relevant in approving the Amended Management Agreement.

Based on all of the information considered and the conclusions reached, the Board determined that the terms of the Amended Management Agreement are fair and reasonable and that the approval of the Amended Management Agreement is in the best interests of the Fund. No single factor was determinative in the Board's analysis.

Summary of Management Fee Evaluation by Independent Fee Consultant

October 26, 2007

Pursuant to an Order entered into by Deutsche Investment Management Americas and affiliates (collectively, "DeAM") with the Attorney General of New York, I, Thomas H. Mack, have been appointed the Independent Fee Consultant for the DWS Scudder Funds. My duties include preparing an annual written evaluation of the management fees DeAM charges the Funds, considering among other factors the management fees charged by other mutual fund companies for like services, management fees DeAM charges other clients for like services, DeAM's costs of supplying services under the management agreements and related profit margins, possible economies of scale if a Fund grows larger, and the nature and quality of DeAM's services, including fund performance. This report summarizes my evaluation for 2007, including my qualifications, the evaluation process for each of the DWS Scudder Funds, consideration of certain complex-level factors, and my conclusions.

Qualifications

For more than 30 years I have served in various professional capacities within the investment management business. I have held investment analysis and advisory positions, including securities analyst, portfolio strategist and director of investment policy with a large investment firm. I have also performed business management functions, including business development, financial management and marketing research and analysis.

Since 1991, I have been an independent consultant within the asset management industry. I have provided services to over 125 client organizations, including investment managers, mutual fund boards, product distributors and related organizations. Over the past several years I have completed a number of assignments for mutual fund boards, specifically including assisting boards with management contract renewal.

I hold a Master of Business Administration degree, with highest honors, from Harvard University; and Master of Science and Bachelor of Science (highest honors) degrees from the University of California at Berkeley. I am an independent director and audit committee financial expert for two closed-end mutual funds, serve on the board of directors of a private market research company, and have served in various leadership and financial oversight capacities with non-profit organizations.

Evaluation of Fees for each DWS Scudder Fund

My work focused primarily on evaluating, fund-by-fund, the fees charged to each of the 136 Fund portfolios in the DWS Scudder Fund family. For each Fund, I considered each of the key factors mentioned above, as well as any other relevant information. In doing so I worked closely with the Funds' Independent Directors in their annual contract renewal process, as well as in their approval of contracts for several new funds (documented separately).

In evaluating each Fund's fees, I reviewed comprehensive materials provided by or on behalf of DeAM, including expense information prepared by Lipper Analytical, comparative performance information, profitability data, manager histories, and other materials. I also accessed certain additional information from the Lipper, Strategic Insight, and Morningstar databases and drew on my industry knowledge and experience.

To facilitate evaluating this considerable body of information, I prepared for each Fund a document summarizing the key data elements in each area as well as additional analytics discussed below. This made it possible to consider each key data element in the context of the others.

In the course of contract renewal, DeAM agreed to implement a number of fee and expense adjustments requested by the Independent Directors which will favorably impact future fees and expenses, and my evaluation includes the effects of these changes.

Fees and Expenses Compared with Other Funds

The competitive fee and expense evaluation for each fund focused on two primary comparisons:

The Fund's contractual management fee (the advisory fee plus the administration fee where applicable) compared with those of a group of typically 12-15 funds in the same Lipper investment category (e.g. Large Capitalization Growth) having similar distribution arrangements and being of similar size.

The Fund's total expenses compared with a broader universe of funds from the same Lipper investment category and having similar distribution arrangements.

These two comparisons provide a view of not only the level of the fee compared with funds of similar scale but also the total expense the Fund bears for all the services it receives, in comparison with the investment choices available in the Fund's investment category and distribution channel. The principal figure-of-merit used in these comparisons was the subject Fund's percentile ranking against peers.

DeAM's Fees for Similar Services to Others

DeAM provided management fee schedules for all of its US domiciled fund and non-fund investment management accounts in any of the investment categories where there is a DWS Scudder Fund. These similar products included the other DWS Scudder Funds, non-fund pooled accounts, institutional accounts and sub-advisory accounts. Using this information, I calculated for each Fund the fee that would be charged to each similar product, at the subject Fund's asset level.

