0001193125-18-309374.txt : 20181029 0001193125-18-309374.hdr.sgml : 20181029 20181026182101 ACCESSION NUMBER: 0001193125-18-309374 CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: N-CSR PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 12 CONFORMED PERIOD OF REPORT: 20180831 FILED AS OF DATE: 20181029 DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20181026 EFFECTIVENESS DATE: 20181029 FILER: COMPANY DATA: COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0000045156 IRS NUMBER: 840578481 STATE OF INCORPORATION: DE FISCAL YEAR END: 0831 FILING VALUES: FORM TYPE: N-CSR SEC ACT: 1940 Act SEC FILE NUMBER: 811-01512 FILM NUMBER: 181142532 BUSINESS ADDRESS: STREET 1: 6803 SOUTH TUCSON WAY CITY: CENTENNIAL STATE: CO ZIP: 80112-3924 BUSINESS PHONE: 303-768-3200 MAIL ADDRESS: STREET 1: 6803 SOUTH TUCSON WAY CITY: CENTENNIAL STATE: CO ZIP: 80112-3924 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: OPPENHEIMER EQUITY INCOME FUND DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19980710 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: OPPENHEIMER EQUITY INCOME FUND INC DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19920703 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: CENTENNIAL EQUITY INCOME FUND INC DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19830428 0000045156 S000006964 OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND C000018996 A C000018997 B C000018998 C C000018999 R C000096103 Y C000135873 I N-CSR 1 d635712dncsr.htm OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund

 

 

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 811-1512

 

 

Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund

(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

 

 

6803 South Tucson Way, Centennial, Colorado 80112-3924

(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

 

 

Cynthia Lo Bessette

OFI Global Asset Management, Inc.

225 Liberty Street, New York, New York 10281-1008

(Name and address of agent for service)

 

 

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (303) 768-3200

Date of fiscal year end: August 31

Date of reporting period: 8/31/2018

 

 

 


Item 1. Reports to Stockholders.

 


LOGO


Table of Contents

 

Fund Performance Discussion      3  
Portfolio Positioning      15  
Fund Expenses      19  
Consolidated Statement of Investments      21  
Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities      55  
Consolidated Statement of Operations      57  
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Net Assets      59  
Consolidated Financial Highlights      60  
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements      70  
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm      98  
Federal Income Tax Information      99  
Board Approval of the Fund’s Investment Advisory and Sub- Advisory Agreements      100  
Portfolio Proxy Voting Policies and Guidelines; Updates to Statement of Investments      104  
Trustees and Officers      105  
Privacy Notice      110  

    

 

 

 

Class A Shares

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS AT 8/31/18

 

          Class A Shares of the Fund                            
                          Bloomberg         
     Without Sales      With Sales      Russell 3000        Barclays U.S.      Reference Index  
     Charge      Charge      Index        Aggregate Bond         
                          Index         
1-Year      4.10%             -1.88%             20.25%             -1.05%             6.15%       
5-Year      5.05                3.81                14.25                2.49                6.69          
10-Year      3.16                2.55                10.89                3.70                6.73          

Performance data quoted represents past performance, which does not guarantee future results. The investment return and principal value of an investment in the Fund will fluctuate so that an investor’s shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Fund returns include changes in share price, reinvested distributions, and a 5.75% maximum applicable sales charge except where “without sales charge” is indicated. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. Returns do not consider capital gains or income taxes on an individual’s investment. Returns for periods of less than one year are cumulative and not annualized. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit oppenheimerfunds.com or call 1.800.CALL OPP (225.5677). See Fund prospectuses and summary prospectuses for more information on share classes and sales charges.

 

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Fund Performance Discussion

The Fund’s Class A shares (without sales charge) generated a total return of 4.10% during the one-year period ended 8/31/18. On a relative basis, the Fund underperformed its Reference Index, a customized weighted index comprised of 65% Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Bloomberg Barclays Index) and 35% Russell 3000 Index, which returned 6.15%. Measured separately, the Bloomberg Barclays Index returned -1.05% and the Russell 3000 Index returned 20.25%. The Fund marginally underperformed the Morningstar 30-50% Equity Category average, which returned 4.35%.

 

All three of the Fund’s strategies generated positive returns during the reporting period. The High Grade Fixed Income and Opportunistic strategies both outperformed the return of the Bloomberg Barclays Index. The Equity & Equity Like strategy generated a double-digit return, but underperformed the Russell 3000 Index. The underperformance of the Fund versus its Reference Index

was the result of underperformance in the equity strategy. During the reporting period, in equities broadly speaking, growth substantially outperformed value and the strong performance was driven by a narrow handful of stocks. Given these dynamics, it is not surprising that a core domestic-focused equity portfolio with a conservative tilt underperformed. The Opportunistic strategy

 

 

 

COMPARISON OF CHANGE IN VALUE OF $10,000 HYPOTHETICAL INVESTMENTS IN:

 

LOGO

 

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outperformed the Bloomberg Barclays Index by more than 650 basis points (bps) during the period on the back of strong security selection. The Fund has continued to deliver on its value proposition of attractive total returns combined with low volatility (3.63% standard deviation versus 9.08% for the S&P 500 and 8.64% for the Russell 3000 Index during the reporting period), good downside risk mitigation, an attractive yield, and high risk-adjusted returns. For the period from April 2009 to August 2018 (the time that Michelle Borré has been lead portfolio manager), the Fund has generated a Sharpe Ratio of 1.69 versus 1.25 for the Morningstar 30-50% Equity Allocation Category peer group average and a Sortino Ratio of 3.88 versus 2.39 for the peer group average. (A higher number indicates a superior risk-adjusted return.)

The Fund’s Class A shares paid four dividends during the period: $0.0609 per share in June 2018, $0.0608 per share in March 2018, $0.0856 per share in December 2017 and $0.0613 per share in September 2017 for a total of $0.2686 per share in the last 12 months. (The Fund’s Class A shares had a net asset value (NAV) of $10.28 per share on 8/31/18.) In addition, we believe that upside/ downside capture ratios provide a good measure of the Fund’s downside protection. The upside capture ratio is the cumulative performance of the Fund in all up months of positive return divided by the cumulative performance of the index in those months. The downside capture ratio is the cumulative performance of the Fund in all down months

of negative return divided by the cumulative performance of the index in those months. For the period from April 2009 to August 2018 (the time that Michelle Borré has been lead portfolio manager), the Fund’s upside capture has been 94% of the Morningstar 30-50% Equity Allocation Category peer group average and its downside capture has been 60%. For the same period, the Fund’s upside capture has been 98% of the Reference Index and its downside capture has been 90%. This level of asymmetry means that the Fund has delivered significantly more upside than downside during that period. In our view, these distributions, combined with our upside/ downside capture ratios, are a testament to the Fund’s intelligent blending of multiple asset classes.

More broadly, the Fund seeks to deliver total return by providing a stream of income along with capital appreciation while attempting to mitigate downside risk. The Fund invests opportunistically in a broad range of securities across asset classes and capital structures. The portfolio is designed as a conservative investment vehicle with income, upside potential, strong risk-adjusted returns, controlled drawdowns and low volatility. Our investment process combines top down and bottom up analyses both within and across asset classes. We are fundamentally driven and longer-term, value-oriented investors.

MARKET OVERVIEW

Regarding the macro environment, risk assets around the world rallied from the date of

 

 

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President Donald Trump’s election victory in November 2016 through 12/31/17, pushing valuations close to all-time highs for a variety of asset classes. During the first eight months of 2018, however, many of these asset classes have reversed course and posted losses. For example, although the S&P 500 generated a positive total return of 9.94% in the first eight months of 2018, the DAX Index (a measure of blue chip German stocks) has fallen 4.29%, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index has fallen 6.99%, and the Shanghai Composite Index has fallen 15.72% over the same period. In addition, the performance difference between growth and value equities has continued to be enormous, with the Russell 1000 Growth Index generating a 27.23% return during the reporting period compared to the 12.47% return for the Russell 1000 Value Index. Against this backdrop, interest rates have continued to climb higher, with the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rising from 1.85% on election day to 2.86% by the end of the reporting period for an increase of 101 bps. Fixed income has come under pressure as rates have continued to back up, with the Bloomberg Barclays Index falling 1.05% during the reporting period. In our view, Treasuries could become less helpful to investors during market selloffs, in part because they offer low yields, making the risk/ reward tradeoff unattractive. We believe this is especially true as the Federal Reserve (Fed) continues on its well-telegraphed path of raising rates while simultaneously shrinking its balance sheet.

The Trump administration has injected a level of policy uncertainty into the markets that investors have not seen in quite a while. At the same time, we believe structural flaws in both Europe and Japan remain unresolved. China and other emerging markets will likely eventually face slower long-term growth because the current growth is overly reliant, in our view, on excessive credit expansion. Meanwhile, we believe that in a number of countries there has been a meaningful change in the relationship between elected representatives and voters, or stated differently, between those who make policies and those who actually pay for those policies. We have discussed in previous commentaries the impact of Brexit along with the rise of populist parties in Europe. In March 2018, Italian voters shunned center left parties and instead voted for populist and center right candidates, resulting in a hung parliament. Although the Euro-skeptic/ populist Five Star party and the anti-immigrant League party have subsequently formed a ruling coalition, it remains to be seen how effectively they can govern and for how long. The new government is also likely to test the existing budget constraints in the EU. More recently, in September 2018, Sweden held elections but no single party won enough votes to form a government. The nationalist Sweden Democrats (SD) won 18% of the vote although the center-left ruling coalition and the center-right alliance (both with approximately 40% of the vote) have refused to govern with SD. Shortly after that election, Prime Minister Stefan Löfven lost a no-confidence vote and will be forced

 

 

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to step down. A major issue in the election was Sweden’s immigration policy. Joining the EU opened the door to new problems like immigration and the need to bail out peripheral nations. However, the EU does not seem capable of solving these issues, in our opinion, which has caused significant internal tension. We believe the EU in its current form is unsustainable, although we do not know what specific catalysts might cause changes in its structure or when those changes might occur.

Moreover, we believe investors now face rising geopolitical risks both in the U.S. and around the world. Trade disputes between the U.S. and China, Europe, Japan, Canada and Mexico have the potential to escalate meaningfully. At the same time, the Trump administration faces challenges at home including an investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller, a growing list of announced retirements by Republicans in Congress, and looming mid-term elections. Under these circumstances, we believe investors could benefit from a broader toolkit than was needed during the risk-on, quantitative easing (QE)-supported market of the past several years and a different toolkit than has been effective in the past because of the unfavorable risk/reward in conservative fixed income. Part of this broader toolkit could include the Fund’s ability to take short positions, which can profit from market declines. This kind of short exposure is available through the Opportunistic strategy of the Fund. (Because the Fund does not have a prime broker, we do not short

individual securities. However, we can take negative positions, or the functional equivalent of short exposures, through a variety of different financial instruments.)

FUND REVIEW

Equity & Equity Like Strategy. The Fund’s Equity & Equity-Like strategy may include common stocks, equity derivatives and hybrid securities with equity sensitivity. This strategy generated a double-digit return during the reporting period, but underperformed the Russell 3000 Index. The strongest contributors to performance were our call options on the S&P 500 and our positions in Cisco and Apple. The largest detractors were our positions in Philip Morris International, General Electric, and Dish Network.

Our call options on the S&P 500 contributed to performance as the index climbed 19.66% in the period on the back of strong earnings acceleration, solid quarterly results, and continued economic growth in the U.S. We like the asymmetry of the call options, which we believe have limited downside and considerably more potential upside.

Our position in Cisco Systems (CSCO), a manufacturer of networking hardware and telecommunications equipment, also contributed to performance. The company’s shares have benefited from a variety of factors. First, Cisco is showing tangible evidence of its ability to transition to a higher mix of recurring revenue through a

 

 

6        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


subscription model. Second, the company has been a major beneficiary of capital repatriation enabled by the recently enacted tax reforms. Management has made clear that it will use these funds to improve its shareholder capital allocation program. Finally, Cisco has benefited from overall improvement in the enterprise spending environment on the back of improved economic conditions, higher corporate cash flows (resulting from lower taxes), and accelerated depreciation available under the new tax laws.

