-----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, TJ8SIa+UawC9v8GiCP7ATxGxPOvp+lIp153PL6wV+Nv5aeuNw1p/na7/iahbK++F vSunJyiO5zJ4vy5+UMgjOw== 0000035348-08-000016.txt : 20080828 0000035348-08-000016.hdr.sgml : 20080828 20080828134859 ACCESSION NUMBER: 0000035348-08-000016 CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: N-CSR PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 32 CONFORMED PERIOD OF REPORT: 20080630 FILED AS OF DATE: 20080828 DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20080828 EFFECTIVENESS DATE: 20080828 FILER: COMPANY DATA: COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: FIDELITY HASTINGS STREET TRUST CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0000035348 IRS NUMBER: 046026953 STATE OF INCORPORATION: MA FISCAL YEAR END: 0630 FILING VALUES: FORM TYPE: N-CSR SEC ACT: 1940 Act SEC FILE NUMBER: 811-00215 FILM NUMBER: 081044858 BUSINESS ADDRESS: STREET 1: 82 DEVONSHIRE ST CITY: BOSTON STATE: MA ZIP: 02109 BUSINESS PHONE: 6173300814 MAIL ADDRESS: STREET 1: 82 DEVONSHIRE STREET STREET 2: MAIL ZONE Z1C CITY: BOSTON STATE: MA ZIP: 02109 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: FIDELITY FUND DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19920703 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: FIDELITY FUND INC DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19851205 0000035348 S000007019 Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund C000019191 Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund FDSVX C000064239 Class K 0000035348 S000007020 Fidelity Fifty C000019192 Fidelity Fifty FFTYX 0000035348 S000007021 Fidelity Fund C000019193 Fidelity Fund FFIDX C000064240 Class K 0000035348 S000007022 Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund C000019194 Fidelity Growth & Income II Portfolio FGRTX C000059099 Fidelity Advisor Mega Cap Stock Fund: Class A C000059100 Fidelity Advisor Mega Cap Stock Fund: Class B C000059101 Fidelity Advisor Mega Cap Stock Fund: Class C C000059102 Fidelity Advisor Mega Cap Stock Fund: Class T C000059103 Fidelity Advisor Mega Cap Stock Fund: Institutional Class N-CSR 1 main.htm

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM N-CSR

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED

MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Investment Company Act file number 811-215

Fidelity Hastings Street Trust

(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

82 Devonshire St., Boston, Massachusetts 02109
(Address of principal executive offices)       (Zip code)

Scott C. Goebel, Secretary

82 Devonshire St.

Boston, Massachusetts 02109
(Name and address of agent for service)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: 617-563-7000

Date of fiscal year end:

June 30

 

 

Date of reporting period:

June 30, 2008

Item 1. Reports to Stockholders

Fidelity Fifty®

Annual Report

June 30, 2008
(2_fidelity_logos) (Registered_Trademark)

Contents

Chairman's Message

<Click Here>

Ned Johnson's message to shareholders.

Performance

<Click Here>

How the fund has done over time.

Management's Discussion

<Click Here>

The manager's review of fund performance, strategy and outlook.

Shareholder Expense Example

<Click Here>

An example of shareholder expenses.

Investment Changes

<Click Here>

A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months.

Investments

<Click Here>

A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values.

Financial Statements

<Click Here>

Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets,
as well as financial highlights.

Notes

<Click Here>

Notes to the financial statements.

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

<Click Here>

 

Trustees and Officers

<Click Here>

 

Distributions

<Click Here>

 

Proxy Voting Results

<Click Here>

 

To view a fund's proxy voting guidelines and proxy voting record for the 12-month period ended June 30, visit http://www.fidelity.com (search for "proxy voting guidelines") or visit the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) web site at http://www.sec.gov. You may also call 1-800-544-8544 to request a free copy of the proxy voting guidelines.

Standard & Poor's, S&P and S&P 500 are registered service marks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and have been licensed for use by Fidelity Distributors Corporation.

Other third party marks appearing herein are the property of their respective owners.

All other marks appearing herein are registered or unregistered trademarks or service marks of FMR LLC or an affiliated company.

Annual Report

This report and the financial statements contained herein are submitted for the general information of the shareholders of the fund. This report is not authorized for distribution to prospective investors in the fund unless preceded or accompanied by an effective prospectus.

A fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, DC. Information regarding the operation of the SEC's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. For a complete list of a fund's portfolio holdings, view the most recent holdings listing, semiannual report, or annual report on Fidelity's web site at http://www.fidelity.com or http://www.advisor.fidelity.com, as applicable.

NOT FDIC INSURED · MAY LOSE VALUE · NO BANK GUARANTEE

Neither the fund nor Fidelity Distributors Corporation is a bank.

Annual Report

Chairman's Message

(photo_of_Edward_C_Johnson_3d)

Dear Shareholder:

Domestic and international securities markets have struggled thus far in 2008. High-grade fixed-income investments produced modestly positive results, but many stock benchmarks suffered double-digit losses through the first half of this year. Financial markets are always unpredictable, but there are a number of time-tested principles that can put the historical odds in your favor.

One of the basic tenets is to invest for the long term. Over time, riding out the markets' inevitable ups and downs has proven much more effective than selling into panic or chasing the hottest trend. Even missing only a few of the markets' best days can significantly diminish investor returns. Patience also affords the benefits of compounding - of earning interest on additional income or reinvested dividends and capital gains. There are tax advantages and cost benefits to consider as well. The more you sell, the more taxes you pay, and the more you trade, the higher the costs. While staying the course doesn't eliminate risk, it can considerably lessen the effect of short-term declines.

You can further manage your investing risk through diversification. And today, more than ever, geographic diversification should be taken into account. Studies indicate that asset allocation is the single most important determinant of a portfolio's long-term success. The right mix of stocks, bonds and cash - aligned to your particular risk tolerance and investment objective - is very important. Age-appropriate rebalancing is also an essential aspect of asset allocation. For younger investors, an emphasis on equities - which historically have been the best-performing asset class over time - is encouraged. As investors near their specific goal, such as retirement or sending a child to college, consideration may be given to replacing volatile assets (e.g. common stocks) with more-stable fixed investments (bonds or savings plans).

A third investment principle - investing regularly - can help lower the average cost of your purchases. Investing a certain amount of money each month or quarter helps ensure you won't pay for all your shares at market highs. This strategy - known as dollar cost averaging - also reduces unconstructive "emotion" from investing, helping shareholders avoid selling weak performers just prior to an upswing, or chasing a hot performer just before a correction.

We invite you to contact us via the Internet, through our Investor Centers or over the phone. It is our privilege to provide you the information you need to make the investments that are right for you.

Sincerely,
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Annual Report

Performance: The Bottom Line

Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the fund's dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of securities that have grown in value) and assuming a constant rate of performance each year. The $10,000 table and the fund's returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares. During periods of reimbursement by Fidelity, a fund's total return will be greater than it would be had the reimbursement not occurred. How a fund did yesterday is no guarantee of how it will do tomorrow.

Average Annual Total Returns

Periods ended June 30, 2008

Past 1
year

Past 5
years

Past 10
years

Fidelity Fifty®

-8.50%

8.06%

7.45%

$10,000 Over 10 Years

Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity Fifty® on June 30, 1998. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Standard & Poor's 500SM Index (S&P 500®) performed over the same period.


fid51

Annual Report

Management's Discussion of Fund Performance

Comments from Peter Saperstone, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity Fifty®

As threats of a recession, concerns about inflation and higher unemployment rates weighed heavily on consumers and investors, the U.S. equity markets struggled for the 12-month period ending June 30, 2008. For investors, the lingering effects of the subprime mortgage crisis and subsequent credit crunch were felt in nearly all segments of the market, with financial stocks lagging the most and the energy sector continuing its upward trajectory. In an effort to reignite the economy, the Federal Reserve Board lowered the fed funds target rate seven times, taking it from 5.25% to 2.00% between September 2007 and April 2008. The Fed also stepped in to help prevent the near collapse of one of the nation's largest investment banks, Bear Stearns. These moves initially seemed to bolster investor confidence, but, ultimately, most indexes lagged. The Standard & Poor's 500SM Index fell 13.12% for the 12 months ending June 30, 2008. The Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also declined, with a -13.27% return, and the NASDAQ Composite® Index plunged 11.28% over the corresponding 12 months.

During the past year, the fund returned -8.50%, solidly beating the S&P 500®. Performance was aided by underweighting the weak-performing financials sector. That said, stock selection was the primary driver of performance, with favorable picks in energy, information technology, industrials, materials, consumer staples and telecommunication services. Overweighting technology had a positive impact as well. Additionally, the fund's foreign investments were aided by currency fluctuations. NAVTEQ was the fund's top individual contributor. The company enjoyed strong demand for its handheld GPS (global positioning systems) products and received a lucrative buyout offer, after which I sold the stock. Other contributors included pump maker Flowserve, for-profit education company DeVry and two natural gas producers - EOG Resources and Chesapeake Energy. Conversely, an overweighting and unfavorable stock selection in consumer discretionary hurt, as did underweightings in health care and utilities. Harman International, a maker of auto "infotainment" products, was the fund's largest detractor, as the stock fell sharply twice during the period. Performance also was hurt by auto and equipment rental provider Hertz Global Holdings, media conglomerate Time Warner - which I sold - and cellular handset maker Nokia. All of the stocks I've mentioned except for EOG Resources, Chesapeake Energy, Harman and Time Warner were out-of-benchmark holdings.

The views expressed above reflect those of the portfolio manager(s) only through the end of the period as stated on the cover of this report and do not necessarily represent the views of Fidelity or any other person in the Fidelity organization. Any such views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions and Fidelity disclaims any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied on as investment advice and, because investment decisions for a Fidelity fund are based on numerous factors, may not be relied on as an indication of trading intent on behalf of any Fidelity fund.

Annual Report

Shareholder Expense Example

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.

The Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008).

Actual Expenses

The first line of the accompanying table provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000.00 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000.00 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The second line of the accompanying table provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on the Fund's actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Fund's actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Annual Report

Shareholder Expense Example - continued

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transaction costs. Therefore, the second line of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds.

 

Beginning
Account Value
January 1, 2008

Ending
Account Value
June 30, 2008

Expenses Paid
During Period
*
January 1, 2008
to June 30, 2008

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 915.10

$ 4.76

Hypothetical (5% return per year before expenses)

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,019.89

$ 5.02

* Expenses are equal to the Fund's annualized expense ratio of 1.00%; multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).

Annual Report

Investment Changes (Unaudited)

Top Ten Stocks as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Flowserve Corp.

5.4

3.6

Research In Motion Ltd.

3.9

2.2

Peabody Energy Corp.

3.2

0.0

Molson Coors Brewing Co. Class B

3.2

3.3

Alstom SA

3.0

4.6

CVS Caremark Corp.

3.0

0.0

Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc.

3.0

0.3

American Tower Corp. Class A

3.0

2.8

Halliburton Co.

2.9

0.0

The Walt Disney Co.

2.9

3.4

 

33.5

Top Five Market Sectors as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Energy

26.5

5.0

Industrials

16.1

20.8

Information Technology

14.7

24.8

Consumer Discretionary

10.4

23.9

Materials

8.4

2.0

Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)

As of June 30, 2008 *

As of December 31, 2007 **

fid53

Stocks 95.3%

 

fid53

Stocks 101.0%

 

fid56

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 4.7%

 

fid58

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets (1.0)%

 

* Foreign investments

17.9%

 

** Foreign investments

27.9%

 


fid60

Short-Term Investments and Net Other Assets are not included in the pie chart.

Annual Report

Investments June 30, 2008

Showing Percentage of Net Assets

Common Stocks - 95.3%

Shares

Value

CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 10.4%

Auto Components - 1.5%

WABCO Holdings, Inc.

416,900

$ 19,369,174

Diversified Consumer Services - 3.0%

DeVry, Inc.

483,000

25,898,460

Weight Watchers International, Inc.

350,306

12,474,397

 

38,372,857

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.0%

International Game Technology

537,700

13,431,746

Household Durables - 2.0%

Harman International Industries, Inc.

621,141

25,709,026

Media - 2.9%

The Walt Disney Co.

1,217,600

37,989,120

TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY

134,871,923

CONSUMER STAPLES - 6.2%

Beverages - 3.2%

Molson Coors Brewing Co. Class B

765,166

41,571,469

Food & Staples Retailing - 3.0%

CVS Caremark Corp.

986,700

39,043,719

TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES

80,615,188

ENERGY - 26.5%

Energy Equipment & Services - 15.7%

BJ Services Co. (d)

1,182,500

37,769,050

Cameron International Corp. (a)

504,000

27,896,400

Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc.

279,600

38,903,544

Halliburton Co.

717,100

38,056,497

Oceaneering International, Inc. (a)

363,900

28,038,495

Weatherford International Ltd. (a)

681,400

33,790,626

 

204,454,612

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 10.8%

Chesapeake Energy Corp.

491,100

32,392,956

CONSOL Energy, Inc.

255,200

28,676,824

Denbury Resources, Inc. (a)

198,600

7,248,900

EOG Resources, Inc.

109,300

14,340,160

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

ENERGY - continued

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued

Peabody Energy Corp.

480,800

$ 42,334,440

XTO Energy, Inc.

226,431

15,512,788

 

140,506,068

TOTAL ENERGY

344,960,680

FINANCIALS - 1.6%

Diversified Financial Services - 1.5%

Bolsa de Mercadorias & Futuros - BM&F SA

2,253,900

19,415,144

Real Estate Management & Development - 0.1%

Indiabulls Real Estate Ltd.

210,896

1,338,671

TOTAL FINANCIALS

20,753,815

HEALTH CARE - 5.8%

Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 1.6%

C.R. Bard, Inc.

231,514

20,361,656

Health Care Providers & Services - 2.2%

Express Scripts, Inc. (a)

450,100

28,230,272

Life Sciences Tools & Services - 2.0%

Waters Corp. (a)

416,400

26,857,800

TOTAL HEALTH CARE

75,449,728

INDUSTRIALS - 16.1%

Electrical Equipment - 7.8%

Alstom SA (d)

172,600

39,578,105

Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd.

593,818

19,080,881

Nexans SA

170,800

20,932,744

Prysmian SpA

883,763

22,310,958

 

101,902,688

Machinery - 5.7%

Colfax Corp.

184,266

4,623,234

Flowserve Corp.

513,700

70,222,790

 

74,846,024

Road & Rail - 2.6%

All America Latina Logistica SA unit

877,400

11,186,412

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

INDUSTRIALS - continued

Road & Rail - continued

CSX Corp.

323,800

$ 20,337,878

Hertz Global Holdings, Inc. (a)

188,300

1,807,680

 

33,331,970

TOTAL INDUSTRIALS

210,080,682

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 14.7%

Communications Equipment - 7.9%

Nokia Corp. sponsored ADR

1,108,200

27,150,900

QUALCOMM, Inc.

574,700

25,499,439

Research In Motion Ltd. (a)

432,800

50,594,322

 

103,244,661

Computers & Peripherals - 0.0%

Apple, Inc. (a)

700

117,208

Internet Software & Services - 1.8%

Akamai Technologies, Inc. (a)(d)

666,521

23,188,266

IT Services - 4.0%

Fiserv, Inc. (a)

710,300

32,226,311

Visa, Inc.

251,600

20,457,596

 

52,683,907

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 1.0%

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. sponsored ADR

1,183,700

12,914,167

TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

192,148,209

MATERIALS - 8.4%

Metals & Mining - 8.4%

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc. Class B

306,400

35,907,016

MMX Mineracao e Metalicos SA (a)

260,800

8,018,234

Nucor Corp.

136,900

10,222,323

Steel Dynamics, Inc.

695,100

27,157,557

United States Steel Corp.

155,800

28,788,724

 

110,093,854

TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 3.0%

Wireless Telecommunication Services - 3.0%

American Tower Corp. Class A (a)

917,700

38,772,825

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

UTILITIES - 2.6%

Electric Utilities - 2.6%

Entergy Corp.

165,600

$ 19,951,488

Exelon Corp.

151,500

13,628,940

 

33,580,428

TOTAL COMMON STOCKS

(Cost $1,147,427,156)

1,241,327,332

Money Market Funds - 4.0%

 

 

 

 

Fidelity Cash Central Fund, 2.38% (b)

5,463,763

5,463,763

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 2.39% (b)(c)

47,177,000

47,177,000

TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS

(Cost $52,640,763)

52,640,763

TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 99.3%

(Cost $1,200,067,919)

1,293,968,095

NET OTHER ASSETS - 0.7%

8,508,963

NET ASSETS - 100%

$ 1,302,477,058

Legend

(a) Non-income producing

(b) Affiliated fund that is available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. The rate quoted is the annualized seven-day yield of the fund at period end. A complete unaudited listing of the fund's holdings as of its most recent quarter end is available upon request.

(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.

(d) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.

Affiliated Central Funds

Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:

Fund

Income earned

Fidelity Cash Central Fund

$ 1,142,913

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund

430,963

Total

$ 1,573,876

Other Information

Distribution of investments by country of issue, as a percentage of total net assets, is as follows: (Unaudited)

United States of America

82.1%

France

4.6%

Canada

3.9%

Brazil

3.0%

Finland

2.1%

Italy

1.7%

India

1.6%

Taiwan

1.0%

 

100.0%

Income Tax Information

The fund intends to elect to defer to its fiscal year ending June 30, 2009 approximately $180,935,820 of losses recognized during the period November 1, 2007 to June 30, 2008.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

 

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Assets

Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $45,222,293) - See accompanying schedule:

Unaffiliated issuers (cost $1,147,427,156)

$ 1,241,327,332

 

Fidelity Central Funds (cost $52,640,763)

52,640,763

 

Total Investments (cost $1,200,067,919)

 

$ 1,293,968,095

Foreign currency held at value (cost $3,113,086)

3,100,749

Receivable for investments sold

65,072,216

Receivable for fund shares sold

950,322

Dividends receivable

1,029,460

Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds

91,241

Prepaid expenses

2,549

Other receivables

15,080

Total assets

1,364,229,712

 

 

 

Liabilities

Payable for investments purchased

$ 8,752,135

Payable for fund shares redeemed

4,610,020

Accrued management fee

835,615

Other affiliated payables

312,121

Other payables and accrued expenses

65,763

Collateral on securities loaned, at value

47,177,000

Total liabilities

61,752,654

 

 

 

Net Assets

$ 1,302,477,058

Net Assets consist of:

 

Paid in capital

$ 1,383,964,149

Accumulated net investment loss

(87)

Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions

(175,346,994)

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

93,859,990

Net Assets, for 65,270,959 shares outstanding

$ 1,302,477,058

Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($1,302,477,058 ÷ 65,270,959 shares)

$ 19.95

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Operations

 

Year ended June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Investment Income

 

 

Dividends

 

$ 11,783,663

Interest

 

45,624

Income from Fidelity Central Funds

 

1,573,876

Total income

 

13,403,163

 

 

 

Expenses

Management fee
Basic fee

$ 8,301,584

Performance adjustment

2,098,651

Transfer agent fees

3,562,542

Accounting and security lending fees

474,345

Custodian fees and expenses

56,735

Independent trustees' compensation

6,059

Registration fees

77,994

Audit

59,021

Legal

8,195

Interest

16,377

Miscellaneous

92,954

Total expenses before reductions

14,754,457

Expense reductions

(101,044)

14,653,413

Net investment income (loss)

(1,250,250)

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

Net realized gain (loss) on:

Investment securities:

 

 

Unaffiliated issuers (net of foreign taxes of $15,057)

(84,581,540)

Foreign currency transactions

(300,392)

Total net realized gain (loss)

 

(84,881,932)

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:

Investment securities (net of decrease in deferred foreign taxes of $2,882)

(66,436,067)

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

(21,350)

Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

 

(66,457,417)

Net gain (loss)

(151,339,349)

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

$ (152,589,599)

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements - continued

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

Year ended
June 30,
2008

Year ended
June 30,
2007

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net investment income (loss)

$ (1,250,250)

$ 3,952,503

Net realized gain (loss)

(84,881,932)

210,392,737

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(66,457,417)

37,818,621

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting
from operations

(152,589,599)

252,163,861

Distributions to shareholders from net investment income

(1,166,932)

(4,645,410)

Distributions to shareholders from net realized gain

(264,783,222)

(91,127,090)

Total distributions

(265,950,154)

(95,772,500)

Share transactions
Proceeds from sales of shares

538,874,678

488,434,858

Reinvestment of distributions

259,377,085

93,419,538

Cost of shares redeemed

(564,686,677)

(446,446,711)

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

233,565,086

135,407,685

Redemption fees

-

4,779

Total increase (decrease) in net assets

(184,974,667)

291,803,825

 

 

 

Net Assets

Beginning of period

1,487,451,725

1,195,647,900

End of period (including accumulated net investment loss of $87 and undistributed net investment income of $1,079,975, respectively)

$ 1,302,477,058

$ 1,487,451,725

Other Information

Shares

Sold

23,613,048

20,712,293

Issued in reinvestment of distributions

11,524,073

4,525,411

Redeemed

(26,883,343)

(18,833,956)

Net increase (decrease)

8,253,778

6,403,748

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights

Years ended June 30,
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004

Selected Per-Share Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 26.09

$ 23.62

$ 20.07

$ 19.59

$ 17.90

Income from Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net investment income (loss) B

  (.02)

  .07

  .11 E

  .07 F

  (.05)

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (1.85)

  4.27

  3.61

  .49

  1.77

Total from investment operations

  (1.87)

  4.34

  3.72

  .56

  1.72

Distributions from net investment income

  (.02)

  (.09)

  (.01)

  (.08)

  (.03)

Distributions from net realized gain

  (4.25)

  (1.78)

  (.16)

  -

  -

Total distributions

  (4.27)

  (1.87)

  (.17)

  (.08)

  (.03)

Redemption fee added to paid in capital

  -

  - B, H,I

  - B, H

  - B, H

  - B, H

Net asset value, end of period

$ 19.95

$ 26.09

$ 23.62

$ 20.07

$ 19.59

Total Return A

  (8.50)%

  20.47%

  18.56%

  2.85%

  9.63%

Ratios to Average Net Assets C,G

 

 

 

 

 

Expenses before reductions

  .99%

  .84%

  .79%

  .97%

  1.05%

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .99%

  .84%

  .79%

  .97%

  1.05%

Expenses net of all reductions

  .98%

  .83%

  .77%

  .92%

  .99%

Net investment income (loss)

  (.08)%

  .30%

  .46% E

  .35% F

  (.29)%

Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 1,302,477

$ 1,487,452

$ 1,195,648

$ 795,058

$ 926,174

Portfolio turnover rate D

  173%

  236%

  107%

  110%

  161%

A Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

C Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

E Investment income per share reflects a special dividend which amounted to $.04 per share. Excluding the special dividend, the ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets would have been .27%.

F Investment income per share reflects a special dividend which amounted to $.10 per share. Excluding the special dividend, the ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets would have been (.14)%.

G Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the Fund. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the Fund during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the Fund.

H Amount represents less than $.01 per share.

I The redemption fee was eliminated during the year ended June 30, 2007.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements

For the period ended June 30, 2008

1. Organization.

Fidelity Fifty (the Fund) is a non-diversified fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust (the trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. The trust is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust. The Fund's investments in emerging markets can be subject to social, economic, regulatory, and political uncertainties and can be extremely volatile.

2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.

The Fund may invest in Fidelity Central Funds, which are open-end investment companies available only to other investment companies and accounts managed by Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) and its affiliates. The Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR.

A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the SEC's web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC's web site or upon request.

3. Significant Accounting Policies.

The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the Fund:

Security Valuation. Investments are valued as of 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on the last calendar day of the period. Wherever possible, the Fund uses independent pricing services approved by the Board of Trustees to value its investments.

Equity securities, including restricted securities, for which market quotations are readily available, are valued at the last reported sale price or official closing price as reported by an independent pricing service on the primary market or exchange on which they are traded. In the event there were no sales during the day or closing prices are not available, securities are valued at the last quoted bid price. Investments in open-end mutual funds,

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Security Valuation - continued

including the Fidelity Central Funds, are valued at their closing net asset value each business day. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less for which quotations are not readily available are valued at amortized cost, which approximates value.

When current market prices or quotations are not readily available or reliable, valuations may be determined in good faith in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees. Factors used in determining value may include significant market or security specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality, and developments in foreign markets which are monitored by evaluating the performance of ADRs, futures contracts and exchange-traded funds. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and may be utilized to a significant extent. The value of securities used for net asset value (NAV) calculation under these procedures may differ from published prices for the same securities.

Foreign Currency. The Fund uses foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.

Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.

The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.

Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 pm Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and may include proceeds received from litigation. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, except for certain dividends from foreign securities where the ex-dividend date may have passed, which are recorded as soon as the Fund is informed of the ex-dividend date. Non-cash dividends included in dividend income, if any, are

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Investment Transactions and Income - continued

recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. The Fund estimates the components of distributions received that may be considered return of capital distributions or capital gain distributions. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain.

Expenses. Most expenses of the trust can be directly attributed to a fund. Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned among each Fund in the trust. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, the Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company by distributing substantially all of its taxable income and realized gains under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code and filing its U.S. federal tax return. As a result, no provision for income taxes is required. The Fund is subject to the provisions of FASB Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for Uncertainties in Income Taxes (FIN 48). FIN 48 sets forth a minimum threshold for financial statement recognition of the benefit of a tax position taken or expected to be taken in a tax return. The implementation of FIN 48 did not result in any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. Each of the Fund's federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remains subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.

Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles. In addition, the Fund will claim a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.

Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.

Book-tax differences are primarily due to foreign currency transactions, certain foreign taxes, partnerships, deferred trustees compensation, and losses deferred due to wash sales and excise tax regulations.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued

The tax-basis components of distributable earnings and the federal tax cost as of period end were as follows:

Unrealized appreciation

$ 186,871,031

 

Unrealized depreciation

(96,012,704)

 

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

90,858,327

 

Undistributed ordinary income

1,943,543

 

 

 

 

Cost for federal income tax purposes

$ 1,203,109,768

 

The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:

 

June 30, 2008

June 30, 2007

Ordinary Income

$ 147,697,148

$ 25,635,358

Long-term Capital Gains

118,253,006

70,137,142

Total

$ 265,950,154

$ 95,772,500

New Accounting Pronouncement. In September 2006, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157, Fair Value Measurements (SFAS 157), was issued and is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. SFAS 157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and results in expanded disclosures about fair value measurements.

4. Operating Policies.

Repurchase Agreements. FMR has received an Exemptive Order from the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) which permits the Fund and other affiliated entities of FMR to transfer uninvested cash balances into joint trading accounts which are then invested in repurchase agreements. The Fund may also invest directly with institutions in repurchase agreements. Repurchase agreements are collateralized by government or non-government securities. Upon settlement date, collateral is held in segregated accounts with custodian banks and may be obtained in the event of a default of the counterparty. The Fund monitors, on a daily basis, the value of the collateral to ensure it is at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). In the event of a default by the counterparty, realization of the collateral proceeds could be delayed, during which time the value of the collateral may decline.

5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.

Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, aggregated $2,536,754,014 and $2,617,145,693, respectively.

Annual Report

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.

Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .30% of the Fund's average net assets and a group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and increases as assets under management decrease. In addition, the management fee is subject to a performance adjustment (up to a maximum of ± .20% of the Fund's average net assets over a 36 month performance period). The upward or downward adjustment to the management fee is based on the Fund's relative investment performance as compared to an appropriate benchmark index. For the period, the total annual management fee rate, including the performance adjustment, was .70% of the Fund's average net assets.

Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc. (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the Fund's transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to account size and type of account. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements. Prior to January 1, 2008, Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), also an affiliate of FMR, was the Fund's transfer agent. For the period the transfer agent fees were equivalent to an annual rate of .24% of average net assets.

Accounting and Security Lending Fees. FSC maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on the level of average net assets for the month. Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.

Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $19,099 for the period.

Interfund Lending Program. Pursuant to an Exemptive Order issued by the SEC, the Fund, along with other registered investment companies having management contracts with FMR, may participate in an interfund lending program. This program provides an alternative credit facility allowing the funds to borrow from, or lend money to, other participating affiliated funds. At period end, there were no interfund loans outstanding. The Fund's activity in this program during the period for which loans were outstanding was as follows:

Borrower or Lender

Average Daily
Loan Balance

Weighted Average Interest Rate

Interest
Expense

Borrower

$ 9,921,071

4.24%

$ 16,377

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

7. Committed Line of Credit.

The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR in a $4.2 billion credit facility (the "line of credit") to be utilized for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions or for other short-term liquidity purposes. The Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $2,839 and is reflected in Miscellaneous Expense on the Statement of Operations. During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.

8. Security Lending.

The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. On the settlement date of the loan, the Fund receives collateral (in the form of U.S. Treasury obligations, letters of credit and/or cash) against the loaned securities and maintains collateral in an amount not less than 100% of the market value of the loaned securities during the period of the loan. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. If the borrower defaults on its obligation to return the securities loaned because of insolvency or other reasons, a fund could experience delays and costs in recovering the securities loaned or in gaining access to the collateral. Any cash collateral received is invested in cash equivalents the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less fees and expenses associated with the loan, plus any premium payments that may be received on the loan of certain types of securities. Security lending income is presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds. Net income from lending portfolio securities during the period amounted to $430,963.

9. Expense Reductions.

Many of the brokers with whom FMR places trades on behalf of the Fund provided services to the Fund in addition to trade execution. These services included payments of certain expenses on behalf of the Fund totaling $58,558 for the period. In addition, through arrangements with the Fund's custodian and transfer agent, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's custody and transfer agent expenses by $1,687 and $40,799, respectively.

Annual Report

10. Other.

The Fund's organizational documents provide former and current trustees and officers with a limited indemnification against liabilities arising in connection with the performance of their duties to the Fund. In the normal course of business, the Fund may also enter into contracts that provide general indemnifications. The Fund's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would be dependent on future claims that may be made against the Fund. The risk of material loss from such claims is considered remote.

In December 2006, the Independent Trustees, with the assistance of independent counsel, completed an investigation regarding gifts, gratuities and business entertainment provided by certain brokers to certain individuals who were employed on FMR's domestic equity trading desk during the period 2002 to 2004. The Independent Trustees and FMR agreed that, despite the absence of proof that the Fidelity mutual funds experienced diminished execution quality as a result of the improper receipt of gifts and business entertainment, the conduct at issue was serious and was worthy of redress. Accordingly, the Independent Trustees requested, and FMR agreed to make, a payment of $42 million plus accrued interest, which equaled approximately $7.3 million, to certain Fidelity mutual funds.

In March 2008, the Trustees approved a method for allocating this payment among the funds and, in total, FMR paid the fund $ 248,320, which is recorded in the accompanying Statement of Operations.

In a related administrative order dated March 5, 2008, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") announced a settlement with FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (an affiliate of FMR) involving the SEC's regulatory rules for investment advisers and the improper receipt of gifts, gratuities and business entertainment. Without admitting or denying the SEC's findings, FMR agreed to pay an $8 million civil penalty to the United States Treasury.

Annual Report

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Fifty:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Fifty (a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust) at June 30, 2008, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Fifty's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at June 30, 2008 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

August 19, 2008

Annual Report

Trustees and Officers

The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive officers of the trust and fund, as applicable, are listed below. The Board of Trustees governs the fund and is responsible for protecting the interests of shareholders. The Trustees are experienced executives who meet periodically throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities, review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the fund, and review the fund's performance. Except for Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey, each of the Trustees oversees 218 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate. Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey oversee 377 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate.

The Trustees hold office without limit in time except that (a) any Trustee may resign; (b) any Trustee may be removed by written instrument, signed by at least two-thirds of the number of Trustees prior to such removal; (c) any Trustee who requests to be retired or who has become incapacitated by illness or injury may be retired by written instrument signed by a majority of the other Trustees; and (d) any Trustee may be removed at any special meeting of shareholders by a two-thirds vote of the outstanding voting securities of the trust. Each Trustee who is not an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) (Independent Trustee), shall retire not later than the last day of the calendar year in which his or her 72nd birthday occurs. The Independent Trustees may waive this mandatory retirement age policy with respect to individual Trustees. The executive officers and Advisory Board Member hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and Advisory Board Member may resign or may be removed by a vote of a majority of the Trustees at any regular meeting or any special meeting of the Trustees. Except as indicated, each individual has held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the past five years.

The fund's Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the Trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-800-544-8544

Interested Trustees*:

Correspondence intended for each Trustee who is an interested person may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Edward C. Johnson 3d (78)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 1984

Mr. Johnson is Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Mr. Johnson serves as Chief Executive Officer, Chairman, and a Director of FMR LLC; Chairman and a Director of FMR; Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (FRAC); Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc.; and Chairman and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Johnson serves as Chairman and Director of FIL Limited. Previously, Mr. Johnson served as President of FMR LLC (2006-2007).

James C. Curvey (73)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2006-
present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, Mr. Curvey serves as an Overseer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a member of the Trustees of Villanova University.

* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR. FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Independent Trustees:

Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Dennis J. Dirks (60)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) (1999-2003). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) (1999-2003) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) (1999-2003). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003) and Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003). Mr. Dirks also serves as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-present).

Alan J. Lacy (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (a private equity firm). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of The Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-present) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (global pharmaceuticals, 2007-present). Mr. Lacy is a Trustee of the National Parks Conservation Association and The Field Museum of Natural History.

Ned C. Lautenbach (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2000

Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees (2006-present). Mr. Lautenbach is an Advisory Partner of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment firm). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was with the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) from 1968 until his retirement in 1998. Mr. Lautenbach serves as a Director of Eaton Corporation (diversified industrial) as well as the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida. He also is a member of the Board of Trustees of Fairfield University (2005-present), as well as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Previously, Mr. Lautenbach served as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007).

Joseph Mauriello (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services firm, 1965-
2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of XL Capital Ltd. (global insurance and re-insurance company, 2006-present) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-present). He also served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007).

Cornelia M. Small (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Ms. Small is a member of the Investment Committee, and Chair (2008-present) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson of the Investment Committee (2002-2008) of Smith College and as Co-Chair (2000-2003) of the Annual Fund for the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. In addition, she served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments.

William S. Stavropoulos (69)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2001

Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President (1993-2000; 2002-2003), CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, he is a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions, 2008-present), Chemical Financial Corporation, Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), Tyco International, Inc. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-present), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital (private equity investment firm, 2005-present). He is a special advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science.

David M. Thomas (59)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products holding company), and Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present).

Michael E. Wiley (57)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Wiley also serves as a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Tulsa (2000-2006; 2007-present). He serves as a Director of Tesoro Corporation (independent oil refiner and marketer, 2005-
present), and a Director of Bill Barrett Corporation (exploration and production company, 2005-present). In addition, he also serves as a Director of Post Oak Bank (privately-held bank, 2004-present). Previously, Mr. Wiley served as a Sr. Energy Advisor of Katzenbach Partners, LLC (consulting firm, 2006-2007), as an Advisory Director of Riverstone Holdings (private investment firm), Chairman, President, and CEO of Baker Hughes, Inc. (oilfield services company, 2000-2004), and as Director of Spinnaker Exploration Company (exploration and production company, 2001-2005).

Advisory Board Members and Executive Officers**:

Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Mr. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Peter S. Lynch (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2003

Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR, and Vice Chairman (2001-present) and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. Previously, Mr. Lynch served as a Trustee of the Fidelity funds (1990-2003). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund.

Kenneth B. Robins (38)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

President and Treasurer of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-
present) and is an employee of FMR (2004-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Robins worked at KPMG LLP, where he was a partner in KPMG's department of professional practice (2002-2004).

Walter C. Donovan (46)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Vice President of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Donovan also serves as Vice President of Fidelity's Equity Funds, President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc., and Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Donovan served as Executive Vice President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2005-2007) and Senior Vice President of FMR (2003-2005) and FMR Co., Inc. (2004-2005).

Bruce T. Herring (42)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2006

Vice President of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of certain Equity Funds (2006-present) and Group Chief Investments Officer of FMR. Previously, Mr. Herring served as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds.

Scott C. Goebel (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO) of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary and CLO of other Fidelity funds (2008-present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present); and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC. Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Assistant Secretary of the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007).

John B. McGinty, Jr. (45)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Assistant Secretary of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. McGinty also serves as Assistant Secretary of other Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC (2004-present). Mr. McGinty also serves as Senior Vice President, Secretary, and Chief Legal Officer of FDC (2007-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. McGinty practiced law at Ropes & Gray, LLP.

Holly C. Laurent (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Anti-Money Laundering (AML) officer of Fidelity Fifty. Ms. Laurent also serves as AML officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC. Previously, Ms. Laurent was Senior Vice President and Head of Legal for Fidelity Business Services India Pvt. Ltd. (2006-2008), Senior Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and Group Head for FMR Co. Legal (2005-2006).

Christine Reynolds (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Chief Financial Officer of Fidelity Fifty. Ms. Reynolds also serves as Chief Financial Officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present). Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) in August 2008. She served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS from 2007 through July 2008. Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Ms. Reynolds worked at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) (1980-2002), where she was an audit partner with PwC's investment management practice.

Kenneth A. Rathgeber (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Rathgeber also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of other Fidelity funds (2004-present) and Executive Vice President of Risk Oversight for Fidelity Investments. He is Chief Compliance Officer of FMR (2005-present), FMR Co., Inc. (2005-
present), Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2005-present), Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2005-present), and Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2005-present).

Bryan A. Mehrmann (47)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Mehrmann also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR. Previously, Mr. Mehrmann served as Vice President of Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Group (FIIS)/Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Corporation, Inc. (FIIOC) Client Services (1998-2004).

Adrien E. Deberghes (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Deberghes also serves as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005).

Robert G. Byrnes (41)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Byrnes also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Byrnes served as Vice President of FPCMS (2003-2005). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Byrnes worked at Deutsche Asset Management where he served as Vice President of the Investment Operations Group (2000-2003).

Peter L. Lydecker (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Lydecker also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2004-present) and is an employee of FMR.

Paul M. Murphy (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Murphy also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2007-present) and is an employee of FMR (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Murphy served as Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity Funds (2005-2006), Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR (2007), and Senior Vice President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1994-2007).

Gary W. Ryan (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of Fidelity Fifty. Mr. Ryan also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Vice President of Fund Reporting in Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1999-2005).

** FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Annual Report

Distributions (Unaudited)

The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Fifty Fund voted to pay on August 11, 2008, to shareholders of record at the opening of business on August 8, 2008, a distribution of $0.035 per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities.

The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended June 30, 2008, $1,909,788, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.

The fund designates 12% and 5% of the dividends distributed in August and December, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends-received deduction for corporate shareholders.

The fund designates 14% and 5% of the dividends distributed in August and December, respectively during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for the purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The fund will notify shareholders in January 2009 of amounts for use in preparing 2008 income tax returns.

Annual Report

Proxy Voting Results

A special meeting of the fund's shareholders was held on May 14, 2008. The results of votes taken among shareholders on the proposals before them are reported below. Each vote reported represents one dollar of net asset value held on the record date for the meeting.

PROPOSAL 1

To elect a Board of Trustees.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

James C. Curvey

Affirmative

5,283,033,775.58

95.146

Withheld

269,544,935.17

4.854

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Dennis J. Dirks

Affirmative

5,309,249,727.21

95.618

Withheld

243,328,983.54

4.382

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Affirmative

5,252,938,642.62

94.604

Withheld

299,640,068.13

5.396

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Alan J. Lacy

Affirmative

5,300,188,165.66

95.455

Withheld

252,390,545.09

4.545

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Ned C. Lautenbach

Affirmative

5,297,558,579.14

95.407

Withheld

255,020,131.61

4.593

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Joseph Mauriello

Affirmative

5,303,242,593.91

95.510

Withheld

249,336,116.84

4.490

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Cornelia M. Small

Affirmative

5,306,804,229.45

95.574

Withheld

245,774,481.30

4.426

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

William S. Stavropoulos

Affirmative

5,284,506,192.07

95.172

Withheld

268,072,518.68

4.828

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

David M. Thomas

Affirmative

5,308,375,429.85

95.602

Withheld

244,203,280.90

4.398

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Michael E. Wiley

Affirmative

5,304,369,992.98

95.530

Withheld

248,208,717.77

4.470

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

PROPOSAL 2

To amend the Declaration of Trust to reduce the required quorum for future shareholder meetings.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

Affirmative

4,180,350,765.24

75.287

Against

812,580,433.39

14.634

Abstain

292,815,961.45

5.274

Broker
Non-Votes

266,831,550.67

4.805

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

A Denotes trust-wide proposal and voting results.

Annual Report

Managing Your Investments

Fidelity offers several ways to conveniently manage your personal investments via your telephone or PC. You can access your account information, conduct trades and research your investments 24 hours a day.

By Phone

Fidelity Automated Service Telephone provides a single toll-free number to access account balances, positions, quotes and trading. It's easy to navigate the service, and on your first call, the system will help you create a personal identification number (PIN) for security.

(phone_graphic)
Fidelity Automated
Service Telephone (FAST
®)
1-800-544-5555

Press

fid62For mutual fund and brokerage trading.

fid64For quotes.*

fid66For account balances and holdings.

fid68To review orders and mutual
fund activity.

fid70To change your PIN.

fid72fid74To speak to a Fidelity representative.

By PC

Fidelity's web site on the Internet provides a wide range of information, including daily financial news, fund performance, interactive planning tools and news about Fidelity products and services.

(computer_graphic)
Fidelity's Web Site
www.fidelity.com

* When you call the quotes line, please remember that a fund's yield and return will vary and, except for money market funds, share price will also vary. This means that you may have a gain or loss when you sell your shares. There is no assurance that money market funds will be able to maintain a stable $1 share price; an investment in a money market fund is not insured or guaranteed by the U.S. government. Total returns are historical and include changes in share price, reinvestment of dividends and capital gains, and the effects of any sales charges.

Annual Report

To Visit Fidelity

For directions and hours, 
please call 1-800-544-9797.