Evaluating information regarding non-fund products is difficult because there are varying levels of services required for different types of accounts, with mutual funds generally requiring considerably more regulatory and administrative types of service as well as having more frequent cash flows than other types of accounts. Also, while mutual fund fees for similar fund products can be expected to be similar, there will be some differences due to different pricing conditions in different distribution channels (e.g. retail funds versus those used in variable insurance products), differences in underlying investment processes and other factors.

Costs and Profit Margins

DeAM provided a detailed profitability analysis for each Fund. After making some adjustments so that the presentation would be more comparable to the available industry figures, I reviewed profit margins from investment management alone, from investment management plus other fund services (excluding distribution) provided to the Funds by DeAM (principally shareholder services), and DeAM profits from all sources, including distribution. A later section comments on overall profitability.

Economies of Scale

Economies of scale — an expected decline in management cost per dollar of fund assets as fund assets grow — are very rarely quantified and documented because of inherent difficulties in collecting and analyzing relevant data. However, in virtually every investment category that I reviewed, larger funds tend to have lower fees and lower total expenses than smaller funds. To see how each DWS Scudder Fund compares with this industry observation, I reviewed:

The trend in Fund assets over the last five years and the accompanying trend in total expenses. This shows if the Fund has grown and, if so, whether total expense (management fees as well as other expenses) have declined as a percent of assets.

Whether the Fund has break-points in its management fee schedule, the extent of the fee reduction built into the schedule and the asset levels where the breaks take effect, and in the case of a sub-advised Fund how the Fund's break-points compare with those of the sub-advisory fee schedule.

How the Fund's contractual fee schedule compares with trends in the industry data. To accomplish this, I constructed a chart showing how actual latest-fiscal-year contractual fees of the Fund and of other similar funds relate to average fund assets, with the subject Fund's contractual fee schedule superimposed.

Quality of Service — Performance

The quality-of-service evaluation focused on investment performance, which is the principal result of the investment management service. Each Fund's performance was reviewed over the past 1, 3, 5 and 10 years, as applicable, and compared with that of other funds in the same investment category and with a suitable market index.

In addition, I calculated and reviewed risk-adjusted returns relative to an index of similar mutual funds' returns and a suitable market index. The risk-adjusted returns analysis provides a way of determining the extent to which the Fund's return comparisons are mainly the product of investment value-added (or lack thereof) or alternatively taking considerably more or less risk than is typical in its investment category.

I also received and considered the history of portfolio manager changes for each Fund, as this provided an important context for evaluating the performance results.

Complex-Level Considerations

While this evaluation was conducted mainly at the individual fund level, there are some issues relating to the reasonableness of fees that can alternatively be considered across the whole fund complex:

I reviewed DeAM's profitability analysis for all DWS Scudder funds, with a view toward determining if the allocation procedures used were reasonable and how profit levels compared with public data for other investment managers.

I considered whether DeAM and affiliates receive any significant ancillary or "fall-out" benefits that should be considered in interpreting the direct profitability results. These would be situations where serving as the investment manager of the Funds is beneficial to another part of the Deutsche Bank organization.

I considered how aggregated DWS Scudder Fund expenses had varied over the years, by asset class and in the context of trends in asset levels.

I reviewed the structure of the DeAM organization, trends in staffing levels, and information on compensation of investment management and other professionals compared with industry data.