Our position in Apple Inc. (AAPL), a technology company that designs and sells consumer electronics and online services, contributed to performance as the company benefited from investor anticipation surrounding its upcoming product cycle. In addition, investors have gained a better appreciation of the benefit of Apple’s recurring revenue stream from services as well as its aggressive plans to return capital to shareholders. In this regard, in May 2018, management announced a new $100 billion share repurchase program and increased the dividend by 16%. The buyback program commenced in June 2018 and management expects to complete it at a fast pace. The increase in the dividend is the largest since the company re-introduced the dividend in 2012.

In contrast, our position in Philip Morris International (PM), a cigarette and tobacco company, detracted from performance. The shares suffered as investors have become

concerned about possible market saturation for iQOS in Japan. Although we expect growth to slow in that market, the global rollout of iQOS is still in the early stages. We expect the heat-not-burn technology to enjoy a multi-year penetration trend and expect iQOS to be accretive to market share and potentially to margins for the company.

Our holdings in General Electric (GE), an industrial conglomerate focused on aviation, power, energy, and healthcare, underperformed during the period in part due to investors’ concerns about the magnitude of revisions to the earnings outlook for 2017-2018. The concerns stem from a weaker global gas power generation outlook, a longer recovery period for the Oil & Gas business and a slowing wide-body aerospace cycle. The market has also been penalizing GE’s lower free cash flow conversion rate of 65% versus its historical rate of 80%. The announced 50% dividend cut in November 2017 was also a negative that hurt the stock, but gives the company needed flexibility to fund future capital expenditures. The January 2018 announcement of a reinsurance charge and required cash contribution for GE Capital compounded the problem. However, subsequent to the end of the reporting period, the company announced the appointment of a new CEO, Larry Culp, to help turn the company around. Mr. Culp’s success in leading Danaher for 14 years and his reputation for operating excellence, combined with investors’ confidence in his strategic vision, has resulted in GE’s stock moving noticeably higher since the announcement.

 

 

7        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


We believe these actions should translate into improved free cash flow generation over time.

Our position in Dish Network (DISH), a television services provider, was also a detractor. The shares have suffered as there had been investor expectations that management could monetize the company’s existing spectrum holdings now that all service providers are free to discuss mergers, joint ventures and partnerships. For the last few years, these conversations weren’t possible because of anti-collusion rules that were in place as the government executed several spectrum auctions. While it’s uncertain when, or if, DISH will partner with another company, we are confident that in a capacity-constrained world, its spectrum is valuable and management will be opportunistic in monetizing these assets.

Opportunistic strategy. In this strategy we seek asymmetric risk/reward opportunities and investments where the return profile has a low correlation to traditional investment strategies. We also seek investments that can help to achieve the broader objectives of the Fund. At the end of the reporting period, this strategy included investments in senior loans through Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund, LLC, asset-backed securities (ABS), corporate bonds, and certain derivatives. This strategy outperformed the Bloomberg Barclays Index by over 650 bps during the reporting period, largely on the back of strong security selection. Among the top performers in this strategy were our positions in senior bank loans, the preferred stock of Citigroup, and

our spread position in European sovereign debt. The biggest detractors were our position in gold, our pair trade that was long the U.S. dollar and short the Thai baht, and our holdings in bonds issued by Wells Fargo.

Our holdings in the Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund, LLC contributed to performance in the period. The economy continued to grow while still easy financial conditions prevailed. Floating rate loans have benefited from the rise in U.S. interest rates as well as the rise in Libor since Trump’s election victory. The floating rate nature of these securities tends to make them more attractive than fixed rate securities in a rising rate environment. Credit spreads tightened in the period as solid economic growth continues to support asset prices. Default rates remain under 2%, which is below the historical average.

Our position in the preferred stock of Citigroup also contributed to performance. Citigroup Capital XIII is a trust preferred security that pays a floating interest rate of 3-month Libor plus 637 bps; currently, 3-month Libor is 234 bps. Since this is a floating rate security, it contributed to performance during a period of rising yields on longer-dated Treasuries. In addition, Citigroup Capital XIII outperformed the S&P Preferred Stock Index during the twelve months ended 8/31/18.

Our long/short position in European credit spreads contributed to performance as well. This position benefits from wider spreads between Germany and less creditworthy

 

 

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European sovereigns (i.e., Italy, Spain and France). In March 2018, Italian voters shunned center left parties and instead voted for populist and center right candidates, resulting in a hung parliament. Since then, the Euro-skeptic/populist Five Star party and the anti-immigrant League party have formed a ruling coalition. The government’s plans call for a larger fiscal deficit, which detracts from Italy’s credit profile. Furthermore, we believe it increases the strain on the EU. Both of these factors caused Italian credit spreads to widen, benefiting our position.

In contrast, our position in gold (GLD) detracted from performance as the yellow metal declined by 9.1% to $1,201 per troy ounce in the period. Gold bullion, which began the period at $1,321, oscillated in a $206 range before ending the period with a loss of $120 per ounce. The precious metals complex fell on the back of a stronger dollar (the U.S. Dollar Index climbed 2.7% in the period), continued solid economic growth, rising U.S. interest rates, and moderate inflation expectations. We believe some investors are increasingly viewing gold and other precious metals as warrants (i.e., long-dated options) on monetary policy going off the rails or a potential hedge against competitive currency debasement or adverse geopolitical events.

Our pair trade that was long U.S. dollar / short Thai baht detracted from performance as well. We exited this position in June. These bonds were fixed to floating rate securities that were paying a fixed rate of

5.9%. If these securities were not called (redeemed) in June of 2024, they would pay a floating rate of 3-month Libor plus 311 bps. The bonds were negatively impacted in the period by rising yields on longer-dated Treasuries as well as by widening credit spreads. Wider spreads reduced the probability that these bonds would be called, which in turn negatively impacted performance. During the twelve months ended 8/31/18, the total return from these securities outperformed the return from longer-dated Treasuries, but underperformed the return from the S&P Preferred Stock Index.

High Grade Fixed Income strategy.

The High Grade Fixed Income strategy generated positive returns and outperformed the Bloomberg Barclays Index during the reporting period. This strategy continues to favor corporate bonds, mortgages, and other securitized products over government debt. The dollar was generally stronger during the period against a basket of currencies for the largest trading partners of the U.S. In addition, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note climbed from 1.85% to 2.86% by the end of the period. Contributing to this strategy’s outperformance was an allocation to non-agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS), which benefited from solid fundamentals and a strong technical environment. Also benefiting relative performance was an allocation to BB-rated corporate bonds, an underweight to U.S. Treasuries, and solid security selection.

 

 

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The economic expansion continues as the U.S. economy is nearing the Fed’s dual mandate of full employment and price stability. Underlying inflation is converging toward the Fed’s 2% target. The High Grade Fixed Income Team believes the Fed is on track to deliver two additional rate hikes in 2018 after hiking by 25 bps three separate times during the reporting period. The Fed has signaled that it will tighten policy gradually, and so far, the hiking cycle has been orderly.

The High Grade Fixed Income Team believes macroeconomic fundamentals should remain solid with a continued increase in U.S. growth resulting from fiscal stimulus and tax reform. Although the Team generally remains neutral duration, in light of rising Treasury yields, particularly at the front of the curve, the Team maintained its slightly shorter effective duration than the Bloomberg Barclays Index at the end of the reporting period. At the sector level, the Team continues to maintain its strategic underweight to U.S. Treasuries. In lieu of Treasuries, the Team continues to maintain its overweight in agency MBS relative to the Bloomberg Barclays Index. The Team believes the sector’s high quality and spread above Treasuries make it an attractive area to add incremental yield potential to the portfolio. Within structured credit, the Team continues to favor auto ABS given their attractive fundamentals, carry and solid structures. The Team has also maintained a small overweight in commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) and remains up-in-structure. Overall, the High Grade Fixed Income Team is more cautious on

credit as it believes we currently reside in the fourth quarter of the credit cycle. The Team remains cautiously engaged in investment grade corporate credit with modest exposure to typically high Sharpe Ratio BB-rated corporates. As a result, the Team is less likely to increase credit risk meaningfully, absent specific relative value opportunities. The Team typically avoids corporate bonds that are rated B or below and also avoids emerging market debt.

STRATEGY & OUTLOOK

After a nearly two-year hiatus, volatility and drawdowns have returned. In our view, the sudden spike in volatility and 10% drop in the S&P 500 in January were overdue. We believe the actual outlier was 2017 with its 50-year lows in equity volatility, 30-year lows in Treasury volatility, and a maximum drawdown of 2.8% on the S&P 500—well below the annual average of more than 10%. In particular, by the end of 2017, it had been more than 380 days since the last 5% drawdown on the S&P 500, far longer than the 90-day average of the last nine decades. The market was due for a spike in volatility and a meaningful drawdown, both of which occurred in late January as the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX Index) jumped more than 250% and the S&P 500 fell 10.1%. The bumpiness continued as the VIX Index spiked 65% in late March and the S&P 500 sold off 7.5%. Prolonged periods of low volatility breed complacency and a lack of mindfulness about downside risk, in our view. We believe many investors are starting to pay attention again.

 

 

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The combination of tax cuts, fiscal stimulus and a tight labor market could lead to higher inflation and higher rates than many investors expect. The Trump administration is pursuing a triple play of tax cuts, higher federal spending, and a major proposed infrastructure plan. Significantly, these efforts are taking place as the economy is accelerating and during a tight labor market. The fact that the administration is pursuing these policies in the absence of a recession makes them unusual. The fact that it is pursuing them all at the same time and so late in the economic cycle makes them highly unusual. We believe this stimulus increases the dual risks of higher inflation and tighter monetary policy.

U.S. Equities are Outperforming International Equities for a Reason this Year. The S&P 500 is meaningfully outperforming most developed and emerging market equity indices thus far in 2018—and there is a reason why. In the fourth quarter of 2017, the Fed was raising interest rates and starting to shrink its balance sheet. Simply put, quantitative easing was morphing into quantitative tightening. By the end of the reporting period, Congress had enacted tax reforms, it had agreed to two years of fiscal stimulus, and the Trump administration had drafted an infrastructure program. As a result, the federal government was borrowing more at a time when the U.S. Treasury was selling assets. This combination of factors effectively pulled U.S. dollars out of the rest of the world, making it more expensive to borrow in

dollars. The good news for U.S. companies is that they have enjoyed the benefits of several offsets in the form of lower tax rates, increased fiscal stimulus, consistent deregulation by the Trump administration, and accelerating economic growth. In contrast, companies in other developed markets as well as those in the emerging markets have enjoyed few (if any) such offsets. This is part of the reason why economic growth in the U.S. and earnings growth for the S&P 500 have been so robust relative to other markets thus far in 2018, in our view.

The trade winds are shifting but by how much remains to be seen. In the wake of Trump’s election victory, we wrote in our fourth quarter commentary for 2016 that international trade was one area of public policy where Trump did not need the approval of Congress to effect meaningful change. That view has proved to be correct so far as the U.S. has engaged in simultaneous trade disputes with China, Europe, Japan, Mexico, and Canada. The dispute with Mexico may be heading toward resolution, but the other disputes remain outstanding and how or when they are resolved remains uncertain. We do know, however, that trade barriers tend to make goods and services more expensive, and on a longer-term basis, they tend to slow economic growth, although the impact may not be apparent for some time.

There is a changing of the guard at the Fed. Jerome Powell became the new Chairman of the Federal Reserve when Janet

 

 

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Yellen’s term expired in February. Richard Clarida recently joined the Fed as Vice Chairman and Randy Quarles joined the Fed in early 2018. Trump has also nominated Professor Marvin Goodfriend and Michelle Bowman to positions as Fed Governors. Their confirmation hearings took place earlier this year but the Senate has yet to vote on these nominees. If a newly reconstituted Fed is more hawkish than investors currently expect, then the Trump administration could ultimately shift the tide away from the current easy money policies of central banks around the world. The Fed has raised the Fed Funds rate by 25 bps seven times since December 2015, including twice in 2018, and indicated that it plans two additional hikes in 2018, three in 2019, and one in 2020. It also started to normalize its $4.5 trillion balance sheet in October, which is effectively additional monetary policy tightening. At the Fed’s stated pace, that balance sheet should shrink below $4.0 trillion by the end of 2018.