Arizona

7001 West Ray Road
Chandler, AZ

15445 N. Scottsdale Road
Scottsdale, AZ

California

815 East Birch Street
Brea, CA

1411 Chapin Avenue
Burlingame, CA

851 East Hamilton Avenue
Campbell, CA

19200 Von Karman Avenue
Irvine, CA

601 Larkspur Landing Circle
Larkspur, CA

2000 Avenue of the Stars
Los Angeles, CA

27101 Puerta Real
Mission Viejo, CA

73-575 El Paseo
Palm Desert, CA

251 University Avenue
Palo Alto, CA

123 South Lake Avenue
Pasadena, CA

16656 Bernardo Ctr. Drive
Rancho Bernardo, CA

1220 Roseville Parkway
Roseville, CA

1740 Arden Way
Sacramento, CA

7676 Hazard Center Drive
San Diego, CA

11943 El Camino Real
San Diego, CA

8 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, CA

3793 State Street
Santa Barbara, CA

1200 Wilshire Boulevard
Santa Monica, CA

398 West El Camino Real
Sunnyvale, CA

111 South Westlake Blvd
Thousand Oaks, CA

21701 Hawthorne Boulevard
Torrance, CA

2001 North Main Street
Walnut Creek, CA

6326 Canoga Avenue
Woodland Hills, CA

Colorado

281 East Flatiron Circle
Broomfield, CO

1625 Broadway
Denver, CO

9185 Westview Road
Lone Tree, CO

Connecticut

48 West Putnam Avenue
Greenwich, CT

265 Church Street
New Haven, CT

300 Atlantic Street
Stamford, CT

29 South Main Street
West Hartford, CT

Delaware

400 Delaware Avenue
Wilmington, DE

Florida

175 East Altamonte Drive
Altamonte Springs, FL

4400 N. Federal Highway
Boca Raton, FL

121 Alhambra Plaza
Coral Gables, FL

2948 N. Federal Highway
Ft. Lauderdale, FL

4671 Town Center Parkway
Jacksonville, FL

8880 Tamiami Trail, North
Naples, FL

230 Royal Palm Way
Palm Beach, FL

3501 PGA Boulevard
Palm Beach Gardens, FL

3550 Tamiami Trail, South
Sarasota, FL

1502 N. Westshore Blvd.
Tampa, FL

2465 State Road 7
Wellington, FL

Georgia

3445 Peachtree Road, N.E.
Atlanta, GA

1000 Abernathy Road
Atlanta, GA

Illinois

One North LaSalle Street
Chicago, IL

401 North Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL

One Skokie Valley Road
Highland Park, IL

1415 West 22nd Street
Oak Brook, IL

15105 S LaGrange Road
Orland Park, IL

1572 East Golf Road
Schaumburg, IL

Indiana

4729 East 82nd Street
Indianapolis, IN

8480 Keystone Crossing
Indianapolis, IN

Kansas

5400 College Boulevard
Overland Park, KS

Maine

Three Canal Plaza
Portland, ME

Maryland

7315 Wisconsin Avenue
Bethesda, MD

610 York Road
Towson, MD

Massachusetts

801 Boylston Street
Boston, MA

155 Congress Street
Boston, MA

300 Granite Street
Braintree, MA

44 Mall Road
Burlington, MA

238 Main Street
Cambridge, MA

200 Endicott Street
Danvers, MA

Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc., 100 Summer St., Boston, MA 02110 Member NYSE/SIPC

Annual Report

405 Cochituate Road
Framingham, MA

551 Boston Turnpike
Shrewsbury, MA

Michigan

500 E. Eisenhower Pkwy.
Ann Arbor, MI

280 Old N. Woodward Ave.
Birmingham, MI

30200 Northwestern Hwy.
Farmington Hills, MI

43420 Grand River Avenue
Novi, MI

Minnesota

7740 France Avenue South
Edina, MN

8342 3rd Street North
Oakdale, MN

Missouri

1524 South Lindbergh Blvd.
St. Louis, MO

Nevada

2225 Village Walk Drive
Henderson, NV

New Jersey

501 Route 73 South
Marlton, NJ

150 Essex Street
Millburn, NJ

35 Morris Street
Morristown, NJ

396 Route 17, North
Paramus, NJ

3518 Route 1 North
Princeton, NJ

530 Broad Street
Shrewsbury, NJ

New Mexico

2261 Q Street NE
Albuquerque, NM

New York

1130 Franklin Avenue
Garden City, NY

37 West Jericho Turnpike
Huntington Station, NY

1271 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY

980 Madison Avenue
New York, NY

61 Broadway
New York, NY

350 Park Avenue
New York, NY

200 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY

733 Third Avenue
New York, NY

11 Penn Plaza
New York, NY

2070 Broadway
New York, NY

1075 Northern Blvd.
Roslyn, NY

799 Central Park Avenue
Scarsdale, NY

North Carolina

4611 Sharon Road
Charlotte, NC

7011 Fayetteville Road
Durham, NC

Ohio

3805 Edwards Road
Cincinnati, OH

1324 Polaris Parkway
Columbus, OH

1800 Crocker Road
Westlake, OH

28699 Chagrin Boulevard
Woodmere Village, OH

Oregon

7493 SW Bridgeport Road
Tigard, OR

Pennsylvania

600 West DeKalb Pike
King of Prussia, PA

1735 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA

12001 Perry Highway
Wexford, PA

Rhode Island

10 Memorial Boulevard
Providence, RI

Tennessee

3018 Peoples Street
Johnson City, TN

7628 West Farmington Blvd.
Germantown, TN

2035 Mallory Lane
Franklin, TN

Texas

10000 Research Boulevard
Austin, TX

4001 Northwest Parkway
Dallas, TX

12532 Memorial Drive
Houston, TX

2701 Drexel Drive
Houston, TX

6560 Fannin Street
Houston, TX

1701 Lake Robbins Drive
The Woodlands, TX

6500 N. MacArthur Blvd.
Irving, TX

6005 West Park Boulevard
Plano, TX

14100 San Pedro
San Antonio, TX

1576 East Southlake Blvd.
Southlake, TX

Utah

279 West South Temple
Salt Lake City, UT

Virginia

1861 International Drive
McLean, VA

Washington

10500 NE 8th Street
Bellevue, WA

1518 6th Avenue
Seattle, WA

Washington, DC

1900 K Street, N.W.
Washington, DC

Wisconsin

16020 West Bluemound Road
Brookfield, WI

Annual Report

Investment Adviser

Fidelity Management & Research Company

Boston, MA

Investment Sub-Advisers

FMR Co., Inc.

Fidelity Management &
Research Company (U.K.) Inc.

Fidelity Research & Analysis Company

Fidelity Investments Japan Limited

Fidelity International Investment Advisors

Fidelity International Investment Advisors (U.K.) Limited

General Distributor

Fidelity Distributors Corporation

Boston, MA

Transfer and Service Agents

Fidelity Investments Institutional
Operations Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Fidelity Service Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Custodian

Citibank, N.A.

New York, NY

The Fidelity Telephone Connection

Mutual Fund 24-Hour Service

Exchanges/Redemptions
and Account Assistance 1-800-544-6666

Product Information 1-800-544-6666

Retirement Accounts 1-800-544-4774
(8 a.m. - 9 p.m.)

TDD Service 1-800-544-0118
for the deaf and hearing impaired
(9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Eastern time)

Fidelity Automated Service
Telephone (FAST®) fid76 1-800-544-5555

fid76 Automated line for quickest service

FIF-UANN-0808
1.787732.105

fid79

Fidelity®
Fund-
Fidelity Fund
Class K

Annual Report

June 30, 2008
(2_fidelity_logos) (Registered_Trademark)

Contents

Chairman's Message

<Click Here>

Ned Johnson's message to shareholders.

Performance

<Click Here>

How the fund has done over time.

Management's Discussion

<Click Here>

The manager's review of fund performance, strategy and outlook.

Shareholder Expense Example

<Click Here>

An example of shareholder expenses.

Investment Changes

<Click Here>

A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months.

Investments

<Click Here>

A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values.

Financial Statements

<Click Here>

Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets,
as well as financial highlights.

Notes

<Click Here>

Notes to the financial statements.

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

<Click Here>

 

Trustees and Officers

<Click Here>

 

Distributions

<Click Here>

 

Proxy Voting Results

<Click Here>

 

To view a fund's proxy voting guidelines and proxy voting record for the 12-month period ended June 30, visit http://www.fidelity.com (search for "proxy voting guidelines") or visit the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) web site at http://www.sec.gov. You may also call 1-800-544-8544 to request a free copy of the proxy voting guidelines.

Standard & Poor's, S&P and S&P 500 are registered service marks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and have been licensed for use by Fidelity Distributors Corporation.

Other third party marks appearing herein are the property of their respective owners.

All other marks appearing herein are registered or unregistered trademarks or service marks of FMR LLC or an affiliated company.

Annual Report

This report and the financial statements contained herein are submitted for the general information of the shareholders of the fund. This report is not authorized for distribution to prospective investors in the fund unless preceded or accompanied by an effective prospectus.

A fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, DC. Information regarding the operation of the SEC's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. For a complete list of a fund's portfolio holdings, view the most recent holdings listing, semiannual report, or annual report on Fidelity's web site at http://www.fidelity.com or http://www.advisor.fidelity.com, as applicable.

NOT FDIC INSURED · MAY LOSE VALUE · NO BANK GUARANTEE

Neither the fund nor Fidelity Distributors Corporation is a bank.

Annual Report

Chairman's Message

(photo_of_Edward_C_Johnson_3d)

Dear Shareholder:

Domestic and international securities markets have struggled thus far in 2008. High-grade fixed-income investments produced modestly positive results, but many stock benchmarks suffered double-digit losses through the first half of this year. Financial markets are always unpredictable, but there are a number of time-tested principles that can put the historical odds in your favor.

One of the basic tenets is to invest for the long term. Over time, riding out the markets' inevitable ups and downs has proven much more effective than selling into panic or chasing the hottest trend. Even missing only a few of the markets' best days can significantly diminish investor returns. Patience also affords the benefits of compounding - of earning interest on additional income or reinvested dividends and capital gains. There are tax advantages and cost benefits to consider as well. The more you sell, the more taxes you pay, and the more you trade, the higher the costs. While staying the course doesn't eliminate risk, it can considerably lessen the effect of short-term declines.

You can further manage your investing risk through diversification. And today, more than ever, geographic diversification should be taken into account. Studies indicate that asset allocation is the single most important determinant of a portfolio's long-term success. The right mix of stocks, bonds and cash - aligned to your particular risk tolerance and investment objective - is very important. Age-appropriate rebalancing is also an essential aspect of asset allocation. For younger investors, an emphasis on equities - which historically have been the best-performing asset class over time - is encouraged. As investors near their specific goal, such as retirement or sending a child to college, consideration may be given to replacing volatile assets (e.g. common stocks) with more-stable fixed investments (bonds or savings plans).

A third investment principle - investing regularly - can help lower the average cost of your purchases. Investing a certain amount of money each month or quarter helps ensure you won't pay for all your shares at market highs. This strategy - known as dollar cost averaging - also reduces unconstructive "emotion" from investing, helping shareholders avoid selling weak performers just prior to an upswing, or chasing a hot performer just before a correction.

We invite you to contact us via the Internet, through our Investor Centers or over the phone. It is our privilege to provide you the information you need to make the investments that are right for you.

Sincerely,
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Annual Report

Performance: The Bottom Line

Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the class' dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of securities that have grown in value, if any) and assuming a constant rate of performance each year. The $10,000 table and the fund's returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares. During periods of reimbursement by Fidelity, a fund's total return will be greater than it would be had the reimbursement not occurred. How a fund did yesterday is no guarantee of how it will do tomorrow.

Average Annual Total Returns

Periods ended June 30, 2008

Past 1
year

Past 5
years

Past 10 years

Fidelity Fund

-3.73%

9.80%

4.02%

Class KA

-3.71%

9.81%

4.02%

A The initial offering of Class K shares took place on May 9, 2008. Returns prior to May 9, 2008 are those of Fidelity Fund, the original class of the fund.

$10,000 Over 10 Years

Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity Fund, a class of the fund, on June 30, 1998. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Standard & Poor's 500SM Index (S&P 500®) performed over the same period.


fid93

Annual Report

Management's Discussion of Fund Performance

Comments from John Avery, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity® Fund

As threats of a recession, concerns about inflation and higher unemployment rates weighed heavily on consumers and investors, the U.S. equity markets struggled for the 12-month period ending June 30, 2008. For investors, the lingering effects of the subprime mortgage crisis and subsequent credit crunch were felt in nearly all segments of the market, with financial stocks lagging the most and the energy sector continuing its upward trajectory. In an effort to reignite the economy, the Federal Reserve Board lowered the fed funds target rate seven times, taking it from 5.25% to 2.00% between September 2007 and April 2008. The Fed also stepped in to help prevent the near collapse of one of the nation's largest investment banks, Bear Stearns. These moves initially seemed to bolster investor confidence, but, ultimately, most indexes lagged. The Standard & Poor's 500SM Index fell 13.12% for the 12 months ending June 30, 2008. The Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also declined, with a -13.27% return, and the NASDAQ Composite® Index plunged 11.28% over the corresponding 12 months.

During the past year, the fund's Retail Class shares returned -3.73%, beating the S&P 500® by a wide margin. (For specific performance results for the fund's new Class K shares, please see the performance section of this report.) Favorable stock picking in materials had the most positive impact on performance. Stock selection also added considerable value in health care, financials, information technology and industrials. Additionally, the fund's foreign investments were aided by currency fluctuations. Monsanto was the largest individual contributor and the fund's largest holding at period end. Farmers willingly paid premium prices for the company's genetically modified seeds in exchange for higher crop yields, boosting Monsanto's profits and market share. Japanese video game maker Nintendo also was a solid contributor, as were coal producer Peabody Energy and Ireland-based biopharmaceutical holding Elan. Both Elan and Nintendo were out-of-benchmark positions. Underweighting weak-performing financial conglomerate Citigroup, an index component, helped as well. Conversely, stock picking in consumer discretionary was a minor drawback. At the stock level, publisher McGraw-Hill, owner of credit-rating business Standard & Poor's, performed poorly, plagued by concerns about the slowdown in new corporate bond issuance and the possibility of tighter regulations governing companies that issue credit-quality ratings. Mortgage securitizer Fannie Mae and refiner Valero Energy detracted as well.

The views expressed above reflect those of the portfolio manager(s) only through the end of the period as stated on the cover of this report and do not necessarily represent the views of Fidelity or any other person in the Fidelity organization. Any such views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions and Fidelity disclaims any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied on as investment advice and, because investment decisions for a Fidelity fund are based on numerous factors, may not be relied on as an indication of trading intent on behalf of any Fidelity fund.

Annual Report

Shareholder Expense Example

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.

The actual expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Fidelity Fund and for the entire period (May 9, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class K. The hypothetical expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested for the one half year period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008).

Actual Expenses

The first line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000.00 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000.00 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line for a class of the Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The second line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a Class' actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Class' actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Annual Report

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transaction costs. Therefore, the second line of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds.

 

Beginning
Account
Value

Ending
Account Value
June 30, 2008

Expenses
Paid During
Period

Fidelity Fund

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 898.30

$ 2.64 B

HypotheticalA

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,022.08

$ 2.82 C

Class K

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 951.00

$ .61 B

HypotheticalA

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,022.73

$ 2.16 C

A 5% return per year before expenses

B Actual expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period) for Fidelity Fund and multiplied by 53/366 (to reflect the period May 9, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class K.

C Hypothetical expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).

 

Annualized
Expense Ratio

Fidelity Fund

.56%

Class K

.43%

Annual Report

Investment Changes (Unaudited)

Top Ten Stocks as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Monsanto Co.

3.2

3.3

Exxon Mobil Corp.

2.2

2.2

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

1.7

0.0

Wyeth

1.7

0.9

Peabody Energy Corp.

1.6

0.9

International Business Machines Corp.

1.6

0.0

Apple, Inc.

1.6

1.5

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

1.5

1.2

Schlumberger Ltd. (NY Shares)

1.4

1.5

Honeywell International, Inc.

1.3

1.8

 

17.8

 

Top Five Market Sectors as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Energy

17.5

12.8

Information Technology

17.1

16.5

Financials

12.0

15.1

Industrials

10.4

13.4

Health Care

10.2

11.8

Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)

As of June 30, 2008 *

As of December 31, 2007 **

fid53

Stocks 93.8%

 

fid53

Stocks 97.0%

 

fid97

Convertible
Securities 0.6%

 

fid97

Convertible
Securities 0.0%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 5.6%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 3.0%

 

* Foreign investments

14.3%

 

** Foreign investments

20.1%

 


fid103

Annual Report

Investments June 30, 2008

Showing Percentage of Net Assets

Common Stocks - 93.8%

Shares

Value (000s)

CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 6.9%

Auto Components - 0.2%

Johnson Controls, Inc.

526,600

$ 15,103

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 0.6%

McDonald's Corp.

766,900

43,115

Household Durables - 0.8%

Lennar Corp. Class A (d)

666,800

8,228

Pulte Homes, Inc.

699,700

6,738

Whirlpool Corp. (d)

701,500

43,304

 

58,270

Media - 2.2%

Discovery Holding Co. Class A (a)

775,400

17,028

McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

831,900

33,376

Regal Entertainment Group Class A

1,354,628

20,699

The Walt Disney Co.

1,193,900

37,250

Time Warner, Inc.

3,038,200

44,965

 

153,318

Multiline Retail - 0.6%

Target Corp.

889,500

41,353

Specialty Retail - 2.0%

AutoZone, Inc. (a)

176,900

21,407

Home Depot, Inc.

983,200

23,027

Lowe's Companies, Inc.

1,711,400

35,512

PetSmart, Inc.

993,451

19,819

Staples, Inc.

1,917,550

45,542

 

145,307

Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.5%

Polo Ralph Lauren Corp. Class A

598,373

37,566

TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY

494,032

CONSUMER STAPLES - 7.9%

Beverages - 1.0%

PepsiCo, Inc.

1,187,990

75,544

Food & Staples Retailing - 2.7%

CVS Caremark Corp.

1,745,700

69,077

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

2,165,100

121,679

 

190,756

Food Products - 2.2%

Bunge Ltd. (d)

693,000

74,629

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

CONSUMER STAPLES - continued

Food Products - continued

Lindt & Spruengli AG (participation certificate)

12,834

$ 35,371

Nestle SA (Reg.)

987,460

44,504

 

154,504

Household Products - 0.9%

Procter & Gamble Co.

1,084,544

65,951

Tobacco - 1.1%

British American Tobacco PLC sponsored ADR

291,700

20,200

Philip Morris International, Inc.

1,148,200

56,710

 

76,910

TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES

563,665

ENERGY - 17.5%

Energy Equipment & Services - 2.6%

Halliburton Co.

1,161,900

61,662

Schlumberger Ltd. (NY Shares)

908,400

97,589

Transocean, Inc. (a)

203,933

31,077

 

190,328

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 14.9%

Canadian Natural Resources Ltd.

279,400

27,640

Chesapeake Energy Corp.

1,060,400

69,944

Chevron Corp.

709,500

70,333

ConocoPhillips

675,400

63,751

Copano Energy LLC

420,400

14,189

Denbury Resources, Inc. (a)

904,600

33,018

Devon Energy Corp.

169,800

20,403

Energy Transfer Equity LP

567,700

16,458

EOG Resources, Inc.

495,300

64,983

Exxon Mobil Corp.

1,803,700

158,960

Hess Corp.

465,700

58,767

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

1,175,200

105,603

Peabody Energy Corp.

1,343,900

118,330

Petroleo Brasileiro SA - Petrobras sponsored ADR

693,800

49,142

Plains Exploration & Production Co. (a)

336,800

24,576

Spectra Energy Corp.

845,100

24,288

Ultra Petroleum Corp. (a)

419,479

41,193

Valero Energy Corp.

1,233,200

50,783

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

ENERGY - continued

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued

Williams Companies, Inc.

823,700

$ 33,203

XTO Energy, Inc.

325,000

22,266

 

1,067,830

TOTAL ENERGY

1,258,158

FINANCIALS - 11.4%

Capital Markets - 3.8%

Bank of New York Mellon Corp.

1,037,500

39,249

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

285,000

49,847

Julius Baer Holding AG

610,658

40,957

Lazard Ltd. Class A

514,500

17,570

State Street Corp.

1,283,300

82,118

T. Rowe Price Group, Inc.

765,300

43,216

 

272,957

Commercial Banks - 1.3%

Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, Inc.

2,813

21,171

U.S. Bancorp, Delaware

725,500

20,234

Wachovia Corp.

561,200

8,715

Wells Fargo & Co.

1,630,500

38,724

 

88,844

Consumer Finance - 1.4%

American Express Co.

770,292

29,017

Capital One Financial Corp. (d)

677,000

25,733

SLM Corp. (a)

2,480,400

47,996

 

102,746

Diversified Financial Services - 2.2%

Bank of America Corp.

2,173,665

51,885

Bovespa Holding SA

1,196,200

16,053

CIT Group, Inc.

1,348,100

9,181

Citigroup, Inc.

983,400

16,482

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

1,906,300

65,405

 

159,006

Insurance - 1.9%

AFLAC, Inc.

406,500

25,528

American International Group, Inc.

1,077,900

28,521

Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class A (a)

165

19,924

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

FINANCIALS - continued

Insurance - continued

MetLife, Inc.

627,600

$ 33,118

Principal Financial Group, Inc. (d)

594,700

24,960

 

132,051

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.8%

Fannie Mae

1,632,600

31,852

Freddie Mac (d)

1,663,400

27,280

 

59,132

TOTAL FINANCIALS

814,736

HEALTH CARE - 10.2%

Biotechnology - 1.7%

Cephalon, Inc. (a)

267,200

17,820

CSL Ltd.

1,672,786

57,255

Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a)

919,000

48,661

 

123,736

Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 3.2%

Becton, Dickinson & Co.

423,600

34,439

C.R. Bard, Inc.

1,007,200

88,583

Covidien Ltd.

1,060,400

50,783

Sonova Holding AG

346,437

28,594

St. Jude Medical, Inc. (a)

720,400

29,450

 

231,849

Health Care Providers & Services - 0.6%

Medco Health Solutions, Inc. (a)

872,000

41,158

Pharmaceuticals - 4.7%

Abbott Laboratories

959,900

50,846

Allergan, Inc.

636,800

33,145

Elan Corp. PLC sponsored ADR (a)

1,954,296

69,475

Johnson & Johnson

444,300

28,586

Merck & Co., Inc.

855,300

32,236

Wyeth

2,467,540

118,343

 

332,631

TOTAL HEALTH CARE

729,374

INDUSTRIALS - 10.4%

Aerospace & Defense - 3.9%

General Dynamics Corp.

818,700

68,935

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

INDUSTRIALS - continued

Aerospace & Defense - continued

Honeywell International, Inc.

1,861,100

$ 93,576

Lockheed Martin Corp.

917,430

90,514

Raytheon Co.

530,800

29,873

 

282,898

Air Freight & Logistics - 0.4%

United Parcel Service, Inc. Class B

445,900

27,409

Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.7%

Stericycle, Inc. (a)

394,900

20,416

The Brink's Co.

406,600

26,600

 

47,016

Construction & Engineering - 1.2%

Fluor Corp.

240,300

44,715

Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. (a)

187,200

15,107

Quanta Services, Inc. (a)

824,600

27,434

 

87,256

Electrical Equipment - 1.6%

ABB Ltd. (Reg.)

770,534

21,813

Alstom SA (d)

105,300

24,146

American Superconductor Corp. (a)(d)

649,200

23,274

Suntech Power Holdings Co. Ltd. sponsored ADR (a)

543,300

20,352

Vestas Wind Systems AS (a)

212,200

27,628

 

117,213

Industrial Conglomerates - 0.5%

Siemens AG sponsored ADR

353,900

38,975

Machinery - 2.1%

Caterpillar, Inc.

226,400

16,713

Cummins, Inc.

321,600

21,071

Danaher Corp.

304,900

23,569

Deere & Co.

422,500

30,475

Eaton Corp.

220,200

18,710

Navistar International Corp. (a)

296,800

19,535

Sulzer AG (Reg.)

142,410

17,994

 

148,067

TOTAL INDUSTRIALS

748,834

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 17.1%

Communications Equipment - 2.6%

Cisco Systems, Inc. (a)

3,955,076

91,995

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued

Communications Equipment - continued

QUALCOMM, Inc.

1,348,100

$ 59,815

Research In Motion Ltd. (a)

273,500

31,972

 

183,782

Computers & Peripherals - 4.7%

Apple, Inc. (a)

686,800

114,998

Hewlett-Packard Co.

2,018,500

89,238

International Business Machines Corp.

971,700

115,176

NCR Corp. (a)

814,121

20,516

 

339,928

Electronic Equipment & Instruments - 1.2%

Amphenol Corp. Class A

1,897,238

85,148

Internet Software & Services - 1.0%

Google, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a)

142,485

75,007

IT Services - 0.9%

Visa, Inc.

796,900

64,796

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 4.4%

Analog Devices, Inc.

998,200

31,713

Applied Materials, Inc.

3,783,200

72,221

Infineon Technologies AG sponsored ADR (a)

1,930,600

16,468

Intel Corp.

2,364,600

50,792

Lam Research Corp. (a)

938,500

33,927

Skyworks Solutions, Inc. (a)

2,279,134

22,495

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. sponsored ADR

2,984,400

32,560

Texas Instruments, Inc. (d)

611,000

17,206

Xilinx, Inc.

1,389,100

35,075

 

312,457

Software - 2.3%

Microsoft Corp.

2,696,100

74,170

Nintendo Co. Ltd.

54,100

30,231

Oracle Corp. (a)

1,689,600

35,482

VMware, Inc. Class A (d)

426,900

22,993

 

162,876

TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

1,223,994

MATERIALS - 7.0%

Chemicals - 6.1%

Albemarle Corp.

452,100

18,043

CF Industries Holdings, Inc.

243,000

37,130

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

MATERIALS - continued

Chemicals - continued

FMC Corp.

575,500

$ 44,567

Monsanto Co.

1,794,654

226,914

Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan, Inc.

138,900

31,748

Praxair, Inc.

388,522

36,614

The Mosaic Co. (a)

285,000

41,240

 

436,256

Metals & Mining - 0.9%

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc. Class B

302,200

35,415

Goldcorp, Inc.

442,100

20,389

Newcrest Mining Ltd.

447,353

12,567

 

68,371

TOTAL MATERIALS

504,627

TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 2.2%

Diversified Telecommunication Services - 2.2%

AT&T, Inc.

2,449,895

82,537

Verizon Communications, Inc.

2,070,700

73,303

 

155,840

UTILITIES - 3.2%

Electric Utilities - 1.6%

Entergy Corp.

328,900

39,626

Exelon Corp.

488,800

43,972

PPL Corp.

649,200

33,934

 

117,532

Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 1.6%

Constellation Energy Group, Inc.

406,000

33,333

Dynegy, Inc. Class A (a)

4,544,400

38,855

NRG Energy, Inc. (a)

1,020,500

43,779

 

115,967

TOTAL UTILITIES

233,499

TOTAL COMMON STOCKS

(Cost $5,983,774)

6,726,759

Convertible Preferred Stocks - 0.6%

Shares

Value (000s)

FINANCIALS - 0.6%

Diversified Financial Services - 0.1%

CIT Group, Inc. Series C, 8.75%

61,400

$ 2,510

Insurance - 0.3%

American International Group, Inc. Series A, 8.50%

400,000

23,865

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.2%

Fannie Mae 8.75%

400,000

15,400

TOTAL CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCKS

(Cost $53,070)

41,775

Money Market Funds - 7.6%

 

 

 

 

Fidelity Cash Central Fund, 2.38% (b)

388,043,522

388,044

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 2.39% (b)(c)

155,186,375

155,186

TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS

(Cost $543,230)

543,230

Cash Equivalents - 0.2%

Maturity Amount (000s)

 

Investments in repurchase agreements in a joint trading account at 1.34%, dated 6/30/08 due 7/1/08 (Collateralized by U.S. Treasury Obligations) #
(Cost $16,906)

$ 16,907

16,906

TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 102.2%

(Cost $6,596,980)

7,328,670

NET OTHER ASSETS - (2.2)%

(155,001)

NET ASSETS - 100%

$ 7,173,669

Legend

(a) Non-income producing

(b) Affiliated fund that is available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. The rate quoted is the annualized seven-day yield of the fund at period end. A complete unaudited listing of the fund's holdings as of its most recent quarter end is available upon request.

(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.

(d) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.

# Additional Information on each counterparty to the repurchase agreement is as follows:

Repurchase Agreement / Counterparty

Value
(Amounts in thousands)

$16,906,000 due 7/01/08 at 1.34%

Banc of America
Securities LLC

$ 3,343

Barclays Capital, Inc.

4,709

Goldman, Sachs & Co.

8,854

 

$ 16,906

Affiliated Central Funds

Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:

Fund

Income earned
(Amounts in thousands)

Fidelity Cash Central Fund

$ 5,875

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund

880

Total

$ 6,755

Other Information

Distribution of investments by country of issue, as a percentage of total net assets, is as follows: (Unaudited)

United States of America

85.7%

Switzerland

2.7%

Canada

2.2%

Bermuda

2.0%

Netherlands Antilles

1.4%

Ireland

1.0%

Others (individually less than 1%)

5.0%

 

100.0%

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

 Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts)

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Assets

Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $149,074 and repurchase agreements of $16,906) - See accompanying schedule:

Unaffiliated issuers (cost $6,053,750)

$ 6,785,440

 

Fidelity Central Funds (cost $543,230)

543,230

 

Total Investments (cost $6,596,980)

 

$ 7,328,670

Foreign currency held at value (cost $4,270)

4,270

Receivable for investments sold

43,460

Receivable for fund shares sold

6,027

Dividends receivable

4,520

Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds

693

Prepaid expenses

11

Other receivables

258

Total assets

7,387,909

 

 

 

Liabilities

Payable for investments purchased

$ 42,958

Payable for fund shares redeemed

12,378

Accrued management fee

2,136

Other affiliated payables

1,251

Other payables and accrued expenses

331

Collateral on securities loaned, at value

155,186

Total liabilities

214,240

 

 

 

Net Assets

$ 7,173,669

Net Assets consist of:

 

Paid in capital

$ 6,235,073

Undistributed net investment income

19,181

Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions

187,719

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

731,696

Net Assets

$ 7,173,669

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Assets and Liabilities - continued

 Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts)

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Fidelity Fund:

Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($7,173,574.02 ÷ 200,987.516 shares)

$ 35.69

 

 

 

Class K:

Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($95.10 ÷ 2.664 shares)

$ 35.70

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements - continued

Statement of Operations

 Amounts in thousands

Year ended June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Investment Income

 

 

Dividends

 

$ 106,641

Interest

 

211

Income from Fidelity Central Funds

 

6,755

Total income

 

113,607

 

 

 

Expenses

Management fee

$ 25,774

Transfer agent fees

13,553

Accounting and security lending fees

1,196

Custodian fees and expenses

242

Independent trustees' compensation

30

Registration fees

88

Audit

83

Legal

49

Interest

3

Miscellaneous

273

Total expenses before reductions

41,291

Expense reductions

(368)

40,923

Net investment income (loss)

72,684

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

Net realized gain (loss) on:

Investment securities:

 

 

Unaffiliated issuers

467,625

Foreign currency transactions

130

Total net realized gain (loss)

 

467,755

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:

Investment securities

(825,278)

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

6

Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

 

(825,272)

Net gain (loss)

(357,517)

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

$ (284,833)

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 Amounts in thousands

Year ended
June 30,
2008

Year ended
June 30,
2007

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net investment income (loss)

$ 72,684

$ 65,819

Net realized gain (loss)

467,755

775,600

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(825,272)

612,454

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting
from operations

(284,833)

1,453,873

Distributions to shareholders from net investment income

(72,940)

(72,277)

Distributions to shareholders from net realized gain

(310,354)

-

Total distributions

(383,294)

(72,277)

Share transactions - net increase (decrease)

423,387

(2,247,117)

Total increase (decrease) in net assets

(244,740)

(865,521)

 

 

 

Net Assets

Beginning of period

7,418,409

8,283,930

End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $19,181 and undistributed net investment income of $20,796, respectively)

$ 7,173,669

$ 7,418,409

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Fidelity Fund

Years ended June 30,
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004

Selected Per-Share Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 38.98

$ 32.55

$ 29.74

$ 28.81

$ 24.46

Income from Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net investment income (loss) B

  .37

  .30

  .28

  .44 E

  .24

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (1.65)

  6.45

  2.80

  .87

  4.35

Total from investment operations

  (1.28)

  6.75

  3.08

  1.31

  4.59

Distributions from net investment income

  (.38)

  (.32)

  (.27)

  (.38)

  (.24)

Distributions from net realized gain

  (1.63)

  -

  -

  -

  -

Total distributions

  (2.01)

  (.32)

  (.27)

  (.38)

  (.24)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 35.69

$ 38.98

$ 32.55

$ 29.74

$ 28.81

Total Return A

  (3.73)%

  20.86%

  10.40%

  4.58%

  18.81%

Ratios to Average Net Assets C,F

 

 

 

 

 

Expenses before reductions

  .56%

  .57%

  .59%

  .60%

  .61%

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .56%

  .57%

  .59%

  .60%

  .61%

Expenses net of all reductions

  .55%

  .56%

  .56%

  .57%

  .59%

Net investment income (loss)

  .98%

  .86%

  .87%

  1.52% E

  .89%

Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net assets, end of period (in millions)

$ 7,174

$ 7,418

$ 8,284

$ 10,178

$ 10,499

Portfolio turnover rate D

  80%

  50%

  72%

  74%

  53%

A Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

C Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

E Investment income per share reflects a special dividend which amounted to $.12 per share. Excluding the special dividend, the ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets would have been 1.09%.

F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class K

Period ended June 30,
2008 G

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 37.54

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) D

  .05

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (1.89)

Total from investment operations

  (1.84)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 35.70

Total Return B,C

  (4.90)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets E,H

 

Expenses before reductions

  .43% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .43% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  .43% A

Net investment income (loss)

  1.00% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

 $ 95

Portfolio turnover rate F

  80%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

E Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

F Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G For the period May 9, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

H Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements

For the period ended June 30, 2008

(Amounts in thousands except ratios)

1. Organization.

Fidelity Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust (the trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. The trust is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust. On January 17, 2008, the Board of Trustees of the Fund approved the creation of an additional class of shares. The Fund commenced sale of shares of Class K and the existing class was designated Fidelity Fund on May 9, 2008. The Fund offers Fidelity Fund and Class K shares, each of which has equal rights as to assets and voting privileges. Each class has exclusive voting rights with respect to matters that affect that class. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, the common expenses of the Fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated on a pro rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the Fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent fees incurred. Certain expense reductions also differ by class.

2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.

The Fund may invest in Fidelity Central Funds, which are open-end investment companies available only to other investment companies and accounts managed by Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) and its affiliates. The Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR.

A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the SEC's web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC's web site or upon request.

3. Significant Accounting Policies.

The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the Fund:

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Security Valuation. Investments are valued as of 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on the last calendar day of the period. Wherever possible, the Fund uses independent pricing services approved by the Board of Trustees to value its investments.

Equity securities, including restricted securities, for which market quotations are readily available, are valued at the last reported sale price or official closing price as reported by an independent pricing service on the primary market or exchange on which they are traded. In the event there were no sales during the day or closing prices are not available, securities are valued at the last quoted bid price. Investments in open-end mutual funds, including the Fidelity Central Funds, are valued at their closing net asset value each business day. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less for which quotations are not readily available are valued at amortized cost, which approximates value.

When current market prices or quotations are not readily available or reliable, valuations may be determined in good faith in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees. Factors used in determining value may include significant market or security specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality, and developments in foreign markets which are monitored by evaluating the performance of ADRs, futures contracts and exchange-traded funds. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and may be utilized to a significant extent. The value of securities used for net asset value (NAV) calculation under these procedures may differ from published prices for the same securities.

Foreign Currency. The Fund uses foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.

Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.

The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.

Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

(Amounts in thousands except ratios)

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Investment Transactions and Income - continued

calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 pm Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and may include proceeds received from litigation. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, except for certain dividends from foreign securities where the ex-dividend date may have passed, which are recorded as soon as the Fund is informed of the ex-dividend date. Non-cash dividends included in dividend income, if any, are recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. The Fund estimates the components of distributions received that may be considered return of capital distributions or capital gain distributions. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain.

Expenses. Most expenses of the trust can be directly attributed to a fund. Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned among each Fund in the trust. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.

Deferred Trustee Compensation. Under a Deferred Compensation Plan (the Plan), independent Trustees must defer receipt of a portion of, and may elect to defer receipt of an additional portion of, their annual compensation. Deferred amounts are invested in a cross-section of Fidelity funds, are marked-to-market and remain in the Fund until distributed in accordance with the Plan. The investment of deferred amounts and the offsetting payable to the Trustees are included in the accompanying Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, the Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company by distributing substantially all of its taxable income and realized gains under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code and filing its U.S. federal tax return. As a result, no provision for income taxes is required. The Fund is subject to the provisions of FASB Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for Uncertainties in Income Taxes (FIN 48). FIN 48 sets forth a minimum threshold for financial statement recognition of the benefit of a tax position taken or expected to be taken in a tax return. The implementation of FIN 48 did not result in any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. Each of the Fund's federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remains subject to examination by the Internal

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued

Revenue Service. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.

Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles. In addition, the Fund will claim a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.

Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. Certain adjustments have been made to the accounts relating to prior periods. Collectively, these adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.

Book-tax differences are primarily due to foreign currency transactions, partnerships, deferred trustees compensation and losses deferred due to wash sales.

The tax-basis components of distributable earnings and the federal tax cost as of period end were as follows:

Unrealized appreciation

$ 1,187,881

 

Unrealized depreciation

(487,500)

 

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

700,381

 

Undistributed ordinary income

19,413

 

Undistributed long-term capital gain

198,086

 

 

 

 

Cost for federal income tax purposes

$ 6,628,289

 

The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:

 

June 30, 2008

June 30, 2007

Ordinary Income

$ 72,940

$ 72,277

Long-term Capital Gains

310,354

-

Total

$ 383,294

$ 72,277

New Accounting Pronouncement. In September 2006, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157, Fair Value Measurements (SFAS 157), was issued and is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. SFAS 157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and results in expanded disclosures about fair value measurements.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

(Amounts in thousands except ratios)

4. Operating Policies.

Repurchase Agreements. FMR has received an Exemptive Order from the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) which permits the Fund and other affiliated entities of FMR to transfer uninvested cash balances into joint trading accounts which are then invested in repurchase agreements. The Fund may also invest directly with institutions in repurchase agreements. Repurchase agreements are collateralized by government or non-government securities. Upon settlement date, collateral is held in segregated accounts with custodian banks and may be obtained in the event of a default of the counterparty. The Fund monitors, on a daily basis, the value of the collateral to ensure it is at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). In the event of a default by the counterparty, realization of the collateral proceeds could be delayed, during which time the value of the collateral may decline.

5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.

Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, aggregated $5,847,250 and $6,095,012, respectively.

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.

Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .09% of the Fund's average net assets and a group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and increases as assets under management decrease. For the period, the total annual management fee rate was .35% of the Fund's average net assets.

Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc. (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to account size and type of account of the shareholders of Fidelity Fund and asset-based fees of .05% of average net assets for Class K. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements. Prior to January 1, 2008, Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), also an affiliate of FMR, was the transfer agent for Fidelity Fund. For the period, the transfer agent fees for Fidelity Fund were equivalent to an annual rate of .18% of average net assets.

Accounting and Security Lending Fees. FSC maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on the level of average net assets for the month.

Annual Report

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued

Accounting and Security Lending Fees - continued

Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.

Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $54 for the period.

7. Committed Line of Credit.

The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR in a $4.2 billion credit facility (the "line of credit") to be utilized for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions or for other short-term liquidity purposes. The Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $14 and is reflected in Miscellaneous Expense on the Statement of Operations. During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.

8. Security Lending.

The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. On the settlement date of the loan, the Fund receives collateral (in the form of U.S. Treasury obligations, letters of credit and/or cash) against the loaned securities and maintains collateral in an amount not less than 100% of the market value of the loaned securities during the period of the loan. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. If the borrower defaults on its obligation to return the securities loaned because of insolvency or other reasons, a fund could experience delays and costs in recovering the securities loaned or in gaining access to the collateral. Any cash collateral received is invested in the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less fees and expenses associated with the loan, plus any premium payments that may be received on the loan of certain types of securities. Security lending income is presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds. Net income from lending portfolio securities during the period amounted to $880.

9. Bank Borrowings.

The Fund is permitted to have bank borrowings for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions. The Fund has established borrowing arrangements with

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

(Amounts in thousands except ratios)

9. Bank Borrowings - continued

certain banks. The interest rate on the borrowings is the bank's base rate, as revised from time to time. The average daily loan balance during the period for which loans were outstanding amounted to $16,907. The weighted average interest rate was 2.25%. The interest expense amounted to $3 under the bank borrowing program. At period end, there were no bank borrowings outstanding.

10. Expense Reductions.

Many of the brokers with whom FMR places trades on behalf of the Fund provided services to the Fund in addition to trade execution. These services included payments of certain expenses on behalf of the Fund totaling $180 for the period. In addition, through arrangements with the Fund's custodian and each class' transfer agent, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's custody expenses by $3. During the period, credits reduced each class' transfer agent expense as noted in the table below.

 

Transfer Agent
expense reduction

 

Fidelity Fund

$ 172

 

In addition, FMR voluntarily agreed to reimburse a portion of the existing class' operating expenses. During the period, this reimbursement reduced the existing class' expenses by $13.

11. Other.

The Fund's organizational documents provide former and current trustees and officers with a limited indemnification against liabilities arising in connection with the performance of their duties to the Fund. In the normal course of business, the Fund may also enter into contracts that provide general indemnifications. The Fund's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would be dependent on future claims that may be made against the Fund. The risk of material loss from such claims is considered remote.

In December 2006, the Independent Trustees, with the assistance of independent counsel, completed an investigation regarding gifts, gratuities and business entertainment provided by certain brokers to certain individuals who were employed on FMR's domestic equity trading desk during the period 2002 to 2004. The Independent Trustees and FMR agreed that, despite the absence of proof that the Fidelity mutual funds experienced diminished execution quality as a result of the improper receipt of gifts and business entertainment, the conduct at issue was serious and was worthy of redress. Accordingly, the Independent Trustees requested, and FMR agreed to make, a payment

Annual Report

11. Other - continued

of $42 million plus accrued interest, which equaled approximately $7.3 million, to certain Fidelity mutual funds.

In March 2008, the Trustees approved a method for allocating this payment among the funds and, in total, FMR paid the fund $1,330, which is recorded in the accompanying Statement of Operations.

In a related administrative order dated March 5, 2008, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") announced a settlement with FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (an affiliate of FMR) involving the SEC's regulatory rules for investment advisers and the improper receipt of gifts, gratuities and business entertainment. Without admitting or denying the SEC's findings, FMR agreed to pay an $8 million civil penalty to the United States Treasury.

12. Distributions to Shareholders.

Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:

Years ended June 30,

2008

2007

From net investment income

 

 

Fidelity Fund

$ 72,940

$ 72,277

From net realized gain

 

 

Fidelity Fund

$ 310,354

$ -

13. Share Transactions.

Transactions for each class of shares were as follows:

 

Shares

Dollars

Years ended June 30,

2008A

2007

2008 A

2007

Fidelity Fund

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

34,776

17,815

$ 1,322,511

$ 634,996

Reinvestment of distributions

9,112

1,967

359,856

67,769

Shares redeemed

(33,213)

(83,933)

(1,259,080)

(2,949,882)

Net increase (decrease)

10,675

(64,151)

$ 423,287

$ (2,247,117)

Class K

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

3

-

$ 100

$ -

A Share transactions for K Class are for the period May 9, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

Annual Report

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Fund (a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust) at June 30, 2008, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at June 30, 2008 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

August 19, 2008

Annual Report

Trustees and Officers

The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive officers of the trust and fund, as applicable, are listed below. The Board of Trustees governs the fund and is responsible for protecting the interests of shareholders. The Trustees are experienced executives who meet periodically throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities, review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the fund, and review the fund's performance. Except for Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey, each of the Trustees oversees 218 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate. Mr. Johnson 3d and Mr. Curvey oversee 377 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate.

The Trustees hold office without limit in time except that (a) any Trustee may resign; (b) any Trustee may be removed by written instrument, signed by at least two-thirds of the number of Trustees prior to such removal; (c) any Trustee who requests to be retired or who has become incapacitated by illness or injury may be retired by written instrument signed by a majority of the other Trustees; and (d) any Trustee may be removed at any special meeting of shareholders by a two-thirds vote of the outstanding voting securities of the trust. Each Trustee who is not an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) (Independent Trustee), shall retire not later than the last day of the calendar year in which his or her 72nd birthday occurs. The Independent Trustees may waive this mandatory retirement age policy with respect to individual Trustees. The executive officers and Advisory Board Member hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and Advisory Board Member may resign or may be removed by a vote of a majority of the Trustees at any regular meeting or any special meeting of the Trustees. Except as indicated, each individual has held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the past five years.

The fund's Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-800-544-8544.

Interested Trustees*:

Correspondence intended for each Trustee who is an interested person may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Edward C. Johnson 3d (78)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 1984

Mr. Johnson is Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Mr. Johnson serves as Chief Executive Officer, Chairman, and a Director of FMR LLC; Chairman and a Director of FMR; Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (FRAC); Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc.; and Chairman and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Johnson serves as Chairman and Director of FIL Limited. Previously, Mr. Johnson served as President of FMR LLC (2006-2007).

James C. Curvey (73)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) or Member of the Advisory Board (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2006-present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, he serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Geerlings & Wade, Inc. (wine distribution).

* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR. FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Independent Trustees:

Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Dennis J. Dirks (60)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) (1999-2003). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) (1999-2003) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) (1999-2003). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003) and Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003). Mr. Dirks also serves as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-present).

Alan J. Lacy (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (a private equity firm). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of The Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-present) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (global pharmaceuticals, 2007-present). Mr. Lacy is a Trustee of the National Parks Conservation Association and The Field Museum of Natural History.

Ned C. Lautenbach (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2000

Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees (2006-present). Mr. Lautenbach is an Advisory Partner of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment firm). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was with the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) from 1968 until his retirement in 1998. Mr. Lautenbach serves as a Director of Eaton Corporation (diversified industrial) as well as the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida. He also is a member of the Board of Trustees of Fairfield University (2005-present), as well as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Previously, Mr. Lautenbach served as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007).

Joseph Mauriello (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services firm, 1965-2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of XL Capital Ltd. (global insurance and re-insurance company, 2006-present) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-present). He also served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007).