Findings

Based on the process and analysis discussed above, which included reviewing a wide range of information from management and external data sources and considering among other factors the fees DeAM charges other clients, the fees charged by other fund managers, DeAM's costs and profits associated with managing the Funds, economies of scale, possible fall-out benefits, and the nature and quality of services provided, in my opinion the management fees charged the DWS Scudder Funds are reasonable.

sif_m0
Thomas H. Mack

Account Management Resources

 

For More Information

The automated telephone system allows you to access personalized account information and obtain information on other DWS funds using either your voice or your telephone keypad. Certain account types within Classes A, B, C and S also have the ability to purchase, exchange or redeem shares using this system.
For more information, contact your financial advisor. You may also access our automated telephone system or speak with a DWS Scudder representative by calling the appropriate number below:

For shareholders of Classes A, B and C:

(800) 621-1048

For shareholders of Class S:

(800) 728-3337

Web Site

www.dws-scudder.com

View your account transactions and balances, trade shares, monitor your asset allocation, and change your address, 24 hours a day.
Obtain prospectuses and applications, blank forms, interactive worksheets, news about DWS funds, subscription to fund updates by e-mail, retirement planning information, and more.

Written Correspondence

DWS Scudder

PO Box 219151
Kansas City, MO 64121-9151

Proxy Voting

A description of the fund's policies and procedures for voting proxies for portfolio securities and information about how the fund voted proxies related to its portfolio securities during the 12-month period ended June 30 is available on our Web site — www.dws-scudder.com (click on "proxy voting"at the bottom of the page) — or on the SEC's Web site — www.sec.gov. To obtain a written copy of the fund's policies and procedures without charge, upon request, call us toll free at (800) 621-1048.

Principal Underwriter

If you have questions, comments or complaints, contact:

DWS Scudder Distributors, Inc.

222 South Riverside Plaza
Chicago, IL 60606-5808

(800) 621-1148

 

Class A

Class B

Class C

Class S

Nasdaq Symbol

KSTAX
KSTBX
KSTCX
KSTSX

CUSIP Number

23337K 101
23337K 200
23337K 309
23337K 507

Fund Number

010
210
310
2391

Privacy Statement

This privacy statement is issued by DWS Scudder Distributors, Inc., Deutsche Investment Management Americas Inc., DeAM Investor Services, Inc., DWS Trust Company and the DWS Funds.

We never sell customer lists or individual client information. We consider privacy fundamental to our client relationships and adhere to the policies and practices described below to protect current and former clients' information. Internal policies are in place to protect confidentiality, while allowing client needs to be served. Only individuals who need to do so in carrying out their job responsibilities may access client information. We maintain physical, electronic and procedural safeguards that comply with federal and state standards to protect confidentiality. These safeguards extend to all forms of interaction with us, including the Internet.

In the normal course of business, clients give us nonpublic personal information on applications and other forms, on our Web sites, and through transactions with us or our affiliates. Examples of the nonpublic personal information collected are name, address, Social Security number and transaction and balance information. To be able to serve our clients, certain of this client information is shared with affiliated and nonaffiliated third-party service providers such as transfer agents, custodians, and broker-dealers to assist us in processing transactions and servicing your account with us. In addition, we may disclose all of the information we collect to companies that perform marketing services on our behalf or to other financial institutions with which we have joint marketing agreements. The organizations described above that receive client information may only use it for the purpose designated by the DWS Scudder Companies listed in the first paragraph of this Privacy Statement.

We may also disclose nonpublic personal information about you to other parties as required or permitted by law. For example, we are required or we may provide information to government entities or regulatory bodies in response to requests for information or subpoenas, to private litigants in certain circumstances, to law enforcement authorities, or any time we believe it necessary to protect the firm.

Questions on this policy may be sent to:

DWS Scudder
Attention: Correspondence — Chicago
P.O. Box 219415
Kansas City, MO 64121-9415

September 2007

Notes

Notes

Notes

Notes

Notes

Notes

sif_backcover0


 

ITEM 2.

CODE OF ETHICS

 

 

 

Not applicable.

 

 

ITEM 3.

AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT

 

 

 

Not applicable.

 

 

ITEM 4.

PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES

 

 

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 5.

AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS

 

 

 

Not Applicable

 

 

ITEM 6.

SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS

 

 

 

Not Applicable

 

 

ITEM 7.

DISCLOSURE OF PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

 

 

 

Not applicable.

 

 

ITEM 8.

PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

 

 

 

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 9.

PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS

 

 

 

Not Applicable.