The Fed is not alone—other central banks are moving in the same direction. Almost a dozen central banks around the world have started hiking rates this year in response to rising inflation and a falling local currency. Among the G-4 central banks, the Bank of England recently hiked rates for the second time in a decade, the European Central Bank is currently tapering its QE program (which is expected to end in December 2018), and the Bank of Japan has signaled that it could let the yield on 10-year Japanese government bonds start to rise

next year. All of this is a notable regime shift after years of coordinated monetary policy easing on a global basis. We could possibly see the first reduction of QE on a global basis in a while in 2019 as other central banks follow the U.S. in reducing stimulus. In fact, the rate at which G-4 central bank balance sheets are expanding has already slowed dramatically since the Fed started shrinking its balance sheet in October 2017. In our opinion, the next step is for the collective size of those balance sheets to start contracting. Today, only the Fed’s balance sheet is contracting. This change could be significant because central bank buying of assets globally has impacted interest rates around the world. We have constructed the portfolio with an eye toward delivering low volatility, effective diversification, strong downside risk mitigation, and high risk-adjusted returns in a variety of market conditions.

U.S. stocks and bonds remain expensive. Valuations for stocks and bonds in the U.S. are at or near their highest deciles going back 100 years. The fact that both asset classes are so expensive at the same time is unusual. Regarding equities, there is an earnings boost coming from tax reform but in the long term, buying stocks at high valuations typically means lower expected future returns for investors. At the same time, U.S. fixed income is expensive relative to historical valuations and the Fed has repeatedly warned of additional rate hikes through 2020. Moreover, the Trump administration’s fiscal and economic policies have caused a meaningful change in the

 

 

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outlook for fixed income. Treasury rates had been range bound for some time, with yields oscillating between 1.25% to 3.0%. In the longer run, however, we did not believe rates this low were sustainable. Trump’s election victory sent rates higher as the 10-year yield jumped from 1.85% on election day to 2.86% by 8/31/18. We have become more bearish on fixed income after the election. In our view, a strong focus on valuations is critical at this point in the economic, equity and credit cycles.

Seeking attractive investment opportunities later in the cycle. We believe the U.S. economy still has attractive growth potential in certain areas, and are waiting to see what additional pro-growth policies the Trump administration can actually implement. We recognize that there are pockets of innovation and disruption in different industries including consumer packaged goods, pharmaceuticals, consumer discretionary, real estate, and technology. Nonetheless, we are mindful that the U.S. equity bull market became the longest on record as of 8/22/18, eclipsing the prior record which ran from October 1990 to March 2000. We also recognize that extended periods of low equity volatility historically have not been sustainable, and they typically resolve with a period of meaningfully higher volatility. In part because of the Fed’s multiple rounds of quantitative easing in the wake of the global financial crisis, the U.S. equity market entered an extended period of

low volatility that began in early 2012 and continues through today. Over the last 30 years, the average maximum drawdown for the S&P 500 during periods of low volatility has been just under 10%. In sharp contrast, the average maximum drawdown for the S&P 500 during periods of high volatility has been just over 40%. The dual risks for investors are that volatility moves meaningfully higher and drawdowns become much more severe.

Moreover, we recognize that U.S. equity valuations are pushing up against the edge of bubble territory after several years when S&P 500 Index performance ran well ahead of earnings growth, leading to significant multiple expansion. (Since the S&P 500 bottomed in March 2009, it has climbed by more than 330% through 8/31/18, while S&P earnings have grown by less than one third of that figure.) In fact, the only time in the last four decades when the S&P 500 Index has traded at a higher price-earnings multiple on next 12 months’ consensus earnings was during the Tech Bubble in 1997-2000.

Accordingly, we continue to pick our spots, selecting securities that we believe offer attractive risk-adjusted returns. We remain focused, as always, on controlling volatility and mitigating downside risk. We expect to be in a cross-current heavy world for a while. We believe that the ability to generate attractive returns efficiently and without taking on undue risk, controlling volatility and limiting drawdowns will be of greater value to

 

 

13        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


investors in this kind of environment, and that is where our investment team’s efforts are focused.

 

LOGO  

LOGO

Michelle Borré, CFA

Portfolio Manager

 

    

    

 

 

LOGO  

LOGO

Krishna Memani

Portfolio Manager

 

 

14        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


Portfolio Positioning

 

PORTFOLIO POSITIONING         
      Long         Short          Net     

High-Grade Fixed Income Strategy

     42.4%        -20.5%        21.9%  

Equity Strategy

     39.3           -0.6           38.7     

Opportunistic Strategy

     30.9           -14.6           16.3     
HIGH-GRADE FIXED INCOME STRATEGY         
      Long      Short      Net  

Corporate Bonds

     18.2%        0.0%        18.2%  

Mortgage Related Securities

     16.4           0.0           16.4     

Asset Backed Securities

     5.2           0.0           5.2     

Duration Hedges

     2.7           -20.5           -17.8     

Credit Default Swaps

     0.0           0.0           0.0     
TOP TEN EQUITY HOLDINGS         
      Long      Short      Net  

Apple, Inc.

     1.3%        0.0%        1.3%  

M&T Bank Corp.

     1.2           0.0           1.2     

Chubb Ltd.

     1.2           0.0           1.2     

Alphabet, Inc., Cl. A

     1.1           0.0           1.1     

UnitedHealth Group, Inc.

     1.1           0.0           1.1     

Philip Morris International, Inc.

     1.1           0.0           1.1     

Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc., Cl. A

     1.0           0.0           1.0     

Lockheed Martin Corp.

     1.0           0.0           1.0     

Cisco Systems, Inc.

     0.9           0.0           0.9     

Xilinx, Inc.

     0.9           0.0           0.9     

Portfolio holdings and allocations are dollar-weighted based on total net assets and are subject to change. Percentages are as of August 31, 2018. Holdings exclude cash and cash equivalents. As of August 31, 2018, the Fund held approximately 6.6% in cash and cash equivalents. Negative weightings may result from the use of leverage. Leverage involves the use of various financial instruments or borrowed capital in an attempt to increase investment return. Leverage risks include potential for higher volatility, greater decline of the Fund’s net asset value and fluctuations of dividends and distributions paid by the Fund. Asset tables may not display cash weightings. Net total exposure may not equal the sum of long and short exposure due to rounding. For more current Fund holdings, please visit oppenheimerfunds.com.

 

15        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


OPPORTUNISTIC STRATEGY

 

        
      Long         Short          Net     

Senior Loans

     13.0%        0.0%        13.0%  

Corporate Bonds & Hybrids

     5.7           0.0           5.7     

Asset Backed Securities

     5.3           0.0           5.3     

Commodities

     1.0           0.0           1.0     

Sovereign

     1.9           -5.3           -3.4     

Interest Rates

     0.0           -3.3           -3.3     

Relative Value

     2.8           -3.6           -0.8     

Currencies

     0.0           -2.4           -2.4     

Catastrophe Bonds

     1.1           0.0           1.1     

Portfolio holdings and allocations are dollar-weighted based on total net assets and are subject to change. Percentages are as of August 31, 2018. Holdings exclude cash and cash equivalents. As of August 31, 2018, the Fund held approximately 6.6% in cash and cash equivalents. Negative weightings may result from the use of leverage. Leverage involves the use of various financial instruments or borrowed capital in an attempt to increase investment return. Leverage risks include potential for higher volatility, greater decline of the Fund’s net asset value and fluctuations of dividends and distributions paid by the Fund. Asset tables may not display cash weightings. Net total exposure may not equal the sum of long and short exposure due to rounding. For more current Fund holdings, please visit oppenheimerfunds. com.

 

16        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


Share Class Performance

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS WITHOUT SALES CHARGE AS 8/31/18

 

     Inception
Date
       1-Year        5-Year        10-Year        
Class A (OPPEX)      12/1/70          4.10        5.05        3.16        
Class C (OPECX)      11/1/95          3.24          4.25          2.32          
Class I (OCIIX)      12/27/13          4.44          4.65        N/A          
Class R (OCINX)      3/1/01          3.73          4.75          2.82          
Class Y (OCIYX)      1/28/11          4.25          5.29          5.86        

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS WITH SALES CHARGE AS OF 8/31/18

 

 

 
     Inception
Date
       1-Year        5-Year        10-Year        
Class A (OPPEX)      12/1/70          -1.88        3.81        2.55        
Class C (OPECX)      11/1/95          2.24          4.25          2.32          
Class I (OCIIX)      12/27/13          4.44          4.65        N/A          
Class R (OCINX)      3/1/01          3.73          4.75          2.82          
Class Y (OCIYX)      1/28/11          4.25          5.29          5.86        

* Shows performance since inception.

Performance data quoted represents past performance, which does not guarantee future results. The investment return and principal value of an investment in the Fund will fluctuate so that an investor’s shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. Returns do not consider capital gains or income taxes on an individual’s investment. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit oppenheimerfunds.com or call 1.800. CALL OPP (225.5677). Fund returns include changes in share price, reinvested distributions, and the applicable sales charge: for Class A shares, the current maximum initial sales charge of 5.75% and for Class C shares, the contingent deferred sales charge of 1% for the 1-year period. There is no sales charge for Class I, Class R and Class Y shares. Returns for periods of less than one year are cumulative and not annualized. See Fund prospectuses and summary prospectuses for more information on share classes and sales charges.

The Fund’s performance is compared to the performance of the Russell 3000 Index, the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index and the Fund’s Reference Index. The Russell 3000 Index measures the performance of the largest 3,000 U.S. companies, representing approximately 98% of the investable U.S. equity market. The Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index is an index of U.S. dollar-denominated, investment-grade U.S. corporate government and mortgage-backed securities. The Fund’s Reference Index is a customized weighted index currently comprised of 35% Russell 3000 Index and 65% Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index. The indices are unmanaged and cannot be purchased directly by investors. While index comparisons may be useful to provide a benchmark for the Fund’s performance, it must be noted that the Fund’s investments are not limited to the investments comprising the indices. Index performance includes reinvestment of income, but does not reflect transaction costs, fees, expenses or taxes. Index performance is shown for illustrative purposes only as a benchmark for the Fund’s performance, and does not predict or depict

 

17        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


performance of the Fund. The Fund’s performance reflects the effects of the Fund’s business and operating expenses.

The Morningstar 30-50% Equity Allocation Category Average is the average return of the mutual funds within the investment category as defined by Morningstar. Returns include the reinvestment of distributions but do not consider sales charges. The Morningstar 30-50% Equity Category Average performance is shown for illustrative purposes only and does not predict or depict the performance of the Fund.

The views in the Fund Performance Discussion represent the opinions of this Fund’s portfolio manager(s) and are not intended as investment advice or to predict or depict the performance of any investment. These views are as of the close of business on August 31, 2018, and are subject to change based on subsequent developments. The Fund’s portfolio and strategies are subject to change.

Before investing in any of the Oppenheimer funds, investors should carefully consider a fund’s investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. Fund prospectuses and summary prospectuses contain this and other information about the funds, and may be obtained by asking your financial advisor, visiting oppenheimerfunds.com, or calling 1.800.CALL OPP (225.5677). Read prospectuses and summary prospectuses carefully before investing.

Shares of Oppenheimer funds are not deposits or obligations of any bank, are not guaranteed by any bank, are not insured by the FDIC or any other agency, and involve investment risks, including the possible loss of the principal amount invested.

 

18        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


Fund Expenses

Fund Expenses. As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, which may include sales charges (loads) on purchase payments and/or contingent deferred sales charges on redemptions; and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees; distribution and service fees; and other Fund expenses. These examples are 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 examples are based on an investment of $1,000.00 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire 6-month period ended August 31, 2018.

Actual Expenses. The first section of the table provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this section for the class of shares you hold, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expense that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000.00 (for example, an $8,600.00 account value divided by $1,000.00 = 8.60), then multiply the result by the number in the first section under the heading entitled “Expenses Paid During 6 Months Ended August 31, 2018” to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes. The second section of the table provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on the Fund’s actual expense ratio for each class of shares, and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year for each class 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 for the class of shares you hold with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds.