Cornelia M. Small (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Ms. Small is a member of the Investment Committee, and Chair (2008-present) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson of the Investment Committee (2002-2008) of Smith College and as Co-Chair (2000-2003) of the Annual Fund for the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. In addition, she served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments.

William S. Stavropoulos (69)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2001

Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President (1993-2000; 2002-2003), CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, he is a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions, 2008-present), Chemical Financial Corporation, Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), Tyco International, Inc. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-present), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital (private equity investment firm, 2005-present). He is a special advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science.

David M. Thomas (59)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products holding company), and Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present).

Michael E. Wiley (57)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Wiley also serves as a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Tulsa (2000-2006; 2007-present). He serves as a Director of Tesoro Corporation (independent oil refiner and marketer, 2005-present), and a Director of Bill Barrett Corporation (exploration and production company, 2005-present). In addition, he also serves as a Director of Post Oak Bank (privately-held bank, 2004-present). Previously, Mr. Wiley served as a Sr. Energy Advisor of Katzenbach Partners, LLC (consulting firm, 2006-2007), as an Advisory Director of Riverstone Holdings (private investment firm), Chairman, President, and CEO of Baker Hughes, Inc. (oilfield services company, 2000-2004), and as Director of Spinnaker Exploration Company (exploration and production company, 2001-2005).

Advisory Board Member and Executive Officers**:

Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Mr. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Peter S. Lynch (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2003

Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR, and Vice Chairman (2001-present) and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. Previously, Mr. Lynch served as a Trustee of the Fidelity funds (1990-2003). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund.

Kenneth B. Robins (38)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

President and Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2004-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Robins worked at KPMG LLP, where he was a partner in KPMG's department of professional practice (2002-2004).

Walter C. Donovan (46)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Vice President of the fund. Mr. Donovan also serves as Vice President of Fidelity's Equity Funds, President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc., and Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Donovan served as Executive Vice President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2005-2007) and Senior Vice President of FMR (2003-2005) and FMR Co., Inc. (2004-2005).

Bruce T. Herring (42)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2006

Vice President of the fund. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of certain Equity Funds (2006-present) and Group Chief Investments Officer of FMR. Previously, Mr. Herring served as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds.

Scott C. Goebel (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Secretary of the fund. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary of other Fidelity funds (2008-present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present); and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC. Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Assistant Secretary of the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007).

John B. McGinty, Jr. (45)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Assistant Secretary of the fund. Mr. McGinty also serves as Assistant Secretary of Fidelity's other Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC (2004-present). Mr. McGinty also serves as Senior Vice President, Secretary, and Chief Legal Officer of FDC (2007-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. McGinty practiced law at Ropes & Gray, LLP.

Holly C. Laurent (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Anti-Money Laundering (AML) officer of the fund. Ms. Laurent also serves as AML officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC. Previously, Ms. Laurent was Senior Vice President and Head of Legal for Fidelity Business Services India Pvt. Ltd. (2006-2008), Senior Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and Group Head for FMR Co. Legal (2005-2006).

Christine Reynolds (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Chief Financial Officer of the fund. Ms. Reynolds also serves as Chief Financial Officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present). Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management (FPCMS) in August 2008. She served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS from 2007 through July 2008. Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Ms. Reynolds worked at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) (1980-2002), where she was an audit partner with PwC's investment management practice.

Kenneth A. Rathgeber (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Chief Compliance Officer of the fund. Mr. Rathgeber also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2004-present). He is Chief Compliance Officer of FMR (2005-present), FMR Co., Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2005-present), Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2005-present), and Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2005-present).

Bryan A. Mehrmann (47)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Deputy Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Mehrmann also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR. Previously, Mr. Mehrmann served as Vice President of Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Group (FIIS)/Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Corporation, Inc. (FIIOC) Client Services (1998-2004).

Adrien E. Deberghes (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Deputy Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Deberghes also serves as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005).

Robert G. Byrnes (41)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Byrnes also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Byrnes served as Vice President of FPCMS (2003-2005). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Byrnes worked at Deutsche Asset Management where he served as Vice President of the Investment Operations Group (2000-2003).

Peter L. Lydecker (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Lydecker also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2004-present) and is an employee of FMR.

Paul M. Murphy (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Murphy also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2007-present) and is an employee of FMR (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Murphy served as Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity Funds (2005-2006), Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR (2007), and Senior Vice President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services Group (FPCMS) (1994-2007).

Gary W. Ryan (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Ryan also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Vice President of Fund Reporting in FPCMS (1999-2005).

** FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Annual Report

Distributions (Unaudited)

The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Fund voted to pay to shareholders of record at the opening of business on record date, the following distributions per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities.

 

Pay Date

Record Date

Dividends

Capital Gains

Fidelity Fund

08/11/08

08/08/08

$-

$0.99

Class K

08/11/08

08/08/08

$-

$0.99

A total of .03% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year was derived from interest on U.S. Government securities which is generally exempt from state income tax.

The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended June 30, 2008, $494,561,120, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.

The fund designates 100% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends-received deduction for corporate shareholders.

The fund designates 100% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for the purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The fund will notify shareholders in January 2009 of amounts for use in preparing 2008 income tax returns.

Annual Report

Proxy Voting Results

A special meeting of the fund's shareholders was held on May 14, 2008. The results of votes taken among shareholders on the proposals before them are reported below. Each vote reported represents one dollar of net asset value held on the record date for the meeting.

PROPOSAL 1

To elect a Board of Trustees.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

James C. Curvey

Affirmative

5,283,033,775.58

95.146

Withheld

269,544,935.17

4.854

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Dennis J. Dirks

Affirmative

5,309,249,727.21

95.618

Withheld

243,328,983.54

4.382

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Affirmative

5,252,938,642.62

94.604

Withheld

299,640,068.13

5.396

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Alan J. Lacy

Affirmative

5,300,188,165.66

95.455

Withheld

252,390,545.09

4.545

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Ned C. Lautenbach

Affirmative

5,297,558,579.14

95.407

Withheld

255,020,131.61

4.593

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Joseph Mauriello

Affirmative

5,303,242,593.91

95.510

Withheld

249,336,116.84

4.490

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Cornelia M. Small

Affirmative

5,306,804,229.45

95.574

Withheld

245,774,481.30

4.426

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

William S. Stavropoulos

Affirmative

5,284,506,192.07

95.172

Withheld

268,072,518.68

4.828

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

David M. Thomas

Affirmative

5,308,375,429.85

95.602

Withheld

244,203,280.90

4.398

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Michael E. Wiley

Affirmative

5,304,369,992.98

95.530

Withheld

248,208,717.77

4.470

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

PROPOSAL 2

To amend the Declaration of Trust to reduce the required quorum for future shareholder meetings.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

Affirmative

4,180,350,765.24

75.287

Against

812,580,433.39

14.634

Abstain

292,815,961.45

5.274

Broker
Non-Votes

266,831,550.67

4.805

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

A Denotes trust-wide proposal and voting results.

Annual Report

Managing Your Investments

Fidelity offers several ways to conveniently manage your personal investments via your telephone or PC. You can access your account information, conduct trades and research your investments 24 hours a day.

By Phone

Fidelity Automated Service Telephone provides a single toll-free number to access account balances, positions, quotes and trading. It's easy to navigate the service, and on your first call, the system will help you create a personal identification number (PIN) for security.

(phone_graphic)
Fidelity Automated
Service Telephone (FAST
®)
1-800-544-5555

Press

fid62For mutual fund and brokerage trading.

fid64For quotes.*

fid66For account balances and holdings.

fid68To review orders and mutual
fund activity.

fid70To change your PIN.

fid72fid74To speak to a Fidelity representative.

By PC

Fidelity's web site on the Internet provides a wide range of information, including daily financial news, fund performance, interactive planning tools and news about Fidelity products and services.

(computer_graphic)
Fidelity's Web Site
www.fidelity.com

* When you call the quotes line, please remember that a fund's yield and return will vary and, except for money market funds, share price will also vary. This means that you may have a gain or loss when you sell your shares. There is no assurance that money market funds will be able to maintain a stable $1 share price; an investment in a money market fund is not insured or guaranteed by the U.S. government. Total returns are historical and include changes in share price, reinvestment of dividends and capital gains, and the effects of any sales charges.

Annual Report

To Write Fidelity

We'll give your correspondence immediate attention and send you written confirmation upon completion of your request.

(letter_graphic)
Making Changes
To Your Account

(such as changing name, address, bank, etc.)

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0002

(letter_graphic)
For Non-Retirement
Accounts

Buying shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003

Overnight Express
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Distribution Services
100 Crosby Parkway - KC1H
Covington, KY 41015

Selling shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0035

Overnight Express
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Distribution Services
100 Crosby Parkway - KC1H
Covington, KY 41015

General Correspondence

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 500
Merrimack, NH 03054-0500

(letter_graphic)
For Retirement
Accounts

Buying shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003

Selling shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0035

Overnight Express
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Distribution Services
100 Crosby Parkway - KC1H
Covington, KY 41015

General Correspondence

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 500
Merrimack, NH 03054-0500

Annual Report

To Visit Fidelity

For directions and hours, 
please call 1-800-544-9797.

Arizona

7001 West Ray Road
Chandler, AZ

15445 N. Scottsdale Road
Scottsdale, AZ

California

815 East Birch Street
Brea, CA

1411 Chapin Avenue
Burlingame, CA

851 East Hamilton Avenue
Campbell, CA

19200 Von Karman Avenue
Irvine, CA

601 Larkspur Landing Circle
Larkspur, CA

2000 Avenue of the Stars
Los Angeles, CA

27101 Puerta Real
Mission Viejo, CA

73-575 El Paseo
Palm Desert, CA

251 University Avenue
Palo Alto, CA

123 South Lake Avenue
Pasadena, CA

16656 Bernardo Ctr. Drive
Rancho Bernardo, CA

1220 Roseville Parkway
Roseville, CA

1740 Arden Way
Sacramento, CA

7676 Hazard Center Drive
San Diego, CA

11943 El Camino Real
San Diego, CA

8 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, CA

3793 State Street
Santa Barbara, CA

1200 Wilshire Boulevard
Santa Monica, CA

398 West El Camino Real
Sunnyvale, CA

111 South Westlake Blvd
Thousand Oaks, CA

21701 Hawthorne Boulevard
Torrance, CA

2001 North Main Street
Walnut Creek, CA

6326 Canoga Avenue
Woodland Hills, CA

Colorado

281 East Flatiron Circle
Broomfield, CO

1625 Broadway
Denver, CO

9185 Westview Road
Lone Tree, CO

Connecticut

48 West Putnam Avenue
Greenwich, CT

265 Church Street
New Haven, CT

300 Atlantic Street
Stamford, CT

29 South Main Street
West Hartford, CT

Delaware

400 Delaware Avenue
Wilmington, DE

Florida

175 East Altamonte Drive
Altamonte Springs, FL

4400 N. Federal Highway
Boca Raton, FL

121 Alhambra Plaza
Coral Gables, FL

2948 N. Federal Highway
Ft. Lauderdale, FL

4671 Town Center Parkway
Jacksonville, FL

8880 Tamiami Trail, North
Naples, FL

230 Royal Palm Way
Palm Beach, FL

3501 PGA Boulevard
Palm Beach Gardens, FL

3550 Tamiami Trail, South
Sarasota, FL

1502 N. Westshore Blvd.
Tampa, FL

2465 State Road 7
Wellington, FL

Georgia

3445 Peachtree Road, N.E.
Atlanta, GA

1000 Abernathy Road
Atlanta, GA

Illinois

One North LaSalle Street
Chicago, IL

401 North Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL

One Skokie Valley Road
Highland Park, IL

1415 West 22nd Street
Oak Brook, IL

15105 S LaGrange Road
Orland Park, IL

1572 East Golf Road
Schaumburg, IL

Indiana

4729 East 82nd Street
Indianapolis, IN

8480 Keystone Crossing
Indianapolis, IN

Kansas

5400 College Boulevard
Overland Park, KS

Maine

Three Canal Plaza
Portland, ME

Maryland

7315 Wisconsin Avenue
Bethesda, MD

610 York Road
Towson, MD

Massachusetts

801 Boylston Street
Boston, MA

155 Congress Street
Boston, MA

300 Granite Street
Braintree, MA

44 Mall Road
Burlington, MA

238 Main Street
Cambridge, MA

200 Endicott Street
Danvers, MA

Annual Report

405 Cochituate Road
Framingham, MA

551 Boston Turnpike
Shrewsbury, MA

Michigan

500 E. Eisenhower Pkwy.
Ann Arbor, MI

280 Old N. Woodward Ave.
Birmingham, MI

30200 Northwestern Hwy.
Farmington Hills, MI

43420 Grand River Avenue
Novi, MI

Minnesota

7740 France Avenue South
Edina, MN

8342 3rd Street North
Oakdale, MN

Missouri

1524 South Lindbergh Blvd.
St. Louis, MO

Nevada

2225 Village Walk Drive
Henderson, NV

New Jersey

501 Route 73 South
Marlton, NJ

150 Essex Street
Millburn, NJ

35 Morris Street
Morristown, NJ

396 Route 17, North
Paramus, NJ

3518 Route 1 North
Princeton, NJ

530 Broad Street
Shrewsbury, NJ

New Mexico

2261 Q Street NE
Albuquerque, NM

New York

1130 Franklin Avenue
Garden City, NY

37 West Jericho Turnpike
Huntington Station, NY

1271 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY

980 Madison Avenue
New York, NY

61 Broadway
New York, NY

350 Park Avenue
New York, NY

200 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY

733 Third Avenue
New York, NY

11 Penn Plaza
New York, NY

2070 Broadway
New York, NY

1075 Northern Blvd.
Roslyn, NY

799 Central Park Avenue
Scarsdale, NY

North Carolina

4611 Sharon Road
Charlotte, NC

7011 Fayetteville Road
Durham, NC

Ohio

3805 Edwards Road
Cincinnati, OH

1324 Polaris Parkway
Columbus, OH

1800 Crocker Road
Westlake, OH

28699 Chagrin Boulevard
Woodmere Village, OH

Oregon

7493 SW Bridgeport Road
Tigard, OR

Pennsylvania

600 West DeKalb Pike
King of Prussia, PA

1735 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA

12001 Perry Highway
Wexford, PA

Rhode Island

10 Memorial Boulevard
Providence, RI

Tennessee

3018 Peoples Street
Johnson City, TN

7628 West Farmington Blvd.
Germantown, TN

2035 Mallory Lane
Franklin, TN

Texas

10000 Research Boulevard
Austin, TX

4001 Northwest Parkway
Dallas, TX

12532 Memorial Drive
Houston, TX

2701 Drexel Drive
Houston, TX

6560 Fannin Street
Houston, TX

1701 Lake Robbins Drive
The Woodlands, TX

6500 N. MacArthur Blvd.
Irving, TX

6005 West Park Boulevard
Plano, TX

14100 San Pedro
San Antonio, TX

1576 East Southlake Blvd.
Southlake, TX

Utah

279 West South Temple
Salt Lake City, UT

Virginia

1861 International Drive
McLean, VA

Washington

10500 NE 8th Street
Bellevue, WA

1518 6th Avenue
Seattle, WA

Washington, DC

1900 K Street, N.W.
Washington, DC

Wisconsin

16020 West Bluemound Road
Brookfield, WI

Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc., 100 Summer St., Boston, MA 02110 Member NYSE/SIPC

Annual Report

Investment Adviser

Fidelity Management &
Research Company

Boston, MA

Investment Sub-Advisers

FMR Co., Inc.

Fidelity Management & Research
(U.K.) Inc.

Fidelity Research & Analysis Company

Fidelity Investments Japan Limited

Fidelity International Investment
Advisors

Fidelity International Investment
Advisors (U.K.) Limited

General Distributor

Fidelity Distributors Corporation

Boston, MA

Transfer and Service Agents

Fidelity Investments Institutional
Operations Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Fidelity Service Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Custodian

The Northern Trust Company

Chicago, IL

FID-UANN-0808
1.787731.105

fid79

Fidelity®
Growth Discovery
Fund -

Growth Discovery
Class K

Annual Report

June 30, 2008
(2_fidelity_logos) (Registered_Trademark)

Contents

Chairman's Message

<Click Here>

Ned Johnson's message to shareholders.

Performance

<Click Here>

How the fund has done over time.

Management's Discussion

<Click Here>

The manager's review of fund performance, strategy and outlook.

Shareholder Expense Example

<Click Here>

An example of shareholder expenses.

Investment Changes

<Click Here>

A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months.

Investments

<Click Here>

A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values.

Financial Statements

<Click Here>

Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets,
as well as financial highlights.

Notes

<Click Here>

Notes to the financial statements.

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

<Click Here>

 

Trustees and Officers

<Click Here>

 

Distributions

<Click Here>

 

Proxy Voting Results

<Click Here>

 

To view a fund's proxy voting guidelines and proxy voting record for the 12-month period ended June 30, visit http://www.fidelity.com (search for "proxy voting guidelines") or visit the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) web site at http://www.sec.gov. You may also call 1-800-544-8544 to request a free copy of the proxy voting guidelines.

Standard & Poor's, S&P and S&P 500 are registered service marks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and have been licensed for use by Fidelity Distributors Corporation.

Other third party marks appearing herein are the property of their respective owners.

All other marks appearing herein are registered or unregistered trademarks or service marks of FMR LLC or an affiliated company.

Annual Report

This report and the financial statements contained herein are submitted for the general information of the shareholders of the fund. This report is not authorized for distribution to prospective investors in the fund unless preceded or accompanied by an effective prospectus.

A fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, DC. Information regarding the operation of the SEC's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. For a complete list of a fund's portfolio holdings, view the most recent holdings listing, semiannual report, or annual report on Fidelity's web site at http://www.fidelity.com or http://www.advisor.fidelity.com, as applicable.

NOT FDIC INSURED · MAY LOSE VALUE · NO BANK GUARANTEE

Neither the fund nor Fidelity Distributors Corporation is a bank.

Annual Report

Chairman's Message

(photo_of_Edward_C_Johnson_3d)

Dear Shareholder:

Domestic and international securities markets have struggled thus far in 2008. High-grade fixed-income investments produced modestly positive results, but many stock benchmarks suffered double-digit losses through the first half of this year. Financial markets are always unpredictable, but there are a number of time-tested principles that can put the historical odds in your favor.

One of the basic tenets is to invest for the long term. Over time, riding out the markets' inevitable ups and downs has proven much more effective than selling into panic or chasing the hottest trend. Even missing only a few of the markets' best days can significantly diminish investor returns. Patience also affords the benefits of compounding - of earning interest on additional income or reinvested dividends and capital gains. There are tax advantages and cost benefits to consider as well. The more you sell, the more taxes you pay, and the more you trade, the higher the costs. While staying the course doesn't eliminate risk, it can considerably lessen the effect of short-term declines.

You can further manage your investing risk through diversification. And today, more than ever, geographic diversification should be taken into account. Studies indicate that asset allocation is the single most important determinant of a portfolio's long-term success. The right mix of stocks, bonds and cash - aligned to your particular risk tolerance and investment objective - is very important. Age-appropriate rebalancing is also an essential aspect of asset allocation. For younger investors, an emphasis on equities - which historically have been the best-performing asset class over time - is encouraged. As investors near their specific goal, such as retirement or sending a child to college, consideration may be given to replacing volatile assets (e.g. common stocks) with more-stable fixed investments (bonds or savings plans).

A third investment principle - investing regularly - can help lower the average cost of your purchases. Investing a certain amount of money each month or quarter helps ensure you won't pay for all your shares at market highs. This strategy - known as dollar cost averaging - also reduces unconstructive "emotion" from investing, helping shareholders avoid selling weak performers just prior to an upswing, or chasing a hot performer just before a correction.

We invite you to contact us via the Internet, through our Investor Centers or over the phone. It is our privilege to provide you the information you need to make the investments that are right for you.

Sincerely,
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Annual Report

Performance: The Bottom Line

Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the class' dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of securities that have grown in value, if any) and assuming a constant rate of performance each year. The $10,000 table and the fund's returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares. During periods of reimbursement by Fidelity, a fund's total return will be greater than it would be had the reimbursement not occurred. How a fund did yesterday is no guarantee of how it will do tomorrow.

Average Annual Total Returns

Periods ended June 30, 2008

Past 1
year

Past 5
years

Past 10
years

Growth Discovery A

1.98%

10.16%

6.51%

Class K A, B

2.05%

10.17%

6.52%

A Prior to February 1, 2007, Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund operated under certain different investment policies. The fund's historical performance may not represent its current investment policies.

B The initial offering of Class K shares took place on May 9, 2008. Returns prior to May 9, 2008 are those of Growth Discovery, the original class of the fund.

$10,000 Over 10 Years

Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Growth Discovery, a class of the fund, on June 30, 1998. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Russell 3000® Growth Index performed over the same period.


fid125

Annual Report

Management's Discussion of Fund Performance

Comments from Jason Weiner, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity® Growth Discovery Fund

As threats of a recession, concerns about inflation and higher unemployment rates weighed heavily on consumers and investors, the U.S. equity markets struggled for the 12-month period ending June 30, 2008. For investors, the lingering effects of the subprime mortgage crisis and subsequent credit crunch were felt in nearly all segments of the market, with financial stocks lagging the most and the energy sector continuing its upward trajectory. In an effort to reignite the economy, the Federal Reserve Board lowered the fed funds target rate seven times, taking it from 5.25% to 2.00% between September 2007 and April 2008. The Fed also stepped in to help prevent the near collapse of one of the nation's largest investment banks, Bear Stearns. These moves initially seemed to bolster investor confidence, but, ultimately, most indexes lagged. The Standard & Poor's 500SM Index fell 13.12% for the 12 months ending June 30, 2008. The Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also declined, with a -13.27% return, and the NASDAQ Composite® Index plunged 11.28% over the corresponding 12 months.

The fund's Retail Class shares gained 1.98% for the year, solidly outperforming the 6.38% loss of the Russell 3000® Growth Index. (For specific performance results for the fund's new Class K shares, please see the performance section of this shareholder report.) Good stock picks drove most of our outperformance. The best results came from the materials, industrials and health care sectors. Fertilizer companies Mosaic and Compass Minerals International, Fording Canadian Coal, foreign technology firms Research In Motion and Nintendo, and construction company McDermott International fared especially well. The fund also benefited from underweighting areas of the market most affected by the slowing U.S. economy, particularly consumer discretionary, as well as from currency fluctuations. On the downside, overweightings in banks and insurance weighed on performance, as did some unfavorable stock picks in pockets of technology. Four of the fund's five biggest detractors were tech stocks, including semiconductor firm Broadcom - an untimely sale - and Finnish mobile handset maker Nokia, as well as a big underweighting in consumer electronics giant Apple. My ill-timed sale of our stake in oilfield services firm Schlumberger also hurt, as did an underweighting and poor stock selection in consumer staples.

The views expressed above reflect those of the portfolio manager(s) only through the end of the period as stated on the cover of this report and do not necessarily represent the views of Fidelity or any other person in the Fidelity organization. Any such views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions and Fidelity disclaims any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied on as investment advice and, because investment decisions for a Fidelity fund are based on numerous factors, may not be relied on as an indication of trading intent on behalf of any Fidelity fund.

Annual Report

Shareholder Expense Example

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.

The actual expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Growth Discovery and for the entire period (May 9, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class K. The hypothetical expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested for the one half year period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008).

Actual Expenses

The first line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000.00 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000.00 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line for a class of the Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The second line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a Class' actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Class' actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Annual Report

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transaction costs. Therefore, the second line of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds.

 

Beginning
Account
Value

Ending
Account
Value
June 30, 2008

Expenses
Paid
During Period

Growth Discovery

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 898.50

$ 4.25 B

HypotheticalA

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,020.39

$ 4.52 C

Class K

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 978.60

$ 1.09 B

HypotheticalA

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,021.08

$ 3.82 C

A 5% return per year before expenses

B Actual expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period) for Growth Discovery and multiplied by 53/366 (to reflect the period May 9, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class K.

C Hypothetical expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).

 

Annualized
Expense Ratio

Growth Discovery

.90%

Class K

.76%

Annual Report

Investment Changes (Unaudited)

Top Ten Stocks as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class B

3.6

4.2

Applied Materials, Inc.

3.2

2.6

The Mosaic Co.

3.1

1.2

Nokia Corp. sponsored ADR

2.4

5.1

Medco Health Solutions, Inc.

2.3

0.3

Annaly Capital Management, Inc.

2.2

0.0

Fording Canadian Coal Trust

1.9

0.0

Denbury Resources, Inc.

1.9

0.8

VeriSign, Inc.

1.9

1.0

CVS Caremark Corp.

1.7

0.6

 

24.2

Top Five Market Sectors as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Information Technology

24.4

37.0

Materials

13.8

2.9

Financials

13.6

10.4

Health Care

12.4

10.5

Energy

12.1

9.6

Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)

As of June 30, 2008 *

As of December 31, 2007 **

fid53

Stocks 95.9%

 

fid53

Stocks 96.8%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 4.1%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 3.2%

 

* Foreign investments

26.1%

 

** Foreign investments

26.0%

 


fid131

Annual Report

Investments June 30, 2008

Showing Percentage of Net Assets

Common Stocks - 95.9%

Shares

Value (000s)

CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 4.3%

Automobiles - 0.2%

Harley-Davidson, Inc.

92,200

$ 3,343

Diversified Consumer Services - 1.0%

Strayer Education, Inc.

81,829

17,108

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 0.9%

BJ's Restaurants, Inc. (a)

45,800

446

McDonald's Corp.

222,800

12,526

Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc.

69,800

2,797

 

15,769

Leisure Equipment & Products - 0.7%

Nikon Corp.

454,000

13,257

Media - 0.8%

Focus Media Holding Ltd. ADR (a)(d)

243,362

6,746

National CineMedia, Inc.

51,100

545

The DIRECTV Group, Inc. (a)

297,300

7,703

 

14,994

Specialty Retail - 0.3%

DSW, Inc. Class A (a)

243,868

2,873

Gamestop Corp. Class A (a)

79,600

3,216

 

6,089

Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 0.4%

Lululemon Athletica, Inc. (d)

155,811

4,528

LVMH Moet Hennessy - Louis Vuitton

16,200

1,690

 

6,218

TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY

76,778

CONSUMER STAPLES - 4.7%

Food & Staples Retailing - 2.0%

CVS Caremark Corp.

758,879

30,029

Whole Foods Market, Inc. (d)

233,095

5,522

 

35,551

Food Products - 1.2%

Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc. (a)

61,086

2,295

Nestle SA sponsored ADR

163,300

18,469

 

20,764

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

CONSUMER STAPLES - continued

Household Products - 1.5%

Procter & Gamble Co.

451,700

$ 27,468

TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES

83,783

ENERGY - 12.1%

Energy Equipment & Services - 3.8%

Atwood Oceanics, Inc. (a)

21,100

2,624

ENSCO International, Inc.

63,399

5,119

FMC Technologies, Inc. (a)

52,500

4,039

Helmerich & Payne, Inc.

56,700

4,084

National Oilwell Varco, Inc. (a)

222,000

19,696

Smith International, Inc.

186,790

15,530

Transocean, Inc. (a)

100,200

15,269

 

66,361

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 8.3%

Chesapeake Energy Corp.

87,300

5,758

Denbury Resources, Inc. (a)

913,849

33,355

EOG Resources, Inc.

85,500

11,218

Galp Energia SGPS SA Class B

287,300

6,372

Hess Corp.

62,000

7,824

OAO Gazprom sponsored ADR

259,300

15,039

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

23,900

2,148

Petroleo Brasileiro SA - Petrobras sponsored ADR

317,400

22,481

Reliance Industries Ltd.

89,879

4,386

Southwestern Energy Co. (a)

340,700

16,221

Ultra Petroleum Corp. (a)

76,500

7,512

Williams Companies, Inc.

357,600

14,415

 

146,729

TOTAL ENERGY

213,090

FINANCIALS - 13.6%

Capital Markets - 2.3%

Bank of New York Mellon Corp.

113,600

4,297

Charles Schwab Corp.

883,200

18,141

Franklin Resources, Inc.

74,000

6,782

JMP Group, Inc.

27,300

180

Northern Trust Corp.

53,100

3,641

State Street Corp.

106,800

6,834

 

39,875

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

FINANCIALS - continued

Commercial Banks - 0.4%

UCBH Holdings, Inc.

258,306

$ 581

Wachovia Corp.

422,100

6,555

 

7,136

Diversified Financial Services - 1.3%

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

202,365

6,943

KKR Financial Holdings LLC

1,011,763

10,624

MSCI, Inc. Class A

159,370

5,784

 

23,351

Insurance - 6.6%

AFLAC, Inc.

162,880

10,229

American International Group, Inc.

324,744

8,593

Assurant, Inc.

133,000

8,773

Berkshire Hathaway, Inc.:

Class A (a)

102

12,317

Class B (a)

16,023

64,282

Principal Financial Group, Inc.

120,400

5,053

Prudential Financial, Inc.

133,487

7,975

 

117,222

Real Estate Investment Trusts - 3.0%

Annaly Capital Management, Inc.

2,471,705

38,336

CapitalSource, Inc. (d)

379,454

4,204

MFA Mortgage Investments, Inc.

1,464,073

9,546

 

52,086

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.0%

New York Community Bancorp, Inc. (d)

35,559

634

TOTAL FINANCIALS

240,304

HEALTH CARE - 12.4%

Biotechnology - 4.4%

Biogen Idec, Inc. (a)

350,489

19,589

CSL Ltd.

847,560

29,010

Genentech, Inc. (a)

127,659

9,689

Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a)

357,898

18,951

 

77,239

Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 3.9%

Alcon, Inc.

55,000

8,953

Baxter International, Inc.

221,803

14,182

Becton, Dickinson & Co.

115,396

9,382

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

HEALTH CARE - continued

Health Care Equipment & Supplies - continued

C.R. Bard, Inc.

100,077

$ 8,802

China Medical Technologies, Inc. sponsored ADR (d)

142,870

7,058

Cochlear Ltd.

82,231

3,441

Covidien Ltd.

76,153

3,647

DENTSPLY International, Inc.

211,500

7,783

Mindray Medical International Ltd. sponsored ADR

149,482

5,579

 

68,827

Health Care Providers & Services - 3.0%

Henry Schein, Inc. (a)

237,800

12,263

Medco Health Solutions, Inc. (a)

860,480

40,615

 

52,878

Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.9%

Covance, Inc. (a)(d)

151,388

13,022

Pharmaceutical Product Development, Inc.

90,000

3,861

 

16,883

Pharmaceuticals - 0.2%

Novo Nordisk AS Series B

55,625

3,662

TOTAL HEALTH CARE

219,489

INDUSTRIALS - 6.4%

Aerospace & Defense - 1.7%

General Dynamics Corp.

178,700

15,047

Rockwell Collins, Inc.

302,675

14,516

 

29,563

Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.4%

Copart, Inc. (a)

41,800

1,790

Corrections Corp. of America (a)

123,141

3,383

Robert Half International, Inc.

68,200

1,635

 

6,808

Electrical Equipment - 1.9%

Alstom SA (d)

60,300

13,827

Vestas Wind Systems AS (a)

157,000

20,441

 

34,268

Industrial Conglomerates - 1.6%

Global Consumer Acquisition Corp. unit

100,000

985

McDermott International, Inc. (a)

442,716

27,400

 

28,385

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

INDUSTRIALS - continued

Machinery - 0.6%

Danaher Corp.

82,400

$ 6,370

Hansen Transmission International NV

649,513

3,463

 

9,833

Trading Companies & Distributors - 0.2%

Fastenal Co. (d)

91,443

3,947

TOTAL INDUSTRIALS

112,804

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 24.4%

Communications Equipment - 6.7%

Cisco Systems, Inc. (a)

1,029,443

23,945

Corning, Inc.

281,666

6,492

Juniper Networks, Inc. (a)

449,737

9,975

Nokia Corp. sponsored ADR

1,708,632

41,861

QUALCOMM, Inc.

610,900

27,106

Research In Motion Ltd. (a)

75,000

8,768

 

118,147

Computers & Peripherals - 2.2%

Apple, Inc. (a)

117,800

19,724

SanDisk Corp. (a)

1,006,100

18,814

 

38,538

Electronic Equipment & Instruments - 1.0%

Amphenol Corp. Class A

371,100

16,655

Internet Software & Services - 3.6%

Baidu.com, Inc. sponsored ADR (a)

4,796

1,501

Google, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a)

51,137

26,920

The Knot, Inc. (a)(d)

257,500

2,518

VeriSign, Inc. (a)(d)

880,200

33,272

 

64,211

IT Services - 5.6%

Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. Class A (a)

646,100

21,005

ExlService Holdings, Inc. (a)

67,811

951

Infosys Technologies Ltd.

264,303

10,693

Infosys Technologies Ltd. sponsored ADR

274,000

11,908

The Western Union Co.

1,137,214

28,112

Visa, Inc.

328,418

26,704

 

99,373

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 3.2%

Applied Materials, Inc.

2,925,126

55,841

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued

Software - 2.1%

Nintendo Co. Ltd.

33,100

$ 18,496

Ubisoft Entertainment SA (a)

99,635

8,713

VMware, Inc. Class A (d)

192,560

10,371

 

37,580

TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

430,345

MATERIALS - 13.8%

Chemicals - 5.3%

FMC Corp.

122,622

9,496

Israel Chemicals Ltd.

393,200

9,172

Monsanto Co.

115,400

14,591

Novozymes AS Series B

57,075

5,138

The Mosaic Co.

371,108

53,699

W.R. Grace & Co. (a)

72,603

1,705

 

93,801

Metals & Mining - 8.5%

ArcelorMittal SA (NY Shares) Class A

235,100

23,291

BHP Billiton PLC

242,800

9,311

Compass Minerals International, Inc.

330,903

26,658

Evraz Group SA GDR

91,664

10,679

Fording Canadian Coal Trust (d)

350,900

33,563

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc. Class B

15,700

1,840

Goldcorp, Inc.

630,800

29,091

JSW Steel Ltd.

121,637

2,552

Rio Tinto PLC sponsored ADR

20,300

10,049

Vedanta Resources PLC

80,700

3,485

 

150,519

TOTAL MATERIALS

244,320

UTILITIES - 4.2%

Electric Utilities - 2.7%

Entergy Corp.

170,911

20,591

Exelon Corp.

304,497

27,393

 

47,984

Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.9%

Constellation Energy Group, Inc.

194,400

15,960

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value (000s)

UTILITIES - continued

Multi-Utilities - 0.6%

Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.

230,600

$ 10,591

TOTAL UTILITIES

74,535

TOTAL COMMON STOCKS

(Cost $1,695,324)

1,695,448

Money Market Funds - 8.7%

 

 

 

 

Fidelity Cash Central Fund, 2.38% (b)

45,240,651

45,241

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 2.39% (b)(c)

109,109,125

109,109

TOTAL MONEY MARKET FUNDS

(Cost $154,350)

154,350

TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 104.6%

(Cost $1,849,674)

1,849,798

NET OTHER ASSETS - (4.6)%

(81,990)

NET ASSETS - 100%

$ 1,767,808

Legend

(a) Non-income producing

(b) Affiliated fund that is available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. The rate quoted is the annualized seven-day yield of the fund at period end. A complete unaudited listing of the fund's holdings as of its most recent quarter end is available upon request.

(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.

(d) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.

Affiliated Central Funds

Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:

Fund

Income earned
(Amounts in thousands)

Fidelity Cash Central Fund

$ 2,307

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund

667

Total

$ 2,974

Other Information

Distribution of investments by country of issue, as a percentage of total net assets, is as follows: (Unaudited)

United States of America

73.9%

Canada

4.5%

Finland

2.4%

Luxembourg

1.9%

Australia

1.8%

Japan

1.7%

India

1.7%

Denmark

1.6%

Switzerland

1.6%

Panama

1.5%

France

1.4%

United Kingdom

1.3%

Brazil

1.3%

Others (individually less than 1%)

3.4%

 

100.0%

Income Tax Information

At June 30, 2008, the fund had a capital loss carryforward of approximately $134,259,000 of which $44,168,000 and $90,091,000 will expire on June 30, 2010 and 2011, respectively. The Fund intends to elect to defer to its fiscal year ending June 30, 2009 approximately $67,547,000 of losses recognized during the period November 1, 2007 to June 30, 2008.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

 Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts)

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Assets

Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $106,503) - See accompanying schedule:

Unaffiliated issuers (cost $1,695,324)

$ 1,695,448

 

Fidelity Central Funds (cost $154,350)

154,350

 

Total Investments (cost $1,849,674)

 

$ 1,849,798

Receivable for investments sold

43,708

Receivable for fund shares sold

3,117

Dividends receivable

3,147

Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds

253

Prepaid expenses

2

Other receivables

51

Total assets

1,900,076

 

 

 

Liabilities

Payable for investments purchased

$ 15,740

Payable for fund shares redeemed

5,997

Accrued management fee

979

Other affiliated payables

369

Other payables and accrued expenses

74

Collateral on securities loaned, at value

109,109

Total liabilities

132,268

 

 

 

Net Assets

$ 1,767,808

Net Assets consist of:

 

Paid in capital

$ 1,968,424

Undistributed net investment income

6,351

Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions

(207,063)

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

96

Net Assets

$ 1,767,808

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Assets and Liabilities - continued

 Amounts in thousands (except per-share amounts)

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Growth Discovery:
Net Asset Value, offering price and redemption price per share ($1,767,709.751 ÷ 121,003.17435 shares)

$ 14.61

 

 

 

Class K:
Net Asset Value
, offering price and redemption price per share ($97.828 ÷ 6.69344 shares)

$ 14.62

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements - continued

Statement of Operations

 Amounts in thousands

Year ended June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Investment Income

 

 

Dividends

 

$ 18,640

Interest

 

62

Income from Fidelity Central Funds

 

2,974

Total income

 

21,676

 

 

 

Expenses

Management fee
Basic fee

$ 8,221

Performance adjustment

1,147

Transfer agent fees

3,008

Accounting and security lending fees

468

Custodian fees and expenses

126

Independent trustees' compensation

6

Registration fees

241

Audit

65

Legal

6

Interest

4

Miscellaneous

73

Total expenses before reductions

13,365

Expense reductions

(102)

13,263

Net investment income (loss)

8,413

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

Net realized gain (loss) on:

Investment securities:

 

 

Unaffiliated issuers (net of foreign taxes of $(9))

(51,229)

Foreign currency transactions

(163)

Total net realized gain (loss)

 

(51,392)

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:

Investment securities

(50,106)

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

(19)

Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

 

(50,125)

Net gain (loss)

(101,517)

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

$ (93,104)

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 Amounts in thousands

Year ended
June 30,
2008

Year ended
June 30,
2007

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net investment income (loss)

$ 8,413

$ 2,431

Net realized gain (loss)

(51,392)

43,973

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(50,125)

52,616

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting
from operations

(93,104)

99,020

Distributions to shareholders from net investment income

(2,017)

(4,210)

Distributions to shareholders from net realized gain

-

(705)

Total distributions

(2,017)

(4,915)

Share transactions - net increase (decrease)

1,382,342

(25,670)

Total increase (decrease) in net assets

1,287,221

68,435

 

 

 

Net Assets

Beginning of period

480,587

412,152

End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $6,351 and undistributed net investment income of $933, respectively)

$ 1,767,808

$ 480,587

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Growth Discovery

Years ended June 30,
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004

Selected Per-Share Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 14.36

$ 11.60

$ 10.70

$ 10.35

$ 9.40

Income from Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net investment income (loss) B

  .09

  .07

  .12

  .16 E

  .07

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  .20G

  2.83

  .91

  .32

  .93

Total from investment operations

  .29

  2.90

  1.03

  .48

  1.00

Distributions from net investment income

  (.04)

  (.12)

  (.13)

  (.13)

  (.05)

Distributions from net realized gain

  -

  (.02)

  -

  -

  -

Total distributions

  (.04)

  (.14)

  (.13)

  (.13)

  (.05)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 14.61

$ 14.36

$ 11.60

$ 10.70

$ 10.35

Total Return A

  1.98%

  25.24%

  9.67%

  4.64%

  10.67%

Ratios to Average Net Assets C, F

 

 

 

 

 

Expenses before reductions

  .91%

  .81%

  .68%

  .81%

  .91%

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .91%

  .81%

  .68%

  .81%

  .91%

Expenses net of all reductions

  .90%

  .80%

  .61%

  .70%

  .84%

Net investment income (loss)

  .57%

  .55%

  1.04%

  1.54% E

  .73%

Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net assets, end of period (in millions)

$ 1,768

$ 481

$ 412

$ 459

$ 541

Portfolio turnover rate D

  150%

  199%

  184%

  229%

  249%

A Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

C Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

E Investment income per share reflects a special dividend which amounted to $.04 per share. Excluding the special dividend, the ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets would have been 1.13%.

F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

G The amount shown for a share outstanding does not correspond with the aggregate net gain (loss) on investments for the period due to the timing of sales and repurchases of shares in relation to fluctuating market values of the investments of the Fund.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class K

Period ended June 30,
2008 G

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 14.94

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) D

  .03

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.35)

Total from investment operations

  (.32)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 14.62

Total Return B, C

  (2.14)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets E, H

 

Expenses before reductions

  .76% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .76% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  .75% A

Net investment income (loss)

  1.44% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 98

Portfolio turnover rate F

  150%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

E Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

F Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G For the period May 9, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

H Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements

For the period ended June 30, 2008
(Amounts in thousands except ratios)

1. Organization.

Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund (the Fund) is a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust (the trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. The trust is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust. On January 17, 2008 the Board of Trustees of the Fund approved the creation of an additional class of shares. The Fund commenced sale of shares of Class K and the existing class was designated Growth Discovery on May 9, 2008. The Fund offers Growth Discovery and Class K shares, each of which has equal rights as to assets and voting privileges. Each class has exclusive voting rights with respect to matters that affect that class. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, the common expenses of the Fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated on a pro rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the Fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent fees incurred. Certain expense reductions also differ by class.

2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.

The Fund may invest in Fidelity Central Funds, which are open-end investment companies available only to other investment companies and accounts managed by Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) and its affiliates. The Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR.

A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the SEC's web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC's web site or upon request.

3. Significant Accounting Policies.

The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. Actual results

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

could differ from those estimates. The following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the Fund:

Security Valuation. Investments are valued as of 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on the last calendar day of the period. Wherever possible, the Fund uses independent pricing services approved by the Board of Trustees to value its investments.

Equity securities, including restricted securities, for which market quotations are readily available, are valued at the last reported sale price or official closing price as reported by an independent pricing service on the primary market or exchange on which they are traded. In the event there were no sales during the day or closing prices are not available, securities are valued at the last quoted bid price. Investments in open-end mutual funds, including the Fidelity Central Funds, are valued at their closing net asset value each business day. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less for which quotations are not readily available are valued at amortized cost, which approximates value.

When current market prices or quotations are not readily available or reliable, valuations may be determined in good faith in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees. Factors used in determining value may include significant market or security specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality, and developments in foreign markets which are monitored by evaluating the performance of ADRs, futures contracts and exchange-traded funds. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and may be utilized to a significant extent. The value of securities used for net asset value (NAV) calculation under these procedures may differ from published prices for the same securities.

Foreign Currency. The Fund uses foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.

Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.

The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

(Amounts in thousands except ratios)

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 pm Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and may include proceeds received from litigation. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, except for certain dividends from foreign securities where the ex-dividend date may have passed, which are recorded as soon as the Fund is informed of the ex-dividend date. Non-cash dividends included in dividend income, if any, are recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. The Fund estimates the components of distributions received that may be considered return of capital distributions or capital gain distributions. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain.

Expenses. Most expenses of the trust can be directly attributed to a fund. Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned among each Fund in the trust. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, the Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company by distributing substantially all of its taxable income and realized gains under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code and filing its U.S. federal tax return. As a result, no provision for income taxes is required. The Fund is subject to the provisions of FASB Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for Uncertainties in Income Taxes (FIN 48). FIN 48 sets forth a minimum threshold for financial statement recognition of the benefit of a tax position taken or expected to be taken in a tax return. The implementation of FIN 48 did not result in any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. Each of the Fund's federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remains subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.

Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles.

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued

Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. Certain adjustments have been made to the accounts relating to prior periods. Collectively these adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.

Book-tax differences are primarily due to foreign currency transactions, certain foreign taxes, passive foreign investment companies (PFIC), capital loss carryforwards, partnerships, losses deferred due to wash sales and excise tax regulations.