 

ITEM 10.

SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

 

 

 

The primary function of the Nominating and Governance Committee is to identify and recommend individuals for membership on the Board and oversee the administration of the Board Governance Guidelines. Shareholders may recommend candidates for Board positions by forwarding their correspondence by U.S. mail or courier service to Chairman of the Board, P.O. Box 100176, Cape Coral, FL 33910.

 

 

ITEM 11.

CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

 

 

 

(a)        The Chief Executive and Financial Officers concluded that the Registrant’s Disclosure Controls and Procedures are effective based on the evaluation of the Disclosure Controls and Procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report.

 

 

 

(b)        There have been no changes in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal controls over financial reporting.

 

 

ITEM 12.

EXHIBITS

 

 

 

(a)(1)   Certification pursuant to Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-2(a)) is filed and attached hereto as Exhibit 99.CERT.

 

 

 

(b)       Certification pursuant to Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-2(b)) is furnished and attached hereto as Exhibit 99.906CERT.

 

 

 

 


Form N-CSRS Item F

 

SIGNATURES

 

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

 

Registrant:

DWS Strategic Income Fund

 

By:

/s/Michael G. Clark

 

Michael G. Clark

President

 

Date:

July 2, 2008

 

 

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

 

Registrant:

DWS Strategic Income Fund

 

By:

/s/Michael G. Clark

 

Michael G. Clark

President

 

Date:

July 2, 2008

 

 

By:

/s/Paul Schubert

 

Paul Schubert

Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

 

Date:

July 2, 2008

 

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President

Form N-CSRS Certification under Sarbanes Oxley Act

 

 

 

I, Michael G. Clark, certify that:

 

1.

I have reviewed this report, filed on behalf of DWS Strategic Income Fund, on Form N-CSRS;

 

2.

Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

 

3.

Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

 

4.

The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the registrant and have:

 

 

(a)

Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

 

 

(b)

Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

 

 

(c)

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based on such evaluation; and

 

(d)

Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and

 

5.

The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

 

 

(a)

All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

 

 

(b)

Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

 

July 2, 2008

/s/Michael G. Clark

 

Michael G. Clark

 

President

 

DWS Strategic Income Fund

 


 

 

 

Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

Form N-CSRS Certification under Sarbanes Oxley Act

 

 

 

I, Paul Schubert, certify that:

 

1.

I have reviewed this report, filed on behalf of DWS Strategic Income Fund, on Form N-CSRS;

 

2.

Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

 

3.

Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

 

4.

The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the registrant and have:

 

 

(a)

Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

 

 

(b)

Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

 

 

(c)

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based on such evaluation; and

 

(d)

Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and

 

5.

The registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

 

 

(a)

All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

 

 

(b)

Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

 

July 2, 2008

/s/Paul Schubert

 

Paul Schubert

 

Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

 

DWS Strategic Income Fund

 

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President

Section 906 Certification under Sarbanes Oxley Act

 

 

 

I, Michael G. Clark, certify that:

 

1.

I have reviewed this report, filed on behalf of DWS Strategic Income Fund, on Form N-CSRS;

 

2.

Based on my knowledge and pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1350, the periodic report on Form N-CSRS (the “Report”) fully complies with the requirements of § 13 (a) or §15 (d), as applicable, of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and that the information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.

 

 

 

July 2, 2008

/s/Michael G. Clark

 

Michael G. Clark

 

President

 

DWS Strategic Income Fund

 


 

 

 

Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

Section 906 Certification under Sarbanes Oxley Act

 

 

 

I, Paul Schubert, certify that:

 

1.

I have reviewed this report, filed on behalf of DWS Strategic Income Fund, on Form N-CSRS;

 

2.

Based on my knowledge and pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1350, the periodic report on Form N-CSRS (the “Report”) fully complies with the requirements of § 13 (a) or § 15 (d), as applicable, of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and that the information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.

 

 

July 2, 2008

/s/Paul Schubert

 

Paul Schubert

 

Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

 

DWS Strategic Income Fund

 

 

 

-----END PRIVACY-ENHANCED MESSAGE-----