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transactional costs, such as front-end or contingent deferred sales charges (loads). Therefore, the “hypothetical” section 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.

 

19        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


Actual     

Beginning        

Account        

Value        

March 1, 2018        

    

Ending        

Account        

Value        

August 31, 2018        

    

Expenses        

Paid During        

6 Months Ended        

August 31, 2018        

Class A

      $   1,000.00                 $   1,022.20                 $   4.96            

Class C

       1,000.00                  1,018.10                  8.89            

Class I

       1,000.00                  1,024.10                  2.91            

Class R

       1,000.00                  1,020.30                  6.33            

Class Y

       1,000.00                  1,023.30                  3.78            
Hypothetical               
(5% return before expenses)                     

Class A

       1,000.00                  1,020.32                  4.95            

Class C

       1,000.00                  1,016.43                  8.88            

Class I

       1,000.00                  1,022.33                  2.91            

Class R

       1,000.00                  1,018.95                  6.33            

Class Y

       1,000.00                  1,021.48                  3.78            

Expenses are equal to the Fund’s annualized expense ratio for that class, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 184/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). Those annualized expense ratios, excluding indirect expenses from affiliated funds, based on the 6-month period ended August 31, 2018 are as follows:

 

Class    Expense Ratios          

Class A

     0.97%        

Class C

     1.74            

Class I

     0.57            

Class R

     1.24            

Class Y

     0.74            

The expense ratios reflect voluntary and/or contractual waivers and/or reimbursements of expenses by the Fund’s Manager and Transfer Agent. Some of these undertakings may be modified or terminated at any time, as indicated in the Fund’s prospectus. The “Consolidated Financial Highlights” tables in the Fund’s financial statements, included in this report, also show the gross expense ratios, without such waivers or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses, if applicable.

 

20        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS August 31, 2018

 

     Shares     Value  
Common Stocks—34.8%             
Consumer Discretionary—1.4%             
Household Durables—0.2%             
Mohawk Industries, Inc.1     

 

30,740

 

 

 

 

  $          5,889,477  

 

Media—0.8%             
DISH Network Corp., Cl. A1      266,644     9,425,865  
Live Nation Entertainment, Inc.1      196,560    

9,765,101  

    

19,190,966  

 

Specialty Retail—0.4%             

Lowe’s Cos., Inc.

 

    

 

87,440

 

 

 

 

9,509,099  

 

Consumer Staples—2.3%             
Beverages—0.7%             

Coca-Cola Co. (The)

 

    

 

404,900

 

 

 

 

18,046,393  

 

Tobacco—1.6%             
Altria Group, Inc.      241,365     14,124,680  
Philip Morris International, Inc.      347,030    

27,030,166  

    

41,154,846  

 

Energy—3.2%             
Energy Equipment & Services—0.4%             
Halliburton Co.      93,584     3,733,066  
Schlumberger Ltd.      98,866    

6,244,376  

    

9,977,442  

 

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels—2.8%             
Canadian Natural Resources Ltd.      146,947     5,017,593  
Chevron Corp.      68,018     8,057,412  
ConocoPhillips      126,054     9,256,145  
EOG Resources, Inc.      34,830     4,117,951  
Noble Energy, Inc.      160,008     4,755,438  
Occidental Petroleum Corp.      132,573     10,588,605  
TOTAL SA, Sponsored ADR      289,860     18,185,816  
Valero Energy Corp.      82,120    

9,680,306  

    

69,659,266  

 

Financials—5.8%             
Capital Markets—1.0%             
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (The)      43,820     10,420,834  
Raymond James Financial, Inc.      56,478     5,254,713  
State Street Corp.      108,930    

9,467,107  

    

25,142,654  

 

Commercial Banks—1.5%             
M&T Bank Corp.      172,050     30,478,657  

 

21        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Shares     Value  
Commercial Banks (Continued)             
PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. (The)      47,678    

  $          6,843,700  

    

37,322,357  

 

Insurance—1.5%             
Allstate Corp. (The)      46,334     4,659,810  
Chubb Ltd.      218,727     29,580,640  
Travelers Cos., Inc. (The)      32,690    

4,302,004  

    

38,542,454  

 

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)—1.6%             
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc., Cl. A      747,750     25,468,365  
Starwood Property Trust, Inc.      742,622    

16,359,963  

    

41,828,328  

 

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance—0.2%             

WSFS Financial Corp.

 

    

 

82,100

 

 

 

 

4,006,480  

 

Health Care—6.9%             
Biotechnology—0.5%             

Shire plc, ADR

 

    

 

70,552

 

 

 

 

12,365,649  

 

Health Care Equipment & Supplies—0.7%             
Abbott Laboratories      107,567     7,189,778  
Medtronic plc      110,011    

10,606,161  

    

17,795,939  

 

Health Care Providers & Services—2.9%             
AMN Healthcare Services, Inc.1      68,930     4,018,619  
Cigna Corp.      72,671     13,686,856  
Envision Healthcare Corp.1      113,090     5,129,762  
HCA Healthcare, Inc.      86,632     11,618,217  
Premier, Inc., Cl. A1      252,390     11,163,210  
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.      105,460    

28,311,792  

    

73,928,456  

 

Pharmaceuticals—2.8%             
Allergan plc      37,960     7,277,312  
Johnson & Johnson      89,150     12,007,614  
Merck & Co., Inc.      300,930     20,640,789  
Mylan NV1      247,740     9,694,066  
Novartis AG, Sponsored ADR      96,520     8,012,125  
Roche Holding AG      48,008    

11,914,632  

    

69,546,538  

 

Industrials—5.0%             
Aerospace & Defense—2.8%             
L3 Technologies, Inc.      56,946     12,170,499  
Lockheed Martin Corp.      75,030     24,040,363  
Northrop Grumman Corp.      60,878     18,171,474  

 

22        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Shares     Value  
Aerospace & Defense (Continued)             
Raytheon Co.      77,570    

  $          15,470,561  

    

69,852,897  

 

Air Freight & Couriers—0.2%             

FedEx Corp.

 

    

 

20,444

 

 

 

 

4,987,314  

 

Commercial Services & Supplies—0.6%             

Republic Services, Inc., Cl. A

 

    

 

184,790

 

 

 

 

13,556,194  

 

Construction & Engineering—0.1%             

Granite Construction, Inc.

 

    

 

75,190

 

 

 

 

3,434,679  

 

Industrial Conglomerates—1.0%             
General Electric Co.      729,100     9,434,554  
Honeywell International, Inc.      96,905    

15,413,709  

    

24,848,263  

 

Machinery—0.3%             

Stanley Black & Decker, Inc.

 

    

 

59,984

 

 

 

 

8,429,552  

 

Information Technology—5.0%             
Communications Equipment—1.3%             
Cisco Systems, Inc.      499,676     23,869,523  
CommScope Holding Co., Inc.1      280,590    

8,891,897  

    

32,761,420  

 

Internet Software & Services—1.1%             

Alphabet, Inc., Cl. A1

 

    

 

23,876

 

 

 

 

29,410,457  

 

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment—1.3%             
QUALCOMM, Inc.      156,413     10,747,137  
Xilinx, Inc.      282,932    

22,020,598  

    

32,767,735  

 

Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals—1.3%             

Apple, Inc.

 

    

 

142,315

 

 

 

 

32,395,163  

 

Materials—1.8%             
Chemicals—0.6%             
Celanese Corp., Cl. A     

 

129,241

 

 

 

 

15,099,226  

 

Containers & Packaging—1.0%             
Packaging Corp. of America      77,325     8,499,564  
Sonoco Products Co.      289,971    

16,249,975  

    

24,749,539  

 

Metals & Mining—0.2%             
Steel Dynamics, Inc.      92,760     4,241,915  

 

23        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Shares     Value  
Telecommunication Services—1.8%             
Diversified Telecommunication Services—1.8%             
AT&T, Inc.      631,170       $            20,159,570  
BCE, Inc.      238,140     9,708,968  
Swisscom AG      18,525     8,267,491  
Verizon Communications, Inc.      154,377    

8,393,477  

    

  46,529,506  

 

Utilities—1.6%             
Electric Utilities—1.0%             
American Electric Power Co., Inc.      210,180     15,076,211  
Edison International      91,620     6,022,183  
PG&E Corp.      102,530    

4,734,835  

    

  25,833,229  

 

Multi-Utilities—0.6%             
CMS Energy Corp.      319,016    

15,708,348  

Total Common Stocks (Cost $927,919,812)     

878,511,781  

 

Preferred Stocks—1.5%             
Citigroup Capital XIII, 7.75% Cum., Non-Vtg. [US0003M+637]2      1,133,000     30,806,270  
M&T Bank Corp., 6.375% Cum., Series A, Non-Vtg.      1,833     1,851,330  
M&T Bank Corp., 6.375% Cum., Series C, Non-Vtg.      4,500    

4,545,000  

Total Preferred Stocks (Cost $36,592,296)      37,202,600  
     Principal Amount      
Asset-Backed Securities—9.0%             
Accredited Mortgage Loan Trust:     
Series 2005-3, Cl. M3, 2.764% [US0001M+48], 9/25/352    $           7,222,280     6,998,143  
Series 2005-4, Cl. M1, 2.465% [US0001M+40], 12/25/352      1,919,000     1,867,104  
American Credit Acceptance Receivables Trust:     
Series 2015-3, Cl. D, 5.86%, 7/12/223      955,000     966,481  
Series 2016-4, Cl. B, 2.11%, 2/12/213      318,519     318,349  
Series 2017-3, Cl. B, 2.25%, 1/11/213      425,000     424,374  
Series 2017-4, Cl. B, 2.61%, 5/10/213      477,000     475,546  
Series 2017-4, Cl. C, 2.94%, 1/10/243      1,351,000     1,343,725  
Series 2017-4, Cl. D, 3.57%, 1/10/243      1,952,000     1,937,248  
Series 2018-2, Cl. B, 3.46%, 8/10/223      1,860,000     1,861,616  
Series 2018-2, Cl. C, 3.70%, 7/10/243      1,835,000     1,836,305  
AmeriCredit Automobile Receivables Trust:     
Series 2015-2, Cl. D, 3.00%, 6/8/21      1,555,000     1,555,450  
Series 2017-2, Cl. D, 3.42%, 4/18/23      2,065,000     2,055,894  
Series 2017-4, Cl. D, 3.08%, 12/18/23      940,000     922,562  
Bear Stearns Structured Products Trust:     
Series 2007-EMX1, Cl. A2, 3.365% [US0001M+130], 3/25/372,3      5,900,000     6,086,940  
Series 2007-EMX1, Cl. M1, 4.065% [US0001M+200], 3/25/372,3      8,000,000     7,952,268  
Cabela’s Credit Card Master Note Trust:     
Series 2015-1A, Cl. A2, 2.603% [US0001M+54], 3/15/232      2,855,000     2,869,530  
Series 2015-2, Cl. A2, 2.733% [US0001M+67], 7/17/232      3,170,000     3,194,131  
Series 2016-1, Cl. A1, 1.78%, 6/15/22      3,735,000     3,707,444  

 