The tax-basis components of distributable earnings and the federal tax cost as of period end were as follows:

Unrealized appreciation

$ 155,670

 

Unrealized depreciation

(160,803)

 

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(5,133)

 

Undistributed ordinary income

6,351

 

Capital loss carryforward

(134,259)

 

 

 

 

Cost for federal income tax purposes

$ 1,854,931

 

The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:

 

June 30, 2008

June 30, 2007

Ordinary Income

$ 2,017

$ 4,915

New Accounting Pronouncement. In September 2006, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157, Fair Value Measurements (SFAS 157), was issued and is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. SFAS 157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and results in expanded disclosures about fair value measurements.

4. Operating Policies.

Repurchase Agreements. FMR has received an Exemptive Order from the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) which permits the Fund and other affiliated entities of FMR to transfer uninvested cash balances into joint trading accounts which are then invested in repurchase agreements. The Fund may also invest directly with institutions in repurchase agreements. Repurchase agreements are collateralized by government or non-government securities. Upon settlement date, collateral is held in segregated accounts with custodian banks and may be obtained in the event of a default of the counterparty. The Fund monitors, on a daily basis, the value of the collateral to

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

(Amounts in thousands except ratios)

4. Operating Policies - continued

Repurchase Agreements - continued

ensure it is at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). In the event of a default by the counterparty, realization of the collateral proceeds could be delayed, during which time the value of the collateral may decline.

5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.

Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, aggregated $3,437,910 and $2,106,420, respectively.

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.

Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .30% of the Fund's average net assets and a group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and increases as assets under management decrease. In addition, the management fee is subject to a performance adjustment (up to a maximum of ± .20% of the Fund's average net assets over a 36 month performance period). The upward or downward adjustment to the management fee is based on the relative investment performance of the retail class of the Fund, Growth Discovery, as compared to an appropriate benchmark index. For the period, the total annual management fee rate, including the performance adjustment, was .64% of the Fund's average net assets.

Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc. (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to account size and type of account of the shareholders of Growth Discovery and asset-based fees of .05% of average net assets for Class K. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements. Prior to January 1, 2008, Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), also an affiliate of FMR, was the transfer agent for Growth Discovery. For the period, the transfer agent fees for Growth Discovery were equivalent to an annual rate of .20% of average net assets.

Accounting and Security Lending Fees. FSC, an affiliate of FMR, maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on the level of average net assets for the month. Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.

Annual Report

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued

Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $26 for the period.

Interfund Lending Program. Pursuant to an Exemptive Order issued by the SEC, the Fund, along with other registered investment companies having management contracts with FMR, may participate in an interfund lending program. This program provides an alternative credit facility allowing the funds to borrow from, or lend money to, other participating affiliated funds. At period end, there were no interfund loans outstanding. The Fund's activity in this program during the period for which loans were outstanding was as follows:

Borrower or Lender

Average Daily Loan Balance

Weighted Average
Interest Rate

Interest
Expense

Borrower

$ 14,250

2.81%

$ 4

7. Committed Line of Credit.

The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR in a $4.2 billion credit facility (the "line of credit") to be utilized for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions or for other short-term liquidity purposes. The Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $2 and is reflected in Miscellaneous Expense on the Statement of Operations. During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.

8. Security Lending.

The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. On the settlement date of the loan, the Fund receives collateral (in the form of U.S. Treasury obligations, letters of credit and/or cash) against the loaned securities and maintains collateral in an amount not less than 100% of the market value of the loaned securities during the period of the loan. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. If the borrower defaults on its obligation to return the securities loaned because of insolvency or other reasons, a fund could experience delays and costs in recovering the securities loaned or in gaining access to the collateral. Any cash collateral received is invested in the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less fees and expenses associated with the loan, plus any premium payments that may be received on the loan of certain types of securities. Security lending income is presented in the Statement of

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

(Amounts in thousands except ratios)

8. Security Lending - continued

Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds. Net income from lending portfolio securities during the period amounted to $667.

9. Expense Reductions.

Many of the brokers with whom FMR places trades on behalf of the Fund provided services to the Fund in addition to trade execution. These services included payments of certain expenses on behalf of the Fund totaling $78 for the period. In addition, through arrangements with the Fund's custodian and each class' transfer agent, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's custody expenses by $2. During the period, credits reduced each class' transfer agent expense as noted in the table below.

 

Transfer Agent
expense reduction

 

Growth Discovery

$ 9

 

In addition, FMR voluntarily agreed to reimburse a portion of Growth Discovery's operating expenses. During the period, this reimbursement reduced Growth Discovery's expenses by $13.

10. Other.

The Fund's organizational documents provide former and current trustees and officers with a limited indemnification against liabilities arising in connection with the performance of their duties to the Fund. In the normal course of business, the Fund may also enter into contracts that provide general indemnifications. The Fund's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would be dependent on future claims that may be made against the Fund. The risk of material loss from such claims is considered remote.

In December 2006, the Independent Trustees, with the assistance of independent counsel, completed an investigation regarding gifts, gratuities and business entertainment provided by certain brokers to certain individuals who were employed on FMR's domestic equity trading desk during the period 2002 to 2004. The Independent Trustees and FMR agreed that, despite the absence of proof that the Fidelity mutual funds experienced diminished execution quality as a result of the improper receipt of gifts and business entertainment, the conduct at issue was serious and was worthy of redress. Accordingly, the Independent Trustees requested, and FMR agreed to make, a payment of $42 million plus accrued interest, which equaled approximately $7.3 million, to certain Fidelity mutual funds.

Annual Report

10. Other - continued

In March 2008, the Trustees approved a method for allocating this payment among the funds and, in total, FMR paid the fund $374, which is recorded in the accompanying Statement of Operations.

In a related administrative order dated March 5, 2008, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") announced a settlement with FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (an affiliate of FMR) involving the SEC's regulatory rules for investment advisers and the improper receipt of gifts, gratuities and business entertainment. Without admitting or denying the SEC's findings, FMR agreed to pay an $8 million civil penalty to the United States Treasury.

11. Distributions to Shareholders.

Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:

Years ended June 30,

2008

2007

From net investment income

 

 

Growth Discovery

$ 2,017

$ 4,210

From net realized gain

 

 

Growth Discovery

$ -

$ 705

12. Share Transactions.

Transactions for each class of shares were as follows:

 

Shares

Dollars

Years ended June 30,

2008 A

2007

2008 A

2007

Growth Discovery

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

135,067

6,838

$ 2,088,523

$ 90,736

Reinvestment of distributions

126

399

1,926

4,800

Shares redeemed

(47,663)

(9,285)

(708,207)

(121,206)

Net increase (decrease)

87,530

(2,048)

$ 1,382,242

$ (25,670)

Class K

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

7

-

$ 100

$ -

A Share transactions for K Class are for the period May 9, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

Annual Report

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund (a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust) at June 30, 2008, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at June 30, 2008 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

August 19, 2008

Annual Report

Trustees and Officers

The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive officers of the trust and fund, as applicable, are listed below. The Board of Trustees governs the fund and is responsible for protecting the interests of shareholders. The Trustees are experienced executives who meet periodically throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities, review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the fund, and review the fund's performance. Except for Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey, each of the Trustees oversees 218 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate. Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey oversee 377 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate.

The Trustees hold office without limit in time except that (a) any Trustee may resign; (b) any Trustee may be removed by written instrument, signed by at least two-thirds of the number of Trustees prior to such removal; (c) any Trustee who requests to be retired or who has become incapacitated by illness or injury may be retired by written instrument signed by a majority of the other Trustees; and (d) any Trustee may be removed at any special meeting of shareholders by a two-thirds vote of the outstanding voting securities of the trust. Each Trustee who is not an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) (Independent Trustee), shall retire not later than the last day of the calendar year in which his or her 72nd birthday occurs. The Independent Trustees may waive this mandatory retirement age policy with respect to individual Trustees. The executive officers and Advisory Board Member hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and Advisory Board Member may resign or may be removed by a vote of a majority of the Trustees at any regular meeting or any special meeting of the Trustees. Except as indicated, each individual has held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the past five years.

The fund's Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the Trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-800-544-8544.

Interested Trustees*:

Correspondence intended for each Trustee who is an interested person may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Edward C. Johnson 3d (78)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 1984

Mr. Johnson is Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Mr. Johnson serves as Chief Executive Officer, Chairman, and a Director of FMR LLC; Chairman and a Director of FMR; Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (FRAC); Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc.; and Chairman and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Johnson serves as Chairman and Director of FIL Limited. Previously, Mr. Johnson served as President of FMR LLC (2006-2007).

James C. Curvey (73)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2006-
present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, Mr. Curvey serves as an Overseer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a member of the Trustees of Villanova University.

* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR. FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Independent Trustees:

Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Dennis J. Dirks (60)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) (1999-2003). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) (1999-2003) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) (1999-2003). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003) and Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003). Mr. Dirks also serves as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-present).

Alan J. Lacy (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (a private equity firm). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of The Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-present) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (global pharmaceuticals, 2007-present). Mr. Lacy is a Trustee of the National Parks Conservation Association and The Field Museum of Natural History.

Ned C. Lautenbach (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2000

Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees (2006-present). Mr. Lautenbach is an Advisory Partner of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment firm). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was with the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) from 1968 until his retirement in 1998. Mr. Lautenbach serves as a Director of Eaton Corporation (diversified industrial) as well as the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida. He also is a member of the Board of Trustees of Fairfield University (2005-present), as well as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Previously, Mr. Lautenbach served as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007).

Joseph Mauriello (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services firm, 1965-2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of XL Capital Ltd. (global insurance and re-insurance company, 2006-present) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-present). He also served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007).

Cornelia M. Small (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Ms. Small is a member of the Investment Committee, and Chair (2008-present) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson of the Investment Committee (2002-2008) of Smith College and as Co-Chair (2000-2003) of the Annual Fund for the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. In addition, she served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments.

William S. Stavropoulos (69)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2001

Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President (1993-2000; 2002-2003), CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, he is a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions, 2008-present), Chemical Financial Corporation, Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), Tyco International, Inc. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-present), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital (private equity investment firm, 2005-present). He is a special advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science.

David M. Thomas (59)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products holding company), and Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present).

Michael E. Wiley (57)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Wiley also serves as a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Tulsa (2000-2006; 2007-present). He serves as a Director of Tesoro Corporation (independent oil refiner and marketer, 2005-

present), and a Director of Bill Barrett Corporation (exploration and production company, 2005-present). In addition, he also serves as a Director of Post Oak Bank (privately-held bank, 2004-present). Previously, Mr. Wiley served as a Sr. Energy Advisor of Katzenbach Partners, LLC (consulting firm, 2006-2007), as an Advisory Director of Riverstone Holdings (private investment firm), Chairman, President, and CEO of Baker Hughes, Inc. (oilfield services company, 2000-2004), and as Director of Spinnaker Exploration Company (exploration and production company, 2001-2005).

Advisory Board Member and Executive Officers**:

Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Mr. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Peter S. Lynch (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2003

Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR, and Vice Chairman (2001-present) and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. Previously, Mr. Lynch served as a Trustee of the Fidelity funds (1990-2003). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund.

Kenneth B. Robins (38)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

President and Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2004-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Robins worked at KPMG LLP, where he was a partner in KPMG's department of professional practice (2002-2004).

Walter C. Donovan (46)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Vice President of the fund. Mr. Donovan also serves as Vice President of Fidelity's Equity Funds, President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc., and Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Donovan served as Executive Vice President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2005-2007) and Senior Vice President of FMR (2003-2005) and FMR Co., Inc. (2004-2005).

Bruce T. Herring (42)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2006

Vice President of the fund. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of certain Equity Funds (2006-present) and Group Chief Investments Officer of FMR. Previously, Mr. Herring served as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds.

Scott C. Goebel (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO) of the fund. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary and CLO of other Fidelity funds (2008-present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present); and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC. Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Assistant Secretary of the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007).

John B. McGinty, Jr. (45)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Assistant Secretary of the fund. Mr. McGinty also serves as Assistant Secretary of other Fidelity funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC (2004-present). Mr. McGinty also serves as Senior Vice President, Secretary, and Chief Legal Officer of FDC (2007-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. McGinty practiced law at Ropes & Gray, LLP.

Holly C. Laurent (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Anti-Money Laundering (AML) officer of the fund. Ms. Laurent also serves as AML officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC. Previously, Ms. Laurent was Senior Vice President and Head of Legal for Fidelity Business Services India Pvt. Ltd. (2006-
2008), Senior Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and Group Head for FMR Co. Legal (2005-2006).

Christine Reynolds (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Chief Financial Officer of the fund. Ms. Reynolds also serves as Chief Financial Officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present). Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) in August 2008. She served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS from 2007 through July 2008. Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Ms. Reynolds worked at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) (1980-2002), where she was an audit partner with PwC's investment management practice.

Kenneth A. Rathgeber (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Chief Compliance Officer of the fund. Mr. Rathgeber also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2004-present). He is Chief Compliance Officer of FMR (2005-present), FMR Co., Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2005-
present), Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2005-present), and Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2005-present).

Bryan A. Mehrmann (47)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Deputy Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Mehrmann also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR. Previously, Mr. Mehrmann served as Vice President of Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Group (FIIS)/Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Corporation, Inc. (FIIOC) Client Services (1998-2004).

Adrien E. Deberghes (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Deputy Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Deberghes also serves as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005).

Robert G. Byrnes (41)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Byrnes also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Byrnes served as Vice President of FPCMS (2003-2005). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Byrnes worked at Deutsche Asset Management where he served as Vice President of the Investment Operations Group (2000-2003).

Peter L. Lydecker (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Lydecker also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2004-present) and is an employee of FMR.

Paul M. Murphy (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Murphy also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2007-present) and is an employee of FMR (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Murphy served as Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity Funds (2005-2006), Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR (2007), and Senior Vice President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1994-2007).

Gary W. Ryan (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Ryan also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Vice President of Fund Reporting in Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1999-2005).

** FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Annual Report

Distributions (Unaudited)

The fund designates 100% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends-received deduction for corporate shareholders.

The fund designates 100% of the dividends distributed during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for the purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The fund will notify shareholders in January 2009 of amounts for use in preparing 2008 income tax returns.

Annual Report

Proxy Voting Results

A special meeting of the fund's shareholders was held on May 14, 2008. The results of votes taken among shareholders on the proposals before them are reported below. Each vote reported represents one dollar of net asset value held on the record date for the meeting.

PROPOSAL 1

To elect a Board of Trustees.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

James C. Curvey

Affirmative

5,283,033,775.58

95.146

Withheld

269,544,935.17

4.854

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Dennis J. Dirks

Affirmative

5,309,249,727.21

95.618

Withheld

243,328,983.54

4.382

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Affirmative

5,252,938,642.62

94.604

Withheld

299,640,068.13

5.396

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Alan J. Lacy

Affirmative

5,300,188,165.66

95.455

Withheld

252,390,545.09

4.545

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Ned C. Lautenbach

Affirmative

5,297,558,579.14

95.407

Withheld

255,020,131.61

4.593

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Joseph Mauriello

Affirmative

5,303,242,593.91

95.510

Withheld

249,336,116.84

4.490

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Cornelia M. Small

Affirmative

5,306,804,229.45

95.574

Withheld

245,774,481.30

4.426

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

William S. Stavropoulos

Affirmative

5,284,506,192.07

95.172

Withheld

268,072,518.68

4.828

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

David M. Thomas

Affirmative

5,308,375,429.85

95.602

Withheld

244,203,280.90

4.398

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Michael E. Wiley

Affirmative

5,304,369,992.98

95.530

Withheld

248,208,717.77

4.470

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

PROPOSAL 2

To amend the Declaration of Trust to reduce the required quorum for future shareholder meetings.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

Affirmative

4,180,350,765.24

75.287

Against

812,580,433.39

14.634

Abstain

292,815,961.45

5.274

Broker
Non-Votes

266,831,550.67

4.805

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

A Denotes trust-wide proposal and voting results.

Annual Report

Managing Your Investments

Fidelity offers several ways to conveniently manage your personal investments via your telephone or PC. You can access your account information, conduct trades and research your investments 24 hours a day.

By Phone

Fidelity Automated Service Telephone provides a single toll-free number to access account balances, positions, quotes and trading. It's easy to navigate the service, and on your first call, the system will help you create a personal identification number (PIN) for security.

(phone_graphic)
Fidelity Automated
Service Telephone (FAST
®)
1-800-544-5555

Press

fid62For mutual fund and brokerage trading.

fid64For quotes.*

fid66For account balances and holdings.

fid68To review orders and mutual
fund activity.

fid70To change your PIN.

fid72fid74To speak to a Fidelity representative.

By PC

Fidelity's web site on the Internet provides a wide range of information, including daily financial news, fund performance, interactive planning tools and news about Fidelity products and services.

(computer_graphic)
Fidelity's Web Site
www.fidelity.com

* When you call the quotes line, please remember that a fund's yield and return will vary and, except for money market funds, share price will also vary. This means that you may have a gain or loss when you sell your shares. There is no assurance that money market funds will be able to maintain a stable $1 share price; an investment in a money market fund is not insured or guaranteed by the U.S. government. Total returns are historical and include changes in share price, reinvestment of dividends and capital gains, and the effects of any sales charges.

Annual Report

To Visit Fidelity

For directions and hours, 
please call 1-800-544-9797.

Arizona

7001 West Ray Road
Chandler, AZ

15445 N. Scottsdale Road
Scottsdale, AZ

California

815 East Birch Street
Brea, CA

1411 Chapin Avenue
Burlingame, CA

851 East Hamilton Avenue
Campbell, CA

19200 Von Karman Avenue
Irvine, CA

601 Larkspur Landing Circle
Larkspur, CA

2000 Avenue of the Stars
Los Angeles, CA

27101 Puerta Real
Mission Viejo, CA

73-575 El Paseo
Palm Desert, CA

251 University Avenue
Palo Alto, CA

123 South Lake Avenue
Pasadena, CA

16656 Bernardo Ctr. Drive
Rancho Bernardo, CA

1220 Roseville Parkway
Roseville, CA

1740 Arden Way
Sacramento, CA

7676 Hazard Center Drive
San Diego, CA

11943 El Camino Real
San Diego, CA

8 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, CA

3793 State Street
Santa Barbara, CA

1200 Wilshire Boulevard
Santa Monica, CA

398 West El Camino Real
Sunnyvale, CA

111 South Westlake Blvd
Thousand Oaks, CA

21701 Hawthorne Boulevard
Torrance, CA

2001 North Main Street
Walnut Creek, CA

6326 Canoga Avenue
Woodland Hills, CA

Colorado

281 East Flatiron Circle
Broomfield, CO

1625 Broadway
Denver, CO

9185 Westview Road
Lone Tree, CO

Connecticut

48 West Putnam Avenue
Greenwich, CT

265 Church Street
New Haven, CT

300 Atlantic Street
Stamford, CT

29 South Main Street
West Hartford, CT

Delaware

400 Delaware Avenue
Wilmington, DE

Florida

175 East Altamonte Drive
Altamonte Springs, FL

4400 N. Federal Highway
Boca Raton, FL

121 Alhambra Plaza
Coral Gables, FL

2948 N. Federal Highway
Ft. Lauderdale, FL

4671 Town Center Parkway
Jacksonville, FL

8880 Tamiami Trail, North
Naples, FL

230 Royal Palm Way
Palm Beach, FL

3501 PGA Boulevard
Palm Beach Gardens, FL

3550 Tamiami Trail, South
Sarasota, FL

1502 N. Westshore Blvd.
Tampa, FL

2465 State Road 7
Wellington, FL

Georgia

3445 Peachtree Road, N.E.
Atlanta, GA

1000 Abernathy Road
Atlanta, GA

Illinois

One North LaSalle Street
Chicago, IL

401 North Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL

One Skokie Valley Road
Highland Park, IL

1415 West 22nd Street
Oak Brook, IL

15105 S LaGrange Road
Orland Park, IL

1572 East Golf Road
Schaumburg, IL

Indiana

4729 East 82nd Street
Indianapolis, IN

8480 Keystone Crossing
Indianapolis, IN

Kansas

5400 College Boulevard
Overland Park, KS

Maine

Three Canal Plaza
Portland, ME

Maryland

7315 Wisconsin Avenue
Bethesda, MD

610 York Road
Towson, MD

Massachusetts

801 Boylston Street
Boston, MA

155 Congress Street
Boston, MA

300 Granite Street
Braintree, MA

44 Mall Road
Burlington, MA

238 Main Street
Cambridge, MA

200 Endicott Street
Danvers, MA

Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc., 100 Summer St., Boston, MA 02110 Member NYSE/SIPC

Annual Report

405 Cochituate Road
Framingham, MA

551 Boston Turnpike
Shrewsbury, MA

Michigan

500 E. Eisenhower Pkwy.
Ann Arbor, MI

280 Old N. Woodward Ave.
Birmingham, MI

30200 Northwestern Hwy.
Farmington Hills, MI

43420 Grand River Avenue
Novi, MI

Minnesota

7740 France Avenue South
Edina, MN

8342 3rd Street North
Oakdale, MN

Missouri

1524 South Lindbergh Blvd.
St. Louis, MO

Nevada

2225 Village Walk Drive
Henderson, NV

New Jersey

501 Route 73 South
Marlton, NJ

150 Essex Street
Millburn, NJ

35 Morris Street
Morristown, NJ

396 Route 17, North
Paramus, NJ

3518 Route 1 North
Princeton, NJ

530 Broad Street
Shrewsbury, NJ

New Mexico

2261 Q Street NE
Albuquerque, NM

New York

1130 Franklin Avenue
Garden City, NY

37 West Jericho Turnpike
Huntington Station, NY

1271 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY

980 Madison Avenue
New York, NY

61 Broadway
New York, NY

350 Park Avenue
New York, NY

200 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY

733 Third Avenue
New York, NY

11 Penn Plaza
New York, NY

2070 Broadway
New York, NY

1075 Northern Blvd.
Roslyn, NY

799 Central Park Avenue
Scarsdale, NY

North Carolina

4611 Sharon Road
Charlotte, NC

7011 Fayetteville Road
Durham, NC

Ohio

3805 Edwards Road
Cincinnati, OH

1324 Polaris Parkway
Columbus, OH

1800 Crocker Road
Westlake, OH

28699 Chagrin Boulevard
Woodmere Village, OH

Oregon

7493 SW Bridgeport Road
Tigard, OR

Pennsylvania

600 West DeKalb Pike
King of Prussia, PA

1735 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA

12001 Perry Highway
Wexford, PA

Rhode Island

10 Memorial Boulevard
Providence, RI

Tennessee

3018 Peoples Street
Johnson City, TN

7628 West Farmington Blvd.
Germantown, TN

2035 Mallory Lane
Franklin, TN

Texas

10000 Research Boulevard
Austin, TX

4001 Northwest Parkway
Dallas, TX

12532 Memorial Drive
Houston, TX

2701 Drexel Drive
Houston, TX

6560 Fannin Street
Houston, TX

1701 Lake Robbins Drive
The Woodlands, TX

6500 N. MacArthur Blvd.
Irving, TX

6005 West Park Boulevard
Plano, TX

14100 San Pedro
San Antonio, TX

1576 East Southlake Blvd.
Southlake, TX

Utah

279 West South Temple
Salt Lake City, UT

Virginia

1861 International Drive
McLean, VA

Washington

10500 NE 8th Street
Bellevue, WA

1518 6th Avenue
Seattle, WA

Washington, DC

1900 K Street, N.W.
Washington, DC

Wisconsin

16020 West Bluemound Road
Brookfield, WI

Annual Report

To Write Fidelity

We'll give your correspondence immediate attention and send you written confirmation upon completion of your request.

(letter_graphic)
Making Changes
To Your Account

(such as changing name, address, bank, etc.)

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0002

(letter_graphic)
For Non-Retirement
Accounts

Buying shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003

Overnight Express
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Distribution Services
100 Crosby Parkway - KC1H
Covington, KY 41015

Selling shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0035

Overnight Express
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Distribution Services
100 Crosby Parkway - KC1H
Covington, KY 41015

General Correspondence

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 500
Merrimack, NH 03054-0500

(letter_graphic)
For Retirement
Accounts

Buying shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003

Selling shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0035

Overnight Express
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Distribution Services
100 Crosby Parkway - KC1H
Covington, KY 41015

General Correspondence

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 500
Merrimack, NH 03054-0500

Annual Report

Investment Adviser

Fidelity Management &
Research Company

Boston, MA

Investment Sub-Advisers

FMR Co., Inc.

Fidelity Management & Research
(U.K.) Inc.

Fidelity Research & Analysis Company

Fidelity Investments Japan Limited

Fidelity International Investment
Advisor

Fidelity International Investment
Advisor (U.K.) Limited

General Distributor

Fidelity Distributors Corporation

Boston, MA

Transfer and Service Agents

Fidelity Investments Institutional
Operations Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Fidelity Service Company, Inc.
Boston, MA

Custodian

Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.

Boston, MA

The Fidelity Telephone Connection

Mutual Fund 24-Hour Service

Exchanges/Redemptions
and Account Assistance 1-800-544-6666

Product Information 1-800-544-6666

Retirement Accounts 1-800-544-4774
(8 a.m. - 9 p.m.)

TDD Service 1-800-544-0118
for the deaf and hearing impaired
(9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Eastern time)

Fidelity Automated Service
Telephone (FAST ®) fid76 1-800-544-5555

fid76 Automated line for quickest service

CII-UANN-0808
1.787730.105

fid79

Fidelity®
Mega Cap Stock
Fund

(formerly Fidelity Growth & Income II Portfolio)

Annual Report

June 30, 2008
(2_fidelity_logos) (Registered_Trademark)

Contents

Chairman's Message

<Click Here>

Ned Johnson's message to shareholders.

Performance

<Click Here>

How the fund has done over time.

Management's Discussion

<Click Here>

The manager's review of fund performance, strategy and outlook.

Shareholder Expense Example

<Click Here>

An example of shareholder expenses.

Investment Changes

<Click Here>

A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months.

Investments

<Click Here>

A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values.

Financial Statements

<Click Here>

Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets,
as well as financial highlights.

Notes

<Click Here>

Notes to the financial statements.

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

<Click Here>

 

Trustees and Officers

<Click Here>

 

Distributions

<Click Here>

 

Proxy Voting Results

<Click Here>

 

To view a fund's proxy voting guidelines and proxy voting record for the 12-month period ended June 30, visit http://www.fidelity.com (search for "proxy voting guidelines") or visit the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) web site at http://www.sec.gov. You may also call 1-800-544-8544 to request a free copy of the proxy voting guidelines.

Standard & Poor's, S&P and S&P 500 are registered service marks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and have been licensed for use by Fidelity Distributors Corporation.

Other third party marks appearing herein are the property of their respective owners.

All other marks appearing herein are registered or unregistered trademarks or service marks of FMR LLC or an affiliated company.

Annual Report

This report and the financial statements contained herein are submitted for the general information of the shareholders of the fund. This report is not authorized for distribution to prospective investors in the fund unless preceded or accompanied by an effective prospectus.

A fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, DC. Information regarding the operation of the SEC's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. For a complete list of a fund's portfolio holdings, view the most recent holdings listing, semiannual report, or annual report on Fidelity's web site at http://www.fidelity.com or http://www.advisor.fidelity.com, as applicable.

NOT FDIC INSURED · MAY LOSE VALUE · NO BANK GUARANTEE

Neither the fund nor Fidelity Distributors Corporation is a bank.

Annual Report

Chairman's Message

(photo_of_Edward_C_Johnson_3d)

Dear Shareholder:

Domestic and international securities markets have struggled thus far in 2008. High-grade fixed-income investments produced modestly positive results, but many stock benchmarks suffered double-digit losses through the first half of this year. Financial markets are always unpredictable, but there are a number of time-tested principles that can put the historical odds in your favor.

One of the basic tenets is to invest for the long term. Over time, riding out the markets' inevitable ups and downs has proven much more effective than selling into panic or chasing the hottest trend. Even missing only a few of the markets' best days can significantly diminish investor returns. Patience also affords the benefits of compounding - of earning interest on additional income or reinvested dividends and capital gains. There are tax advantages and cost benefits to consider as well. The more you sell, the more taxes you pay, and the more you trade, the higher the costs. While staying the course doesn't eliminate risk, it can considerably lessen the effect of short-term declines.

You can further manage your investing risk through diversification. And today, more than ever, geographic diversification should be taken into account. Studies indicate that asset allocation is the single most important determinant of a portfolio's long-term success. The right mix of stocks, bonds and cash - aligned to your particular risk tolerance and investment objective - is very important. Age-appropriate rebalancing is also an essential aspect of asset allocation. For younger investors, an emphasis on equities - which historically have been the best-performing asset class over time - is encouraged. As investors near their specific goal, such as retirement or sending a child to college, consideration may be given to replacing volatile assets (e.g. common stocks) with more-stable fixed investments (bonds or savings plans).

A third investment principle - investing regularly - can help lower the average cost of your purchases. Investing a certain amount of money each month or quarter helps ensure you won't pay for all your shares at market highs. This strategy - known as dollar cost averaging - also reduces unconstructive "emotion" from investing, helping shareholders avoid selling weak performers just prior to an upswing, or chasing a hot performer just before a correction.

We invite you to contact us via the Internet, through our Investor Centers or over the phone. It is our privilege to provide you the information you need to make the investments that are right for you.

Sincerely,
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Annual Report

Performance: The Bottom Line

Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the class' dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of securities that have grown in value, if any) and assuming a constant rate of performance each year. The $10,000 table and the fund's returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares. During periods of reimbursement by Fidelity, a fund's total return will be greater than it would be had the reimbursement not occurred. How a fund did yesterday is no guarantee of how it will do tomorrow.

Average Annual Total Returns

Periods ended June 30, 2008

Past 1
year

Past 5
years

Life of
fund
A

Mega Cap Stock

-12.73%

5.84%

1.73%

A From December 28, 1998.

Prior to December 1, 2007, Mega Cap Stock operated under certain different investment policies. The fund's historical performance may not represent its current investment policies.

$10,000 Over Life of Fund

Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Mega Cap Stock, a class of the fund, on December 28, 1998, when the fund started. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the S&P 500® Index performed over the same period.



fid155

Annual Report

Management's Discussion of Fund Performance

Comments from Rick Mace, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity® Mega Cap Stock Fund

As threats of a recession, concerns about inflation and higher unemployment rates weighed heavily on consumers and investors, the U.S. equity markets struggled for the year ending June 30, 2008. For investors, the lingering effects of the subprime mortgage crisis and credit crunch were felt in most areas of the market, with financial stocks lagging and the energy sector continuing its upward trajectory. To help reignite the economy, the Federal Reserve Board lowered its key interest rate seven times, taking it from 5.25% to 2.00% during the period. The Fed also stepped in to help prevent the near collapse of investment bank Bear Stearns. These moves initially seemed to bolster investor confidence, but, ultimately, most indexes lagged. The Standard & Poor's 500SM Index fell 13.12% for the year ending June 30, 2008. The Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also declined, with a - -13.27% return, and the NASDAQ Composite® Index plunged 11.28%.

During the past year, Mega Cap Stock returned -12.73%, edging out the Russell Top 200® Index, a mega-cap proxy added as a supplemental benchmark on December 1, 2007, which returned -12.81%. Prior to December 1, 2007, the fund was primarily compared with the S&P 500®, which declined 13.12% for the corresponding year. During this period, the fund's mandate shifted to investing in companies with mega market capitalizations, and the fund's name changed accordingly. For the first five months of the period, the fund outperformed the S&P 500. Security selection in industrials and financials helped the most. Specifically, oilfield services provider Cameron International and diversified industrial company McDermott International fared well. Both stocks were sold by period end. On the downside, insurance giant American International Group (AIG) faltered. For the last seven months of the period, the fund lagged the Russell Top 200. Stock selection in energy was the biggest detractor. The fund's positions in oil refiners Valero and Tesoro, the latter of which was an out-of-index holding, hurt. Elsewhere, insurance giant AIG continued to lag. Conversely, stock picking and market selection in technology, industrials and consumer discretionary were beneficial, as was stock selection in materials. Underweightings in conglomerate General Electric and bank Wachovia were the biggest contributors. Overweightings in Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold and offshore driller Transocean also were productive.

The views expressed above reflect those of the portfolio manager(s) only through the end of the period as stated on the cover of this report and do not necessarily represent the views of Fidelity or any other person in the Fidelity organization. Any such views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions and Fidelity disclaims any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied on as investment advice and, because investment decisions for a Fidelity fund are based on numerous factors, may not be relied on as an indication of trading intent on behalf of any Fidelity fund.

Annual Report

Shareholder Expense Example

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, including sales charges (loads) on purchase payments or redemption proceeds, and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees, distribution and/or service (12b-1) fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.

The actual expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Mega Cap Stock and for the entire period (February 5, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C and Institutional Class.

The hypothetical expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008).

Actual Expenses

The first line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000.00 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000.00 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line for a class of the Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The second line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a Class' actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Class' actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Annual Report

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transaction costs. Therefore, the second line of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. In addition, if these transactional costs were included, your costs would have been higher.

 

Beginning
Account
Value

Ending
Account Value
June 30, 2008

Expenses
Paid
During Period

Class A

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 932.10

$ 3.96 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,019.79

$ 5.12 C

Class T

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 931.20

$ 5.12 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,018.30

$ 6.62 C

Class B

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 930.30

$ 6.71 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,016.26

$ 8.67 C

Class C

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 930.30

$ 6.63 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,016.36

$ 8.57 C

Mega Cap Stock

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 849.20

$ 3.36 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,021.23

$ 3.67 C

Institutional Class

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 934.00

$ 2.72 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,021.38

$ 3.52 C

A 5% return per year before expenses

B Actual expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period) for Mega Cap Stock and multiplied by 147/366 (to reflect the period February 5, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C and Institutional Class.

C Hypothetical expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).

Annual Report

 

Annualized
Expense Ratio

Class A

1.02%

Class T

1.32%

Class B

1.73%

Class C

1.71%

Mega Cap Stock

.73%

Institutional Class

.70%

Annual Report

Investment Changes (Unaudited)

Top Ten Stocks as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Exxon Mobil Corp.

5.2

2.4

Hewlett-Packard Co.

3.4

2.0

Microsoft Corp.

2.8

2.6

AT&T, Inc.

2.7

1.3

Johnson & Johnson

2.6

1.7

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

2.6

2.5

ConocoPhillips

2.1

1.8

American International Group, Inc.

2.1

2.1

International Business Machines Corp.

2.0

1.5

Philip Morris International, Inc.

1.8

0.0

 

27.3

Top Five Market Sectors as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Information Technology

20.5

17.5

Energy

16.6

13.0

Financials

15.9

17.1

Health Care

12.6

12.6

Consumer Discretionary

8.8

10.4

Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)

As of June 30, 2008 *

As of December 31, 2007 **

fid53

Stocks 100.0%

 

fid53

Stocks 98.0%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 0.0%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 2.0%

 

* Foreign investments

4.9%

 

** Foreign investments

3.9%

 


fid161

Annual Report

Investments June 30, 2008

Showing Percentage of Net Assets

Common Stocks - 100.0%

Shares

Value

CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 8.8%

Auto Components - 0.3%

Johnson Controls, Inc.

69,600

$ 1,996,128

Automobiles - 0.1%

Toyota Motor Corp. sponsored ADR

10,000

940,000

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.7%

McDonald's Corp.

198,700

11,170,914

Household Durables - 1.2%

Whirlpool Corp. (d)

128,400

7,926,132

Media - 2.5%

Comcast Corp. Class A

50,000

948,500

McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

57,900

2,322,948

News Corp. Class A

20,100

302,304

Omnicom Group, Inc.

26,100

1,171,368

The DIRECTV Group, Inc. (a)

77,400

2,005,434

The Walt Disney Co.

188,600

5,884,320

Time Warner, Inc.

132,100

1,955,080

Viacom, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.) (a)

58,300

1,780,482

 

16,370,436

Multiline Retail - 0.9%

Sears Holdings Corp. (a)(d)

51,400

3,786,124

Target Corp. (d)

53,400

2,482,566

 

6,268,690

Specialty Retail - 1.1%

Abercrombie & Fitch Co. Class A

26,100

1,635,948

Best Buy Co., Inc.

10,000

396,000

Home Depot, Inc.

131,100

3,070,362

Lowe's Companies, Inc.

30,000

622,500

Staples, Inc.

55,243

1,312,021

 

7,036,831

Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 1.0%

NIKE, Inc. Class B (d)

114,400

6,819,384

TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY

58,528,515

CONSUMER STAPLES - 8.6%

Beverages - 0.6%

Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.

24,300

420,390

Molson Coors Brewing Co. Class B

64,793

3,520,204

 

3,940,594

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

CONSUMER STAPLES - continued

Food & Staples Retailing - 2.5%

CVS Caremark Corp.

97,600

$ 3,862,032

Kroger Co.

67,700

1,954,499

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

196,384

11,036,781

 

16,853,312

Food Products - 1.0%

Archer Daniels Midland Co.

107,000

3,611,250

Kellogg Co.

65,200

3,130,904

Tyson Foods, Inc. Class A

1,300

19,422

 

6,761,576

Household Products - 1.7%

Energizer Holdings, Inc. (a)

10,000

730,900

Kimberly-Clark Corp.

10,000

597,800

Procter & Gamble Co.

160,700

9,772,167

 

11,100,867

Tobacco - 2.8%

Altria Group, Inc.

325,030

6,682,617

Philip Morris International, Inc.

245,030

12,102,032

 

18,784,649

TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES

57,440,998

ENERGY - 16.6%

Energy Equipment & Services - 3.6%

Halliburton Co.

143,400

7,610,238

National Oilwell Varco, Inc. (a)

20,000

1,774,400

Noble Corp.

23,900

1,552,544

Schlumberger Ltd. (NY Shares)

32,715

3,514,572

Transocean, Inc. (a)

61,552

9,379,909

 

23,831,663

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 13.0%

Apache Corp.

30,000

4,170,000

Canadian Natural Resources Ltd.

5,000

494,629

Chevron Corp.

65,500

6,493,015

ConocoPhillips

150,000

14,158,500

Devon Energy Corp.

5,000

600,800

Exxon Mobil Corp.

393,071

34,641,347

Marathon Oil Corp.

204,500

10,607,415

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

20,000

1,797,200

Peabody Energy Corp.

8,927

786,022

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

ENERGY - continued

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued

Plains Exploration & Production Co. (a)

6,100

$ 445,117

Tesoro Corp.

138,100

2,730,237

Valero Energy Corp.

246,500

10,150,870

 

87,075,152

TOTAL ENERGY

110,906,815

FINANCIALS - 15.9%

Capital Markets - 3.9%

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

51,100

8,937,390

Janus Capital Group, Inc.

208,700

5,524,289

Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.

357,672

7,085,482

Morgan Stanley

31,500

1,136,205

State Street Corp.

48,700

3,116,313

 

25,799,679

Commercial Banks - 1.6%

U.S. Bancorp, Delaware

40,000

1,115,600

Wachovia Corp.

106,100

1,647,733

Wells Fargo & Co. (d)

348,400

8,274,500

 

11,037,833

Consumer Finance - 0.3%

American Express Co.

15,700

591,419

Capital One Financial Corp.

35,000

1,330,350

 

1,921,769

Diversified Financial Services - 5.3%

Bank of America Corp.

447,780

10,688,509

Citigroup, Inc.

432,200

7,243,672

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

506,200

17,367,722

 

35,299,903

Insurance - 4.6%

ACE Ltd.

26,100

1,437,849

AFLAC, Inc.

25,000

1,570,000

American International Group, Inc.

524,330

13,873,772

Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class B (a)

860

3,450,320

Loews Corp.

60,900

2,856,210

MetLife, Inc.

27,500

1,451,175

Prudential Financial, Inc.

16,600

991,684

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

FINANCIALS - continued

Insurance - continued

The Chubb Corp.

27,000

$ 1,323,270

The Travelers Companies, Inc.

86,000

3,732,400

 

30,686,680

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.2%

Fannie Mae

58,500

1,141,335

Freddie Mac

30,000

492,000

 

1,633,335

TOTAL FINANCIALS

106,379,199

HEALTH CARE - 12.6%

Biotechnology - 1.4%

Amgen, Inc. (a)

50,190

2,366,960

Biogen Idec, Inc. (a)

32,200

1,799,658

Genentech, Inc. (a)

45,200

3,430,680

Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a)

35,220

1,864,899

 

9,462,197

Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 1.7%

Baxter International, Inc.

69,900

4,469,406

Becton, Dickinson & Co.

39,200

3,186,960

C.R. Bard, Inc.

5,200

457,340

Covidien Ltd.

40,000

1,915,600

Medtronic, Inc.

28,300

1,464,525

 

11,493,831

Health Care Providers & Services - 2.5%

Humana, Inc. (a)

72,800

2,895,256

McKesson Corp.

19,300

1,079,063

Medco Health Solutions, Inc. (a)

159,500

7,528,400

UnitedHealth Group, Inc.

140,200

3,680,250

WellPoint, Inc. (a)

26,900

1,282,054

 

16,465,023

Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.6%

Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. (a)

65,000

3,622,450

Pharmaceuticals - 6.4%

Abbott Laboratories

45,000

2,383,650

Allergan, Inc.

10,000

520,500

Johnson & Johnson

271,800

17,487,612

Merck & Co., Inc.

283,900

10,700,191

Pfizer, Inc.

244,200

4,266,174

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

HEALTH CARE - continued

Pharmaceuticals - continued

Schering-Plough Corp.

155,100

$ 3,053,919

Wyeth

96,000

4,604,160

 

43,016,206

TOTAL HEALTH CARE

84,059,707

INDUSTRIALS - 8.6%

Aerospace & Defense - 4.9%

General Dynamics Corp.

6,500

547,300

Honeywell International, Inc.

109,600

5,510,688

L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.

24,900

2,262,663

Lockheed Martin Corp.

61,900

6,107,054

Northrop Grumman Corp.

89,800

6,007,620

Raytheon Co.

81,000

4,558,680

The Boeing Co.

69,800

4,587,256

United Technologies Corp.

45,900

2,832,030

 

32,413,291

Airlines - 0.1%

AMR Corp. (a)

72,200

369,664

UAL Corp.

28,800

150,336

US Airways Group, Inc. (a)

40,900

102,250

 

622,250

Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.0%

Manpower, Inc.

900

52,416

Industrial Conglomerates - 0.9%

General Electric Co.

175,700

4,689,433

Tyco International Ltd.

40,000

1,601,600

 

6,291,033

Machinery - 1.7%

Caterpillar, Inc.

54,900

4,052,718

Deere & Co.

78,300

5,647,779

Eaton Corp.

700

59,479

Ingersoll-Rand Co. Ltd. Class A

37,900

1,418,597

 

11,178,573

Road & Rail - 1.0%

Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp.

10,000

998,900

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

INDUSTRIALS - continued

Road & Rail - continued

Norfolk Southern Corp.

30,000

$ 1,880,100

Union Pacific Corp.

52,000

3,926,000

 

6,805,000

TOTAL INDUSTRIALS

57,362,563

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 20.5%

Communications Equipment - 3.0%

Cisco Systems, Inc. (a)

464,800

10,811,248

Corning, Inc.

42,100

970,405

Juniper Networks, Inc. (a)

10,000

221,800

Nokia Corp. sponsored ADR

205,400

5,032,300

QUALCOMM, Inc.

69,100

3,065,967

 

20,101,720

Computers & Peripherals - 7.9%

Apple, Inc. (a)

68,100

11,402,664

EMC Corp. (a)

300

4,407

Hewlett-Packard Co.

509,500

22,524,995

International Business Machines Corp.

114,800

13,607,244

Western Digital Corp. (a)

145,800

5,034,474

 

52,573,784

Electronic Equipment & Instruments - 0.3%

Tyco Electronics Ltd.

61,600

2,206,512

Internet Software & Services - 0.9%

Google, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a)

11,350

5,974,867

Yahoo!, Inc. (a)

14,300

295,438

 

6,270,305

IT Services - 1.3%

Accenture Ltd. Class A

156,400

6,368,608

Visa, Inc.

25,000

2,032,750

 

8,401,358

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 3.0%

Applied Materials, Inc.

405,918

7,748,975

ASML Holding NV (NY Shares)

184,900

4,511,560

Intel Corp.

332,200

7,135,656

Texas Instruments, Inc.

20,000

563,200

 

19,959,391

Software - 4.1%

Microsoft Corp.