24        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Asset-Backed Securities (Continued)             
Cabela’s Credit Card Master Note Trust: (Continued)     
Series 2016-1, Cl. A2, 2.913% [US0001M+85], 6/15/222    $ 1,745,000       $            1,754,124  
Capital Auto Receivables Asset Trust, Series 2017-1, Cl. D, 3.15%, 2/20/253      275,000     273,085  
CarFinance Capital Auto Trust, Series 2015-1A, Cl. A, 1.75%, 6/15/213      41,224     41,186  
CarMax Auto Owner Trust:     
Series 2015-2, Cl. D, 3.04%, 11/15/21      655,000     653,802  
Series 2015-3, Cl. D, 3.27%, 3/15/22      1,975,000     1,973,884  
Series 2016-1, Cl. D, 3.11%, 8/15/22      1,300,000     1,295,551  
Series 2017-1, Cl. D, 3.43%, 7/17/23      1,565,000     1,557,897  
Series 2017-4, Cl. D, 3.30%, 5/15/24      705,000     694,209  
Series 2018-1, Cl. D, 3.37%, 7/15/24      515,000     506,977  
CCG Receivables Trust:     
Series 2017-1, Cl. B, 2.75%, 11/14/233      1,580,000     1,555,457  
Series 2018-1, Cl. B, 3.09%, 6/16/253      620,000     613,920  
Series 2018-1, Cl. C, 3.42%, 6/16/253      175,000     173,179  
Series 2018-2, Cl. C, 3.87%, 12/15/253      415,000     415,617  
CIG Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2017-1A, Cl. A, 2.71%, 5/15/233      542,289     538,983  
Citibank Credit Card Issuance Trust, Series 2014-A6, Cl. A6, 2.15%, 7/15/21      3,545,000     3,528,997  
CNH Equipment Trust, Series 2017-C, Cl. B, 2.54%, 5/15/25      475,000     464,587  
CPS Auto Receivables Trust:     
Series 2017-C, Cl. A, 1.78%, 9/15/203      201,547     201,041  
Series 2017-C, Cl. B, 2.30%, 7/15/213      685,000     681,143  
Series 2017-D, Cl. B, 2.43%, 1/18/223      1,180,000     1,169,044  
Series 2018-A, Cl. B, 2.77%, 4/18/223      975,000     968,089  
Series 2018-B, Cl. B, 3.23%, 7/15/223      1,090,000     1,087,890  
CPS Auto Trust, Series 2017-A, Cl. B, 2.68%, 5/17/213      210,000     209,678  
Credit Acceptance Auto Loan Trust:     
Series 2017-3A, Cl. C, 3.48%, 10/15/263      1,415,000     1,397,821  
Series 2018-1A, Cl. B, 3.60%, 4/15/273      920,000     916,427  
Series 2018-1A, Cl. C, 3.77%, 6/15/273      1,305,000     1,295,079  
Series 2018-2A, Cl. C, 4.16%, 9/15/273      770,000     775,199  
Dell Equipment Finance Trust:     
Series 2017-2, Cl. B, 2.47%, 10/24/223      470,000     464,000  
Series 2018-1, Cl. B, 3.34%, 6/22/233      590,000     591,912  
Drive Auto Receivables Trust:     
Series 2015-BA, Cl. D, 3.84%, 7/15/213      113,604     114,178  
Series 2016-CA, Cl. D, 4.18%, 3/15/243      1,070,000     1,082,479  
Series 2017-3, Cl. C, 2.80%, 7/15/22      785,000     782,738  
Series 2017-AA, Cl. C, 2.98%, 1/18/223      1,210,000     1,209,580  
Series 2017-BA, Cl. D, 3.72%, 10/17/223      1,525,000     1,532,710  
Series 2018-1, Cl. D, 3.81%, 5/15/24      1,190,000     1,187,105  
Series 2018-2, Cl. D, 4.14%, 8/15/24      2,160,000     2,173,706  
Series 2018-3, Cl. D, 4.30%, 9/16/24      1,420,000     1,437,471  
DT Auto Owner Trust:     
Series 2015-2A, Cl. D, 4.25%, 2/15/223      685,870     689,211  
Series 2016-4A, Cl. E, 6.49%, 9/15/233      495,000     509,749  
Series 2017-1A, Cl. C, 2.70%, 11/15/223      565,000     563,660  
Series 2017-1A, Cl. D, 3.55%, 11/15/223      1,060,000     1,061,749  

 

25        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Asset-Backed Securities (Continued)             
DT Auto Owner Trust: (Continued)     
Series 2017-1A, Cl. E, 5.79%, 2/15/243    $ 1,025,000       $            1,042,308  
Series 2017-2A, Cl. D, 3.89%, 1/15/233      1,165,000     1,168,244  
Series 2017-3A, Cl. B, 2.40%, 5/17/213      1,235,000     1,231,510  
Series 2017-3A, Cl. E, 5.60%, 8/15/243      1,015,000     1,026,975  
Series 2017-4A, Cl. C, 2.86%, 7/17/233      285,000     283,570  
Series 2017-4A, Cl. D, 3.47%, 7/17/233      1,675,000     1,664,501  
Series 2017-4A, Cl. E, 5.15%, 11/15/243      990,000     991,134  
Series 2018-1A, Cl. B, 3.04%, 1/18/223      1,055,000     1,053,201  
Series 2018-2A, Cl. B, 3.43%, 5/16/223      555,000     555,323  
Element Rail Leasing I LLC, Series 2014-1A, Cl. A1, 2.299%, 4/19/443      872,515     860,855  
Evergreen Credit Card Trust Series, Series 2018-2, Cl. A, 2.427% [US0001M+35], 7/15/222,3      2,755,000     2,758,283  
Exeter Automobile Receivables Trust, Series 2018-1A, Cl. B, 2.75%, 4/15/223      1,065,000     1,057,157  
Fieldstone Mortgage Investment Trust, Series 2004-5, Cl. M3, 4.09% [US0001M+202.5], 2/25/352      4,434,759     4,272,103  
Flagship Credit Auto Trust:     
Series 2014-1, Cl. D, 4.83%, 6/15/203      200,000     200,848  
Series 2016-1, Cl. C, 6.22%, 6/15/223      2,410,000     2,501,841  
FRS I LLC, Series 2013-1A, Cl. A1, 1.80%, 4/15/433      53,247     52,977  
GLS Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2018-1A, Cl. A, 2.82%, 7/15/223      2,038,172     2,032,307  
GM Financial Automobile Leasing Trust:     
Series 2017-3, Cl. C, 2.73%, 9/20/21      795,000     786,991  
Series 2018-2, Cl. C, 3.50%, 4/20/22      965,000     965,572  
GSAMP Trust:     
Series 2005-HE4, Cl. M3, 2.845% [US0001M+78], 7/25/452      13,300,000     13,272,325  
Series 2005-HE5, Cl. M3, 2.525% [US0001M+46], 11/25/352      4,060,889     3,933,451  
Series 2007-HS1, Cl. M4, 4.315% [US0001M+225], 2/25/472      4,849,000     4,944,379  
JP Morgan Mortgage Acquisition Corp., Series 2005-OPT2, Cl. M2, 2.515% [US0001M+45], 12/25/352      5,480,000     5,471,558  
JP Morgan Mortgage Acquisition Trust:     
Series 2007-CH1, Cl. MV10, 3.065% [US0001M+100], 11/25/362,3      5,010,000     4,884,491  
Series 2007-CH1, Cl. MV8, 3.065% [US0001M+100], 11/25/362      5,400,000     5,332,171  
Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2005-WL3, Cl. M1, 2.71% [US0001M+64.5], 11/25/352      1,739,910     1,727,410  
Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I, Inc. Trust, Series 2006-NC1, Cl. M1, 2.445% [US0001M+38], 12/25/352      12,287,000     12,250,403  
Navistar Financial Dealer Note Master Owner Trust II:     
Series 2016-1, Cl. D, 5.365% [LIBOR01M+330], 9/27/212,3      495,000     495,778  
Series 2017-1, Cl. C, 3.615% [LIBOR01M+155], 6/27/222,3      400,000     401,549  
Series 2017-1, Cl. D, 4.365% [LIBOR01M+230], 6/27/222,3      465,000     465,548  
New Century Home Equity Loan Trust:     
Series 2005-1, Cl. M2, 2.785% [US0001M+72], 3/25/352      4,383,661     4,237,705  
Series 2005-2, Cl. M3, 2.80% [US0001M+73.5], 6/25/352      5,500,000     5,519,414  
RASC Series Trust, Series 2006-KS2, Cl. M2, 2.455% [US0001M+39], 3/25/362      4,875,000     4,765,775  
Raspro Trust, Series 2005-1A, Cl. G, 2.725% [LIBOR03M+40], 3/23/242,3      1,405,920     1,414,398  

 

26        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value    
Asset-Backed Securities (Continued)                 
Santander Drive Auto Receivables Trust:     
Series 2016-2, Cl. D, 3.39%, 4/15/22    $ 825,000       $                 827,301    
Series 2017-1, Cl. D, 3.17%, 4/17/23      1,085,000       1,078,531    
Series 2017-1, Cl. E, 5.05%, 7/15/243      2,735,000       2,783,054    
Series 2017-2, Cl. D, 3.49%, 7/17/23      390,000       389,700    
Series 2017-3, Cl. D, 3.20%, 11/15/23      1,900,000       1,885,042    
Series 2018-1, Cl. D, 3.32%, 3/15/24      760,000       748,652    
Series 2018-2, Cl. D, 3.88%, 2/15/24      1,165,000       1,162,325    
Series 2018-3, Cl. C, 3.51%, 8/15/23      2,950,000       2,954,164    
Santander Retail Auto Lease Trust, Series 2017-A, Cl. C, 2.96%, 11/21/223      1,275,000       1,258,326    
SG Mortgage Securities Trust, Series 2005-OPT1, Cl. M2, 2.515% [US0001M+45], 10/25/352      6,129,000       6,082,168    
TCF Auto Receivables Owner Trust, Series 2015-1A, Cl. D, 3.53%, 3/15/223      1,075,000       1,070,911    
United Auto Credit Securitization Trust, Series 2018-1, Cl. C, 3.05%, 9/10/213      1,635,000       1,629,639    
Verizon Owner Trust, Series 2017-3A, Cl. A1A, 2.06%, 4/20/223      1,260,000       1,242,845    
Veros Automobile Receivables Trust, Series 2017-1, Cl. A, 2.84%, 4/17/233      516,264       514,515    
Westlake Automobile Receivables Trust:     
Series 2016-1A, Cl. E, 6.52%, 6/15/223      1,760,000       1,793,213    
Series 2017-2A, Cl. E, 4.63%, 7/15/243      2,090,000       2,101,476    
Series 2018-1A, Cl. C, 2.92%, 5/15/233      1,100,000       1,091,800    
Series 2018-1A, Cl. D, 3.41%, 5/15/233      2,275,000       2,262,303    
Series 2018-3A, Cl. B, 3.32%, 10/16/233      1,019,000       1,018,839    
World Financial Network Credit Card Master Trust:     
Series 2012-D, Cl. A, 2.15%, 4/17/23      1,040,000       1,034,626    
Series 2016-C, Cl. A, 1.72%, 8/15/23      4,470,000       4,408,529    
Series 2017-A, Cl. A, 2.12%, 3/15/24      2,775,000       2,732,677    
Series 2017-B, Cl. A, 1.98%, 6/15/23      2,105,000       2,089,886    
Series 2017-C, Cl. A, 2.31%, 8/15/24      2,845,000       2,798,761    
Series 2018-A, Cl. A, 3.07%, 12/16/24      3,695,000       3,680,812    
    

 

 

 
Total Asset-Backed Securities (Cost $217,999,419)       

 

226,778,374  

 

 

 

Mortgage-Backed Obligations—17.7%                 
Government Agency—10.5%                 
FHLMC/FNMA/FHLB/Sponsored—9.3%                 
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. Gold Pool:     
4.50%, 5/1/19      51,194       51,704    
5.00%, 12/1/34      36,024       38,362    
6.50%, 7/1/28-4/1/34      107,680       119,010    
7.00%, 10/1/31      79,473       86,408    
9.00%, 8/1/22-5/1/25      3,514       3,737    
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Interest-Only Stripped Mtg.-Backed Security:     
Series 183,Cl. IO, 80.873%, 4/1/274      69,924       15,771    
Series 192,Cl. IO, 99.999%, 2/1/284      22,839       4,658    
Series 243,Cl. 6, 0.00%, 12/15/324,5      72,223       11,999    
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Mtg.-Linked Amortizing Global Debt Securities, Series 2012-1, Cl. A10, 2.06%, 1/15/22      1,748,122       1,712,076    
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Principal-Only Stripped Mtg.- Backed Security, Series 176, Cl. PO, 4.127%, 6/1/266      22,750       20,882    

 

27        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value    
FHLMC/FNMA/FHLB/Sponsored (Continued)                 
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Real Estate Mtg. Investment Conduit Multiclass Pass-Through Certificates:

 

Series 2034,Cl. Z, 6.50%, 2/15/28    $ 54,740       $             59,052  
Series 2043,Cl. ZP, 6.50%, 4/15/28      240,524       263,801  
Series 2053,Cl. Z, 6.50%, 4/15/28      48,769       53,589  
Series 2279,Cl. PK, 6.50%, 1/15/31      99,208       107,969  
Series 2326,Cl. ZP, 6.50%, 6/15/31      44,100       47,417  
Series 2427,Cl. ZM, 6.50%, 3/15/32      185,175       202,484  
Series 2461,Cl. PZ, 6.50%, 6/15/32      212,172       229,782  
Series 2626,Cl. TB, 5.00%, 6/15/33      167,733       173,228  
Series 2635,Cl. AG, 3.50%, 5/15/32      56,082       55,753  
Series 2707,Cl. QE, 4.50%, 11/15/18      4,763       4,759  
Series 2770,Cl. TW, 4.50%, 3/15/19      4,733       4,741  
Series 3010,Cl. WB, 4.50%, 7/15/20      47,303       47,705  
Series 3025,Cl. SJ, 17.187% [-3.667 x LIBOR01M+2,475], 8/15/352      27,190       38,591  
Series 3030,Cl. FL, 2.463% [LIBOR01M+40], 9/15/352      373,646       375,322  
Series 3645,Cl. EH, 3.00%, 12/15/20      3,715       3,714  
Series 3741,Cl. PA, 2.15%, 2/15/35      14,614       14,600  
Series 3815,Cl. BD, 3.00%, 10/15/20      1,189       1,189  
Series 3822,Cl. JA, 5.00%, 6/15/40      64,583       66,081  
Series 3840,Cl. CA, 2.00%, 9/15/18      162       161  
Series 3848,Cl. WL, 4.00%, 4/15/40      311,628       313,930  
Series 3857,Cl. GL, 3.00%, 5/15/40      29,484       29,605  
Series 4221,Cl. HJ, 1.50%, 7/15/23      738,733       721,372  
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Real Estate Mtg. Investment Conduit Multiclass Pass-Through Certificates, Interest-Only Stripped Mtg.-Backed Security:

 

Series 2130,Cl. SC, 83.043%, 3/15/294      52,142       6,605  
Series 2796,Cl. SD, 99.999%, 7/15/264      90,872       10,479  
Series 2920,Cl. S, 56.073%, 1/15/354      572,702       75,911  
Series 2922,Cl. SE, 20.242%, 2/15/354      134,620       16,842  
Series 2937,Cl. SY, 11.389%, 2/15/354      1,521,027       183,850  
Series 2981,Cl. AS, 2.531%, 5/15/354      1,066,655       110,510  
Series 3397,Cl. GS, 0.00%, 12/15/374,5      277,754       43,303  
Series 3424,Cl. EI, 0.00%, 4/15/384,5      81,213       6,651  
Series 3450,Cl. BI, 12.817%, 5/15/384      653,295       87,754  
Series 3606,Cl. SN, 13.929%, 12/15/394      269,546       32,639  
Series 4057,Cl. QI, 5.741%, 6/15/274      4,514,720       377,571  
Series 4818,Cl. BI, 2.648%, 3/15/454      1,524,299       284,594  
Federal National Mortgage Assn.:     
2.50%, 9/1/337      13,260,000       12,894,104  
3.00%, 9/1/33-9/1/487      29,295,000       28,623,681  
3.50%, 9/1/33-9/1/487      93,390,000       93,103,899  
4.00%, 9/1/33-9/1/487      28,015,000       28,569,883  
4.50%, 9/1/487      43,650,000       45,323,748  
5.00%, 9/1/487      8,525,000       9,012,886  
Federal National Mortgage Assn. Pool:     
5.00%, 3/1/21      5,644       5,786  
5.50%, 2/1/35-4/1/39      716,525       775,884  
6.50%, 10/1/19-11/1/31      268,470       294,401  
7.00%, 12/1/32-4/1/35      22,544       23,900  

 

28        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
FHLMC/FNMA/FHLB/Sponsored (Continued)             
Federal National Mortgage Assn. Pool: (Continued)     
7.50%, 1/1/33-3/1/33    $             1,318,570       $            1,510,730  
8.50%, 7/1/32      2,423     2,460  
Federal National Mortgage Assn., Interest-Only Stripped Mtg.-Backed Security:     
Series 222,Cl. 2, 99.999%, 6/25/234      130,822     15,466  
Series 252,Cl. 2, 99.999%, 11/25/234      109,737     14,871  
Series 303,Cl. IO, 97.675%, 11/25/294      64,235     14,939  
Series 308,Cl. 2, 79.058%, 9/25/304      162,017     38,478  
Series 320,Cl. 2, 52.582%, 4/25/324      584,210     141,937  
Series 321,Cl. 2, 23.601%, 4/25/324      403,509     95,319  
Series 331,Cl. 9, 20.612%, 2/25/334      156,202     31,121  
Series 334,Cl. 17, 27.725%, 2/25/334      83,413     20,087  
Series 339,Cl. 12, 0.00%, 6/25/334,5      279,172     70,963  
Series 339,Cl. 7, 0.00%, 11/25/334,5      330,876     72,704  
Series 343,Cl. 13, 0.00%, 9/25/334,5      289,309     55,398  
Series 343,Cl. 18, 0.00%, 5/25/344,5      78,623     18,591  
Series 345,Cl. 9, 0.00%, 1/25/344,5      134,397     30,689  
Series 351,Cl. 10, 0.00%, 4/25/344,5      88,303     21,423  
Series 351,Cl. 8, 0.00%, 4/25/344,5      156,555     30,710  
Series 356,Cl. 10, 0.00%, 6/25/354,5      111,532     23,491  
Series 356,Cl. 12, 0.00%, 2/25/354,5      54,849     11,953  
Series 362,Cl. 13, 0.00%, 8/25/354,5      197,936     40,381  
Series 364,Cl. 16, 0.00%, 9/25/354,5      239,062     48,224  
Series 365,Cl. 16, 0.00%, 3/25/364,5      520,400     106,253  
Federal National Mortgage Assn., Real Estate Mtg. Investment Conduit Multiclass Pass-Through Certificates:     
Series 1993-87,Cl. Z, 6.50%, 6/25/23      113,480     119,283  
Series 1998-61,Cl. PL, 6.00%, 11/25/28      64,947     70,061  
Series 1999-54,Cl. LH, 6.50%, 11/25/29      105,634     114,315  
Series 2001-51,Cl. OD, 6.50%, 10/25/31      154,762     163,462  
Series 2003-130,Cl. CS, 9.971% [-2 x LIBOR01M+1,410], 12/25/332      42,983     44,096  
Series 2003-28,Cl. KG, 5.50%, 4/25/23      242,993     251,969  
Series 2003-84,Cl. GE, 4.50%, 9/25/18      5     5  
Series 2004-25,Cl. PC, 5.50%, 1/25/34      27,066     27,169  
Series 2005-104,Cl. MC, 5.50%, 12/25/25      1,327,772     1,394,550  
Series 2005-31,Cl. PB, 5.50%, 4/25/35      1,430,000     1,556,460  
Series 2005-73,Cl. DF, 2.315% [LIBOR01M+25], 8/25/352      329,762     330,922  
Series 2006-11,Cl. PS, 16.996% [-3.667 x LIBOR01M+2,456.67], 3/25/362      94,073     134,306  
Series 2006-46,Cl. SW, 16.629% [-3.667 x LIBOR01M+2,419.92], 6/25/362      67,420     92,673  
Series 2006-50,Cl. KS, 16.629% [-3.667 x LIBOR01M+2,420], 6/25/362      126,001     176,730  
Series 2006-50,Cl. SK, 16.629% [-3.667 x LIBOR01M+2,420], 6/25/362      26,010     35,791  
Series 2008-75,Cl. DB, 4.50%, 9/25/23      8,281     8,280  
Series 2009-113,Cl. DB, 3.00%, 12/25/20      49,907     49,844  
Series 2009-36,Cl. FA, 3.005% [LIBOR01M+94], 6/25/372      122,048     124,855  
Series 2009-70,Cl. TL, 4.00%, 8/25/19      7,992     7,986  

 

29        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
FHLMC/FNMA/FHLB/Sponsored (Continued)             
Federal National Mortgage Assn., Real Estate Mtg. Investment Conduit Multiclass Pass-Through Certificates: (Continued)
Series 2010-43,Cl. KG, 3.00%, 1/25/21    $ 39,811       $            39,787  
Series 2011-15,Cl. DA, 4.00%, 3/25/41      68,811     68,486  
Series 2011-3,Cl. EL, 3.00%, 5/25/20      56,107     56,022  
Series 2011-3,Cl. KA, 5.00%, 4/25/40                    464,680     482,464  
Series 2011-38,Cl. AH, 2.75%, 5/25/20      178     177  
Series 2011-82,Cl. AD, 4.00%, 8/25/26      136,318     136,411  
Federal National Mortgage Assn., Real Estate Mtg. Investment Conduit Multiclass Pass-Through Certificates, Interest-Only Stripped Mtg.-Backed Security:
Series 2001-15,Cl. SA, 99.999%, 3/17/314      9,373     712  
Series 2001-65,Cl. S, 47.49%, 11/25/314      137,248     25,804  
Series 2001-81,Cl. S, 48.553%, 1/25/324      36,299     5,880  
Series 2002-47,Cl. NS, 32.314%, 4/25/324      87,766     15,221  
Series 2002-51,Cl. S, 32.965%, 8/25/324      80,581     13,975  
Series 2002-52,Cl. SD, 63.988%, 9/25/324      123,551     20,711  
Series 2002-60,Cl. SM, 22.84%, 8/25/324      108,087     14,394  
Series 2002-7,Cl. SK, 33.645%, 1/25/324      34,286     4,904  
Series 2002-75,Cl. SA, 38.847%, 11/25/324      176,131     28,779  
Series 2002-77,Cl. BS, 30.543%, 12/18/324      76,274     12,546  
Series 2002-77,Cl. SH, 47.708%, 12/18/324      51,939     8,024  
Series 2002-89,Cl. S, 64.271%, 1/25/334      275,069     47,925  
Series 2002-9,Cl. MS, 30.895%, 3/25/324      46,554     8,335  
Series 2002-90,Cl. SN, 23.465%, 8/25/324      55,658     7,412  
Series 2002-90,Cl. SY, 29.905%, 9/25/324      28,232     3,858  
Series 2003-33,Cl. SP, 33.988%, 5/25/334      151,418     29,270  
Series 2003-46,Cl. IH, 0.00%, 6/25/234,5      224,104     20,183  
Series 2004-54,Cl. DS, 99.999%, 11/25/304      110,101     15,497  
Series 2004-56,Cl. SE, 13.002%, 10/25/334      207,655     34,061  
Series 2005-12,Cl. SC, 28.76%, 3/25/354      61,648     8,578  
Series 2005-19,Cl. SA, 52.942%, 3/25/354      1,317,126     174,116  
Series 2005-40,Cl. SA, 52.522%, 5/25/354      288,959     37,113  
Series 2005-52,Cl. JH, 26.679%, 5/25/354      678,286     80,544  
Series 2005-6,Cl. SE, 99.999%, 2/25/354      578,257     76,459  
Series 2005-93,Cl. SI, 10.612%, 10/25/354      323,359     43,214  
Series 2008-55,Cl. SA, 0.00%, 7/25/384,5      132,286     11,061  
Series 2009-8,Cl. BS, 0.00%, 2/25/244,5      4,489     225  
Series 2011-96,Cl. SA, 7.462%, 10/25/414      762,689     101,996  
Series 2012-134,Cl. SA, 2.256%, 12/25/424      2,374,548     394,204  
Series 2012-40,Cl. PI, 9.302%, 4/25/414      2,420,954     377,931  
Federal National Mortgage Assn., Real Estate Mtg. Investment Conduit Multiclass Pass-Through Certificates, Principal-Only Stripped Mtg.-Backed Security, Series 1993-184, Cl. M, 5.135%, 9/25/236      51,328     47,650  
    