689,100

18,957,141

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued

Software - continued

Oracle Corp. (a)

368,200

$ 7,732,200

Symantec Corp. (a)

53,300

1,031,355

 

27,720,696

TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

137,233,766

MATERIALS - 3.0%

Chemicals - 1.0%

Celanese Corp. Class A

19,500

890,370

Monsanto Co.

23,000

2,908,120

The Mosaic Co. (a)

20,000

2,894,000

 

6,692,490

Metals & Mining - 2.0%

ArcelorMittal SA (NY Shares) Class A

19,300

1,912,051

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc. Class B

95,500

11,191,645

 

13,103,696

TOTAL MATERIALS

19,796,186

TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 3.3%

Diversified Telecommunication Services - 3.3%

AT&T, Inc.

524,700

17,677,143

Qwest Communications International, Inc.

50,000

196,500

Verizon Communications, Inc.

114,600

4,056,840

 

21,930,483

UTILITIES - 2.1%

Electric Utilities - 0.7%

Entergy Corp.

5,000

602,400

Exelon Corp.

15,000

1,349,400

FirstEnergy Corp.

30,000

2,469,900

PPL Corp.

10,000

522,700

 

4,944,400

Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.8%

AES Corp. (a)

82,100

1,577,141

Constellation Energy Group, Inc.

46,800

3,842,280

 

5,419,421

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

UTILITIES - continued

Multi-Utilities - 0.6%

Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.

87,300

$ 4,009,689

TOTAL UTILITIES

14,373,510

TOTAL COMMON STOCKS

(Cost $743,099,299)

668,011,742

Money Market Funds - 3.5%

 

 

 

 

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 2.39% (b)(c) (Cost $23,436,500)

23,436,500

23,436,500

TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 103.5%

(Cost $766,535,799)

691,448,242

NET OTHER ASSETS - (3.5)%

(23,365,552)

NET ASSETS - 100%

$ 668,082,690

Legend

(a) Non-income producing

(b) Affiliated fund that is available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. The rate quoted is the annualized seven-day yield of the fund at period end. A complete unaudited listing of the fund's holdings as of its most recent quarter end is available upon request.

(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.

(d) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.

Affiliated Central Funds

Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:

Fund

Income earned

Fidelity Cash Central Fund

$ 529,959

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund

295,384

Total

$ 825,343

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

 

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Assets

Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $22,228,782) - See accompanying schedule:

Unaffiliated issuers (cost $743,099,299)

$ 668,011,742

 

Fidelity Central Funds (cost $23,436,500)

23,436,500

 

Total Investments (cost $766,535,799)

 

$ 691,448,242

Receivable for investments sold

2,485,471

Receivable for fund shares sold

465,833

Dividends receivable

617,823

Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds

60,828

Prepaid expenses

812

Other receivables

21

Total assets

695,079,030

 

 

 

Liabilities

Payable to custodian bank

$ 61,954

Payable for fund shares redeemed

3,054,231

Accrued management fee

270,451

Distribution fees payable

259

Other affiliated payables

134,912

Other payables and accrued expenses

38,033

Collateral on securities loaned, at value

23,436,500

Total liabilities

26,996,340

 

 

 

Net Assets

$ 668,082,690

Net Assets consist of:

 

Paid in capital

$ 742,629,358

Undistributed net investment income

4,457,069

Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions

(3,916,659)

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

(75,087,078)

Net Assets

$ 668,082,690

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Assets and Liabilities - continued

 

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Calculation of Maximum Offering Price
Class A:
Net Asset Value and redemption price per share ($106,360 ÷ 10,749 shares)

$ 9.89

 

 

 

Maximum offering price per share (100/94.25 of $9.89)

$ 10.49

Class T:
Net Asset Value
and redemption price per share ($135,765 ÷ 13,738 shares)

$ 9.88

 

 

 

Maximum offering price per share (100/96.50 of $9.88)

$ 10.24

Class B:
Net Asset Value
and offering price per share ($106,810 ÷ 10,827 shares)A

$ 9.87

 

 

 

Class C:
Net Asset Value
and offering price per share ($98,202 ÷ 9,953 shares)A

$ 9.87

 

 

 

Mega Cap Stock:
Net Asset Value
, offering price and redemption price per share ($667,542,177 ÷ 67,387,928 shares)

$ 9.91

 

 

 

Institutional Class:
Net Asset Value
, offering price and redemption price per share ($93,376 ÷ 9,425 shares)

$ 9.91

A Redemption price per share is equal to net asset value less any applicable contingent deferred sales charge.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements - continued

Statement of Operations

 

Year ended June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Investment Income

 

 

Dividends

 

$ 8,748,862

Interest

 

9,105

Income from Fidelity Central Funds

 

825,343

Total income

 

9,583,310

 

 

 

Expenses

Management fee

$ 2,176,949

Transfer agent fees

967,001

Distribution fees

1,219

Accounting and security lending fees

177,248

Custodian fees and expenses

27,668

Independent trustees' compensation

1,778

Registration fees

146,462

Audit

43,161

Legal

1,425

Miscellaneous

21,549

Total expenses before reductions

3,564,460

Expense reductions

(66,857)

3,497,603

Net investment income (loss)

6,085,707

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

Net realized gain (loss) on:

Investment securities:

 

 

Unaffiliated issuers

(93,135)

Foreign currency transactions

2,821

Futures contracts

(562,680)

Total net realized gain (loss)

 

(652,994)

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:

Investment securities

(106,617,638)

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

416

Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

 

(106,617,222)

Net gain (loss)

(107,270,216)

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

$ (101,184,509)

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

Year ended
June 30,
2008

Year ended
June 30,
2007

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net investment income (loss)

$ 6,085,707

$ 1,533,606

Net realized gain (loss)

(652,994)

11,201,563

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(106,617,222)

22,555,444

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting
from operations

(101,184,509)

35,290,613

Distributions to shareholders from net investment income

(2,028,069)

(1,575,615)

Distributions to shareholders from net realized gain

(12,126,374)

(3,189,149)

Total distributions

(14,154,443)

(4,764,764)

Share transactions - net increase (decrease)

578,258,425

(8,196,217)

Total increase (decrease) in net assets

462,919,473

22,329,632

 

 

 

Net Assets

Beginning of period

205,163,217

182,833,585

End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $4,457,069 and undistributed net investment income of $410,073, respectively)

$ 668,082,690

$ 205,163,217

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class A

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .05

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.77)

Total from investment operations

  (.72)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.89

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.79)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.02% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.02% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.01% A

Net investment income (loss)

  1.24% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 106

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the sales charges.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class T

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .04

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.77)

Total from investment operations

  (.73)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.88

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.88)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.32% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.32% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.32% A

Net investment income (loss)

  .89% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 136

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the sales charges.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class B

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .02

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.76)

Total from investment operations

  (.74)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.87

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.97)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.73% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.73% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.73% A

Net investment income (loss)

  .52% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 107

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the contingent deferred sales charge.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class C

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .02

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.76)

Total from investment operations

  (.74)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.87

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.97)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.71% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.71% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.71% A

Net investment income (loss)

  .55% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 98

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the contingent deferred sales charge.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Mega Cap Stock

Years ended June 30,
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004

Selected Per-Share Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 12.06

$ 10.31

$ 9.28

$ 9.24

$ 8.48

Income from Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net investment income (loss) B

  .14

  .09

  .05

  .14 E

  .06

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (1.60)

  1.93

  1.21

  .02

  .76

Total from investment operations

  (1.46)

  2.02

  1.26

  .16

  .82

Distributions from net investment income

  (.07)

  (.09)

  (.06)

  (.12)

  (.06)

Distributions from net realized gain

  (.62)

  (.18)

  (.17)

  -

  -

Total distributions

  (.69)

  (.27)

  (.23)

  (.12)

  (.06)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.91

$ 12.06

$ 10.31

$ 9.28

$ 9.24

Total Return A

  (12.73)%

  20.05%

  13.63%

  1.71%

  9.68%

Ratios to Average Net Assets C, F

 

 

 

 

 

Expenses before reductions

  .75%

  .81%

  .86%

  .84%

  .86%

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .74%

  .81%

  .86%

  .84%

  .86%

Expenses net of all reductions

  .74%

  .81%

  .82%

  .81%

  .85%

Net investment income (loss)

  1.28%

  .79%

  .51%

  1.52% E

  .72%

Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 667,542

$ 205,163

$ 182,834

$ 179,344

$ 209,344

Portfolio turnover rate D

  97%

  94%

  180%

  79%

  26%

A Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

C Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

E Investment income per share reflects a special dividend which amounted to $.03 per share. Excluding the special dividend, the ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets would have been 1.15%.

F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Institutional Class

Year ended June 30,
2008 G

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) D

  .07

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.77)

Total from investment operations

  (.70)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.91

Total Return B, C

  (6.60)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets E, H

 

Expenses before reductions

  .70% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .70% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  .70% A

Net investment income (loss)

  1.57% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 93

Portfolio turnover rate F

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

E Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

F Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

H Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements

For the period ended June 30, 2008

1. Organization.

Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund (the Fund) (formerly Fidelity Growth & Income II Portfolio) is a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust (the trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. The trust is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust. The Fund commenced sale of Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C, and Institutional Class shares and the existing class was designated Mega Cap Stock on February 5, 2008. Class B shares will automatically convert to Class A shares after a holding period of seven years from the initial date of purchase. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, the common expenses of the Fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated on a pro rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the Fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent and distribution and service plan fees incurred. Certain expense reductions also differ by class.

2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.

The Fund may invest in Fidelity Central Funds, which are open-end investment companies available only to other investment companies and accounts managed by Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) and its affiliates. The Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR.

A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the SEC's web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC's web site or upon request.

3. Significant Accounting Policies.

The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the Fund:

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Security Valuation. Investments are valued as of 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on the last calendar day of the period. Wherever possible, the Fund uses independent pricing services approved by the Board of Trustees to value its investments.

Equity securities, including restricted securities, for which market quotations are readily available, are valued at the last reported sale price or official closing price as reported by an independent pricing service on the primary market or exchange on which they are traded. In the event there were no sales during the day or closing prices are not available, securities are valued at the last quoted bid price. Investments in open-end mutual funds, including the Fidelity Central Funds, are valued at their closing net asset value each business day. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less for which quotations are not readily available are valued at amortized cost, which approximates value.

When current market prices or quotations are not readily available or reliable, valuations may be determined in good faith in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees. Factors used in determining value may include significant market or security specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality, and developments in foreign markets which are monitored by evaluating the performance of ADRs, futures contracts and exchange-traded funds. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and may be utilized to a significant extent. The value of securities used for net asset value (NAV) calculation under these procedures may differ from published prices for the same securities.

Foreign Currency. The Fund uses foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.

Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.

The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.

Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Investment Transactions and Income - continued

calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 pm Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and may include proceeds received from litigation. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, except for certain dividends from foreign securities where the ex-dividend date may have passed, which are recorded as soon as the Fund is informed of the ex-dividend date. Non-cash dividends included in dividend income, if any, are recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. The Fund estimates the components of distributions received that may be considered return of capital distributions or capital gain distributions. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain.

Expenses. Most expenses of the trust can be directly attributed to a fund. Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned among each Fund in the trust. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, the Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company by distributing substantially all of its taxable income and realized gains under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code and filing its U.S. federal tax return. As a result, no provision for income taxes is required. The Fund is subject to the provisions of FASB Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for Uncertainties in Income Taxes (FIN 48). FIN 48 sets forth a minimum threshold for financial statement recognition of the benefit of a tax position taken or expected to be taken in a tax return. The implementation of FIN 48 did not result in any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. Each of the Fund's federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remains subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.

Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles. In addition, the Fund will claim a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued

Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.

Book-tax differences are primarily due to foreign currency transactions and losses deferred due to wash sales.

The tax-basis components of distributable earnings and the federal tax cost as of period end were as follows:

Unrealized appreciation

$ 32,029,360

 

Unrealized depreciation

(112,195,963)

 

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(80,166,603)

 

Undistributed ordinary income

3,708,324

 

Undistributed long-term capital gain

967,118

 

 

 

 

Cost for federal income tax purposes

$ 771,614,845

 

The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:

 

June 30, 2008

June 30, 2007

Ordinary Income

$ 5,440,769

$ 1,575,615

Long-term Capital Gains

8,713,674

3,189,149

Total

$ 14,154,443

$ 4,764,764

New Accounting Pronouncements. In September 2006, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157, Fair Value Measurements (SFAS 157), was issued and is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. SFAS 157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and results in expanded disclosures about fair value measurements.

In addition, in March 2008, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 161, Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities (SFAS 161), was issued and is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2008. SFAS 161 requires enhanced disclosures to provide information about the reasons the Fund invests in derivative instruments, the accounting treatment and the effect derivatives have on financial performance. Management is currently evaluating the impact the adoption of SFAS 161 will have on the Fund's financial statement disclosures.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

4. Operating Policies.

Repurchase Agreements. FMR has received an Exemptive Order from the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) which permits the Fund and other affiliated entities of FMR to transfer uninvested cash balances into joint trading accounts which are then invested in repurchase agreements. The Fund may also invest directly with institutions in repurchase agreements. Repurchase agreements are collateralized by government or non-government securities. Upon settlement date, collateral is held in segregated accounts with custodian banks and may be obtained in the event of a default of the counterparty. The Fund monitors, on a daily basis, the value of the collateral to ensure it is at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). In the event of a default by the counterparty, realization of the collateral proceeds could be delayed, during which time the value of the collateral may decline.

Futures Contracts. The Fund may use futures contracts to manage its exposure to the stock market. Buying futures tends to increase a fund's exposure to the underlying instrument, while selling futures tends to decrease a fund's exposure to the underlying instrument or hedge other fund investments. Upon entering into a futures contract, a fund is required to deposit with a clearing broker, no later than the following business day, an amount ("initial margin") equal to a certain percentage of the face value of the contract. The initial margin may be in the form of cash or securities and is transferred to a segregated account on settlement date. Subsequent payments ("variation margin") are made or received by a fund depending on the daily fluctuations in the value of the futures contract and are accounted for as unrealized gains or losses. Realized gains (losses) are recorded upon the expiration or closing of the futures contract. Losses may arise from changes in the value of the underlying instruments or if the counterparties do not perform under the contract's terms.

5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.

Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, aggregated $1,027,448,757 and $447,578,450, respectively.

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.

Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .20% of the Fund's average net assets and a group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and

Annual Report

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued

Management Fee - continued

increases as assets under management decrease. For the period, the total annual management fee rate was .46% of the Fund's average net assets.

Distribution and Service Plan. In accordance with Rule 12b-1 of the 1940 Act, the Fund has adopted separate Distribution and Service Plans for each class of shares. Certain classes pay Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC), an affiliate of FMR, separate Distribution and Service Fees, each of which is based on an annual percentage of each class' average net assets. In addition, FDC may pay financial intermediaries for selling shares of the Fund and providing shareholder support services. For the period, the Distribution and Service Fee rates and the total amounts paid to and retained by FDC were as follows:

 

Distribution
Fee

Service
Fee

Paid to
FDC

Retained
by FDC

Class A

0%

.25%

$ 107

$ 102

Class T

.25%

.25%

268

204

Class B

.75%

.25%

431

425

Class C

.75%

.25%

413

413

 

 

 

$ 1,219

$ 1,144

Sales Load. FDC receives a front-end sales charge of up to 5.75% for selling Class A shares, and 3.50% for selling Class T shares, some of which is paid to financial intermediaries for selling shares of the Fund. FDC receives the proceeds of contingent deferred sales charges levied on Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C redemptions. These charges depend on the holding period. The deferred sales charges range from 5% to 1% for Class B, 1% for Class C, 1.00% to .50% for certain purchases of Class A shares and .25% for certain purchases of Class T shares.

For the period, sales charge amounts retained by FDC were as follows:

 

Retained
by FDC

Class A

$ 95

Class T

19

Class B*

5

Class C*

-

 

$ 119

* When Class B and Class C shares are initially sold, FDC pays commissions from its own resources to financial intermediaries through which the sales are made.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued

Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc. (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to the account size and type of account of the shareholders of the respective classes of the Fund. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements. Prior to January 1, 2008, Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), also an affiliate of FMR, was the transfer agent for Mega Cap Stock shares. For the period, each class paid the following transfer agent fees:

 

Amount

% of
Average
Net Assets

Class A

$ 97

.22

Class T

150

.28

Class B

83

.19

Class C

69

.17

Mega Cap Stock

966,538

.20

Institutional Class

64

.16

 

$ 967,001

 

Accounting and Security Lending Fees. FSC maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on the level of average net assets for the month. Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.

Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $44,159 for the period.

7. Committed Line of Credit.

The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR in a $4.2 billion credit facility (the "line of credit") to be utilized for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions or for other short-term liquidity purposes. The Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $668 and is reflected in Miscellaneous Expense on the Statement of Operations. During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.

8. Security Lending.

The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. On the settlement date of the loan, the Fund receives collateral (in the form of U.S. Treasury obligations, letters of credit and/or cash) against the loaned securities and

Annual Report

8. Security Lending - continued

maintains collateral in an amount not less than 100% of the market value of the loaned securities during the period of the loan. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. If the borrower defaults on its obligation to return the securities loaned because of insolvency or other reasons, a fund could experience delays and costs in recovering the securities loaned or in gaining access to the collateral. Any cash collateral received is invested in the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less fees and expenses associated with the loan, plus any premium payments that may be received on the loan of certain types of securities. Security lending income is presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds. Net income from lending portfolio securities during the period amounted to $295,384.

9. Expense Reductions.

Many of the brokers with whom FMR places trades on behalf of the Fund provided services to the Fund in addition to trade execution. These services included payments of certain expenses on behalf of the Fund totaling $2,912 for the period. In addition, through arrangements with the Fund's custodian and each class' transfer agent, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's expenses by $3,979. During the period, credits reduced each class' transfer agent expense as noted in the table below.

 

Transfer Agent
expense reduction

 

Mega Cap Stock

$ 3,091

 

In addition, FMR voluntarily agreed to reimburse a portion of the existing class' operating expenses. During the period, this reimbursement reduced the existing class' expenses by $56,875.

10. Other.

The Fund's organizational documents provide former and current trustees and officers with a limited indemnification against liabilities arising in connection with the performance of their duties to the Fund. In the normal course of business, the Fund may also enter into contracts that provide general indemnifications. The Fund's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would be dependent on future claims that may be made against the Fund. The risk of material loss from such claims is considered remote.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

10. Other - continued

In December 2006, the Independent Trustees, with the assistance of independent counsel, completed an investigation regarding gifts, gratuities and business entertainment provided by certain brokers to certain individuals who were employed on FMR's domestic equity trading desk during the period 2002 to 2004. The Independent Trustees and FMR agreed that, despite the absence of proof that the Fidelity mutual funds experienced diminished execution quality as a result of the improper receipt of gifts and business entertainment, the conduct at issue was serious and was worthy of redress. Accordingly, the Independent Trustees requested, and FMR agreed to make, a payment of $42 million plus accrued interest, which equaled approximately $7.3 million, to certain Fidelity mutual funds.

In March 2008, the Trustees approved a method for allocating this payment among the funds and, in total, FMR paid the fund $14,537, which is recorded in the accompanying Statement of Operations.

In a related administrative order dated March 5, 2008, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") announced a settlement with FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (an affiliate of FMR) involving the SEC's regulatory rules for investment advisers and the improper receipt of gifts, gratuities and business entertainment. Without admitting or denying the SEC's findings, FMR agreed to pay an $8 million civil penalty to the United States Treasury.

11. Distributions to Shareholders.

Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:

Years ended June 30,

2008

2007

From net investment income

 

 

Mega Cap Stock

$ 2,028,069

$ 1,575,615

From net realized gain

 

 

Mega Cap Stock

$ 12,126,374

$ 3,189,149

Annual Report

12. Share Transactions.

Transactions for each class of shares were as follows:

 

Shares

Dollars

Years ended June 30,

2008

2007

2008

2007

Class A A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

10,749

-

$ 114,109

$ -

Shares redeemed

-

-

-

-

Net increase (decrease)

10,749

-

$ 114,109

$ -

Class T A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

13,813

-

$ 145,705

$ -

Shares redeemed

(75)

-

(773)

-

Net increase (decrease)

13,738

-

$ 144,932

$ -

Class B A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

10,836

-

$ 114,788

$ -

Shares redeemed

(9)

-

(99)

-

Net increase (decrease)

10,827

-

$ 114,689

$ -

Class C A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

9,953

-

$ 105,728

$ -

Shares redeemed

-

-

-

-

Net increase (decrease)

9,953

-

$ 105,728

$ -

Mega Cap Stock

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

62,330,525

2,800,133

$ 706,742,566

$ 31,267,121

Reinvestment of distributions

1,173,267

441,763

13,245,178

4,570,058

Shares redeemed

(13,126,183)

(3,969,395)

(142,308,777)

(44,033,396)

Net increase (decrease)

50,377,609

(727,499)

$ 577,678,967

$ (8,196,217)

Institutional Class A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

9,425

-

$ 100,000

$ -

Shares redeemed

-

-

-

-

Net increase (decrease)

9,425

-

$ 100,000

$ -

A Share transactions for Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C and Institutional Class are for the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

Annual Report

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund (a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust) at June 30, 2008, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at June 30, 2008 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

August 19, 2008

Annual Report

Trustees and Officers

The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive officers of the trust and fund, as applicable, are listed below. The Board of Trustees governs the fund and is responsible for protecting the interests of shareholders. The Trustees are experienced executives who meet periodically throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities, review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the fund, and review the fund's performance. Except for Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey, each of the Trustees oversees 218 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate. Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey oversee 377 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate.

The Trustees hold office without limit in time except that (a) any Trustee may resign; (b) any Trustee may be removed by written instrument, signed by at least two-thirds of the number of Trustees prior to such removal; (c) any Trustee who requests to be retired or who has become incapacitated by illness or injury may be retired by written instrument signed by a majority of the other Trustees; and (d) any Trustee may be removed at any special meeting of shareholders by a two-thirds vote of the outstanding voting securities of the trust. Each Trustee who is not an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) (Independent Trustee), shall retire not later than the last day of the calendar year in which his or her 72nd birthday occurs. The Independent Trustees may waive this mandatory retirement age policy with respect to individual Trustees. The executive officers and Advisory Board Member hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and Advisory Board Member may resign or may be removed by a vote of a majority of the Trustees at any regular meeting or any special meeting of the Trustees. Except as indicated, each individual has held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the past five years.

The fund's Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the Trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-800-544-8544.

Interested Trustees*:

Correspondence intended for each Trustee who is an interested person may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Edward C. Johnson 3d (78)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 1984

Mr. Johnson is Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Mr. Johnson serves as Chief Executive Officer, Chairman, and a Director of FMR LLC; Chairman and a Director of FMR; Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (FRAC); Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc.; and Chairman and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Johnson serves as Chairman and Director of FIL Limited. Previously, Mr. Johnson served as President of FMR LLC (2006-2007).

James C. Curvey (73)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2006-
present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, Mr. Curvey serves as an Overseer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a member of the Trustees of Villanova University.

* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR. FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Independent Trustees:

Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Dennis J. Dirks (60)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) (1999-2003). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) (1999-2003) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) (1999-2003). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003) and Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003). Mr. Dirks also serves as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-present).

Alan J. Lacy (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (a private equity firm). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of The Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-present) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (global pharmaceuticals, 2007-present). Mr. Lacy is a Trustee of the National Parks Conservation Association and The Field Museum of Natural History.

Ned C. Lautenbach (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2000

Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees (2006-present). Mr. Lautenbach is an Advisory Partner of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment firm). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was with the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) from 1968 until his retirement in 1998. Mr. Lautenbach serves as a Director of Eaton Corporation (diversified industrial) as well as the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida. He also is a member of the Board of Trustees of Fairfield University (2005-present), as well as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Previously, Mr. Lautenbach served as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007).

Joseph Mauriello (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services firm, 1965-2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of XL Capital Ltd. (global insurance and re-insurance company, 2006-present) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-present). He also served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007).

Cornelia M. Small (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Ms. Small is a member of the Investment Committee, and Chair (2008-present) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson of the Investment Committee (2002-2008) of Smith College and as Co-Chair (2000-2003) of the Annual Fund for the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. In addition, she served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments.

William S. Stavropoulos (69)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2001

Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President (1993-2000; 2002-2003), CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, he is a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions, 2008-present), Chemical Financial Corporation, Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), Tyco International, Inc. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-present), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital (private equity investment firm, 2005-present). He is a special advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science.

David M. Thomas (59)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products holding company), and Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present).

Michael E. Wiley (57)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Wiley also serves as a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Tulsa (2000-2006; 2007-present). He serves as a Director of Tesoro Corporation (independent oil refiner and marketer, 2005-
present), and a Director of Bill Barrett Corporation (exploration and production company, 2005-present). In addition, he also serves as a Director of Post Oak Bank (privately-held bank, 2004-present). Previously, Mr. Wiley served as a Sr. Energy Advisor of Katzenbach Partners, LLC (consulting firm, 2006-2007), as an Advisory Director of Riverstone Holdings (private investment firm), Chairman, President, and CEO of Baker Hughes, Inc. (oilfield services company, 2000-2004), and as Director of Spinnaker Exploration Company (exploration and production company, 2001-2005).

Advisory Board Member and Executive Officers**:

Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Mr. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Peter S. Lynch (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2003

Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR, and Vice Chairman (2001-present) and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. Previously, Mr. Lynch served as a Trustee of the Fidelity funds (1990-2003). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund.

Kenneth B. Robins (38)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

President and Treasurer of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2004-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Robins worked at KPMG LLP, where he was a partner in KPMG's department of professional practice (2002-2004).

Walter C. Donovan (46)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Vice President of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Donovan also serves as Vice President of Fidelity's Equity Funds, President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc., and Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Donovan served as Executive Vice President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2005-2007) and Senior Vice President of FMR (2003-2005) and FMR Co., Inc. (2004-2005).

Bruce T. Herring (42)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2006

Vice President of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of certain Equity Funds (2006-present) and Group Chief Investments Officer of FMR. Previously, Mr. Herring served as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds.

Scott C. Goebel (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO) of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary and CLO of other Fidelity funds (2008-
present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present); and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC. Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Assistant Secretary of the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007).

John B. McGinty, Jr. (45)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Assistant Secretary of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. McGinty also serves as Assistant Secretary of Fidelity's other Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC (2004-present). Mr. McGinty also serves as Senior Vice President, Secretary, and Chief Legal Officer of FDC (2007-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. McGinty practiced law at Ropes & Gray, LLP.

Holly C. Laurent (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Anti-Money Laundering (AML) officer of Mega Cap Stock. Ms. Laurent also serves as AML officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC. Previously, Ms. Laurent was Senior Vice President and Head of Legal for Fidelity Business Services India Pvt. Ltd. (2006-2008), Senior Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and Group Head for FMR Co. Legal (2005-2006).

Christine Reynolds (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Chief Financial Officer of Mega Cap Stock. Ms. Reynolds also serves as Chief Financial Officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present). Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) in August 2008. She served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS from 2007 through July 2008. Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Ms. Reynolds worked at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) (1980-2002), where she was an audit partner with PwC's investment management practice.

Kenneth A. Rathgeber (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Chief Compliance Officer of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Rathgeber also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2004-present). He is Chief Compliance Officer of FMR (2005-
present), FMR Co., Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2005-present), Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2005-present), and Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2005-present).

Bryan A. Mehrmann (47)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Deputy Treasurer of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Mehrmann also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR. Previously, Mr. Mehrmann served as Vice President of Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Group (FIIS)/Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Corporation, Inc. (FIIOC) Client Services (1998-2004).

Adrien E. Deberghes (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Deputy Treasurer of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Deberghes also serves as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-
present) and is an employee of FMR (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005).

Robert G. Byrnes (41)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Byrnes also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Byrnes served as Vice President of FPCMS (2003-2005). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Byrnes worked at Deutsche Asset Management where he served as Vice President of the Investment Operations (2000-2003).

Peter L. Lydecker (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Assistant Treasurer of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Lydecker also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2004-present) and is an employee of FMR.

Paul M. Murphy (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Assistant Treasurer of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Murphy also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2007-present) and is an employee of FMR (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Murphy served as Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity Funds (2005-2006), Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR (2007), and Senior Vice President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1994-2007).

Gary W. Ryan (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of Mega Cap Stock. Mr. Ryan also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Vice President of Fund Reporting in Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1999-2005).

** FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Annual Report

Distributions (Unaudited)

The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund voted to pay to shareholders of record at the opening of business on record date, the following distributions per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities, and dividends derived from net investment income:

 

Pay Date

Record Date

Dividends

Capital Gains

Mega Cap Stock

08/11/08

08/08/08

$.056

$.02

The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended June 30, 2008, $3,867,467, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.

Mega Cap Stock designates 33%, 33%, 99% and 100% of the dividends distributed in July, August, October and December, respectively during the fiscal year as qualifying for the dividends-received deduction for corporate shareholders.

Mega Cap Stock designates 38%, 38%, 99% and 100% of the dividends distributed in July, August, October and December, respectively during the fiscal year as amounts which may be taken into account as a dividend for the purposes of the maximum rate under section 1(h)(11) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The fund will notify shareholders in January 2009 of amounts for use in preparing 2008 income tax returns.

Annual Report

Proxy Voting Results

A special meeting of the fund's shareholders was held on May 14, 2008. The results of votes taken among shareholders on the proposals before them are reported below. Each vote reported represents one dollar of net asset value held on the record date for the meeting.

PROPOSAL 1

To elect a Board of Trustees.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

James C. Curvey

Affirmative

5,283,033,775.58

95.146

Withheld

269,544,935.17

4.854

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Dennis J. Dirks

Affirmative

5,309,249,727.21

95.618

Withheld

243,328,983.54

4.382

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Affirmative

5,252,938,642.62

94.604

Withheld

299,640,068.13

5.396

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Alan J. Lacy

Affirmative

5,300,188,165.66

95.455

Withheld

252,390,545.09

4.545

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Ned C. Lautenbach

Affirmative

5,297,558,579.14

95.407

Withheld

255,020,131.61

4.593

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Joseph Mauriello

Affirmative

5,303,242,593.91

95.510

Withheld

249,336,116.84

4.490

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Cornelia M. Small

Affirmative

5,306,804,229.45

95.574

Withheld

245,774,481.30

4.426

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

William S. Stavropoulos

Affirmative

5,284,506,192.07

95.172

Withheld

268,072,518.68

4.828

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

David M. Thomas

Affirmative

5,308,375,429.85

95.602

Withheld

244,203,280.90

4.398

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Michael E. Wiley

Affirmative

5,304,369,992.98

95.530

Withheld

248,208,717.77

4.470

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

PROPOSAL 2

To amend the Declaration of Trust to reduce the required quorum for future shareholder meetings.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

Affirmative

4,180,350,765.24

75.287

Against

812,580,433.39

14.634

Abstain

292,815,961.45

5.274

Broker
Non-Votes

266,831,550.67

4.805

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

A Denotes trust-wide proposal and voting results.

Annual Report

Managing Your Investments

Fidelity offers several ways to conveniently manage your personal investments via your telephone or PC. You can access your account information, conduct trades and research your investments 24 hours a day.

By Phone

Fidelity Automated Service Telephone provides a single toll-free number to access account balances, positions, quotes and trading. It's easy to navigate the service, and on your first call, the system will help you create a personal identification number (PIN) for security.

(phone_graphic)
Fidelity Automated
Service Telephone (FAST
®)
1-800-544-5555

Press

fid62For mutual fund and brokerage trading.

fid64For quotes.*

fid66For account balances and holdings.

fid68To review orders and mutual
fund activity.

fid70To change your PIN.

fid72fid74To speak to a Fidelity representative.

By PC

Fidelity's web site on the Internet provides a wide range of information, including daily financial news, fund performance, interactive planning tools and news about Fidelity products and services.

(computer_graphic)
Fidelity's Web Site
www.fidelity.com

* When you call the quotes line, please remember that a fund's yield and return will vary and, except for money market funds, share price will also vary. This means that you may have a gain or loss when you sell your shares. There is no assurance that money market funds will be able to maintain a stable $1 share price; an investment in a money market fund is not insured or guaranteed by the U.S. government. Total returns are historical and include changes in share price, reinvestment of dividends and capital gains, and the effects of any sales charges.

Annual Report

To Write Fidelity

We'll give your correspondence immediate attention and send you written confirmation upon completion of your request.

(letter_graphic)
Making Changes
To Your Account

(such as changing name, address, bank, etc.)

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0002

(letter_graphic)
For Non-Retirement
Accounts

Buying shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003

Overnight Express
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Distribution Services
100 Crosby Parkway - KC1H
Covington, KY 41015

Selling shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0035

Overnight Express
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Distribution Services
100 Crosby Parkway - KC1H
Covington, KY 41015

General Correspondence

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 500
Merrimack, NH 03054-0500

(letter_graphic)
For Retirement
Accounts

Buying shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0003

Selling shares

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 770001
Cincinnati, OH 45277-0035

Overnight Express
Fidelity Investments
Attn: Distribution Services
100 Crosby Parkway - KC1H
Covington, KY 41015

General Correspondence

Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 500
Merrimack, NH 03054-0500

Annual Report

To Visit Fidelity

For directions and hours, 
please call 1-800-544-9797.

Arizona

7001 West Ray Road
Chandler, AZ

15445 N. Scottsdale Road
Scottsdale, AZ

California

815 East Birch Street
Brea, CA

1411 Chapin Avenue
Burlingame, CA

851 East Hamilton Avenue
Campbell, CA

19200 Von Karman Avenue
Irvine, CA

601 Larkspur Landing Circle
Larkspur, CA

2000 Avenue of the Stars
Los Angeles, CA

27101 Puerta Real
Mission Viejo, CA

73-575 El Paseo
Palm Desert, CA

251 University Avenue
Palo Alto, CA

123 South Lake Avenue
Pasadena, CA

16656 Bernardo Ctr. Drive
Rancho Bernardo, CA

1220 Roseville Parkway
Roseville, CA

1740 Arden Way
Sacramento, CA

7676 Hazard Center Drive
San Diego, CA

11943 El Camino Real
San Diego, CA

8 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, CA

3793 State Street
Santa Barbara, CA

1200 Wilshire Boulevard
Santa Monica, CA

398 West El Camino Real
Sunnyvale, CA

111 South Westlake Blvd
Thousand Oaks, CA

21701 Hawthorne Boulevard
Torrance, CA

2001 North Main Street
Walnut Creek, CA

6326 Canoga Avenue
Woodland Hills, CA

Colorado

281 East Flatiron Circle
Broomfield, CO

1625 Broadway
Denver, CO

9185 Westview Road
Lone Tree, CO

Connecticut

48 West Putnam Avenue
Greenwich, CT

265 Church Street
New Haven, CT

300 Atlantic Street
Stamford, CT

29 South Main Street
West Hartford, CT

Delaware

400 Delaware Avenue
Wilmington, DE

Florida

175 East Altamonte Drive
Altamonte Springs, FL

4400 N. Federal Highway
Boca Raton, FL

121 Alhambra Plaza
Coral Gables, FL

2948 N. Federal Highway
Ft. Lauderdale, FL

4671 Town Center Parkway
Jacksonville, FL

8880 Tamiami Trail, North
Naples, FL

230 Royal Palm Way
Palm Beach, FL

3501 PGA Boulevard
Palm Beach Gardens, FL

3550 Tamiami Trail, South
Sarasota, FL

1502 N. Westshore Blvd.
Tampa, FL

2465 State Road 7
Wellington, FL

Georgia

3445 Peachtree Road, N.E.
Atlanta, GA

1000 Abernathy Road
Atlanta, GA

Illinois

One North LaSalle Street
Chicago, IL

401 North Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL

One Skokie Valley Road
Highland Park, IL

1415 West 22nd Street
Oak Brook, IL

15105 S LaGrange Road
Orland Park, IL

1572 East Golf Road
Schaumburg, IL

Indiana

4729 East 82nd Street
Indianapolis, IN

8480 Keystone Crossing
Indianapolis, IN

Kansas

5400 College Boulevard
Overland Park, KS

Maine

Three Canal Plaza
Portland, ME

Maryland

7315 Wisconsin Avenue
Bethesda, MD

610 York Road
Towson, MD

Massachusetts

801 Boylston Street
Boston, MA

155 Congress Street
Boston, MA

300 Granite Street
Braintree, MA

44 Mall Road
Burlington, MA

238 Main Street
Cambridge, MA

200 Endicott Street
Danvers, MA

Annual Report

405 Cochituate Road
Framingham, MA

551 Boston Turnpike
Shrewsbury, MA

Michigan

500 E. Eisenhower Pkwy.
Ann Arbor, MI

280 Old N. Woodward Ave.
Birmingham, MI

30200 Northwestern Hwy.
Farmington Hills, MI

43420 Grand River Avenue
Novi, MI

Minnesota

7740 France Avenue South
Edina, MN

8342 3rd Street North
Oakdale, MN

Missouri

1524 South Lindbergh Blvd.
St. Louis, MO

Nevada

2225 Village Walk Drive
Henderson, NV

New Jersey

501 Route 73 South
Marlton, NJ

150 Essex Street
Millburn, NJ

35 Morris Street
Morristown, NJ

396 Route 17, North
Paramus, NJ

3518 Route 1 North
Princeton, NJ

530 Broad Street
Shrewsbury, NJ

New Mexico

2261 Q Street NE
Albuquerque, NM

New York

1130 Franklin Avenue
Garden City, NY

37 West Jericho Turnpike
Huntington Station, NY

1271 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY

980 Madison Avenue
New York, NY

61 Broadway
New York, NY

350 Park Avenue
New York, NY

200 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY

733 Third Avenue
New York, NY

11 Penn Plaza
New York, NY

2070 Broadway
New York, NY

1075 Northern Blvd.
Roslyn, NY

799 Central Park Avenue
Scarsdale, NY

North Carolina

4611 Sharon Road
Charlotte, NC

7011 Fayetteville Road
Durham, NC

Ohio

3805 Edwards Road
Cincinnati, OH

1324 Polaris Parkway
Columbus, OH

1800 Crocker Road
Westlake, OH

28699 Chagrin Boulevard
Woodmere Village, OH

Oregon

7493 SW Bridgeport Road
Tigard, OR

Pennsylvania

600 West DeKalb Pike
King of Prussia, PA

1735 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA

12001 Perry Highway
Wexford, PA

Rhode Island

10 Memorial Boulevard
Providence, RI

Tennessee

3018 Peoples Street
Johnson City, TN

7628 West Farmington Blvd.
Germantown, TN

2035 Mallory Lane
Franklin, TN

Texas

10000 Research Boulevard
Austin, TX

4001 Northwest Parkway
Dallas, TX

12532 Memorial Drive
Houston, TX

2701 Drexel Drive
Houston, TX

6560 Fannin Street
Houston, TX

1701 Lake Robbins Drive
The Woodlands, TX

6500 N. MacArthur Blvd.
Irving, TX

6005 West Park Boulevard
Plano, TX

14100 San Pedro
San Antonio, TX

1576 East Southlake Blvd.
Southlake, TX

Utah

279 West South Temple
Salt Lake City, UT

Virginia

1861 International Drive
McLean, VA

Washington

10500 NE 8th Street
Bellevue, WA

1518 6th Avenue
Seattle, WA

Washington, DC

1900 K Street, N.W.
Washington, DC

Wisconsin

16020 West Bluemound Road
Brookfield, WI

Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc., 100 Summer St., Boston, MA 02110 Member NYSE/SIPC

Annual Report

Investment Adviser

Fidelity Management & Research Company

Boston, MA

Investment Sub-Advisers

FMR Co., Inc.

Fidelity Management & Research
(U.K.) Inc.

Fidelity Research & Analysis Company

Fidelity Investments Japan Limited

Fidelity International Investment
Advisors

Fidelity International Investment
Advisors (U.K.) Limited

General Distributor

Fidelity Distributors Corporation

Boston, MA

Transfer and Service Agents

Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations, Co.

Boston, MA

Fidelity Service Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Custodian

JPMorgan Chase Bank

New York, NY

The Fidelity Telephone Connection

Mutual Fund 24-Hour Service

Exchanges/Redemptions
and Account Assistance 1-800-544-6666

Product Information 1-800-544-6666

Retirement Accounts 1-800-544-4774
(8 a.m. - 9 p.m.)

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for the deaf and hearing impaired
(9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Eastern time)

Fidelity Automated Service
Telephone (FAST®) fid76 1-800-544-5555

fid171 Automated line for quickest service

GII-UANN-0808
1.787733.105

fid79

(Fidelity Investment logo)(registered trademark)

(Fidelity Investment logo)(registered trademark)

Fidelity Advisor
Mega Cap Stock
Fund - Class A, Class T, Class B
and Class C

Annual Report

June 30, 2008

Class A, Class T, Class B,
and Class C are classes of
Fidelity® Mega Cap Stock Fund
(formerly Fidelity Growth &
Income II Portfolio)

(2_fidelity_logos) (Registered_Trademark)

Contents

Chairman's Message

<Click Here>

Ned Johnson's message to shareholders.

Performance

<Click Here>

How the fund has done over time.

Management's Discussion

<Click Here>

The manager's review of fund performance, strategy and outlook.

Shareholder Expense Example

<Click Here>

An example of shareholder expenses.

Investment Changes

<Click Here>

A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months.

Investments

<Click Here>

A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values.

Financial Statements

<Click Here>

Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets,
as well as financial highlights.

Notes

<Click Here>

Notes to the financial statements.

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

<Click Here>

 

Trustees and Officers

<Click Here>

 

Distributions

<Click Here>

 

Proxy Voting Results

<Click Here>

 

To view a fund's proxy voting guidelines and proxy voting record for the 12-month period ended June 30, visit http://www.fidelity.com (search for "proxy voting guidelines") or visit the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) web site at http://www.sec.gov. You may also call 1-800-544-8544 to request a free copy of the proxy voting guidelines.

Standard & Poor's, S&P and S&P 500 are registered service marks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and have been licensed for use by Fidelity Distributors Corporation.

Other third party marks appearing herein are the property of their respective owners.

All other marks appearing herein are registered or unregistered trademarks or service marks of FMR LLC or an affiliated company.

Annual Report

This report and the financial statements contained herein are submitted for the general information of the shareholders of the fund. This report is not authorized for distribution to prospective investors in the fund unless preceded or accompanied by an effective prospectus.

A fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, DC. Information regarding the operation of the SEC's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. For a complete list of a fund's portfolio holdings, view the most recent holdings listing, semiannual report, or annual report on Fidelity's web site at http://www.fidelity.com or http://www.advisor.fidelity.com, as applicable.

NOT FDIC INSURED · MAY LOSE VALUE · NO BANK GUARANTEE

Neither the fund nor Fidelity Distributors Corporation is a bank.

Annual Report

Chairman's Message

(photo_of_Edward_C_Johnson_3d)

Dear Shareholder:

Domestic and international securities markets have struggled thus far in 2008. High-grade fixed-income investments produced modestly positive results, but many stock benchmarks suffered double-digit losses through the first half of this year. Financial markets are always unpredictable, but there are a number of time-tested principles that can put the historical odds in your favor.

One of the basic tenets is to invest for the long term. Over time, riding out the markets' inevitable ups and downs has proven much more effective than selling into panic or chasing the hottest trend. Even missing only a few of the markets' best days can significantly diminish investor returns. Patience also affords the benefits of compounding - of earning interest on additional income or reinvested dividends and capital gains. There are tax advantages and cost benefits to consider as well. The more you sell, the more taxes you pay, and the more you trade, the higher the costs. While staying the course doesn't eliminate risk, it can considerably lessen the effect of short-term declines.

You can further manage your investing risk through diversification. And today, more than ever, geographic diversification should be taken into account. Studies indicate that asset allocation is the single most important determinant of a portfolio's long-term success. The right mix of stocks, bonds and cash - aligned to your particular risk tolerance and investment objective - is very important. Age-appropriate rebalancing is also an essential aspect of asset allocation. For younger investors, an emphasis on equities - which historically have been the best-performing asset class over time - is encouraged. As investors near their specific goal, such as retirement or sending a child to college, consideration may be given to replacing volatile assets (e.g. common stocks) with more-stable fixed investments (bonds or savings plans).

A third investment principle - investing regularly - can help lower the average cost of your purchases. Investing a certain amount of money each month or quarter helps ensure you won't pay for all your shares at market highs. This strategy - known as dollar cost averaging - also reduces unconstructive "emotion" from investing, helping shareholders avoid selling weak performers just prior to an upswing, or chasing a hot performer just before a correction.