234,317,207  

 

GNMA/Guaranteed—1.2%             
Government National Mortgage Assn. II Pool, 3.50%, 9/1/487      30,795,000     30,895,445  
Government National Mortgage Assn., Interest-Only Stripped Mtg.-Backed Security:     
Series 2002-15,Cl. SM, 99.025%, 2/16/324      133,190     1,381  

 

30        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
GNMA/Guaranteed (Continued)             
Government National Mortgage Assn., Interest-Only Stripped Mtg.-Backed Security: (Continued)     
Series 2002-41,Cl. GS, 45.494%, 6/16/324    $             17,708       $                  729  
Series 2002-76,Cl. SY, 87.91%, 12/16/264      269,049     26,012  
Series 2007-17,Cl. AI, 40.146%, 4/16/374      1,322,193     179,640  
Series 2011-52,Cl. HS, 19.423%, 4/16/414      1,501,728     166,795  
Series 2017-136, Cl. LI, 5.259%, 9/16/474      3,223,763     675,245  
    

  31,945,247  

 

Non-Agency—7.2%             
Commercial—2.9%             
BCAP LLC Trust, Series 2011-R11, Cl. 18A5, 3.41% [H15T1Y+210], 9/26/352,3      218,543     219,629  
Benchmark Mortgage Trust, Interest-Only Commercial Mtg. Pass- Through Certificates, Series 2018-B1, Cl. XA, 14.071%, 1/15/514      16,702,697        649,424  
CD Mortgage Trust, Interest-Only Commercial Mtg. Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2017-CD6, Cl. XA, 14.674%, 11/13/504      5,843,897        357,479  
Chase Mortgage Finance Trust, Series 2005-A2, Cl. 1A3, 3.665%, 1/25/368      759,754     721,648  
Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust:     
Series 2012-GC8,Cl. AAB, 2.608%, 9/10/45      712,152     705,794  
Series 2014-GC21,Cl. AAB, 3.477%, 5/10/47      710,000     716,560  
Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust, Interest-Only Commercial Mtg. Pass-Through Certificates:     
Series 2013-GC17,Cl. XA, 0.00%, 11/10/464,5      2,555,641     86,864  
Series 2017-C4, Cl. XA, 13.838%, 10/12/504      15,324,818     1,111,944  
COMM Mortgage Trust:     
Series 2012-CR3,Cl. ASB, 2.372%, 10/15/45      133,480     131,729  
Series 2012-LC4,Cl. A3, 3.069%, 12/10/44      278,443     278,333  
Series 2013-CR13,Cl. ASB, 3.706%, 11/10/46      1,355,000     1,376,330  
Series 2013-CR6,Cl. AM, 3.147%, 3/10/463      1,520,000     1,494,274  
Series 2014-CR17,Cl. ASB, 3.598%, 5/10/47      1,955,000     1,979,135  
Series 2014-CR20,Cl. ASB, 3.305%, 11/10/47      475,000     476,464  
Series 2014-CR21,Cl. AM, 3.987%, 12/10/47      4,410,000     4,481,363  
Series 2014-LC15,Cl. AM, 4.198%, 4/10/47      980,000     1,007,786  
Series 2014-UBS6,Cl. AM, 4.048%, 12/10/47      3,020,000     3,051,954  
Series 2015-CR22,Cl. A2, 2.856%, 3/10/48      865,000     863,518  
COMM Mortgage Trust, Interest-Only Stripped Mtg.-Backed Security, Series 2012-CR5, Cl. XA, 22.20%, 12/10/454      4,455,205        241,346  
CSMC Mortgage-Backed Trust, Series 2006-6, Cl. 1A4, 6.00%, 7/25/36      1,049,914     875,432  
First Horizon Alternative Mortgage Securities Trust, Series 2005-FA8, Cl. 1A6, 2.715% [US0001M+65], 11/25/352      446,307        344,336  
FREMF Mortgage Trust:     
Series 2010-K6,Cl. B, 5.542%, 12/25/463,8      390,000     400,448  
Series 2012-K705,Cl. C, 4.316%, 9/25/443,8      920,000     917,898  
Series 2012-K710,Cl. B, 3.941%, 6/25/473,8      195,000     195,928  
Series 2012-K711,Cl. B, 3.684%, 8/25/453,8      85,000     85,213  
Series 2012-K711,Cl. C, 3.684%, 8/25/453,8      920,000     920,273  
Series 2013-K25,Cl. C, 3.744%, 11/25/453,8      350,000     346,004  

 

31        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Commercial (Continued)             
FREMF Mortgage Trust: (Continued)     
Series 2013-K26,Cl. C, 3.721%, 12/25/453,8    $             460,000       $            449,213  
Series 2013-K27,Cl. C, 3.615%, 1/25/463,8      400,000     387,605  
Series 2013-K28,Cl. C, 3.61%, 6/25/463,8      2,460,000     2,429,956  
Series 2013-K712,Cl. C, 3.473%, 5/25/453,8      505,000     504,590  
Series 2013-K713,Cl. C, 3.263%, 4/25/463,8      480,000     477,699  
Series 2014-K714,Cl. C, 3.981%, 1/25/473,8      325,000     326,155  
Series 2014-K715,Cl. C, 4.265%, 2/25/463,8      155,000     154,580  
Series 2015-K44,Cl. B, 3.809%, 1/25/483,8      170,000     166,501  
Series 2017-K62,Cl. B, 4.004%, 1/25/503,8      150,000     147,419  
GS Mortgage Securities Corp. Trust, Series 2012-SHOP, Cl. A, 2.933%, 6/5/313      3,155,000     3,158,288  
GS Mortgage Securities Trust:     
Series 2012-GC6,Cl. A3, 3.482%, 1/10/45      313,815     316,491  
Series 2013-GC12,Cl. AAB, 2.678%, 6/10/46      242,058     239,616  
Series 2013-GC16,Cl. AS, 4.649%, 11/10/46      455,000     477,349  
Series 2014-GC18,Cl. AAB, 3.648%, 1/10/47      620,000     625,313  
GSMSC Pass-Through Trust, Series 2009-3R, Cl. 1A2, 6.00%, 4/25/373,8      857,853     827,637  
JP Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust:     
Series 2012-C6,Cl. ASB, 3.144%, 5/15/45      956,488     957,344  
Series 2012-LC9,Cl. A4, 2.611%, 12/15/47      160,000     157,943  
Series 2013-C10,Cl. AS, 3.372%, 12/15/47      2,110,000     2,094,278  
Series 2013-C16,Cl. AS, 4.517%, 12/15/46      2,005,000     2,084,280  
Series 2013-LC11,Cl. AS, 3.216%, 4/15/46      578,000     568,570  
Series 2013-LC11,Cl. ASB, 2.554%, 4/15/46      339,837     335,623  
Series 2014-C20,Cl. AS, 4.043%, 7/15/47      1,570,000     1,595,500  
Series 2016-JP3,Cl. A2, 2.435%, 8/15/49      1,520,000     1,485,185  
JP Morgan Mortgage Trust, Series 2007-A1, Cl. 5A1, 3.843%, 7/25/358      663,733     683,048  
JP Morgan Resecuritization Trust, Series 2009-5, Cl. 1A2, 4.422%, 7/26/363,8      646,939     654,094  
JPMBB Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust:     
Series 2013-C17,Cl. ASB, 3.705%, 1/15/47      530,000     537,884  
Series 2014-C18,Cl. A3, 3.578%, 2/15/47      745,000     746,560  
Series 2014-C19,Cl. ASB, 3.584%, 4/15/47      295,000     298,215  
Series 2014-C24,Cl. B, 4.116%, 11/15/478      1,945,000     1,964,085  
Series 2014-C25,Cl. AS, 4.065%, 11/15/47      3,600,000     3,664,416  
Series 2014-C26,Cl. AS, 3.80%, 1/15/48      1,775,000     1,782,319  
Morgan Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Trust:     
Series 2013-C7,Cl. AAB, 2.469%, 2/15/46      669,560     660,671  
Series 2013-C9,Cl. AS, 3.456%, 5/15/46      1,670,000     1,656,159  
Series 2014-C14,Cl. B, 4.792%, 2/15/478      80,000     83,622  
Series 2014-C19,Cl. AS, 3.832%, 12/15/47      3,650,000     3,643,472  
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust:     
Series 2011-C1,Cl. A4, 5.033%, 9/15/473,8      285,927     295,392  
Series 2011-C2,Cl. A4, 4.661%, 6/15/443      355,000     367,149  
Morgan Stanley Capital I, Inc., Interest-Only Commercial Mtg. Pass- Through Certificates, Series 2017-HR2, Cl. XA, 12.821%, 12/15/504      5,632,924     330,107  

 

32        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Commercial (Continued)             
Morgan Stanley Re-Remic Trust, Series 2012-R3, Cl. 1B, 3.076%, 11/26/363,8    $             1,851,561       $            1,740,783  
Morgan Stanley Resecuritization Trust, Series 2013-R9, Cl. 3A, 3.479%, 6/26/463,8      482,686     481,796  
RBSSP Resecuritization Trust, Series 2010-1, Cl. 2A1, 3.688%, 7/26/453,8      146,719     150,420  
Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2004-10, Cl. 2A, 4.278%, 8/25/348      382,702     384,878  
UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust, Interest-Only Commercial Mtg. Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2017-C5, Cl. XA, 14.169%, 11/15/504      10,001,926        654,450  
Wells Fargo Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2015-NXS1, Cl. ASB, 2.934%, 5/15/48      2,415,000     2,388,468  
Wells Fargo Commercial Mortgage Trust, Interest-Only Commercial Mtg. Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2017-C42, Cl. XA, 12.495%, 12/15/504      7,804,925        520,603  
WF-RBS Commercial Mortgage Trust:     
Series 2013-C14,Cl. AS, 3.488%, 6/15/46      1,045,000     1,035,872  
Series 2014-C20,Cl. AS, 4.176%, 5/15/47      905,000     928,632  
Series 2014-C22,Cl. A3, 3.528%, 9/15/57      320,000     322,362  
Series 2014-C25,Cl. AS, 3.984%, 11/15/47      1,085,000     1,087,972  
Series 2014-LC14,Cl. AS, 4.351%, 3/15/478      1,065,000     1,098,542  
WF-RBS Commercial Mortgage Trust, Interest-Only Commercial Mtg. Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2011-C3, Cl. XA, 28.785%, 3/15/443,4      10,222,234        290,548  
    

 

    

72,456,760  

 

Multi-Family—0.1%             
Connecticut Avenue Securities:     
Series 2014-C02,Cl. 1M1, 3.015% [US0001M+95], 5/25/242      607,919     609,335  
Series 2017-C04,Cl. 2M1, 2.915% [US0001M+85], 11/25/292      2,007,307     2,014,678  
    

 

    

2,624,013  

 

Residential—4.2%             
Asset-Backed Funding Certificates Trust, Series 2005-HE2, Cl. M3, 2.845% [US0001M+78], 6/25/352      3,616,198     3,645,727  
Banc of America Funding Trust:     
Series 2007-1,Cl. 1A3, 6.00%, 1/25/37      127,292     122,096  
Series 2007-C,Cl. 1A4, 3.789%, 5/20/368      119,835     116,113  
Series 2014-R7,Cl. 3A1, 3.917%, 3/26/363,8      761,768     765,753  
Banc of America Mortgage Trust, Series 2007-1, Cl. 1A24, 6.00%, 3/25/37      387,084     367,202  
Bear Stearns ARM Trust:     
Series 2005-9,Cl. A1, 4.73% [H15T1Y+230], 10/25/352      721,893     732,260  
Series 2006-1,Cl. A1, 3.67% [H15T1Y+225], 2/25/362      1,013,289     1,023,298  
Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities I Trust, Series 2005-HE6, Cl. M2, 3.07% [US0001M+100.5], 6/25/352      2,935,975        2,975,759  
CHL Mortgage Pass-Through Trust:     
Series 2005-26,Cl. 1A8, 5.50%, 11/25/35      491,440     443,452  

 