We invite you to contact us via the Internet, through our Investor Centers or over the phone. It is our privilege to provide you the information you need to make the investments that are right for you.

Sincerely,
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Annual Report

Performance: The Bottom Line

Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the fund's dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of securities that have grown in value, if any) and assuming a constant rate of performance each year. The $10,000 table and the fund's returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares. During periods of reimbursement by Fidelity, a fund's total return will be greater than it would be had the reimbursement not occurred. How a fund did yesterday is no guarantee of how it will do tomorrow.

Average Annual Total Returns

Periods ended June 30, 2008

Past 1
year

Past 5
years

Life of
fund
A

Class A (incl. 5.75% sales charge) B, F

-17.91%

4.55%

1.08%

Class T (incl. 3.50% sales charge) C, F

-16.04%

5.02%

1.32%

Class B (incl. contingent deferred sales charge) D, F

-17.17%

5.43%

1.69%

Class C (incl. contingent deferred sales charge) E, F

-13.90%

5.75%

1.69%

A From December 28, 1998.

B Class A shares bear a 0.25% 12b-1 fee. The initial offering of Class A took place on February 5, 2008. Returns prior to February 5, 2008 are those of Mega Cap Stock, the original retail class of the fund, which does not bear a 12b-1 fee. Had Class A shares' 12b-1 fee been reflected, returns prior to February 5, 2008 would have been lower.

C Class T shares bear a 0.50% 12b-1 fee. The initial offering of Class T took place on February 5, 2008. Returns prior to February 5, 2008 are those of Mega Cap Stock, the original retail class of the fund, which does not bear a 12b-1 fee. Had Class T shares' 12b-1 fee been reflected, returns prior to February 5, 2008 would have been lower.

D Class B shares bear a 1.00% 12b-1 fee. The initial offering of Class B took place on February 5, 2008. Returns prior to February 5, 2008 are those of Mega Cap Stock, the original retail class of the fund, which does not bear a 12b-1 fee. Had Class B shares' 12b-1 fee been reflected, returns prior to February 5, 2008 would have been lower. Class B shares' contingent deferred sales charges included in the past one year, past five years, and Life of Fund total return figures are 5%, 2%, and 0%, respectively.

E Class C shares bear a 1.00% 12b-1 fee. The initial offering of Class C took place on February 5, 2008. Returns prior to February 5, 2008 are those of Mega Cap Stock, the original retail class of the fund, which does not bear a 12b-1 fee. Had Class C shares' 12b-1 fee been reflected, returns prior to February 5, 2008 would have been lower. Class C shares' contingent deferred sales charges included in the past one year, past five years, and Life of Fund total return figures are 1%, 0%, and 0%, respectively.

F Prior to December 1, 2007 the fund operated under certain different investment policies. The fund's historical performance may not represent its current investment policies.

Annual Report

$10,000 Over Life of Fund

Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity Advisor Mega Cap Stock Fund - Class A on December 28, 1998, when the fund started. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Standard & Poor's 500SM Index (S&P 500®) performed over the same period. The initial offering of Class A took place on February 5, 2008. See the previous page for additional information regarding the performance of Class A.


fid186

Annual Report

Management's Discussion of Fund Performance

Comments from Rick Mace, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity Advisor Mega Cap Stock Fund

As threats of a recession, concerns about inflation and higher unemployment rates weighed heavily on consumers and investors, the U.S. equity markets struggled for the year ending June 30, 2008. For investors, the lingering effects of the subprime mortgage crisis and subsequent credit crunch were felt in most areas of the market, with financial stocks lagging and the energy sector continuing its upward trajectory. To help reignite the economy, the Federal Reserve Board lowered its key interest rate seven times, taking it from 5.25% to 2.00% during the period. The Fed also stepped in to help prevent the near collapse of investment bank Bear Stearns. These moves initially seemed to bolster investor confidence, but, ultimately, most indexes lagged. The Standard & Poor's 500SM Index fell 13.12% for the year ending June 30, 2008. The Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also declined, with a -13.27% return, and the NASDAQ Composite® Index plunged 11.28%.

During the past year, the fund's Class A, Class T, Class B and Class C shares (excluding sales charges) performed roughly in line with the Russell Top 200® Index, a mega-cap proxy added as a supplemental benchmark on December 1, 2007, which returned -12.81%. Prior to December 1, 2007, the fund was primarily compared with the S&P 500®, which declined 13.12% for the corresponding year. (For specific class-level performance results for the 12-month period, please refer to the performance section of this report.) During this period, the fund's mandate shifted to investing in companies with mega market capitalizations, and the fund's name changed accordingly. For the first five months of the period, the fund outperformed the S&P 500. Security selection in industrials and financials helped the most. Specifically, oilfield services provider Cameron International and diversified industrial company McDermott International fared well. Both stocks were sold by period end. On the downside, insurance giant American International Group (AIG) faltered. For the last seven months of the period, the fund lagged the Russell Top 200. Stock selection in energy was the biggest detractor. The fund's positions in oil refiners Valero and Tesoro, the latter of which was an out-of-index holding, hurt. Elsewhere, insurance giant AIG continued to lag. Conversely, stock picking and market selection in technology, industrials and consumer discretionary were beneficial, as was stock selection in materials. Underweightings in conglomerate General Electric and bank Wachovia were the biggest contributors. Overweightings in Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold and offshore driller Transocean also were productive.

During the past year, the fund's Institutional Class shares performed roughly in line with the Russell Top 200® Index, a mega-cap proxy added as a supplemental benchmark on December 1, 2007, which returned -12.81%. Prior to December 1, 2007, the fund was primarily compared with the S&P 500®, which declined 13.12% for the corresponding year. (For specific class-level performance results for the 12-month period, please refer to the performance section of this report.) During this period, the fund's mandate shifted to investing in companies with mega market capitalizations, and the fund's name changed accordingly. For the first five months of the period, the fund outperformed the S&P 500. Security selection in industrials and financials helped the most. Specifically, oilfield services provider Cameron International and diversified industrial company McDermott International fared well. Both stocks were sold by period end. On the downside, insurance giant American International Group (AIG) faltered. For the last seven months of the period, the fund lagged the Russell Top 200. Stock selection in energy was the biggest detractor. The fund's positions in oil refiners Valero and Tesoro, the latter of which was an out-of-index holding, hurt. Elsewhere, insurance giant AIG continued to lag. Conversely, stock picking and market selection in technology, industrials and consumer discretionary were beneficial, as was stock selection in materials. Underweightings in conglomerate General Electric and bank Wachovia were the biggest contributors. Overweightings in Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold and offshore driller Transocean also were productive.

Annual Report

The views expressed above reflect those of the portfolio manager(s) only through the end of the period as stated on the cover of this report and do not necessarily represent the views of Fidelity or any other person in the Fidelity organization. Any such views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions and Fidelity disclaims any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied on as investment advice and, because investment decisions for a Fidelity fund are based on numerous factors, may not be relied on as an indication of trading intent on behalf of any Fidelity fund.

Annual Report

Shareholder Expense Example

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, including sales charges (loads) on purchase payments or redemption proceeds, and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees, distribution and/or service (12b-1) fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.

The actual expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Mega Cap Stock and for the entire period (February 5, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C and Institutional Class.

The hypothetical expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008).

Actual Expenses

The first line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000.00 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000.00 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line for a class of the Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The second line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a Class' actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Class' actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Annual Report

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transaction costs. Therefore, the second line of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. In addition, if these transactional costs were included, your costs would have been higher.

 

Beginning
Account
Value

Ending
Account Value
June 30, 2008

Expenses
Paid
During Period

Class A

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 932.10

$ 3.96 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,019.79

$ 5.12 C

Class T

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 931.20

$ 5.12 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,018.30

$ 6.62 C

Class B

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 930.30

$ 6.71 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,016.26

$ 8.67 C

Class C

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 930.30

$ 6.63 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,016.36

$ 8.57 C

Mega Cap Stock

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 849.20

$ 3.36 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,021.23

$ 3.67 C

Institutional Class

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 934.00

$ 2.72 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,021.38

$ 3.52 C

A 5% return per year before expenses

B Actual expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period) for Mega Cap Stock and multiplied by 147/366 (to reflect the period February 5, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C and Institutional Class.

C Hypothetical expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).

Annual Report

 

Annualized
Expense Ratio

Class A

1.02%

Class T

1.32%

Class B

1.73%

Class C

1.71%

Mega Cap Stock

.73%

Institutional Class

.70%

Annual Report

Investment Changes (Unaudited)

Top Ten Stocks as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Exxon Mobil Corp.

5.2

2.4

Hewlett-Packard Co.

3.4

2.0

Microsoft Corp.

2.8

2.6

AT&T, Inc.

2.7

1.3

Johnson & Johnson

2.6

1.7

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

2.6

2.5

ConocoPhillips

2.1

1.8

American International Group, Inc.

2.1

2.1

International Business Machines Corp.

2.0

1.5

Philip Morris International, Inc.

1.8

0.0

 

27.3

Top Five Market Sectors as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Information Technology

20.5

17.5

Energy

16.6

13.0

Financials

15.9

17.1

Health Care

12.6

12.6

Consumer Discretionary

8.8

10.4

Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)

As of June 30, 2008 *

As of December 31, 2007 **

fid53

Stocks 100.0%

 

fid53

Stocks 98.0%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 0.0%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 2.0%

 

* Foreign investments

4.9%

 

** Foreign investments

3.9%

 


fid192

Annual Report

Investments June 30, 2008

Showing Percentage of Net Assets

Common Stocks - 100.0%

Shares

Value

CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 8.8%

Auto Components - 0.3%

Johnson Controls, Inc.

69,600

$ 1,996,128

Automobiles - 0.1%

Toyota Motor Corp. sponsored ADR

10,000

940,000

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.7%

McDonald's Corp.

198,700

11,170,914

Household Durables - 1.2%

Whirlpool Corp. (d)

128,400

7,926,132

Media - 2.5%

Comcast Corp. Class A

50,000

948,500

McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

57,900

2,322,948

News Corp. Class A

20,100

302,304

Omnicom Group, Inc.

26,100

1,171,368

The DIRECTV Group, Inc. (a)

77,400

2,005,434

The Walt Disney Co.

188,600

5,884,320

Time Warner, Inc.

132,100

1,955,080

Viacom, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.) (a)

58,300

1,780,482

 

16,370,436

Multiline Retail - 0.9%

Sears Holdings Corp. (a)(d)

51,400

3,786,124

Target Corp. (d)

53,400

2,482,566

 

6,268,690

Specialty Retail - 1.1%

Abercrombie & Fitch Co. Class A

26,100

1,635,948

Best Buy Co., Inc.

10,000

396,000

Home Depot, Inc.

131,100

3,070,362

Lowe's Companies, Inc.

30,000

622,500

Staples, Inc.

55,243

1,312,021

 

7,036,831

Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 1.0%

NIKE, Inc. Class B (d)

114,400

6,819,384

TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY

58,528,515

CONSUMER STAPLES - 8.6%

Beverages - 0.6%

Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.

24,300

420,390

Molson Coors Brewing Co. Class B

64,793

3,520,204

 

3,940,594

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

CONSUMER STAPLES - continued

Food & Staples Retailing - 2.5%

CVS Caremark Corp.

97,600

$ 3,862,032

Kroger Co.

67,700

1,954,499

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

196,384

11,036,781

 

16,853,312

Food Products - 1.0%

Archer Daniels Midland Co.

107,000

3,611,250

Kellogg Co.

65,200

3,130,904

Tyson Foods, Inc. Class A

1,300

19,422

 

6,761,576

Household Products - 1.7%

Energizer Holdings, Inc. (a)

10,000

730,900

Kimberly-Clark Corp.

10,000

597,800

Procter & Gamble Co.

160,700

9,772,167

 

11,100,867

Tobacco - 2.8%

Altria Group, Inc.

325,030

6,682,617

Philip Morris International, Inc.

245,030

12,102,032

 

18,784,649

TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES

57,440,998

ENERGY - 16.6%

Energy Equipment & Services - 3.6%

Halliburton Co.

143,400

7,610,238

National Oilwell Varco, Inc. (a)

20,000

1,774,400

Noble Corp.

23,900

1,552,544

Schlumberger Ltd. (NY Shares)

32,715

3,514,572

Transocean, Inc. (a)

61,552

9,379,909

 

23,831,663

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 13.0%

Apache Corp.

30,000

4,170,000

Canadian Natural Resources Ltd.

5,000

494,629

Chevron Corp.

65,500

6,493,015

ConocoPhillips

150,000

14,158,500

Devon Energy Corp.

5,000

600,800

Exxon Mobil Corp.

393,071

34,641,347

Marathon Oil Corp.

204,500

10,607,415

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

20,000

1,797,200

Peabody Energy Corp.

8,927

786,022

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

ENERGY - continued

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued

Plains Exploration & Production Co. (a)

6,100

$ 445,117

Tesoro Corp.

138,100

2,730,237

Valero Energy Corp.

246,500

10,150,870

 

87,075,152

TOTAL ENERGY

110,906,815

FINANCIALS - 15.9%

Capital Markets - 3.9%

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

51,100

8,937,390

Janus Capital Group, Inc.

208,700

5,524,289

Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.

357,672

7,085,482

Morgan Stanley

31,500

1,136,205

State Street Corp.

48,700

3,116,313

 

25,799,679

Commercial Banks - 1.6%

U.S. Bancorp, Delaware

40,000

1,115,600

Wachovia Corp.

106,100

1,647,733

Wells Fargo & Co. (d)

348,400

8,274,500

 

11,037,833

Consumer Finance - 0.3%

American Express Co.

15,700

591,419

Capital One Financial Corp.

35,000

1,330,350

 

1,921,769

Diversified Financial Services - 5.3%

Bank of America Corp.

447,780

10,688,509

Citigroup, Inc.

432,200

7,243,672

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

506,200

17,367,722

 

35,299,903

Insurance - 4.6%

ACE Ltd.

26,100

1,437,849

AFLAC, Inc.

25,000

1,570,000

American International Group, Inc.

524,330

13,873,772

Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class B (a)

860

3,450,320

Loews Corp.

60,900

2,856,210

MetLife, Inc.

27,500

1,451,175

Prudential Financial, Inc.

16,600

991,684

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

FINANCIALS - continued

Insurance - continued

The Chubb Corp.

27,000

$ 1,323,270

The Travelers Companies, Inc.

86,000

3,732,400

 

30,686,680

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.2%

Fannie Mae

58,500

1,141,335

Freddie Mac

30,000

492,000

 

1,633,335

TOTAL FINANCIALS

106,379,199

HEALTH CARE - 12.6%

Biotechnology - 1.4%

Amgen, Inc. (a)

50,190

2,366,960

Biogen Idec, Inc. (a)

32,200

1,799,658

Genentech, Inc. (a)

45,200

3,430,680

Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a)

35,220

1,864,899

 

9,462,197

Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 1.7%

Baxter International, Inc.

69,900

4,469,406

Becton, Dickinson & Co.

39,200

3,186,960

C.R. Bard, Inc.

5,200

457,340

Covidien Ltd.

40,000

1,915,600

Medtronic, Inc.

28,300

1,464,525

 

11,493,831

Health Care Providers & Services - 2.5%

Humana, Inc. (a)

72,800

2,895,256

McKesson Corp.

19,300

1,079,063

Medco Health Solutions, Inc. (a)

159,500

7,528,400

UnitedHealth Group, Inc.

140,200

3,680,250

WellPoint, Inc. (a)

26,900

1,282,054

 

16,465,023

Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.6%

Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. (a)

65,000

3,622,450

Pharmaceuticals - 6.4%

Abbott Laboratories

45,000

2,383,650

Allergan, Inc.

10,000

520,500

Johnson & Johnson

271,800

17,487,612

Merck & Co., Inc.

283,900

10,700,191

Pfizer, Inc.

244,200

4,266,174

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

HEALTH CARE - continued

Pharmaceuticals - continued

Schering-Plough Corp.

155,100

$ 3,053,919

Wyeth

96,000

4,604,160

 

43,016,206

TOTAL HEALTH CARE

84,059,707

INDUSTRIALS - 8.6%

Aerospace & Defense - 4.9%

General Dynamics Corp.

6,500

547,300

Honeywell International, Inc.

109,600

5,510,688

L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.

24,900

2,262,663

Lockheed Martin Corp.

61,900

6,107,054

Northrop Grumman Corp.

89,800

6,007,620

Raytheon Co.

81,000

4,558,680

The Boeing Co.

69,800

4,587,256

United Technologies Corp.

45,900

2,832,030

 

32,413,291

Airlines - 0.1%

AMR Corp. (a)

72,200

369,664

UAL Corp.

28,800

150,336

US Airways Group, Inc. (a)

40,900

102,250

 

622,250

Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.0%

Manpower, Inc.

900

52,416

Industrial Conglomerates - 0.9%

General Electric Co.

175,700

4,689,433

Tyco International Ltd.

40,000

1,601,600

 

6,291,033

Machinery - 1.7%

Caterpillar, Inc.

54,900

4,052,718

Deere & Co.

78,300

5,647,779

Eaton Corp.

700

59,479

Ingersoll-Rand Co. Ltd. Class A

37,900

1,418,597

 

11,178,573

Road & Rail - 1.0%

Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp.

10,000

998,900

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

INDUSTRIALS - continued

Road & Rail - continued

Norfolk Southern Corp.

30,000

$ 1,880,100

Union Pacific Corp.

52,000

3,926,000

 

6,805,000

TOTAL INDUSTRIALS

57,362,563

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 20.5%

Communications Equipment - 3.0%

Cisco Systems, Inc. (a)

464,800

10,811,248

Corning, Inc.

42,100

970,405

Juniper Networks, Inc. (a)

10,000

221,800

Nokia Corp. sponsored ADR

205,400

5,032,300

QUALCOMM, Inc.

69,100

3,065,967

 

20,101,720

Computers & Peripherals - 7.9%

Apple, Inc. (a)

68,100

11,402,664

EMC Corp. (a)

300

4,407

Hewlett-Packard Co.

509,500

22,524,995

International Business Machines Corp.

114,800

13,607,244

Western Digital Corp. (a)

145,800

5,034,474

 

52,573,784

Electronic Equipment & Instruments - 0.3%

Tyco Electronics Ltd.

61,600

2,206,512

Internet Software & Services - 0.9%

Google, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a)

11,350

5,974,867

Yahoo!, Inc. (a)

14,300

295,438

 

6,270,305

IT Services - 1.3%

Accenture Ltd. Class A

156,400

6,368,608

Visa, Inc.

25,000

2,032,750

 

8,401,358

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 3.0%

Applied Materials, Inc.

405,918

7,748,975

ASML Holding NV (NY Shares)

184,900

4,511,560

Intel Corp.

332,200

7,135,656

Texas Instruments, Inc.

20,000

563,200

 

19,959,391

Software - 4.1%

Microsoft Corp.

689,100

18,957,141

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued

Software - continued

Oracle Corp. (a)

368,200

$ 7,732,200

Symantec Corp. (a)

53,300

1,031,355

 

27,720,696

TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

137,233,766

MATERIALS - 3.0%

Chemicals - 1.0%

Celanese Corp. Class A

19,500

890,370

Monsanto Co.

23,000

2,908,120

The Mosaic Co. (a)

20,000

2,894,000

 

6,692,490

Metals & Mining - 2.0%

ArcelorMittal SA (NY Shares) Class A

19,300

1,912,051

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc. Class B

95,500

11,191,645

 

13,103,696

TOTAL MATERIALS

19,796,186

TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 3.3%

Diversified Telecommunication Services - 3.3%

AT&T, Inc.

524,700

17,677,143

Qwest Communications International, Inc.

50,000

196,500

Verizon Communications, Inc.

114,600

4,056,840

 

21,930,483

UTILITIES - 2.1%

Electric Utilities - 0.7%

Entergy Corp.

5,000

602,400

Exelon Corp.

15,000

1,349,400

FirstEnergy Corp.

30,000

2,469,900

PPL Corp.

10,000

522,700

 

4,944,400

Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.8%

AES Corp. (a)

82,100

1,577,141

Constellation Energy Group, Inc.

46,800

3,842,280

 

5,419,421

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

UTILITIES - continued

Multi-Utilities - 0.6%

Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.

87,300

$ 4,009,689

TOTAL UTILITIES

14,373,510

TOTAL COMMON STOCKS

(Cost $743,099,299)

668,011,742

Money Market Funds - 3.5%

 

 

 

 

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 2.39% (b)(c) (Cost $23,436,500)

23,436,500

23,436,500

TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 103.5%

(Cost $766,535,799)

691,448,242

NET OTHER ASSETS - (3.5)%

(23,365,552)

NET ASSETS - 100%

$ 668,082,690

Legend

(a) Non-income producing

(b) Affiliated fund that is available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. The rate quoted is the annualized seven-day yield of the fund at period end. A complete unaudited listing of the fund's holdings as of its most recent quarter end is available upon request.

(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.

(d) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.

Affiliated Central Funds

Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:

Fund

Income earned

Fidelity Cash Central Fund

$ 529,959

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund

295,384

Total

$ 825,343

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

 

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Assets

Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $22,228,782) - See accompanying schedule:

Unaffiliated issuers (cost $743,099,299)

$ 668,011,742

 

Fidelity Central Funds (cost $23,436,500)

23,436,500

 

Total Investments (cost $766,535,799)

 

$ 691,448,242

Receivable for investments sold

2,485,471

Receivable for fund shares sold

465,833

Dividends receivable

617,823

Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds

60,828

Prepaid expenses

812

Other receivables

21

Total assets

695,079,030

 

 

 

Liabilities

Payable to custodian bank

$ 61,954

Payable for fund shares redeemed

3,054,231

Accrued management fee

270,451

Distribution fees payable

259

Other affiliated payables

134,912

Other payables and accrued expenses

38,033

Collateral on securities loaned, at value

23,436,500

Total liabilities

26,996,340

 

 

 

Net Assets

$ 668,082,690

Net Assets consist of:

 

Paid in capital

$ 742,629,358

Undistributed net investment income

4,457,069

Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions

(3,916,659)

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

(75,087,078)

Net Assets

$ 668,082,690

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Assets and Liabilities - continued

 

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Calculation of Maximum Offering Price
Class A:
Net Asset Value and redemption price per share ($106,360 ÷ 10,749 shares)

$ 9.89

 

 

 

Maximum offering price per share (100/94.25 of $9.89)

$ 10.49

Class T:
Net Asset Value
and redemption price per share ($135,765 ÷ 13,738 shares)

$ 9.88

 

 

 

Maximum offering price per share (100/96.50 of $9.88)

$ 10.24

Class B:
Net Asset Value
and offering price per share ($106,810 ÷ 10,827 shares)A

$ 9.87

 

 

 

Class C:
Net Asset Value
and offering price per share ($98,202 ÷ 9,953 shares)A

$ 9.87

 

 

 

Mega Cap Stock:
Net Asset Value
, offering price and redemption price per share ($667,542,177 ÷ 67,387,928 shares)

$ 9.91

 

 

 

Institutional Class:
Net Asset Value
, offering price and redemption price per share ($93,376 ÷ 9,425 shares)

$ 9.91

A Redemption price per share is equal to net asset value less any applicable contingent deferred sales charge.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements - continued

Statement of Operations

 

Year ended June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Investment Income

 

 

Dividends

 

$ 8,748,862

Interest

 

9,105

Income from Fidelity Central Funds

 

825,343

Total income

 

9,583,310

 

 

 

Expenses

Management fee

$ 2,176,949

Transfer agent fees

967,001

Distribution fees

1,219

Accounting and security lending fees

177,248

Custodian fees and expenses

27,668

Independent trustees' compensation

1,778

Registration fees

146,462

Audit

43,161

Legal

1,425

Miscellaneous

21,549

Total expenses before reductions

3,564,460

Expense reductions

(66,857)

3,497,603

Net investment income (loss)

6,085,707

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

Net realized gain (loss) on:

Investment securities:

 

 

Unaffiliated issuers

(93,135)

Foreign currency transactions

2,821

Futures contracts

(562,680)

Total net realized gain (loss)

 

(652,994)

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:

Investment securities

(106,617,638)

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

416

Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

 

(106,617,222)

Net gain (loss)

(107,270,216)

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

$ (101,184,509)

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

Year ended
June 30,
2008

Year ended
June 30,
2007

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net investment income (loss)

$ 6,085,707

$ 1,533,606

Net realized gain (loss)

(652,994)

11,201,563

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(106,617,222)

22,555,444

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting
from operations

(101,184,509)

35,290,613

Distributions to shareholders from net investment income

(2,028,069)

(1,575,615)

Distributions to shareholders from net realized gain

(12,126,374)

(3,189,149)

Total distributions

(14,154,443)

(4,764,764)

Share transactions - net increase (decrease)

578,258,425

(8,196,217)

Total increase (decrease) in net assets

462,919,473

22,329,632

 

 

 

Net Assets

Beginning of period

205,163,217

182,833,585

End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $4,457,069 and undistributed net investment income of $410,073, respectively)

$ 668,082,690

$ 205,163,217

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class A

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .05

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.77)

Total from investment operations

  (.72)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.89

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.79)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.02% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.02% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.01% A

Net investment income (loss)

  1.24% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 106

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the sales charges.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class T

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .04

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.77)

Total from investment operations

  (.73)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.88

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.88)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.32% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.32% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.32% A

Net investment income (loss)

  .89% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 136

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the sales charges.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class B

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .02

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.76)

Total from investment operations

  (.74)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.87

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.97)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.73% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.73% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.73% A

Net investment income (loss)

  .52% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 107

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the contingent deferred sales charge.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class C

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .02

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.76)

Total from investment operations

  (.74)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.87

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.97)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.71% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.71% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.71% A

Net investment income (loss)

  .55% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 98

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the contingent deferred sales charge.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Mega Cap Stock

Years ended June 30,
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004

Selected Per-Share Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 12.06

$ 10.31

$ 9.28

$ 9.24

$ 8.48

Income from Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net investment income (loss) B

  .14

  .09

  .05

  .14 E

  .06

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (1.60)

  1.93

  1.21

  .02

  .76

Total from investment operations

  (1.46)

  2.02

  1.26

  .16

  .82

Distributions from net investment income

  (.07)

  (.09)

  (.06)

  (.12)

  (.06)

Distributions from net realized gain

  (.62)

  (.18)

  (.17)

  -

  -

Total distributions

  (.69)

  (.27)

  (.23)

  (.12)

  (.06)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.91

$ 12.06

$ 10.31

$ 9.28

$ 9.24

Total Return A

  (12.73)%

  20.05%

  13.63%

  1.71%

  9.68%

Ratios to Average Net Assets C, F

 

 

 

 

 

Expenses before reductions

  .75%

  .81%

  .86%

  .84%

  .86%

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .74%

  .81%

  .86%

  .84%

  .86%

Expenses net of all reductions

  .74%

  .81%

  .82%

  .81%

  .85%

Net investment income (loss)

  1.28%

  .79%

  .51%

  1.52% E

  .72%

Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 667,542

$ 205,163

$ 182,834

$ 179,344

$ 209,344

Portfolio turnover rate D

  97%

  94%

  180%

  79%

  26%

A Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

C Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

E Investment income per share reflects a special dividend which amounted to $.03 per share. Excluding the special dividend, the ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets would have been 1.15%.

F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Institutional Class

Year ended June 30,
2008 G

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) D

  .07

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.77)

Total from investment operations

  (.70)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.91

Total Return B, C

  (6.60)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets E, H

 

Expenses before reductions

  .70% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .70% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  .70% A

Net investment income (loss)

  1.57% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 93

Portfolio turnover rate F

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

E Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

F Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

H Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements

For the period ended June 30, 2008

1. Organization.

Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund (the Fund) (formerly Fidelity Growth & Income II Portfolio) is a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust (the trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. The trust is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust. The Fund commenced sale of Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C, and Institutional Class shares and the existing class was designated Mega Cap Stock on February 5, 2008. Class B shares will automatically convert to Class A shares after a holding period of seven years from the initial date of purchase. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, the common expenses of the Fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated on a pro rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the Fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent and distribution and service plan fees incurred. Certain expense reductions also differ by class.

2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.

The Fund may invest in Fidelity Central Funds, which are open-end investment companies available only to other investment companies and accounts managed by Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) and its affiliates. The Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR.

A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the SEC's web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC's web site or upon request.

3. Significant Accounting Policies.

The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the Fund:

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Security Valuation. Investments are valued as of 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on the last calendar day of the period. Wherever possible, the Fund uses independent pricing services approved by the Board of Trustees to value its investments.

Equity securities, including restricted securities, for which market quotations are readily available, are valued at the last reported sale price or official closing price as reported by an independent pricing service on the primary market or exchange on which they are traded. In the event there were no sales during the day or closing prices are not available, securities are valued at the last quoted bid price. Investments in open-end mutual funds, including the Fidelity Central Funds, are valued at their closing net asset value each business day. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less for which quotations are not readily available are valued at amortized cost, which approximates value.

When current market prices or quotations are not readily available or reliable, valuations may be determined in good faith in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees. Factors used in determining value may include significant market or security specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality, and developments in foreign markets which are monitored by evaluating the performance of ADRs, futures contracts and exchange-traded funds. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and may be utilized to a significant extent. The value of securities used for net asset value (NAV) calculation under these procedures may differ from published prices for the same securities.

Foreign Currency. The Fund uses foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.

Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.

The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.

Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Investment Transactions and Income - continued

calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 pm Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and may include proceeds received from litigation. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, except for certain dividends from foreign securities where the ex-dividend date may have passed, which are recorded as soon as the Fund is informed of the ex-dividend date. Non-cash dividends included in dividend income, if any, are recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. The Fund estimates the components of distributions received that may be considered return of capital distributions or capital gain distributions. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain.

Expenses. Most expenses of the trust can be directly attributed to a fund. Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned among each Fund in the trust. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, the Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company by distributing substantially all of its taxable income and realized gains under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code and filing its U.S. federal tax return. As a result, no provision for income taxes is required. The Fund is subject to the provisions of FASB Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for Uncertainties in Income Taxes (FIN 48). FIN 48 sets forth a minimum threshold for financial statement recognition of the benefit of a tax position taken or expected to be taken in a tax return. The implementation of FIN 48 did not result in any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. Each of the Fund's federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remains subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.

Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles. In addition, the Fund will claim a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued

Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.

Book-tax differences are primarily due to foreign currency transactions and losses deferred due to wash sales.

The tax-basis components of distributable earnings and the federal tax cost as of period end were as follows:

Unrealized appreciation

$ 32,029,360

 

Unrealized depreciation

(112,195,963)

 

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(80,166,603)

 

Undistributed ordinary income

3,708,324

 

Undistributed long-term capital gain

967,118

 

 

 

 

Cost for federal income tax purposes

$ 771,614,845

 

The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:

 

June 30, 2008

June 30, 2007

Ordinary Income

$ 5,440,769

$ 1,575,615

Long-term Capital Gains

8,713,674

3,189,149

Total

$ 14,154,443

$ 4,764,764

New Accounting Pronouncements. In September 2006, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157, Fair Value Measurements (SFAS 157), was issued and is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. SFAS 157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and results in expanded disclosures about fair value measurements.

In addition, in March 2008, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 161, Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities (SFAS 161), was issued and is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2008. SFAS 161 requires enhanced disclosures to provide information about the reasons the Fund invests in derivative instruments, the accounting treatment and the effect derivatives have on financial performance. Management is currently evaluating the impact the adoption of SFAS 161 will have on the Fund's financial statement disclosures.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

4. Operating Policies.

Repurchase Agreements. FMR has received an Exemptive Order from the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) which permits the Fund and other affiliated entities of FMR to transfer uninvested cash balances into joint trading accounts which are then invested in repurchase agreements. The Fund may also invest directly with institutions in repurchase agreements. Repurchase agreements are collateralized by government or non-government securities. Upon settlement date, collateral is held in segregated accounts with custodian banks and may be obtained in the event of a default of the counterparty. The Fund monitors, on a daily basis, the value of the collateral to ensure it is at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). In the event of a default by the counterparty, realization of the collateral proceeds could be delayed, during which time the value of the collateral may decline.

Futures Contracts. The Fund may use futures contracts to manage its exposure to the stock market. Buying futures tends to increase a fund's exposure to the underlying instrument, while selling futures tends to decrease a fund's exposure to the underlying instrument or hedge other fund investments. Upon entering into a futures contract, a fund is required to deposit with a clearing broker, no later than the following business day, an amount ("initial margin") equal to a certain percentage of the face value of the contract. The initial margin may be in the form of cash or securities and is transferred to a segregated account on settlement date. Subsequent payments ("variation margin") are made or received by a fund depending on the daily fluctuations in the value of the futures contract and are accounted for as unrealized gains or losses. Realized gains (losses) are recorded upon the expiration or closing of the futures contract. Losses may arise from changes in the value of the underlying instruments or if the counterparties do not perform under the contract's terms.

5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.

Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, aggregated $1,027,448,757 and $447,578,450, respectively.

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.

Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .20% of the Fund's average net assets and a group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and

Annual Report

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued

Management Fee - continued

increases as assets under management decrease. For the period, the total annual management fee rate was .46% of the Fund's average net assets.

Distribution and Service Plan. In accordance with Rule 12b-1 of the 1940 Act, the Fund has adopted separate Distribution and Service Plans for each class of shares. Certain classes pay Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC), an affiliate of FMR, separate Distribution and Service Fees, each of which is based on an annual percentage of each class' average net assets. In addition, FDC may pay financial intermediaries for selling shares of the Fund and providing shareholder support services. For the period, the Distribution and Service Fee rates and the total amounts paid to and retained by FDC were as follows:

 

Distribution
Fee

Service
Fee

Paid to
FDC

Retained
by FDC

Class A

0%

.25%

$ 107

$ 102

Class T

.25%

.25%

268

204

Class B

.75%

.25%

431

425

Class C

.75%

.25%

413

413

 

 

 

$ 1,219

$ 1,144

Sales Load. FDC receives a front-end sales charge of up to 5.75% for selling Class A shares, and 3.50% for selling Class T shares, some of which is paid to financial intermediaries for selling shares of the Fund. FDC receives the proceeds of contingent deferred sales charges levied on Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C redemptions. These charges depend on the holding period. The deferred sales charges range from 5% to 1% for Class B, 1% for Class C, 1.00% to .50% for certain purchases of Class A shares and .25% for certain purchases of Class T shares.

For the period, sales charge amounts retained by FDC were as follows:

 

Retained
by FDC

Class A

$ 95

Class T

19

Class B*

5

Class C*

-

 

$ 119

* When Class B and Class C shares are initially sold, FDC pays commissions from its own resources to financial intermediaries through which the sales are made.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued

Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc. (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to the account size and type of account of the shareholders of the respective classes of the Fund. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements. Prior to January 1, 2008, Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), also an affiliate of FMR, was the transfer agent for Mega Cap Stock shares. For the period, each class paid the following transfer agent fees:

 

Amount

% of
Average
Net Assets

Class A

$ 97

.22

Class T

150

.28

Class B

83

.19

Class C

69

.17

Mega Cap Stock

966,538

.20

Institutional Class

64

.16

 

$ 967,001

 

Accounting and Security Lending Fees. FSC maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on the level of average net assets for the month. Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.

Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $44,159 for the period.

7. Committed Line of Credit.

The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR in a $4.2 billion credit facility (the "line of credit") to be utilized for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions or for other short-term liquidity purposes. The Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $668 and is reflected in Miscellaneous Expense on the Statement of Operations. During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.

8. Security Lending.

The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. On the settlement date of the loan, the Fund receives collateral (in the form of U.S. Treasury obligations, letters of credit and/or cash) against the loaned securities and

Annual Report

8. Security Lending - continued

maintains collateral in an amount not less than 100% of the market value of the loaned securities during the period of the loan. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. If the borrower defaults on its obligation to return the securities loaned because of insolvency or other reasons, a fund could experience delays and costs in recovering the securities loaned or in gaining access to the collateral. Any cash collateral received is invested in the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less fees and expenses associated with the loan, plus any premium payments that may be received on the loan of certain types of securities. Security lending income is presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds. Net income from lending portfolio securities during the period amounted to $295,384.

9. Expense Reductions.

Many of the brokers with whom FMR places trades on behalf of the Fund provided services to the Fund in addition to trade execution. These services included payments of certain expenses on behalf of the Fund totaling $2,912 for the period. In addition, through arrangements with the Fund's custodian and each class' transfer agent, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's expenses by $3,979. During the period, credits reduced each class' transfer agent expense as noted in the table below.

 

Transfer Agent
expense reduction

 

Mega Cap Stock

$ 3,091

 

In addition, FMR voluntarily agreed to reimburse a portion of the existing class' operating expenses. During the period, this reimbursement reduced the existing class' expenses by $56,875.

10. Other.

The Fund's organizational documents provide former and current trustees and officers with a limited indemnification against liabilities arising in connection with the performance of their duties to the Fund. In the normal course of business, the Fund may also enter into contracts that provide general indemnifications. The Fund's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would be dependent on future claims that may be made against the Fund. The risk of material loss from such claims is considered remote.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

10. Other - continued

In December 2006, the Independent Trustees, with the assistance of independent counsel, completed an investigation regarding gifts, gratuities and business entertainment provided by certain brokers to certain individuals who were employed on FMR's domestic equity trading desk during the period 2002 to 2004. The Independent Trustees and FMR agreed that, despite the absence of proof that the Fidelity mutual funds experienced diminished execution quality as a result of the improper receipt of gifts and business entertainment, the conduct at issue was serious and was worthy of redress. Accordingly, the Independent Trustees requested, and FMR agreed to make, a payment of $42 million plus accrued interest, which equaled approximately $7.3 million, to certain Fidelity mutual funds.

In March 2008, the Trustees approved a method for allocating this payment among the funds and, in total, FMR paid the fund $14,537, which is recorded in the accompanying Statement of Operations.

In a related administrative order dated March 5, 2008, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") announced a settlement with FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (an affiliate of FMR) involving the SEC's regulatory rules for investment advisers and the improper receipt of gifts, gratuities and business entertainment. Without admitting or denying the SEC's findings, FMR agreed to pay an $8 million civil penalty to the United States Treasury.

11. Distributions to Shareholders.

Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:

Years ended June 30,

2008

2007

From net investment income

 

 

Mega Cap Stock

$ 2,028,069

$ 1,575,615

From net realized gain

 

 

Mega Cap Stock

$ 12,126,374

$ 3,189,149

Annual Report

12. Share Transactions.

Transactions for each class of shares were as follows:

 

Shares

Dollars

Years ended June 30,

2008

2007

2008

2007

Class A A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

10,749

-

$ 114,109

$ -

Shares redeemed

-

-

-

-

Net increase (decrease)

10,749

-

$ 114,109

$ -

Class T A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

13,813

-

$ 145,705

$ -

Shares redeemed

(75)

-

(773)

-

Net increase (decrease)

13,738

-

$ 144,932

$ -

Class B A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

10,836

-

$ 114,788

$ -

Shares redeemed

(9)

-

(99)

-

Net increase (decrease)

10,827

-

$ 114,689

$ -

Class C A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

9,953

-

$ 105,728

$ -

Shares redeemed

-

-

-

-

Net increase (decrease)

9,953

-

$ 105,728

$ -

Mega Cap Stock

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

62,330,525

2,800,133

$ 706,742,566

$ 31,267,121

Reinvestment of distributions

1,173,267

441,763

13,245,178

4,570,058

Shares redeemed

(13,126,183)

(3,969,395)

(142,308,777)

(44,033,396)

Net increase (decrease)

50,377,609

(727,499)

$ 577,678,967

$ (8,196,217)

Institutional Class A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

9,425

-

$ 100,000

$ -

Shares redeemed

-

-

-

-

Net increase (decrease)

9,425

-

$ 100,000

$ -

A Share transactions for Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C and Institutional Class are for the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

Annual Report

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund (a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust) at June 30, 2008, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at June 30, 2008 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

August 19, 2008

Annual Report

Trustees and Officers

The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive officers of the trust, as applicable, are listed below. The Board of Trustees governs the fund and is responsible for protecting the interests of shareholders. The Trustees are experienced executives who meet periodically throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities, review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the fund, and review the fund's performance. Except for Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey, each of the Trustees oversees 218 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate. Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey oversee 377 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate.

The Trustees hold office without limit in time except that (a) any Trustee may resign; (b) any Trustee may be removed by written instrument, signed by at least two-thirds of the number of Trustees prior to such removal; (c) any Trustee who requests to be retired or who has become incapacitated by illness or injury may be retired by written instrument signed by a majority of the other Trustees; and (d) any Trustee may be removed at any special meeting of shareholders by a two-thirds vote of the outstanding voting securities of the trust. Each Trustee who is not an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) (Independent Trustee), shall retire not later than the last day of the calendar year in which his or her 72nd birthday occurs. The Independent Trustees may waive this mandatory retirement age policy with respect to individual Trustees. The executive officers and Advisory Board Members hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and Advisory Board Member may resign or may be removed by a vote of a majority of the Trustees at any regular meeting or any special meeting of the Trustees. Except as indicated, each individual has held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the past five years.

The fund's Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the Trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-877-208-0098.

Interested Trustees*:

Correspondence intended for each Trustee who is an interested person may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Edward C. Johnson 3d (78)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 1984

Mr. Johnson is Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Mr. Johnson serves as Chief Executive Officer, Chairman, and a Director of FMR LLC; Chairman and a Director of FMR; Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (FRAC); Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc.; and Chairman and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Johnson serves as Chairman and Director of FIL Limited. Previously, Mr. Johnson served as President of FMR LLC (2006-2007).

James C. Curvey (73)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2006-present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, Mr. Curvey serves as an overseer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a member of the Trustees for Villanove University.

* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR. FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Independent Trustees:

Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Dennis J. Dirks (60)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) (1999-2003). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) (1999-2003) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) (1999-2003). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003) and Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003). Mr. Dirks also serves as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-present).

Alan J. Lacy (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (a private equity firm). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of The Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-present) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (global pharmaceuticals, 2007-present). Mr. Lacy is a Trustee of the National Parks Conservation Association and The Field Museum of Natural History.

Ned C. Lautenbach (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2000

Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees (2006-present). Mr. Lautenbach is an Advisory Partner of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment firm). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was with the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) from 1968 until his retirement in 1998. Mr. Lautenbach serves as a Director of Eaton Corporation (diversified industrial) as well as the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida. He also is a member of the Board of Trustees of Fairfield University (2005-present), as well as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Previously, Mr. Lautenbach served as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007).

Joseph Mauriello (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services firm, 1965-
2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of
Directors of XL Capital Ltd. (global insurance and re-insurance company, 2006-present) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-present). He also served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007).

Cornelia M. Small (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Ms. Small is a member of the Investment Commitee, and Chair (2008-present) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson of the Investment Committee (2002-2008) of Smith College and as Co-Chair (2000-2003) of the Annual Fund for the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. In addition, she served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments.

William S. Stavropoulos (69)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2001

Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President (1993-2000; 2002-2003), CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, he is a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions, 2008-present), Chemical Financial Corporation, Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), Tyco International, Inc. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-present), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital (private equity investment firm, 2005-present). He is a special advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science.

David M. Thomas (59)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products holding company), and Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present).

Michael E. Wiley (57)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Wiley also serves as a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Tulsa (2000-2006; 2007-present). He serves as a Director of Tesoro Corporation (independent oil refiner and marketer, 2005-
present), and a Director of Bill Barrett Corporation (exploration and production company, 2005-present). In addition, he also serves as a Director of Post Oak Bank (privately-held bank, 2004-present). Previously, Mr. Wiley served as a Sr. Energy Advisor of Katzenbach Partners, LLC (consulting firm, 2006-2007), as an Advisory Director of Riverstone Holdings (private investment firm), Chairman, President, and CEO of Baker Hughes, Inc. (oilfield services company, 2000-2004), and as Director of Spinnaker Exploration Company (exploration and production company, 2001-2005).

Advisory Board Member and Executive Officers**:

Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Mr. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Peter S. Lynch (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2003

Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR, and Vice Chairman (2001-present) and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. Previously, Mr. Lynch served as a Trustee of the Fidelity funds (1990-2003). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund.

Kenneth B. Robins (38)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

President and Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2004-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Robins worked at KPMG LLP, where he was a partner in KPMG's department of professional practice (2002-2004).

Walter C. Donovan (46)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Vice President of the fund. Mr. Donovan also serves as Vice President of Fidelity's Equity Funds, President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc., and Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Donovan served as Executive Vice President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2005-2007) and Senior Vice President of FMR (2003-2005) and FMR Co., Inc. (2004-2005).

Bruce T. Herring (42)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2006

Vice President of the fund. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of certain Equity Funds (2006-present) and Group Chief Investments Officer of FMR. Previously, Mr. Herring served as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds.

Scott C. Goebel (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO) of the fund. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary and CLO of other Fidelity funds (2008-present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present); and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC. Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Assistant Secretary of the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007).

John B. McGinty, Jr. (45)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Assistant Secretary of the fund. Mr. McGinty also serves as Assistant Secretary of Fidelity's other Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC (2004-present). Mr. McGinty also serves as Senior Vice President, Secretary, and Chief Legal Officer of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2007-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. McGinty practiced law at Ropes & Gray, LLP.

Holly C. Laurent (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Anti-Money Laundering (AML) officer of the fund. Ms. Laurent also serves as AML officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC. Previously, Ms. Laurent was Senior Vice President and Head of Legal for Fidelity Business Services India Pvt. Ltd. (2006-2008), Senior Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and Group Head for FMR Co. Legal (2005-2006).

Christine Reynolds (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Chief Financial Officer of the fund. Ms. Reynolds also serves as Chief Financial Officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present). Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) in August 2008. She served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS from 2007 through July 2008. Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Ms. Reynolds worked at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) (1980-2002), where she was an audit partner with PwC's investment management practice.

Kenneth A. Rathgeber (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Chief Compliance Officer of the fund. Mr. Rathgeber also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2004-present). He is Chief Compliance Officer of FMR (2005-present), FMR Co., Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2005-present), Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2005-present), and Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2005-present).

Bryan A. Mehrmann (47)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Deputy Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Mehrmann also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR. Previously, Mr. Mehrmann served as Vice President of Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Group (FIIS)/Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Corporation, Inc. (FIIOC) Client Services (1998-2004).

Adrien E. Deberghes (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Deputy Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Deberghes also serves as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's other Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005).

Robert G. Byrnes (41)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Byrnes also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Byrnes served as Vice President of FPCMS (2003-2005). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Byrnes worked at Deutsche Asset Management where he served as Vice President of the Investment Operations Group (2000-2003).

Peter L. Lydecker (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Lydecker also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2004-present) and is an employee of FMR.

Paul M. Murphy (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Murphy also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2007-present) and is an employee of FMR (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Murphy served as Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity Funds (2005-2006), Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR (2007), and Senior Vice President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services Group (FPCMS) (1994-2007).

Gary W. Ryan (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Ryan also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Vice President of Fund Reporting in Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1999-2005).

** FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Annual Report

Distributions (Unaudited)

The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund voted to pay to shareholders of record at the opening of business on record date, the following distributions per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities, and dividends derived from net investment income:

 

Pay Date

Record Date

Dividends

Capital Gains

Class A

08/11/08

08/08/08

$.050

$.02

Class T

08/11/08

08/08/08

$.035

$.02

Class B

08/11/08

08/08/08

$.014

$.02

Class C

08/11/08

08/08/08

$.031

$.02

The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended June 30, 2008, $3,867,467, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.

The fund will notify shareholders in January 2009 of amounts for use in preparing 2008 income tax returns.

Annual Report

Proxy Voting Results

A special meeting of the fund's shareholders was held on May 14, 2008. The results of votes taken among shareholders on the proposals before them are reported below. Each vote reported represents one dollar of net asset value held on the record date for the meeting.

PROPOSAL 1

To elect a Board of Trustees.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

James C. Curvey

Affirmative

5,283,033,775.58

95.146

Withheld

269,544,935.17

4.854

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Dennis J. Dirks

Affirmative

5,309,249,727.21

95.618

Withheld

243,328,983.54

4.382

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Affirmative

5,252,938,642.62

94.604

Withheld

299,640,068.13

5.396

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Alan J. Lacy

Affirmative

5,300,188,165.66

95.455

Withheld

252,390,545.09

4.545

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Ned C. Lautenbach

Affirmative

5,297,558,579.14

95.407

Withheld

255,020,131.61

4.593

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Joseph Mauriello

Affirmative

5,303,242,593.91

95.510

Withheld

249,336,116.84

4.490

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Cornelia M. Small

Affirmative

5,306,804,229.45

95.574

Withheld

245,774,481.30

4.426

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

William S. Stavropoulos

Affirmative

5,284,506,192.07

95.172

Withheld

268,072,518.68

4.828

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

David M. Thomas

Affirmative

5,308,375,429.85

95.602

Withheld

244,203,280.90

4.398

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Michael E. Wiley

Affirmative

5,304,369,992.98

95.530

Withheld

248,208,717.77

4.470

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

PROPOSAL 2

To amend the Declaration of Trust to reduce the required quorum for future shareholder meetings.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

Affirmative

4,180,350,765.24

75.287

Against

812,580,433.39

14.634

Abstain

292,815,961.45

5.274

Broker
Non-Votes

266,831,550.67

4.805

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

A Denotes trust-wide proposal and voting results.

Annual Report

Investment Adviser

Fidelity Management & Research Company

Boston, MA

Investment Sub-Advisers

FMR Co. Inc.

Fidelity Management & Research
(U.K.) Inc.

Fidelity Research & Analysis Company

Fidelity Investments Japan Limited

Fidelity International Investment Advisors

Fidelity International Investment Advisors
(U.K.) Limited

General Distributor

Fidelity Distributors Corporation

Boston, MA

Transfer and Service Agents

Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Fidelity Service Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Custodian

JPMorgan Chase Bank

New York, NY

AGII-UANN-0808
1.855226.100

fid194

Fidelity Advisor
Mega Cap Stock
Fund - Institutional Class

Annual Report

June 30, 2008

Institutional Class
is a class of Fidelity®
Mega Cap Stock Fund
(formerly Fidelity Growth &
Income II Portfolio)

(2_fidelity_logos) (Registered_Trademark)

Contents

Chairman's Message

<Click Here>

Ned Johnson's message to shareholders.

Performance

<Click Here>

How the fund has done over time.

Management's Discussion

<Click Here>

The manager's review of fund performance, strategy and outlook.

Shareholder Expense Example

<Click Here>

An example of shareholder expenses.

Investment Changes

<Click Here>

A summary of major shifts in the fund's investments over the past six months.

Investments

<Click Here>

A complete list of the fund's investments with their market values.

Financial Statements

<Click Here>

Statements of assets and liabilities, operations, and changes in net assets,
as well as financial highlights.

Notes

<Click Here>

Notes to the financial statements.

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

<Click Here>

 

Trustees and Officers

<Click Here>

 

Distributions

<Click Here>

 

Proxy Voting Results

<Click Here>

 

To view a fund's proxy voting guidelines and proxy voting record for the 12-month period ended June 30, visit http://www.fidelity.com (search for "proxy voting guidelines") or visit the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) web site at http://www.sec.gov. You may also call 1-800-544-8544 to request a free copy of the proxy voting guidelines.

Standard & Poor's, S&P and S&P 500 are registered service marks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and have been licensed for use by Fidelity Distributors Corporation.

Other third party marks appearing herein are the property of their respective owners.

All other marks appearing herein are registered or unregistered trademarks or service marks of FMR LLC or an affiliated company.

Annual Report

This report and the financial statements contained herein are submitted for the general information of the shareholders of the fund. This report is not authorized for distribution to prospective investors in the fund unless preceded or accompanied by an effective prospectus.

A fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. Forms N-Q are available on the SEC's web site at http://www.sec.gov. A fund's Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, DC. Information regarding the operation of the SEC's Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. For a complete list of a fund's portfolio holdings, view the most recent holdings listing, semiannual report, or annual report on Fidelity's web site at http://www.fidelity.com or http://www.advisor.fidelity.com, as applicable.

NOT FDIC INSURED · MAY LOSE VALUE · NO BANK GUARANTEE

Neither the fund nor Fidelity Distributors Corporation is a bank.

Annual Report

Chairman's Message

(photo_of_Edward_C_Johnson_3d)

Dear Shareholder:

Domestic and international securities markets have struggled thus far in 2008. High-grade fixed-income investments produced modestly positive results, but many stock benchmarks suffered double-digit losses through the first half of this year. Financial markets are always unpredictable, but there are a number of time-tested principles that can put the historical odds in your favor.

One of the basic tenets is to invest for the long term. Over time, riding out the markets' inevitable ups and downs has proven much more effective than selling into panic or chasing the hottest trend. Even missing only a few of the markets' best days can significantly diminish investor returns. Patience also affords the benefits of compounding - of earning interest on additional income or reinvested dividends and capital gains. There are tax advantages and cost benefits to consider as well. The more you sell, the more taxes you pay, and the more you trade, the higher the costs. While staying the course doesn't eliminate risk, it can considerably lessen the effect of short-term declines.

You can further manage your investing risk through diversification. And today, more than ever, geographic diversification should be taken into account. Studies indicate that asset allocation is the single most important determinant of a portfolio's long-term success. The right mix of stocks, bonds and cash - aligned to your particular risk tolerance and investment objective - is very important. Age-appropriate rebalancing is also an essential aspect of asset allocation. For younger investors, an emphasis on equities - which historically have been the best-performing asset class over time - is encouraged. As investors near their specific goal, such as retirement or sending a child to college, consideration may be given to replacing volatile assets (e.g. common stocks) with more-stable fixed investments (bonds or savings plans).

A third investment principle - investing regularly - can help lower the average cost of your purchases. Investing a certain amount of money each month or quarter helps ensure you won't pay for all your shares at market highs. This strategy - known as dollar cost averaging - also reduces unconstructive "emotion" from investing, helping shareholders avoid selling weak performers just prior to an upswing, or chasing a hot performer just before a correction.

We invite you to contact us via the Internet, through our Investor Centers or over the phone. It is our privilege to provide you the information you need to make the investments that are right for you.

Sincerely,
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Annual Report

Performance: The Bottom Line

Average annual total return reflects the change in the value of an investment, assuming reinvestment of the fund's dividend income and capital gains (the profits earned upon the sale of securities that have grown in value, if any) and assuming a constant rate of performance each year. The $10,000 table and the fund's returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares. During periods of reimbursement by Fidelity, a fund's total return will be greater than it would be had the reimbursement not occurred. How a fund did yesterday is no guarantee of how it will do tomorrow.

Average Annual Total Returns

Periods ended June 30, 2008

Past 1
year

Past 5
years

Life of
fund
A

Institutional Class B, C

-12.73%

5.84%

1.73%

A From December 28, 1998.

B The initial offering of Institutional Class shares took place on February 5, 2008. Returns prior to February 5, 2008 are those of Mega Cap Stock, the original retail class of the fund.

C Prior to December 1, 2007, the fund operated under certain different investment policies. The fund's historical performance may not represent its current investment policies.

Annual Report

$10,000 Over Life of Fund

Let's say hypothetically that $10,000 was invested in Fidelity Advisor Mega Cap Stock - Institutional Class on December 28, 1998, when the fund started. The chart shows how the value of your investment would have changed, and also shows how the Standard & Poor's 500SM Index (S&P 500®) performed over the same period. The initial offering of Institutional Class took place on February 5, 2008. See the previous page for additional information regarding the performance of Institutional Class.



fid208

Annual Report

Management's Discussion of Fund Performance

Comments from Rick Mace, Portfolio Manager of Fidelity Advisor Mega Cap Stock Fund

As threats of a recession, concerns about inflation and higher unemployment rates weighed heavily on consumers and investors, the U.S. equity markets struggled for the year ending June 30, 2008. For investors, the lingering effects of the subprime mortgage crisis and subsequent credit crunch were felt in most areas of the market, with financial stocks lagging and the energy sector continuing its upward trajectory. To help reignite the economy, the Federal Reserve Board lowered its key interest rate seven times, taking it from 5.25% to 2.00% during the period. The Fed also stepped in to help prevent the near collapse of investment bank Bear Stearns. These moves initially seemed to bolster investor confidence, but, ultimately, most indexes lagged. The Standard & Poor's 500SM Index fell 13.12% for the year ending June 30, 2008. The Dow Jones Industrial AverageSM also declined, with a -13.27% return, and the NASDAQ Composite® Index plunged 11.28%.

During the past year, the fund's Class A, Class T, Class B and Class C shares (excluding sales charges) performed roughly in line with the Russell Top 200® Index, a mega-cap proxy added as a supplemental benchmark on December 1, 2007, which returned -12.81%. Prior to December 1, 2007, the fund was primarily compared with the S&P 500®, which declined 13.12% for the corresponding year. (For specific class-level performance results for the 12-month period, please refer to the performance section of this report.) During this period, the fund's mandate shifted to investing in companies with mega market capitalizations, and the fund's name changed accordingly. For the first five months of the period, the fund outperformed the S&P 500. Security selection in industrials and financials helped the most. Specifically, oilfield services provider Cameron International and diversified industrial company McDermott International fared well. Both stocks were sold by period end. On the downside, insurance giant American International Group (AIG) faltered. For the last seven months of the period, the fund lagged the Russell Top 200. Stock selection in energy was the biggest detractor. The fund's positions in oil refiners Valero and Tesoro, the latter of which was an out-of-index holding, hurt. Elsewhere, insurance giant AIG continued to lag. Conversely, stock picking and market selection in technology, industrials and consumer discretionary were beneficial, as was stock selection in materials. Underweightings in conglomerate General Electric and bank Wachovia were the biggest contributors. Overweightings in Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold and offshore driller Transocean also were productive.

During the past year, the fund's Institutional Class shares performed roughly in line with the Russell Top 200® Index, a mega-cap proxy added as a supplemental benchmark on December 1, 2007, which returned -12.81%. Prior to December 1, 2007, the fund was primarily compared with the S&P 500®, which declined 13.12% for the corresponding year. (For specific class-level performance results for the 12-month period, please refer to the performance section of this report.) During this period, the fund's mandate shifted to investing in companies with mega market capitalizations, and the fund's name changed accordingly. For the first five months of the period, the fund outperformed the S&P 500. Security selection in industrials and financials helped the most. Specifically, oilfield services provider Cameron International and diversified industrial company McDermott International fared well. Both stocks were sold by period end. On the downside, insurance giant American International Group (AIG) faltered. For the last seven months of the period, the fund lagged the Russell Top 200. Stock selection in energy was the biggest detractor. The fund's positions in oil refiners Valero and Tesoro, the latter of which was an out-of-index holding, hurt. Elsewhere, insurance giant AIG continued to lag. Conversely, stock picking and market selection in technology, industrials and consumer discretionary were beneficial, as was stock selection in materials. Underweightings in conglomerate General Electric and bank Wachovia were the biggest contributors. Overweightings in Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold and offshore driller Transocean also were productive.

Annual Report

The views expressed above reflect those of the portfolio manager(s) only through the end of the period as stated on the cover of this report and do not necessarily represent the views of Fidelity or any other person in the Fidelity organization. Any such views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions and Fidelity disclaims any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied on as investment advice and, because investment decisions for a Fidelity fund are based on numerous factors, may not be relied on as an indication of trading intent on behalf of any Fidelity fund.

Annual Report

Shareholder Expense Example

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, including sales charges (loads) on purchase payments or redemption proceeds, and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees, distribution and/or service (12b-1) fees and other Fund expenses. This Example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.

The actual expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Mega Cap Stock and for the entire period (February 5, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C and Institutional Class.

The hypothetical expense Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire period (January 1, 2008 to June 30, 2008).

Actual Expenses

The first line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000.00 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000.00 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line for a class of the Fund under the heading entitled "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The second line of the accompanying table for each class of the Fund provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on a Class' actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Class' actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds. A small balance maintenance fee of $12.00 that is charged once a year may apply for certain accounts with a value of less than $2,000. This fee is not included in the table below. If it was, the estimate of expenses you paid during the period would be higher, and your ending account value lower, by this amount. In addition, the Fund, as a shareholder in the underlying Fidelity Central Funds, will indirectly bear its pro rata share of the fees and expenses incurred by the underlying Fidelity Central Funds. These fees and expenses are not included in the Fund's annualized expense ratio used to calculate the expense estimate in the table below.

Annual Report

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transaction costs. Therefore, the second line of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. In addition, if these transactional costs were included, your costs would have been higher.

 

Beginning
Account
Value

Ending
Account Value
June 30, 2008

Expenses
Paid
During Period

Class A

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 932.10

$ 3.96 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,019.79

$ 5.12 C

Class T

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 931.20

$ 5.12 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,018.30

$ 6.62 C

Class B

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 930.30

$ 6.71 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,016.26

$ 8.67 C

Class C

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 930.30

$ 6.63 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,016.36

$ 8.57 C

Mega Cap Stock

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 849.20

$ 3.36 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,021.23

$ 3.67 C

Institutional Class

 

 

 

Actual

$ 1,000.00

$ 934.00

$ 2.72 B

Hypothetical A

$ 1,000.00

$ 1,021.38

$ 3.52 C

A 5% return per year before expenses

B Actual expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period) for Mega Cap Stock and multiplied by 147/366 (to reflect the period February 5, 2008 to June 30, 2008) for Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C and Institutional Class.

C Hypothetical expenses are equal to each Class' annualized expense ratio (shown in the table below); multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 182/366 (to reflect the one-half year period).

Annual Report

 

Annualized
Expense Ratio

Class A

1.02%

Class T

1.32%

Class B

1.73%

Class C

1.71%

Mega Cap Stock

.73%

Institutional Class

.70%

Annual Report

Investment Changes (Unaudited)

Top Ten Stocks as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Exxon Mobil Corp.

5.2

2.4

Hewlett-Packard Co.

3.4

2.0

Microsoft Corp.

2.8

2.6

AT&T, Inc.

2.7

1.3

Johnson & Johnson

2.6

1.7

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

2.6

2.5

ConocoPhillips

2.1

1.8

American International Group, Inc.

2.1

2.1

International Business Machines Corp.

2.0

1.5

Philip Morris International, Inc.

1.8

0.0

 

27.3

Top Five Market Sectors as of June 30, 2008

 

% of fund's
net assets

% of fund's net assets
6 months ago

Information Technology

20.5

17.5

Energy

16.6

13.0

Financials

15.9

17.1

Health Care

12.6

12.6

Consumer Discretionary

8.8

10.4

Asset Allocation (% of fund's net assets)

As of June 30, 2008 *

As of December 31, 2007 **

fid53

Stocks 100.0%

 

fid53

Stocks 98.0%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 0.0%

 

fid100

Short-Term
Investments and
Net Other Assets 2.0%

 

* Foreign investments

4.9%

 

** Foreign investments

3.9%

 


fid214

Annual Report

Investments June 30, 2008

Showing Percentage of Net Assets

Common Stocks - 100.0%

Shares

Value

CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY - 8.8%

Auto Components - 0.3%

Johnson Controls, Inc.

69,600

$ 1,996,128

Automobiles - 0.1%

Toyota Motor Corp. sponsored ADR

10,000

940,000

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure - 1.7%

McDonald's Corp.

198,700

11,170,914

Household Durables - 1.2%

Whirlpool Corp. (d)

128,400

7,926,132

Media - 2.5%

Comcast Corp. Class A

50,000

948,500

McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

57,900

2,322,948

News Corp. Class A

20,100

302,304

Omnicom Group, Inc.

26,100

1,171,368

The DIRECTV Group, Inc. (a)

77,400

2,005,434

The Walt Disney Co.

188,600

5,884,320

Time Warner, Inc.

132,100

1,955,080

Viacom, Inc. Class B (non-vtg.) (a)

58,300

1,780,482

 

16,370,436

Multiline Retail - 0.9%

Sears Holdings Corp. (a)(d)

51,400

3,786,124

Target Corp. (d)

53,400

2,482,566

 

6,268,690

Specialty Retail - 1.1%

Abercrombie & Fitch Co. Class A

26,100

1,635,948

Best Buy Co., Inc.

10,000

396,000

Home Depot, Inc.

131,100

3,070,362

Lowe's Companies, Inc.

30,000

622,500

Staples, Inc.

55,243

1,312,021

 

7,036,831

Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods - 1.0%

NIKE, Inc. Class B (d)

114,400

6,819,384

TOTAL CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY

58,528,515

CONSUMER STAPLES - 8.6%

Beverages - 0.6%

Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.

24,300

420,390

Molson Coors Brewing Co. Class B

64,793

3,520,204

 

3,940,594

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

CONSUMER STAPLES - continued

Food & Staples Retailing - 2.5%

CVS Caremark Corp.

97,600

$ 3,862,032

Kroger Co.

67,700

1,954,499

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

196,384

11,036,781

 

16,853,312

Food Products - 1.0%

Archer Daniels Midland Co.

107,000

3,611,250

Kellogg Co.

65,200

3,130,904

Tyson Foods, Inc. Class A

1,300

19,422

 

6,761,576

Household Products - 1.7%

Energizer Holdings, Inc. (a)

10,000

730,900

Kimberly-Clark Corp.

10,000

597,800

Procter & Gamble Co.

160,700

9,772,167

 

11,100,867

Tobacco - 2.8%

Altria Group, Inc.

325,030

6,682,617

Philip Morris International, Inc.

245,030

12,102,032

 

18,784,649

TOTAL CONSUMER STAPLES

57,440,998

ENERGY - 16.6%

Energy Equipment & Services - 3.6%

Halliburton Co.

143,400

7,610,238

National Oilwell Varco, Inc. (a)

20,000

1,774,400

Noble Corp.

23,900

1,552,544

Schlumberger Ltd. (NY Shares)

32,715

3,514,572

Transocean, Inc. (a)

61,552

9,379,909

 

23,831,663

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - 13.0%

Apache Corp.

30,000

4,170,000

Canadian Natural Resources Ltd.

5,000

494,629

Chevron Corp.

65,500

6,493,015

ConocoPhillips

150,000

14,158,500

Devon Energy Corp.

5,000

600,800

Exxon Mobil Corp.

393,071

34,641,347

Marathon Oil Corp.

204,500

10,607,415

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

20,000

1,797,200

Peabody Energy Corp.

8,927

786,022

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

ENERGY - continued

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels - continued

Plains Exploration & Production Co. (a)

6,100

$ 445,117

Tesoro Corp.

138,100

2,730,237

Valero Energy Corp.

246,500

10,150,870

 

87,075,152

TOTAL ENERGY

110,906,815

FINANCIALS - 15.9%

Capital Markets - 3.9%

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

51,100

8,937,390

Janus Capital Group, Inc.

208,700

5,524,289

Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.

357,672

7,085,482

Morgan Stanley

31,500

1,136,205

State Street Corp.

48,700

3,116,313

 

25,799,679

Commercial Banks - 1.6%

U.S. Bancorp, Delaware

40,000

1,115,600

Wachovia Corp.

106,100

1,647,733

Wells Fargo & Co. (d)

348,400

8,274,500

 

11,037,833

Consumer Finance - 0.3%

American Express Co.

15,700

591,419

Capital One Financial Corp.

35,000

1,330,350

 

1,921,769

Diversified Financial Services - 5.3%

Bank of America Corp.

447,780

10,688,509

Citigroup, Inc.

432,200

7,243,672

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

506,200

17,367,722

 

35,299,903

Insurance - 4.6%

ACE Ltd.

26,100

1,437,849

AFLAC, Inc.

25,000

1,570,000

American International Group, Inc.

524,330

13,873,772

Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Class B (a)

860

3,450,320

Loews Corp.

60,900

2,856,210

MetLife, Inc.

27,500

1,451,175

Prudential Financial, Inc.

16,600

991,684

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

FINANCIALS - continued

Insurance - continued

The Chubb Corp.

27,000

$ 1,323,270

The Travelers Companies, Inc.

86,000

3,732,400

 

30,686,680

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance - 0.2%

Fannie Mae

58,500

1,141,335

Freddie Mac

30,000

492,000

 

1,633,335

TOTAL FINANCIALS

106,379,199

HEALTH CARE - 12.6%

Biotechnology - 1.4%

Amgen, Inc. (a)

50,190

2,366,960

Biogen Idec, Inc. (a)

32,200

1,799,658

Genentech, Inc. (a)

45,200

3,430,680

Gilead Sciences, Inc. (a)

35,220

1,864,899

 

9,462,197

Health Care Equipment & Supplies - 1.7%

Baxter International, Inc.

69,900

4,469,406

Becton, Dickinson & Co.

39,200

3,186,960

C.R. Bard, Inc.

5,200

457,340

Covidien Ltd.

40,000

1,915,600

Medtronic, Inc.

28,300

1,464,525

 

11,493,831

Health Care Providers & Services - 2.5%

Humana, Inc. (a)

72,800

2,895,256

McKesson Corp.

19,300

1,079,063

Medco Health Solutions, Inc. (a)

159,500

7,528,400

UnitedHealth Group, Inc.

140,200

3,680,250

WellPoint, Inc. (a)

26,900

1,282,054

 

16,465,023

Life Sciences Tools & Services - 0.6%

Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. (a)

65,000

3,622,450

Pharmaceuticals - 6.4%

Abbott Laboratories

45,000

2,383,650

Allergan, Inc.

10,000

520,500

Johnson & Johnson

271,800

17,487,612

Merck & Co., Inc.

283,900

10,700,191

Pfizer, Inc.

244,200

4,266,174

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

HEALTH CARE - continued

Pharmaceuticals - continued

Schering-Plough Corp.

155,100

$ 3,053,919

Wyeth

96,000

4,604,160

 

43,016,206

TOTAL HEALTH CARE

84,059,707

INDUSTRIALS - 8.6%

Aerospace & Defense - 4.9%

General Dynamics Corp.

6,500

547,300

Honeywell International, Inc.

109,600

5,510,688

L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.

24,900

2,262,663

Lockheed Martin Corp.

61,900

6,107,054

Northrop Grumman Corp.

89,800

6,007,620

Raytheon Co.

81,000

4,558,680

The Boeing Co.

69,800

4,587,256

United Technologies Corp.

45,900

2,832,030

 

32,413,291

Airlines - 0.1%

AMR Corp. (a)

72,200

369,664

UAL Corp.

28,800

150,336

US Airways Group, Inc. (a)

40,900

102,250

 

622,250

Commercial Services & Supplies - 0.0%

Manpower, Inc.

900

52,416

Industrial Conglomerates - 0.9%

General Electric Co.

175,700

4,689,433

Tyco International Ltd.

40,000

1,601,600

 

6,291,033

Machinery - 1.7%

Caterpillar, Inc.

54,900

4,052,718

Deere & Co.

78,300

5,647,779

Eaton Corp.

700

59,479

Ingersoll-Rand Co. Ltd. Class A

37,900

1,418,597

 

11,178,573

Road & Rail - 1.0%

Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp.

10,000

998,900

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

INDUSTRIALS - continued

Road & Rail - continued

Norfolk Southern Corp.

30,000

$ 1,880,100

Union Pacific Corp.

52,000

3,926,000

 

6,805,000

TOTAL INDUSTRIALS

57,362,563

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - 20.5%

Communications Equipment - 3.0%

Cisco Systems, Inc. (a)

464,800

10,811,248

Corning, Inc.

42,100

970,405

Juniper Networks, Inc. (a)

10,000

221,800

Nokia Corp. sponsored ADR

205,400

5,032,300

QUALCOMM, Inc.

69,100

3,065,967

 

20,101,720

Computers & Peripherals - 7.9%

Apple, Inc. (a)

68,100

11,402,664

EMC Corp. (a)

300

4,407

Hewlett-Packard Co.

509,500

22,524,995

International Business Machines Corp.

114,800

13,607,244

Western Digital Corp. (a)

145,800

5,034,474

 

52,573,784

Electronic Equipment & Instruments - 0.3%

Tyco Electronics Ltd.

61,600

2,206,512

Internet Software & Services - 0.9%

Google, Inc. Class A (sub. vtg.) (a)

11,350

5,974,867

Yahoo!, Inc. (a)

14,300

295,438

 

6,270,305

IT Services - 1.3%

Accenture Ltd. Class A

156,400

6,368,608

Visa, Inc.

25,000

2,032,750

 

8,401,358

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment - 3.0%

Applied Materials, Inc.

405,918

7,748,975

ASML Holding NV (NY Shares)

184,900

4,511,560

Intel Corp.

332,200

7,135,656

Texas Instruments, Inc.

20,000

563,200

 

19,959,391

Software - 4.1%

Microsoft Corp.

689,100

18,957,141

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - continued

Software - continued

Oracle Corp. (a)

368,200

$ 7,732,200

Symantec Corp. (a)

53,300

1,031,355

 

27,720,696

TOTAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

137,233,766

MATERIALS - 3.0%

Chemicals - 1.0%

Celanese Corp. Class A

19,500

890,370

Monsanto Co.

23,000

2,908,120

The Mosaic Co. (a)

20,000

2,894,000

 

6,692,490

Metals & Mining - 2.0%

ArcelorMittal SA (NY Shares) Class A

19,300

1,912,051

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc. Class B

95,500

11,191,645

 

13,103,696

TOTAL MATERIALS

19,796,186

TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 3.3%

Diversified Telecommunication Services - 3.3%

AT&T, Inc.

524,700

17,677,143

Qwest Communications International, Inc.

50,000

196,500

Verizon Communications, Inc.

114,600

4,056,840

 

21,930,483

UTILITIES - 2.1%

Electric Utilities - 0.7%

Entergy Corp.

5,000

602,400

Exelon Corp.

15,000

1,349,400

FirstEnergy Corp.

30,000

2,469,900

PPL Corp.

10,000

522,700

 

4,944,400

Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders - 0.8%

AES Corp. (a)

82,100

1,577,141

Constellation Energy Group, Inc.

46,800

3,842,280

 

5,419,421

Common Stocks - continued

Shares

Value

UTILITIES - continued

Multi-Utilities - 0.6%

Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.

87,300

$ 4,009,689

TOTAL UTILITIES

14,373,510

TOTAL COMMON STOCKS

(Cost $743,099,299)

668,011,742

Money Market Funds - 3.5%

 

 

 

 

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund, 2.39% (b)(c) (Cost $23,436,500)

23,436,500

23,436,500

TOTAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO - 103.5%

(Cost $766,535,799)

691,448,242

NET OTHER ASSETS - (3.5)%

(23,365,552)

NET ASSETS - 100%

$ 668,082,690

Legend

(a) Non-income producing

(b) Affiliated fund that is available only to investment companies and other accounts managed by Fidelity Investments. The rate quoted is the annualized seven-day yield of the fund at period end. A complete unaudited listing of the fund's holdings as of its most recent quarter end is available upon request.

(c) Investment made with cash collateral received from securities on loan.

(d) Security or a portion of the security is on loan at period end.

Affiliated Central Funds

Information regarding fiscal year to date income earned by the Fund from investments in Fidelity Central Funds is as follows:

Fund

Income earned

Fidelity Cash Central Fund

$ 529,959

Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund

295,384

Total

$ 825,343

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

 

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Assets

Investment in securities, at value (including securities loaned of $22,228,782) - See accompanying schedule:

Unaffiliated issuers (cost $743,099,299)

$ 668,011,742

 

Fidelity Central Funds (cost $23,436,500)

23,436,500

 

Total Investments (cost $766,535,799)

 

$ 691,448,242

Receivable for investments sold

2,485,471

Receivable for fund shares sold

465,833

Dividends receivable

617,823

Distributions receivable from Fidelity Central Funds

60,828

Prepaid expenses

812

Other receivables

21

Total assets

695,079,030

 

 

 

Liabilities

Payable to custodian bank

$ 61,954

Payable for fund shares redeemed

3,054,231

Accrued management fee

270,451

Distribution fees payable

259

Other affiliated payables

134,912

Other payables and accrued expenses

38,033

Collateral on securities loaned, at value

23,436,500

Total liabilities

26,996,340

 

 

 

Net Assets

$ 668,082,690

Net Assets consist of:

 

Paid in capital

$ 742,629,358

Undistributed net investment income

4,457,069

Accumulated undistributed net realized gain (loss) on investments and foreign currency transactions

(3,916,659)

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

(75,087,078)

Net Assets

$ 668,082,690

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Assets and Liabilities - continued

 

June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Calculation of Maximum Offering Price
Class A:
Net Asset Value and redemption price per share ($106,360 ÷ 10,749 shares)

$ 9.89

 

 

 

Maximum offering price per share (100/94.25 of $9.89)

$ 10.49

Class T:
Net Asset Value
and redemption price per share ($135,765 ÷ 13,738 shares)

$ 9.88

 

 

 

Maximum offering price per share (100/96.50 of $9.88)

$ 10.24

Class B:
Net Asset Value
and offering price per share ($106,810 ÷ 10,827 shares)A

$ 9.87

 

 

 

Class C:
Net Asset Value
and offering price per share ($98,202 ÷ 9,953 shares)A

$ 9.87

 

 

 

Mega Cap Stock:
Net Asset Value
, offering price and redemption price per share ($667,542,177 ÷ 67,387,928 shares)

$ 9.91

 

 

 

Institutional Class:
Net Asset Value
, offering price and redemption price per share ($93,376 ÷ 9,425 shares)

$ 9.91

A Redemption price per share is equal to net asset value less any applicable contingent deferred sales charge.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Statements - continued

Statement of Operations

 

Year ended June 30, 2008

 

 

 

Investment Income

 

 

Dividends

 

$ 8,748,862

Interest

 

9,105

Income from Fidelity Central Funds

 

825,343

Total income

 

9,583,310

 

 

 

Expenses

Management fee

$ 2,176,949

Transfer agent fees

967,001

Distribution fees

1,219

Accounting and security lending fees

177,248

Custodian fees and expenses

27,668

Independent trustees' compensation

1,778

Registration fees

146,462

Audit

43,161

Legal

1,425

Miscellaneous

21,549

Total expenses before reductions

3,564,460

Expense reductions

(66,857)

3,497,603

Net investment income (loss)

6,085,707

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

Net realized gain (loss) on:

Investment securities:

 

 

Unaffiliated issuers

(93,135)

Foreign currency transactions

2,821

Futures contracts

(562,680)

Total net realized gain (loss)

 

(652,994)

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:

Investment securities

(106,617,638)

Assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

416

Total change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

 

(106,617,222)

Net gain (loss)

(107,270,216)

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

$ (101,184,509)

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

Year ended
June 30,
2008

Year ended
June 30,
2007

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net investment income (loss)

$ 6,085,707

$ 1,533,606

Net realized gain (loss)

(652,994)

11,201,563

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(106,617,222)

22,555,444

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting
from operations

(101,184,509)

35,290,613

Distributions to shareholders from net investment income

(2,028,069)

(1,575,615)

Distributions to shareholders from net realized gain

(12,126,374)

(3,189,149)

Total distributions

(14,154,443)

(4,764,764)

Share transactions - net increase (decrease)

578,258,425

(8,196,217)

Total increase (decrease) in net assets

462,919,473

22,329,632

 

 

 

Net Assets

Beginning of period

205,163,217

182,833,585

End of period (including undistributed net investment income of $4,457,069 and undistributed net investment income of $410,073, respectively)

$ 668,082,690

$ 205,163,217

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class A

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .05

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.77)

Total from investment operations

  (.72)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.89

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.79)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.02% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.02% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.01% A

Net investment income (loss)

  1.24% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 106

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the sales charges.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class T

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .04

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.77)

Total from investment operations

  (.73)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.88

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.88)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.32% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.32% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.32% A

Net investment income (loss)

  .89% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 136

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the sales charges.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class B

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .02

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.76)

Total from investment operations

  (.74)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.87

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.97)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.73% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.73% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.73% A

Net investment income (loss)

  .52% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 107

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the contingent deferred sales charge.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Class C

Year ended June 30,
2008 H

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) E

  .02

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.76)

Total from investment operations

  (.74)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.87

Total Return B, C, D

  (6.97)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets F, I

 

Expenses before reductions

  1.71% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  1.71% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  1.71% A

Net investment income (loss)

  .55% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 98

Portfolio turnover rate G

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Total returns do not include the effect of the contingent deferred sales charge.

E Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

F Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

H For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

I Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Mega Cap Stock

Years ended June 30,
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004

Selected Per-Share Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 12.06

$ 10.31

$ 9.28

$ 9.24

$ 8.48

Income from Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net investment income (loss) B

  .14

  .09

  .05

  .14 E

  .06

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (1.60)

  1.93

  1.21

  .02

  .76

Total from investment operations

  (1.46)

  2.02

  1.26

  .16

  .82

Distributions from net investment income

  (.07)

  (.09)

  (.06)

  (.12)

  (.06)

Distributions from net realized gain

  (.62)

  (.18)

  (.17)

  -

  -

Total distributions

  (.69)

  (.27)

  (.23)

  (.12)

  (.06)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.91

$ 12.06

$ 10.31

$ 9.28

$ 9.24

Total Return A

  (12.73)%

  20.05%

  13.63%

  1.71%

  9.68%

Ratios to Average Net Assets C, F

 

 

 

 

 

Expenses before reductions

  .75%

  .81%

  .86%

  .84%

  .86%

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .74%

  .81%

  .86%

  .84%

  .86%

Expenses net of all reductions

  .74%

  .81%

  .82%

  .81%

  .85%

Net investment income (loss)

  1.28%

  .79%

  .51%

  1.52% E

  .72%

Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 667,542

$ 205,163

$ 182,834

$ 179,344

$ 209,344

Portfolio turnover rate D

  97%

  94%

  180%

  79%

  26%

A Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

B Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

C Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

D Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

E Investment income per share reflects a special dividend which amounted to $.03 per share. Excluding the special dividend, the ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets would have been 1.15%.

F Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Financial Highlights - Institutional Class

Year ended June 30,
2008 G

Selected Per-Share Data

 

Net asset value, beginning of period

$ 10.61

Income from Investment Operations

 

Net investment income (loss) D

  .07

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

  (.77)

Total from investment operations

  (.70)

Net asset value, end of period

$ 9.91

Total Return B, C

  (6.60)%

Ratios to Average Net Assets E, H

 

Expenses before reductions

  .70% A

Expenses net of fee waivers, if any

  .70% A

Expenses net of all reductions

  .70% A

Net investment income (loss)

  1.57% A

Supplemental Data

 

Net assets, end of period (000 omitted)

$ 93

Portfolio turnover rate F

  97%

A Annualized

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

C Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the periods shown.

D Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.

E Fees and expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds are not included in the Fund's expense ratio. The Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

F Amount does not include the portfolio activity of any underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

G For the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

H Expense ratios reflect operating expenses of the class. Expenses before reductions do not reflect amounts reimbursed by the investment adviser or reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements and do not represent the amount paid by the class during periods when reimbursements or reductions occur. Expense ratios before reductions for start-up periods may not be representative of longer-term operating periods. Expenses net of fee waivers reflect expenses after reimbursement by the investment adviser but prior to reductions from brokerage service arrangements or other expense offset arrangements. Expenses net of all reductions represent the net expenses paid by the class.

See accompanying notes which are an integral part of the financial statements.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements

For the period ended June 30, 2008

1. Organization.

Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund (the Fund) (formerly Fidelity Growth & Income II Portfolio) is a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust (the trust) and is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares. The trust is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act), as an open-end management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust. The Fund commenced sale of Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C, and Institutional Class shares and the existing class was designated Mega Cap Stock on February 5, 2008. Class B shares will automatically convert to Class A shares after a holding period of seven years from the initial date of purchase. Investment income, realized and unrealized capital gains and losses, the common expenses of the Fund, and certain fund-level expense reductions, if any, are allocated on a pro rata basis to each class based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the Fund. Each class differs with respect to transfer agent and distribution and service plan fees incurred. Certain expense reductions also differ by class.

2. Investments in Fidelity Central Funds.

The Fund may invest in Fidelity Central Funds, which are open-end investment companies available only to other investment companies and accounts managed by Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) and its affiliates. The Fund's Schedule of Investments lists each of the Fidelity Central Funds as an investment of the Fund, but does not include the underlying holdings of each Fidelity Central Fund. As an Investing Fund, the Fund indirectly bears its proportionate share of the expenses of the underlying Fidelity Central Funds.

The Money Market Central Funds seek preservation of capital and current income and are managed by Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (FIMM), an affiliate of FMR.

A complete unaudited list of holdings for each Fidelity Central Fund is available upon request or at the SEC's web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, the financial statements of the Fidelity Central Funds, which are not covered by the Fund's Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, are available on the SEC's web site or upon request.

3. Significant Accounting Policies.

The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions at the date of the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the Fund:

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Security Valuation. Investments are valued as of 4:00 p.m. Eastern time on the last calendar day of the period. Wherever possible, the Fund uses independent pricing services approved by the Board of Trustees to value its investments.

Equity securities, including restricted securities, for which market quotations are readily available, are valued at the last reported sale price or official closing price as reported by an independent pricing service on the primary market or exchange on which they are traded. In the event there were no sales during the day or closing prices are not available, securities are valued at the last quoted bid price. Investments in open-end mutual funds, including the Fidelity Central Funds, are valued at their closing net asset value each business day. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of sixty days or less for which quotations are not readily available are valued at amortized cost, which approximates value.

When current market prices or quotations are not readily available or reliable, valuations may be determined in good faith in accordance with procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees. Factors used in determining value may include significant market or security specific events, changes in interest rates and credit quality, and developments in foreign markets which are monitored by evaluating the performance of ADRs, futures contracts and exchange-traded funds. The frequency with which these procedures are used cannot be predicted and may be utilized to a significant extent. The value of securities used for net asset value (NAV) calculation under these procedures may differ from published prices for the same securities.

Foreign Currency. The Fund uses foreign currency contracts to facilitate transactions in foreign-denominated securities. Losses from these transactions may arise from changes in the value of the foreign currency or if the counterparties do not perform under the contracts' terms.

Foreign-denominated assets, including investment securities, and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate at period end. Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and dividends received and expenses denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars at the exchange rate in effect on the transaction date.

The effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investments are included with the net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities. Other foreign currency transactions resulting in realized and unrealized gain (loss) are disclosed separately.

Investment Transactions and Income. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund's investment holdings and NAV include trades executed through the end of the last business day of the period. The NAV per share for processing shareholder transactions is

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Investment Transactions and Income - continued

calculated as of the close of business of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally 4:00 pm Eastern time and includes trades executed through the end of the prior business day. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and may include proceeds received from litigation. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date, except for certain dividends from foreign securities where the ex-dividend date may have passed, which are recorded as soon as the Fund is informed of the ex-dividend date. Non-cash dividends included in dividend income, if any, are recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Distributions received on securities that represent a return of capital or capital gain are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. The Fund estimates the components of distributions received that may be considered return of capital distributions or capital gain distributions. Interest income and distributions from the Fidelity Central Funds are accrued as earned. Interest income includes coupon interest and amortization of premium and accretion of discount on debt securities. Investment income is recorded net of foreign taxes withheld where recovery of such taxes is uncertain.

Expenses. Most expenses of the trust can be directly attributed to a fund. Expenses which cannot be directly attributed are apportioned among each Fund in the trust. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders. Each year, the Fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company by distributing substantially all of its taxable income and realized gains under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code and filing its U.S. federal tax return. As a result, no provision for income taxes is required. The Fund is subject to the provisions of FASB Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for Uncertainties in Income Taxes (FIN 48). FIN 48 sets forth a minimum threshold for financial statement recognition of the benefit of a tax position taken or expected to be taken in a tax return. The implementation of FIN 48 did not result in any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. Each of the Fund's federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remains subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service. Foreign taxes are provided for based on the Fund's understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests.

Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gain distributions are declared separately for each class. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles. In addition, the Fund will claim a portion of the payment made to redeeming shareholders as a distribution for income tax purposes.

Annual Report

3. Significant Accounting Policies - continued

Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders - continued

Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences will reverse in a subsequent period.

Book-tax differences are primarily due to foreign currency transactions and losses deferred due to wash sales.

The tax-basis components of distributable earnings and the federal tax cost as of period end were as follows:

Unrealized appreciation

$ 32,029,360

 

Unrealized depreciation

(112,195,963)

 

Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

(80,166,603)

 

Undistributed ordinary income

3,708,324

 

Undistributed long-term capital gain

967,118

 

 

 

 

Cost for federal income tax purposes

$ 771,614,845

 

The tax character of distributions paid was as follows:

 

June 30, 2008

June 30, 2007

Ordinary Income

$ 5,440,769

$ 1,575,615

Long-term Capital Gains

8,713,674

3,189,149

Total

$ 14,154,443

$ 4,764,764

New Accounting Pronouncements. In September 2006, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 157, Fair Value Measurements (SFAS 157), was issued and is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. SFAS 157 defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and results in expanded disclosures about fair value measurements.

In addition, in March 2008, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 161, Disclosures about Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities (SFAS 161), was issued and is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2008. SFAS 161 requires enhanced disclosures to provide information about the reasons the Fund invests in derivative instruments, the accounting treatment and the effect derivatives have on financial performance. Management is currently evaluating the impact the adoption of SFAS 161 will have on the Fund's financial statement disclosures.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

4. Operating Policies.

Repurchase Agreements. FMR has received an Exemptive Order from the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) which permits the Fund and other affiliated entities of FMR to transfer uninvested cash balances into joint trading accounts which are then invested in repurchase agreements. The Fund may also invest directly with institutions in repurchase agreements. Repurchase agreements are collateralized by government or non-government securities. Upon settlement date, collateral is held in segregated accounts with custodian banks and may be obtained in the event of a default of the counterparty. The Fund monitors, on a daily basis, the value of the collateral to ensure it is at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). In the event of a default by the counterparty, realization of the collateral proceeds could be delayed, during which time the value of the collateral may decline.

Futures Contracts. The Fund may use futures contracts to manage its exposure to the stock market. Buying futures tends to increase a fund's exposure to the underlying instrument, while selling futures tends to decrease a fund's exposure to the underlying instrument or hedge other fund investments. Upon entering into a futures contract, a fund is required to deposit with a clearing broker, no later than the following business day, an amount ("initial margin") equal to a certain percentage of the face value of the contract. The initial margin may be in the form of cash or securities and is transferred to a segregated account on settlement date. Subsequent payments ("variation margin") are made or received by a fund depending on the daily fluctuations in the value of the futures contract and are accounted for as unrealized gains or losses. Realized gains (losses) are recorded upon the expiration or closing of the futures contract. Losses may arise from changes in the value of the underlying instruments or if the counterparties do not perform under the contract's terms.

5. Purchases and Sales of Investments.

Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term securities, aggregated $1,027,448,757 and $447,578,450, respectively.

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates.

Management Fee. FMR and its affiliates provide the Fund with investment management related services for which the Fund pays a monthly management fee. The management fee is the sum of an individual fund fee rate that is based on an annual rate of .20% of the Fund's average net assets and a group fee rate that averaged .26% during the period. The group fee rate is based upon the average net assets of all the mutual funds advised by FMR. The group fee rate decreases as assets under management increase and

Annual Report

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued

Management Fee - continued

increases as assets under management decrease. For the period, the total annual management fee rate was .46% of the Fund's average net assets.

Distribution and Service Plan. In accordance with Rule 12b-1 of the 1940 Act, the Fund has adopted separate Distribution and Service Plans for each class of shares. Certain classes pay Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC), an affiliate of FMR, separate Distribution and Service Fees, each of which is based on an annual percentage of each class' average net assets. In addition, FDC may pay financial intermediaries for selling shares of the Fund and providing shareholder support services. For the period, the Distribution and Service Fee rates and the total amounts paid to and retained by FDC were as follows:

 

Distribution
Fee

Service
Fee

Paid to
FDC

Retained
by FDC

Class A

0%

.25%

$ 107

$ 102

Class T

.25%

.25%

268

204

Class B

.75%

.25%

431

425

Class C

.75%

.25%

413

413

 

 

 

$ 1,219

$ 1,144

Sales Load. FDC receives a front-end sales charge of up to 5.75% for selling Class A shares, and 3.50% for selling Class T shares, some of which is paid to financial intermediaries for selling shares of the Fund. FDC receives the proceeds of contingent deferred sales charges levied on Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C redemptions. These charges depend on the holding period. The deferred sales charges range from 5% to 1% for Class B, 1% for Class C, 1.00% to .50% for certain purchases of Class A shares and .25% for certain purchases of Class T shares.

For the period, sales charge amounts retained by FDC were as follows:

 

Retained
by FDC

Class A

$ 95

Class T

19

Class B*

5

Class C*

-

 

$ 119

* When Class B and Class C shares are initially sold, FDC pays commissions from its own resources to financial intermediaries through which the sales are made.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

6. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates - continued

Transfer Agent Fees. Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc. (FIIOC), an affiliate of FMR, is the transfer, dividend disbursing and shareholder servicing agent for each class of the Fund. FIIOC receives account fees and asset-based fees that vary according to the account size and type of account of the shareholders of the respective classes of the Fund. FIIOC pays for typesetting, printing and mailing of shareholder reports, except proxy statements. Prior to January 1, 2008, Fidelity Service Company, Inc. (FSC), also an affiliate of FMR, was the transfer agent for Mega Cap Stock shares. For the period, each class paid the following transfer agent fees:

 

Amount

% of
Average
Net Assets

Class A

$ 97

.22

Class T

150

.28

Class B

83

.19

Class C

69

.17

Mega Cap Stock

966,538

.20

Institutional Class

64

.16

 

$ 967,001

 

Accounting and Security Lending Fees. FSC maintains the Fund's accounting records. The accounting fee is based on the level of average net assets for the month. Under a separate contract, FSC administers the security lending program. The security lending fee is based on the number and duration of lending transactions.

Brokerage Commissions. The Fund placed a portion of its portfolio transactions with brokerage firms which are affiliates of the investment adviser. The commissions paid to these affiliated firms were $44,159 for the period.

7. Committed Line of Credit.

The Fund participates with other funds managed by FMR in a $4.2 billion credit facility (the "line of credit") to be utilized for temporary or emergency purposes to fund shareholder redemptions or for other short-term liquidity purposes. The Fund has agreed to pay commitment fees on its pro rata portion of the line of credit, which amounted to $668 and is reflected in Miscellaneous Expense on the Statement of Operations. During the period, there were no borrowings on this line of credit.

8. Security Lending.

The Fund lends portfolio securities from time to time in order to earn additional income. On the settlement date of the loan, the Fund receives collateral (in the form of U.S. Treasury obligations, letters of credit and/or cash) against the loaned securities and

Annual Report

8. Security Lending - continued

maintains collateral in an amount not less than 100% of the market value of the loaned securities during the period of the loan. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. If the borrower defaults on its obligation to return the securities loaned because of insolvency or other reasons, a fund could experience delays and costs in recovering the securities loaned or in gaining access to the collateral. Any cash collateral received is invested in the Fidelity Securities Lending Cash Central Fund. The value of loaned securities and cash collateral at period end are disclosed on the Fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less fees and expenses associated with the loan, plus any premium payments that may be received on the loan of certain types of securities. Security lending income is presented in the Statement of Operations as a component of income from Fidelity Central Funds. Net income from lending portfolio securities during the period amounted to $295,384.

9. Expense Reductions.

Many of the brokers with whom FMR places trades on behalf of the Fund provided services to the Fund in addition to trade execution. These services included payments of certain expenses on behalf of the Fund totaling $2,912 for the period. In addition, through arrangements with the Fund's custodian and each class' transfer agent, credits realized as a result of uninvested cash balances were used to reduce the Fund's expenses. During the period, these credits reduced the Fund's expenses by $3,979. During the period, credits reduced each class' transfer agent expense as noted in the table below.

 

Transfer Agent
expense reduction

 

Mega Cap Stock

$ 3,091

 

In addition, FMR voluntarily agreed to reimburse a portion of the existing class' operating expenses. During the period, this reimbursement reduced the existing class' expenses by $56,875.

10. Other.

The Fund's organizational documents provide former and current trustees and officers with a limited indemnification against liabilities arising in connection with the performance of their duties to the Fund. In the normal course of business, the Fund may also enter into contracts that provide general indemnifications. The Fund's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would be dependent on future claims that may be made against the Fund. The risk of material loss from such claims is considered remote.

Annual Report

Notes to Financial Statements - continued

10. Other - continued

In December 2006, the Independent Trustees, with the assistance of independent counsel, completed an investigation regarding gifts, gratuities and business entertainment provided by certain brokers to certain individuals who were employed on FMR's domestic equity trading desk during the period 2002 to 2004. The Independent Trustees and FMR agreed that, despite the absence of proof that the Fidelity mutual funds experienced diminished execution quality as a result of the improper receipt of gifts and business entertainment, the conduct at issue was serious and was worthy of redress. Accordingly, the Independent Trustees requested, and FMR agreed to make, a payment of $42 million plus accrued interest, which equaled approximately $7.3 million, to certain Fidelity mutual funds.

In March 2008, the Trustees approved a method for allocating this payment among the funds and, in total, FMR paid the fund $14,537, which is recorded in the accompanying Statement of Operations.

In a related administrative order dated March 5, 2008, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") announced a settlement with FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (an affiliate of FMR) involving the SEC's regulatory rules for investment advisers and the improper receipt of gifts, gratuities and business entertainment. Without admitting or denying the SEC's findings, FMR agreed to pay an $8 million civil penalty to the United States Treasury.

11. Distributions to Shareholders.

Distributions to shareholders of each class were as follows:

Years ended June 30,

2008

2007

From net investment income

 

 

Mega Cap Stock

$ 2,028,069

$ 1,575,615

From net realized gain

 

 

Mega Cap Stock

$ 12,126,374

$ 3,189,149

Annual Report

12. Share Transactions.

Transactions for each class of shares were as follows:

 

Shares

Dollars

Years ended June 30,

2008

2007

2008

2007

Class A A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

10,749

-

$ 114,109

$ -

Shares redeemed

-

-

-

-

Net increase (decrease)

10,749

-

$ 114,109

$ -

Class T A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

13,813

-

$ 145,705

$ -

Shares redeemed

(75)

-

(773)

-

Net increase (decrease)

13,738

-

$ 144,932

$ -

Class B A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

10,836

-

$ 114,788

$ -

Shares redeemed

(9)

-

(99)

-

Net increase (decrease)

10,827

-

$ 114,689

$ -

Class C A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

9,953

-

$ 105,728

$ -

Shares redeemed

-

-

-

-

Net increase (decrease)

9,953

-

$ 105,728

$ -

Mega Cap Stock

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

62,330,525

2,800,133

$ 706,742,566

$ 31,267,121

Reinvestment of distributions

1,173,267

441,763

13,245,178

4,570,058

Shares redeemed

(13,126,183)

(3,969,395)

(142,308,777)

(44,033,396)

Net increase (decrease)

50,377,609

(727,499)

$ 577,678,967

$ (8,196,217)

Institutional Class A

 

 

 

 

Shares sold

9,425

-

$ 100,000

$ -

Shares redeemed

-

-

-

-

Net increase (decrease)

9,425

-

$ 100,000

$ -

A Share transactions for Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C and Institutional Class are for the period February 5, 2008 (commencement of sale of shares) to June 30, 2008.

Annual Report

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust and the Shareholders of Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund (a fund of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust) at June 30, 2008, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at June 30, 2008 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

August 19, 2008

Annual Report

Trustees and Officers

The Trustees, Member of the Advisory Board, and executive officers of the trust, as applicable, are listed below. The Board of Trustees governs the fund and is responsible for protecting the interests of shareholders. The Trustees are experienced executives who meet periodically throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities, review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the fund, and review the fund's performance. Except for Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey, each of the Trustees oversees 218 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate. Edward C. Johnson 3d and James C. Curvey oversee 377 funds advised by FMR or an affiliate.

The Trustees hold office without limit in time except that (a) any Trustee may resign; (b) any Trustee may be removed by written instrument, signed by at least two-thirds of the number of Trustees prior to such removal; (c) any Trustee who requests to be retired or who has become incapacitated by illness or injury may be retired by written instrument signed by a majority of the other Trustees; and (d) any Trustee may be removed at any special meeting of shareholders by a two-thirds vote of the outstanding voting securities of the trust. Each Trustee who is not an interested person (as defined in the 1940 Act) (Independent Trustee), shall retire not later than the last day of the calendar year in which his or her 72nd birthday occurs. The Independent Trustees may waive this mandatory retirement age policy with respect to individual Trustees. The executive officers and Advisory Board Members hold office without limit in time, except that any officer and Advisory Board Member may resign or may be removed by a vote of a majority of the Trustees at any regular meeting or any special meeting of the Trustees. Except as indicated, each individual has held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the past five years.

The fund's Statement of Additional Information (SAI) includes more information about the Trustees. To request a free copy, call Fidelity at 1-877-208-0098.

Interested Trustees*:

Correspondence intended for each Trustee who is an interested person may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Edward C. Johnson 3d (78)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 1984

Mr. Johnson is Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Mr. Johnson serves as Chief Executive Officer, Chairman, and a Director of FMR LLC; Chairman and a Director of FMR; Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (FRAC); Chairman and a Director of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc.; and Chairman and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. In addition, Mr. Johnson serves as Chairman and Director of FIL Limited. Previously, Mr. Johnson served as President of FMR LLC (2006-2007).

James C. Curvey (73)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Mr. Curvey also serves as Trustee (2007-present) of other investment companies advised by FMR. Mr. Curvey is a Director of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2007-present). Mr. Curvey is also Vice Chairman (2006-present) and Director of FMR LLC. In addition, Mr. Curvey serves as an overseer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a member of the Trustees for Villanove University.

* Trustees have been determined to be "Interested Trustees" by virtue of, among other things, their affiliation with the trust or various entities under common control with FMR. FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Independent Trustees:

Correspondence intended for each Independent Trustee (that is, the Trustees other than the Interested Trustees) may be sent to Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 55235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-5235.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Dennis J. Dirks (60)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Prior to his retirement in May 2003, Mr. Dirks was Chief Operating Officer and a member of the Board of The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) (1999-2003). He also served as President, Chief Operating Officer, and Board member of The Depository Trust Company (DTC) (1999-2003) and President and Board member of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) (1999-2003). In addition, Mr. Dirks served as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of Manhattan College (2005-2008), and as Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Government Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003) and Chief Executive Officer and Board member of the Mortgage-Backed Securities Clearing Corporation (2001-2003). Mr. Dirks also serves as a Trustee and a member of the Finance Committee of AHRC of Nassau County (2006-present).

Alan J. Lacy (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Lacy serves as Senior Adviser (2007-present) of Oak Hill Capital Partners, L.P. (a private equity firm). Mr. Lacy also served as Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) and Vice Chairman (2005-2006) of Sears Holdings Corporation and Sears, Roebuck and Co. (retail). In addition, Mr. Lacy serves as a member of the Board of Directors of The Western Union Company (global money transfer, 2006-present) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (global pharmaceuticals, 2007-present). Mr. Lacy is a Trustee of the National Parks Conservation Association and The Field Museum of Natural History.

Ned C. Lautenbach (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2000

Mr. Lautenbach is Chairman of the Independent Trustees (2006-present). Mr. Lautenbach is an Advisory Partner of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment firm). Previously, Mr. Lautenbach was with the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) from 1968 until his retirement in 1998. Mr. Lautenbach serves as a Director of Eaton Corporation (diversified industrial) as well as the Philharmonic Center for the Arts in Naples, Florida. He also is a member of the Board of Trustees of Fairfield University (2005-present), as well as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Previously, Mr. Lautenbach served as a Director of Sony Corporation (2006-2007).

Joseph Mauriello (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Prior to his retirement in January 2006, Mr. Mauriello served in numerous senior management positions including Deputy Chairman and Chief Operating Officer (2004-2005), and Vice Chairman of Financial Services (2002-2004) of KPMG LLP US (professional services firm, 1965-
2005). Mr. Mauriello currently serves as a member of the Board of
Directors of XL Capital Ltd. (global insurance and re-insurance company, 2006-present) and of Arcadia Resources Inc. (health care services and products, 2007-present). He also served as a Director of the Hamilton Funds of the Bank of New York (2006-2007).

Cornelia M. Small (63)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Ms. Small is a member of the Investment Commitee, and Chair (2008-present) and a member of the Board of Trustees of Smith College. Ms. Small also serves on the Investment Committee of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (2008-present). Previously, Ms. Small served as Chairperson of the Investment Committee (2002-2008) of Smith College and as Co-Chair (2000-2003) of the Annual Fund for the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. In addition, she served as Chief Investment Officer, Director of Global Equity Investments, and a member of the Board of Directors of Scudder, Stevens & Clark and Scudder Kemper Investments.

William S. Stavropoulos (69)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2001

Mr. Stavropoulos is Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Directors of The Dow Chemical Company, where he previously served in numerous senior management positions, including President (1993-2000; 2002-2003), CEO (1995-2000; 2002-2004), Chairman of the Executive Committee (2000-2006), and as a member of the Board of Directors (1990-2006). Currently, he is a Director of Teradata Corporation (data warehousing and technology solutions, 2008-present), Chemical Financial Corporation, Maersk Inc. (industrial conglomerate), Tyco International, Inc. (multinational manufacturing and services, 2007-present), and a member of the Advisory Board for Metalmark Capital (private equity investment firm, 2005-present). He is a special advisor to Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc. (private equity investment). In addition, Mr. Stavropoulos is a member of the University of Notre Dame Advisory Council for the College of Science.

David M. Thomas (59)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Previously, Mr. Thomas served as Executive Chairman (2005-2006) and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (2000-2005) of IMS Health, Inc. (pharmaceutical and healthcare information solutions). In addition, Mr. Thomas serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Fortune Brands, Inc. (consumer products holding company), and Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc. (marketing communication, 2004-present).

Michael E. Wiley (57)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Mr. Wiley also serves as a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Tulsa (2000-2006; 2007-present). He serves as a Director of Tesoro Corporation (independent oil refiner and marketer, 2005-
present), and a Director of Bill Barrett Corporation (exploration and production company, 2005-present). In addition, he also serves as a Director of Post Oak Bank (privately-held bank, 2004-present). Previously, Mr. Wiley served as a Sr. Energy Advisor of Katzenbach Partners, LLC (consulting firm, 2006-2007), as an Advisory Director of Riverstone Holdings (private investment firm), Chairman, President, and CEO of Baker Hughes, Inc. (oilfield services company, 2000-2004), and as Director of Spinnaker Exploration Company (exploration and production company, 2001-2005).

Advisory Board Member and Executive Officers**:

Correspondence intended for each executive officer and Mr. Lynch may be sent to Fidelity Investments, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

Name, Age; Principal Occupation

Peter S. Lynch (64)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2003

Member of the Advisory Board of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust. Mr. Lynch is Vice Chairman and a Director of FMR, and Vice Chairman (2001-present) and a Director of FMR Co., Inc. Previously, Mr. Lynch served as a Trustee of the Fidelity funds (1990-2003). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of Boston College and as the Chairman of the Inner-City Scholarship Fund.

Kenneth B. Robins (38)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

President and Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Robins also serves as President and Treasurer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2004-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Robins worked at KPMG LLP, where he was a partner in KPMG's department of professional practice (2002-2004).

Walter C. Donovan (46)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Vice President of the fund. Mr. Donovan also serves as Vice President of Fidelity's Equity Funds, President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc., and Executive Vice President of Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Donovan served as Executive Vice President of FMR and FMR Co., Inc. (2005-2007) and Senior Vice President of FMR (2003-2005) and FMR Co., Inc. (2004-2005).

Bruce T. Herring (42)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2006

Vice President of the fund. Mr. Herring also serves as Vice President of certain Equity Funds (2006-present) and Group Chief Investments Officer of FMR. Previously, Mr. Herring served as a portfolio manager for Fidelity U.S. Equity Funds.

Scott C. Goebel (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (CLO) of the fund. Mr. Goebel also serves as Secretary and CLO of other Fidelity funds (2008-present); General Counsel, Secretary, and Senior Vice President of FMR (2008-present); and Deputy General Counsel of FMR LLC. Previously, Mr. Goebel served as Assistant Secretary of the Funds (2007-2008) and as Vice President and Secretary of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2005-2007).

John B. McGinty, Jr. (45)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Assistant Secretary of the fund. Mr. McGinty also serves as Assistant Secretary of Fidelity's other Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC (2004-present). Mr. McGinty also serves as Senior Vice President, Secretary, and Chief Legal Officer of Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) (2007-present). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. McGinty practiced law at Ropes & Gray, LLP.

Holly C. Laurent (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Anti-Money Laundering (AML) officer of the fund. Ms. Laurent also serves as AML officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR LLC. Previously, Ms. Laurent was Senior Vice President and Head of Legal for Fidelity Business Services India Pvt. Ltd. (2006-2008), Senior Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and Group Head for FMR Co. Legal (2005-2006).

Christine Reynolds (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Chief Financial Officer of the fund. Ms. Reynolds also serves as Chief Financial Officer of other Fidelity funds (2008-present). Ms. Reynolds became President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) in August 2008. She served as Chief Operating Officer of FPCMS from 2007 through July 2008. Previously, Ms. Reynolds served as President, Treasurer, and Anti-Money Laundering officer of the Fidelity funds (2004-2007). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Ms. Reynolds worked at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) (1980-2002), where she was an audit partner with PwC's investment management practice.

Kenneth A. Rathgeber (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Chief Compliance Officer of the fund. Mr. Rathgeber also serves as Chief Compliance Officer of Fidelity's Equity and High Income Funds (2004-present). He is Chief Compliance Officer of FMR (2005-present), FMR Co., Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc. (2005-present), Fidelity Research & Analysis Company (2005-present), Fidelity Investments Money Management, Inc. (2005-present), and Strategic Advisers, Inc. (2005-present).

Bryan A. Mehrmann (47)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Deputy Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Mehrmann also serves as Deputy Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR. Previously, Mr. Mehrmann served as Vice President of Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Group (FIIS)/Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Corporation, Inc. (FIIOC) Client Services (1998-2004).

Adrien E. Deberghes (40)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2008

Deputy Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Deberghes also serves as Deputy Treasurer of Fidelity's other Equity and High Income Funds (2008-present) and is an employee of FMR (2008-present). Previously, Mr. Deberghes served as Senior Vice President of Mutual Fund Administration at State Street Corporation (2007-2008), Senior Director of Mutual Fund Administration at Investors Bank & Trust (2005-2007), and Director of Finance for Dunkin' Brands (2000-2005).

Robert G. Byrnes (41)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Byrnes also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Byrnes served as Vice President of FPCMS (2003-2005). Before joining Fidelity Investments, Mr. Byrnes worked at Deutsche Asset Management where he served as Vice President of the Investment Operations Group (2000-2003).

Peter L. Lydecker (54)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2004

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Lydecker also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2004-present) and is an employee of FMR.

Paul M. Murphy (61)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2007

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Murphy also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2007-present) and is an employee of FMR (2007-present). Previously, Mr. Murphy served as Chief Financial Officer of the Fidelity Funds (2005-2006), Vice President and Associate General Counsel of FMR (2007), and Senior Vice President of Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services Group (FPCMS) (1994-2007).

Gary W. Ryan (49)

 

Year of Election or Appointment: 2005

Assistant Treasurer of the fund. Mr. Ryan also serves as Assistant Treasurer of other Fidelity funds (2005-present) and is an employee of FMR (2005-present). Previously, Mr. Ryan served as Vice President of Fund Reporting in Fidelity Pricing and Cash Management Services (FPCMS) (1999-2005).

** FMR Corp. merged with and into FMR LLC on October 1, 2007. Any references to FMR LLC for prior periods are deemed to be references to the prior entity.

Annual Report

Distributions (Unaudited)

The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund voted to pay to shareholders of record at the opening of business on record date, the following distributions per share derived from capital gains realized from sales of portfolio securities, and dividends derived from net investment income:

 

Pay Date

Record Date

Dividends

Capital Gains

Institutional Class

08/11/08

08/08/08

$.057

$.02

The fund hereby designates as a capital gain dividend with respect to the taxable year ended June 30, 2008, $3,867,467, or, if subsequently determined to be different, the net capital gain of such year.

The fund will notify shareholders in January 2009 of amounts for use in preparing 2008 income tax returns.

Annual Report

Proxy Voting Results

A special meeting of the fund's shareholders was held on May 14, 2008. The results of votes taken among shareholders on the proposals before them are reported below. Each vote reported represents one dollar of net asset value held on the record date for the meeting.

PROPOSAL 1

To elect a Board of Trustees.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

James C. Curvey

Affirmative

5,283,033,775.58

95.146

Withheld

269,544,935.17

4.854

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Dennis J. Dirks

Affirmative

5,309,249,727.21

95.618

Withheld

243,328,983.54

4.382

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Edward C. Johnson 3d

Affirmative

5,252,938,642.62

94.604

Withheld

299,640,068.13

5.396

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Alan J. Lacy

Affirmative

5,300,188,165.66

95.455

Withheld

252,390,545.09

4.545

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Ned C. Lautenbach

Affirmative

5,297,558,579.14

95.407

Withheld

255,020,131.61

4.593

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Joseph Mauriello

Affirmative

5,303,242,593.91

95.510

Withheld

249,336,116.84

4.490

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Cornelia M. Small

Affirmative

5,306,804,229.45

95.574

Withheld

245,774,481.30

4.426

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

William S. Stavropoulos

Affirmative

5,284,506,192.07

95.172

Withheld

268,072,518.68

4.828

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

David M. Thomas

Affirmative

5,308,375,429.85

95.602

Withheld

244,203,280.90

4.398

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

Michael E. Wiley

Affirmative

5,304,369,992.98

95.530

Withheld

248,208,717.77

4.470

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

PROPOSAL 2

To amend the Declaration of Trust to reduce the required quorum for future shareholder meetings.A

 

# of
Votes

% of
Votes

Affirmative

4,180,350,765.24

75.287

Against

812,580,433.39

14.634

Abstain

292,815,961.45

5.274

Broker
Non-Votes

266,831,550.67

4.805

TOTAL

5,552,578,710.75

100.000

A Denotes trust-wide proposal and voting results.

Annual Report

Investment Adviser

Fidelity Management & Research Company

Boston, MA

Investment Sub-Advisers

FMR Co. Inc.

Fidelity Management & Research
(U.K.) Inc.

Fidelity Research & Analysis Company

Fidelity Investments Japan Limited

Fidelity International Investment Advisors

Fidelity International Investment Advisors
(U.K.) Limited

General Distributor

Fidelity Distributors Corporation

Boston, MA

Transfer and Service Agents

Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Fidelity Service Company, Inc.

Boston, MA

Custodian

JPMorgan Chase Bank

New York, NY

AGIII-UANN-0808 1.855219.100

Item 2. Code of Ethics

As of the end of the period, June 30, 2008, Fidelity Hastings Street Trust (the trust) has adopted a code of ethics, as defined in Item 2 of Form N-CSR, that applies to its President and Treasurer and its Chief Financial Officer. A copy of the code of ethics is filed as an exhibit to this Form N-CSR.

Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert

The Board of Trustees of the trust has determined that Joseph Mauriello is an audit committee financial expert, as defined in Item 3 of Form N-CSR.   Mr. Mauriello is independent for purposes of Item 3 of Form N-CSR.  

Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services

(a) Audit Fees.

For the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007, the aggregate Audit Fees billed by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) for professional services rendered for the audits of the financial statements, or services that are normally provided in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements for those fiscal years, for Fidelity Fifty, Fidelity Fund, Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund, and Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund (the funds) and for all funds in the Fidelity Group of Funds are shown in the table below.

Fund

2008A

2007A

Fidelity Fifty

$38,000

$41,000

Fidelity Fund

$69,000

$80,000

Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund

$39,000

$41,000

Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund

$37,000

$39,000

All funds in the Fidelity Group of Funds audited by PwC

 

$14,000,000

 

$13,900,000

A

Aggregate amounts may reflect rounding.

(b) Audit-Related Fees.

In each of the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007 the aggregate Audit-Related Fees billed by PwC for services rendered for assurance and related services to each fund that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of the fund's financial statements, but not reported as Audit Fees, are shown in the table below.

Fund

2008A

2007A

Fidelity Fifty

$0

$0

Fidelity Fund

$0

$0

Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund

$0

$0

Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund

$0

$0

A

Aggregate amounts may reflect rounding.

In each of the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007, the aggregate Audit-Related Fees that were billed by PwC that were required to be approved by the Audit Committee for services rendered on behalf of Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR) and entities controlling, controlled by, or under common control with FMR (not including any sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with or overseen by another investment adviser) that provide ongoing services to the funds ("Fund Service Providers") for assurance and related services that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of each fund that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of the fund's financial statements, but not reported as Audit Fees, are shown in the table below.

Billed By

2008A

2007A

PwC

$1,010,000

$0

A

Aggregate amounts may reflect rounding.

Fees included in the audit-related category comprise assurance and related services (e.g., due diligence services) that are traditionally performed by the independent registered public accounting firm. These audit-related services include due diligence related to mergers and acquisitions, accounting consultations and audits in connection with acquisitions, internal control reviews, attest services that are not required by statute or regulation and consultation concerning financial accounting and reporting standards.

(c) Tax Fees.

In each of the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007, the aggregate Tax Fees billed by PwC for professional services rendered for tax compliance, tax advice, and tax planning for each fund is shown in the table below.

Fund

2008A

2007A

Fidelity Fifty

$3,200

$2,900

Fidelity Fund

$3,900

$3,800

Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund

$3,200

$2,900

Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund

$3,200

$2,900

A

Aggregate amounts may reflect rounding.

In each of the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007, the aggregate Tax Fees billed by PwC that were required to be approved by the Audit Committee for professional services rendered on behalf of the Fund Service Providers for tax compliance, tax advice, and tax planning that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of each fund is shown in the table below.

Billed By

2008A

2007A

PwC

$0

$0

A

Aggregate amounts may reflect rounding.

Fees included in the Tax Fees category comprise all services performed by professional staff in the independent registered public accounting firm's tax division except those services related to the audit. Typically, this category would include fees for tax compliance, tax planning, and tax advice. Tax compliance, tax advice, and tax planning services include preparation of original and amended tax returns, claims for refund and tax payment-planning services, assistance with tax audits and appeals, tax advice related to mergers and acquisitions and requests for rulings or technical advice from taxing authorities.

(d) All Other Fees.

In each of the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007, the aggregate Other Fees billed by PwC for all other non-audit services rendered to the funds is shown in the table below.

Fund

2008A

2007A

Fidelity Fifty

$2,000

$2,000

Fidelity Fund

$5,500

$6,100

Fidelity Growth Discovery Fund

$1,900

$1,400

Fidelity Mega Cap Stock Fund

$1,400

$1,300

A

Aggregate amounts may reflect rounding.

In each of the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007, the aggregate Other Fees billed by PwC that were required to be approved by the Audit Committee for all other non-audit services rendered on behalf of the Fund Service Providers that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of each fund is shown in the table below.

Billed By

2008A

2007A

PwC

$235,000

$225,000

A

Aggregate amounts may reflect rounding.

Fees included in the All Other Fees category include services related to internal control reviews, strategy and other consulting, financial information systems design and implementation, consulting on other information systems, and other tax services unrelated to the fund.

(e) (1)

Audit Committee Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures:

The trust's Audit Committee must pre-approve all audit and non-audit services provided by the independent registered public accounting firm relating to the operations or financial reporting of the funds. Prior to the commencement of any audit or non-audit services to a fund, the Audit Committee reviews the services to determine whether they are appropriate and permissible under applicable law.

The trust's Audit Committee has adopted policies and procedures to, among other purposes, provide a framework for the Committee's consideration of non-audit services by the audit firms that audit the Fidelity funds. The policies and procedures require that any non-audit service provided by a fund audit firm to a Fidelity Fund and any non-audit service provided by a fund auditor to a Fund Service Provider that relates directly to the operations and financial reporting of a Fidelity fund (Covered Service) are subject to approval by the Audit Committee before such service is provided. Non-audit services provided by a fund audit firm for a Fund Service Provider that do not relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of a Fidelity fund (Non-Covered Service) but that are expected to exceed $50,000 are also subject to pre-approval by the Audit Committee.

All Covered Services, as well as Non-Covered Services that are expected to exceed $50,000, must be approved in advance of provision of the service either: (i) by formal resolution of the Audit Committee, or (ii) by oral or written approval of the service by the Chair of the Audit Committee (or if the Chair is unavailable, such other member of the Audit Committee as may be designated by the Chair to act in the Chair's absence). The approval contemplated by (ii) above is permitted where the Treasurer determines that action on such an engagement is necessary before the next meeting of the Audit Committee. Neither pre-approval nor advance notice of Non-Covered Service engagements for which fees are not expected to exceed $50,000 is required; such engagements are to be reported to the Audit Committee monthly.

(e) (2)

Services approved pursuant to paragraph (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X:

 

Audit-Related Fees:

There were no amounts that were approved by the Audit Committee pursuant to the de minimis exception for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007 on behalf of each fund.

There were no amounts that were required to be approved by the Audit Committee pursuant to the de minimis exception for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007 on behalf of the Fund Service Providers that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of each fund.

Tax Fees:

There were no amounts that were approved by the Audit Committee pursuant to the de minimis exception for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007 on behalf of each fund.

There were no amounts that were required to be approved by the Audit Committee pursuant to the de minimis exception for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007 on behalf of the Fund Service Providers that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of each fund.

All Other Fees:

There were no amounts that were approved by the Audit Committee pursuant to the de minimis exception for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007 on behalf of each fund.

There were no amounts that were required to be approved by the Audit Committee pursuant to the de minimis exception for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007 on behalf of the Fund Service Providers that relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of each fund.

(f) Not applicable.

(g) For the fiscal years ended June 30, 2008 and June 30, 2007, the aggregate fees billed by PwC of $2,245,000A and $1,350,000A for non-audit services rendered on behalf of the funds, FMR (not including any sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with or overseen by another investment adviser) and Fund Service Providers relating to Covered Services and Non-Covered Services are shown in the table below.

 

2008A

2007A

Covered Services

$1,270,000

$250,000

Non-Covered Services

$975,000

$1,100,000

A

Aggregate amounts may reflect rounding.

(h) The trust's Audit Committee has considered Non-Covered Services that were not pre-approved that were provided by PwC to Fund Service Providers to be compatible with maintaining the independence of PwC in its audit of the funds, taking into account representations from PwC, in accordance with Independence Standards Board Standard No.1, regarding its independence from the funds and their related entities.

Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants

Not applicable.

Item 6. Investments

(a) Not applicable.

(b) 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. Purchase 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

There were no material changes to the procedures by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the trust's Board of Trustees.

Item 11. Controls and Procedures

(a)(i) The President and Treasurer and the Chief Financial Officer have concluded that the trust's disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act) provide reasonable assurances that material information relating to the trust is made known to them by the appropriate persons, based on their evaluation of these controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report.

(a)(ii) There was no change in the trust's internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act) 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 trust's internal control over financial reporting.

Item 12. Exhibits

(a)

(1)

Code of Ethics pursuant to Item 2 of Form N-CSR is filed and attached hereto as EX-99.CODE ETH.

(a)

(2)

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.

(a)

(3)

Not applicable.

(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.

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.

Fidelity Hastings Street Trust

By:

/s/Kenneth B. Robins

 

Kenneth B. Robins

 

President and Treasurer

 

 

Date:

August 28, 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.

By:

/s/Kenneth B. Robins

 

Kenneth B. Robins

 

President and Treasurer

 

 

Date:

August 28, 2008

By:

/s/Christine Reynolds

 

Christine Reynolds

 

Chief Financial Officer

 

 

Date:

August 28, 2008

EX-99.CERT 2 ex99.htm

Exhibit EX-99.CERT

I, Kenneth B. Robins, certify that:

1. I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust;

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 upon 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.

Date: August 28, 2008

/s/Kenneth B. Robins

Kenneth B. Robins

President and Treasurer

I, Christine Reynolds, certify that:

1. I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust;

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 upon 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.

Date: August 28, 2008

/s/Christine Reynolds

Christine Reynolds

Chief Financial Officer

EX-99.906 CERT 3 ex906.htm

Exhibit EX-99.906CERT

Certification Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (subsections (a) and (b) of section 1350, chapter 63 of title 18, United States Code)

In connection with the attached Report of Fidelity Hastings Street Trust (the "Trust") on Form N-CSR to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Report"), each of the undersigned officers of the Trust does hereby certify that, to the best of such officer's knowledge:

1. The Report fully complies with the requirements of 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

2. The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Trust as of, and for, the periods presented in the Report.

Dated: August 28, 2008

/s/Kenneth B. Robins

Kenneth B. Robins

President and Treasurer

Dated: August 28, 2008

/s/Christine Reynolds

Christine Reynolds

Chief Financial Officer

A signed original of this written statement required by Section 906, or other document authenticating, acknowledging, or otherwise adopting the signature that appears in typed form within the electronic version of this written statement required by Section 906, has been provided to the Trust and will be retained by the Trust and furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission or its staff upon request.

EX-99.CODE ETH 4 ex99code.htm

EXHIBIT EX-99.CODE ETH

FIDELITY FUNDS' CODE OF ETHICS FOR

PRESIDENT, TREASURER AND PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTING OFFICER

I. Purposes of the Code/Covered Officers

This document constitutes the Code of Ethics ("the Code") adopted by the Fidelity Funds (the "Funds") pursuant to the provisions of Rule 30b2-1(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940), which Rule implements Sections 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 with respect to registered investment companies. The Code applies to the Fidelity Funds' President and Treasurer, and Chief Financial Officer (the "Covered Officers"). Fidelity's Ethics Office, a part of Fidelity Enterprise Compliance within Risk Oversight, administers the Code.

The purposes of the Code are to deter wrongdoing and to promote, on the part of the Covered Officers:

  • honest and ethical conduct, including the ethical handling of actual or apparent conflicts of interest between personal and professional relationships;
  • full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure in reports and documents that the Fidelity Funds submit to the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), and in other public communications by a Fidelity Fund;
  • compliance with applicable laws and governmental rules and regulations;
  • the prompt internal reporting to an appropriate person or persons identified in the Code of violations of the Code; and
  • accountability for adherence to the Code.
  • Each Covered Officer should adhere to a high standard of business ethics and should be sensitive to situations that may give rise to actual as well as apparent conflicts of interest.

II. Covered Officers Should Handle Ethically

Actual and Apparent Conflicts of Interest

Overview. A "conflict of interest" occurs when a Covered Officer's private interest interferes with the interests of, or his service to, the Fidelity Funds. For example, a conflict of interest would arise if a Covered Officer, or a member of his family, receives improper personal benefits as a result of his position with the Fidelity Funds.

Certain conflicts of interest arise out of the relationships between Covered Officers and the Fidelity Funds and already are subject to conflict of interest provisions in the Investment Company Act of 1940 ("Investment Company Act") and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 ("Investment Advisers Act"). For example, Covered Officers may not individually engage in certain transactions (such as the purchase or sale of securities or other property) with a Fidelity Fund because of their status as "affiliated persons" of the Fund. Separate compliance programs and procedures of the Fidelity Funds, Fidelity Management & Research Company ("FMR") and the other Fidelity companies are designed to prevent, or identify and correct, violations of these provisions. This Code does not, and is not intended to, repeat or replace these programs and procedures, and such conflicts fall outside of the parameters of this Code.

Although typically not presenting an opportunity for improper personal benefit, conflicts arise from, or as a result of, the contractual relationship between the Fidelity Funds and FMR (or another Fidelity company) of which the Covered Officers are also officers or employees. As a result, this Code recognizes that the Covered Officers will, in the normal course of their duties (whether formally for the Fidelity Funds, FMR or another Fidelity company), be involved in establishing policies and implementing decisions that have different effects on the Fidelity Funds, FMR and other Fidelity companies. The participation of the Covered Officers in such activities is inherent in the contractual relationship between the Fidelity Funds and FMR (or another Fidelity company), and is consistent with the performance by the Covered Officers of their duties as officers of the Fidelity Funds. Thus, if performed in conformity with the provisions of the Investment Company Act and the Investment Advisers Act, such activities will be deemed to have been handled ethically. In addition, it is recognized by the Funds' Board of Trustees ("Board") that the Covered Officers also may be officers or employees of one or more other Fidelity Funds covered by this Code.

Other conflicts of interest are covered by the Code, even if such conflicts of interest are not subject to provisions in the Investment Company Act and the Investment Advisers Act. The following list provides examples of conflicts of interest under the Code, but Covered Officers should keep in mind that these examples are not exhaustive. The overarching principle is that the personal interest of a Covered Officer should not be placed improperly before the interest of a Fidelity Fund.

* * *

Each Covered Officer must:

  • not use his or her personal influence or personal relationships improperly to influence investment decisions or financial reporting by any Fidelity Fund whereby the Covered Officer would benefit personally to the detriment of any Fidelity Fund;
  • not cause a Fidelity Fund to take action, or fail to take action, for the individual personal benefit of the Covered Officer rather than the benefit of the Fidelity Fund;
  • not engage in any outside business activity, including serving as a director or trustee, that prevents the Covered Officer from devoting appropriate time and attention to the Covered Officer's responsibilities with the Fidelity Funds;
  • not have a consulting or employment relationship with any of the Fidelity Funds' service providers that are not affiliated with Fidelity; and
  • not retaliate against any employee or Covered Officer for reports of actual or potential misconduct, which are made in good faith.

With respect to other fact patterns, if a Covered Officer is in doubt, other potential conflict of interest situations should be described immediately to the Fidelity Ethics Office for resolution. Similarly, any questions a Covered Officer has generally regarding the application or interpretation of the Code should be directed to the Fidelity Ethics Office immediately.

III. Disclosure and Compliance

  • Each Covered Officer should familiarize himself with the disclosure requirements generally applicable to the Fidelity Funds.
  • Each Covered Officer should not knowingly misrepresent, or cause others to misrepresent, facts about any Fidelity Fund to others, whether within or outside Fidelity, including to the Board and auditors, and to governmental regulators and self-regulatory organizations;
  • Each Covered Officer should, to the extent appropriate within his area of responsibility, consult with other officers and employees of the Fidelity Funds, FMR and the Fidelity service providers, and with the Board's Compliance Committee, with the goal of promoting full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure in the reports and documents the Fidelity Funds file with, or submit to, the SEC and in other public communications made by the Fidelity Funds; and
  • It is the responsibility of each Covered Officer to promote compliance with the standards and restrictions imposed by applicable laws, rules and regulations.

IV. Reporting and Accountability

Each Covered Officer must:

  • upon receipt of the Code, and annually thereafter, submit to the Fidelity Ethics Office an acknowledgement stating that he or she has received, read, and understands the Code; and
  • notify the Fidelity Ethics Office promptly if he or she knows of any violation of the Code. Failure to do so is itself a violation of this Code.

The Fidelity Ethics Office shall take all action it considers appropriate to investigate any actual or potential violations reported to it. Upon completion of the investigation, if necessary, the matter will be reviewed with senior management or other appropriate parties, and a determination will be made as to whether any action should be taken as detailed below. The Covered Officer will be informed of any action determined to be appropriate. The Fidelity Ethics Office will inform the Ethics Oversight Committee of all Code violations and actions taken in response. Without implied limitation, appropriate remedial, disciplinary or preventive action may include a written warning, a letter of censure, suspension, dismissal or, in the event of criminal or other serious violations of law, notification of the SEC or other appropriate law enforcement authorities. Additionally, other legal remedies may be pursued.

The policies and procedures described in the Code do not create any obligations to any person or entity other than the Fidelity Funds. The Code is intended solely for the internal use by the Fidelity Funds and does not constitute a promise, contract or an admission by or on behalf of any Fidelity Fund as to any fact, circumstance, or legal conclusion. The Fidelity Funds, the Fidelity companies and the Fidelity Ethics Officer retain the discretion to decide whether the Code applies to a specific situation, and how it should be interpreted.

V. Oversight

Material violations of this Code will be reported promptly by FMR to the Board's Compliance Committee. In addition, at least once each year, FMR will provide a written report to the Board, which describes any issues arising under the Code since the last report to the Board, including, but not limited to, information about material violations of the Code and action taken in response to the material violations.

VI. Other Policies and Procedures

This Code shall be the sole code of ethics adopted by the Fidelity Funds for purposes of Section 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the rules and forms applicable to registered investment companies thereunder. Other Fidelity policies or procedures that cover the behavior or activities of Covered Officers are separate requirements applying to the Covered Officers (and others), and are not part of this Code.

VII. Amendments

Any material amendments or changes to this Code must be approved or ratified by a majority vote of the Board, including a majority of the Trustees who are not interested persons of the Fidelity Funds.

VIII. Records and Confidentiality

Records of any violation of the Code and of the actions taken as a result of such violations will be kept by the Fidelity Ethics Office. All reports and records prepared or maintained pursuant to this Code will be considered confidential and shall be maintained and protected accordingly. Except as otherwise required by law or this Code, such matters shall not be disclosed to anyone other than the Fidelity Ethics Office, the Ethics Oversight Committee, the Board, appropriate personnel at the relevant Fidelity company or companies and the legal counsel of any or all of the foregoing.

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