33        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Residential (Continued)             
CHL Mortgage Pass-Through Trust: (Continued)     
Series 2006-6,Cl. A3, 6.00%, 4/25/36    $             274,683       $            234,924  
Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.:     
Series 2004-OPT1,Cl. M3, 3.01% [US0001M+94.5], 10/25/342      3,750,000     3,788,636  
Series 2006-AR1,Cl. 1A1, 4.28% [H15T1Y+240], 10/25/352      2,055,542     2,081,938  
Connecticut Avenue Securities:     
Series 2014-C03,Cl. 1M2, 5.065% [US0001M+300], 7/25/242      2,257,173     2,417,816  
Series 2016-C03,Cl. 1M1, 4.065% [US0001M+200], 10/25/282      494,099     500,327  
Series 2016-C07,Cl. 2M1, 3.365% [US0001M+130], 5/25/292      837,561     840,507  
Series 2017-C02,Cl. 2M1, 3.215% [US0001M+115], 9/25/292      2,664,990     2,681,929  
Series 2017-C03,Cl. 1M1, 3.015% [US0001M+95], 10/25/292      2,437,622     2,451,168  
Series 2017-C05,Cl. 1M1, 2.615% [US0001M+55], 1/25/302      523,545     523,967  
Series 2017-C06,Cl. 1M1, 2.815% [US0001M+75], 2/25/302      829,708     831,559  
Series 2017-C07,Cl. 1M1, 2.715% [US0001M+65], 5/25/302      1,989,609     1,994,043  
Series 2017-C07,Cl. 1M2, 4.465% [US0001M+240], 5/25/302      1,475,000     1,528,271  
Series 2017-C07,Cl. 2M1, 2.715% [US0001M+65], 5/25/302      1,484,622     1,485,466  
Series 2018-C01,Cl. 1M1, 2.665% [US0001M+60], 7/25/302      1,814,945     1,816,045  
Series 2018-C02,Cl. 2M1, 2.715% [US0001M+65], 8/25/302      768,079     768,789  
Series 2018-C03,Cl. 1M1, 2.745% [US0001M+68], 10/25/302      1,720,890     1,723,070  
Series 2018-C04,Cl. 2M1, 2.815% [US0001M+75], 12/25/302      1,907,332     1,909,986  
Series 2018-C05,Cl. 1M1, 2.785% [US0001M+72], 1/25/312      729,211     730,627  
Countrywide Alternative Loan Trust:     
Series 2005-21CB,Cl. A7, 5.50%, 6/25/35      638,643     604,112  
Series 2005-J10,Cl. 1A17, 5.50%, 10/25/35      2,397,789     2,180,489  
GMACM Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2007-HE2, Cl. A2, 6.054%, 12/25/378      7,098     6,963  
GSR Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2005-AR4, Cl. 6A1, 4.36%, 7/25/358      204,515     206,457  
HomeBanc Mortgage Trust, Series 2005-3, Cl. A2, 2.375% [US0001M+31], 7/25/352      255,674     255,419  
RAMP Trust:     
Series 2005-RS2,Cl. M4, 2.785% [US0001M+72], 2/25/352      4,469,000     4,476,194  
Series 2005-RS6,Cl. M4, 3.04% [US0001M+97.5], 6/25/352      5,700,000     5,721,831  
Series 2006-EFC1,Cl. M2, 2.465% [US0001M+40], 2/25/362      5,490,000     5,457,900  
STACR Trust, Series 2018-DNA2, Cl. M1, 2.865% [US0001M+80], 12/25/302,3      2,565,000     2,572,760  
Structured Agency Credit Risk Debt Nts.:     
Series 2013-DN2,Cl. M2, 6.315% [US0001M+425], 11/25/232      1,528,062     1,701,222  
Series 2014-DN1,Cl. M2, 4.265% [US0001M+220], 2/25/242      298,390     306,853  
Series 2014-DN1,Cl. M3, 6.565% [US0001M+450], 2/25/242      1,180,000     1,363,330  
Series 2014-DN2,Cl. M3, 5.665% [US0001M+360], 4/25/242      1,835,000     2,044,648  
Series 2014-HQ2,Cl. M3, 5.815% [US0001M+375], 9/25/242      2,270,000     2,601,975  
Series 2015-HQA2,Cl. M2, 4.865% [US0001M+280], 5/25/282      168,419     173,113  
Series 2016-DNA1,Cl. M2, 4.965% [US0001M+290], 7/25/282      435,633     446,841  
Series 2016-DNA4,Cl. M1, 2.865% [US0001M+80], 3/25/292      206,610     206,751  
Series 2016-DNA4,Cl. M3, 5.865% [US0001M+380], 3/25/292      2,290,000     2,581,508  
Series 2016-HQA3,Cl. M1, 2.865% [US0001M+80], 3/25/292      1,223,631     1,224,982  
Series 2016-HQA3,Cl. M3, 5.915% [US0001M+385], 3/25/292      765,000     864,649  
Series 2016-HQA4,Cl. M1, 2.865% [US0001M+80], 4/25/292      825,936     826,725  

 

34        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Residential (Continued)             
Structured Agency Credit Risk Debt Nts.: (Continued)     
Series 2016-HQA4,Cl. M3, 5.965% [US0001M+390], 4/25/292    $             2,270,000       $            2,572,264  
Series 2017-HQA1,Cl. M1, 3.265% [US0001M+120], 8/25/292      3,731,977     3,757,931  
Series 2017-HQA2,Cl. M1, 2.865% [US0001M+80], 12/25/292      1,267,120     1,271,014  
Series 2017-HQA3,Cl. M1, 2.615% [US0001M+55], 4/25/302      3,119,035     3,119,865  
Series 2018-DNA1,Cl. M1, 2.515% [US0001M+45], 7/25/302      4,200,656     4,189,858  
Series 2018-DNA1,Cl. M2, 3.865% [US0001M+180], 7/25/302      3,145,000     3,135,587  
Structured Asset Securities Corp. Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2007- GEL2, Cl. A2, 2.385% [US0001M+32], 5/25/372,3      6,549,581     6,523,713  
WaMu Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Trust:     
Series 2003-AR10,Cl. A7, 3.47%, 10/25/338      354,056     360,159  
Series 2005-AR14,Cl. 1A4, 3.457%, 12/25/358      485,436     490,722  
Series 2005-AR16,Cl. 1A1, 3.422%, 12/25/358      523,839     526,455  
Wells Fargo Mortgage-Backed Securities Trust:     
Series 2005-AR15,Cl. 1A2, 4.60%, 9/25/358      743,284     726,569  
Series 2005-AR15,Cl. 1A6, 4.60%, 9/25/358      380,390     369,188  
Series 2005-AR4,Cl. 2A2, 4.002%, 4/25/358      1,856,580     1,874,289  
Series 2006-AR10,Cl. 1A1, 4.256%, 7/25/368      279,183     274,093  
Series 2006-AR10,Cl. 5A5, 4.422%, 7/25/368      1,267,322     1,288,138  
Series 2006-AR2,Cl. 2A3, 3.917%, 3/25/368      174,727     177,081  
Series 2006-AR7,Cl. 2A4, 4.324%, 5/25/368      161,124     165,306  
Series 2007-16,Cl. 1A1, 6.00%, 12/28/37      155,857     158,324  
     105,306,006  
Total Mortgage-Backed Obligations (Cost $440,710,082)     

446,649,233  

 

U.S. Government Obligation—0.2%             
United States Treasury Nts., 1.50%, 5/31/199,10 (Cost $4,534,520)     

 

4,530,000

 

 

 

 

4,500,626  

 

Non-Convertible Corporate Bonds and Notes—22.2%             
Consumer Discretionary—2.9%             
Automobiles—0.8%             
Daimler Finance North America LLC:     
2.20% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/5/203      1,947,000     1,914,602  
3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/22/283      1,891,000     1,867,036  
Ford Motor Credit Co. LLC:     
3.20% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/21      1,360,000     1,335,939  
3.664% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/8/24      1,629,000     1,533,095  
General Motors Co., 6.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/2/43      581,000     603,231  
General Motors Financial Co., Inc., 4.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/19/23      1,931,000     1,927,864  
Harley-Davidson Financial Services, Inc., 2.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/203      2,326,000     2,285,671  
Hyundai Capital America:     
1.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/27/193      1,746,000     1,716,563  
4.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/8/233      2,263,000     2,262,674  
Nissan Motor Acceptance Corp., 2.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/28/203      1,466,000     1,430,097  
Volkswagen Group of America Finance LLC, 2.45% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/20/193      2,290,000     2,272,120  
     19,148,892  

 

35        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Diversified Consumer Services—0.1%             
Service Corp. International, 4.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/15/27    $

 

            2,496,000

 

 

 

 

  $            2,402,400  

 

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure—0.2%             
Aramark Services, Inc., 5.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/1/253      1,210,000     1,220,587  
Hyatt Hotels Corp., 4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/28      519,000     516,236  
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd., 2.65% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/28/20      2,086,000     2,051,803  
Starbucks Corp., 3.80% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/25      2,205,000     2,206,718  
    

5,995,344  

 

Household Durables—0.4%             
DR Horton, Inc., 2.55% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/1/20      2,284,000     2,241,698  
Lennar Corp., 4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/30/25      2,323,000     2,293,963  
Newell Brands, Inc., 5.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/23      1,142,000     1,154,024  
PulteGroup, Inc., 5.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/27      1,676,000     1,602,675  
Toll Brothers Finance Corp.:     
4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/23      1,720,000     1,718,228  
4.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/27      485,000     465,600  
    

9,476,188  

 

Internet & Catalog Retail—0.2%             
Amazon.com, Inc., 4.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/5/44      816,000     927,367  
QVC, Inc., 4.45% Sr. Sec. Nts., 2/15/25      4,050,000     3,891,886  
    

4,819,253  

 

Media—0.6%             
21st Century Fox America, Inc., 4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/46      856,000     919,797  
Charter Communications Operating LLC/Charter Communications Operating Capital, 5.375% Sr. Sec. Nts., 5/1/47      1,012,000     947,249  
Comcast Cable Communications Holdings, Inc., 9.455% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/22      2,206,000     2,708,809  
Comcast Corp., 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/1/48      1,175,000     1,064,245  
Interpublic Group of Cos., Inc. (The), 4.20% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/24      2,250,000     2,253,886  
Sky plc, 3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/16/243      1,104,000     1,105,538  
Time Warner Cable LLC, 4.50% Sr. Unsec. Unsub. Nts., 9/15/42      1,618,000     1,368,010  
Viacom, Inc., 4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/43      725,000     626,407  
Virgin Media Secured Finance plc, 5.25% Sr. Sec. Nts., 1/15/263      2,366,000     2,310,281  
WPP Finance 2010, 3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/19/24      2,554,000     2,468,901  
    

15,773,123  

 

Multiline Retail—0.1%             

Dollar Tree, Inc., 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/15/25

 

    

 

2,334,000

 

 

 

 

2,309,355  

 

Specialty Retail—0.4%             
AutoZone, Inc., 1.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/21/19      412,000     408,988  
Best Buy Co., Inc., 5.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/21      2,216,000     2,325,815  
L Brands, Inc., 5.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/15/22      2,209,000     2,244,896  
Ross Stores, Inc., 3.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/24      2,328,000     2,300,328  

 

36        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Specialty Retail (Continued)             
Signet UK Finance plc, 4.70% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/24    $             2,318,000       $            2,178,825  
    

9,458,852  

 

Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods—0.1%             
Hanesbrands, Inc., 4.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/15/263      2,333,000     2,257,178  
Levi Strauss & Co., 5.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/1/25      1,633,000     1,649,330  
    

3,906,508  

 

Consumer Staples—1.6%             
Beverages—0.5%             
Anheuser-Busch InBev Finance, Inc.:     
3.65% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/1/26      764,000     748,099  
4.90% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/1/46      333,000     339,688  
Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide, Inc., 8.20% Sr. Unsec. Unsub. Nts., 1/15/39      1,355,000     1,938,555  
Bacardi Ltd., 4.70% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/15/283      1,181,000     1,179,216  
Keurig Dr Pepper, Inc.:     
4.057% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/25/233      2,351,000     2,366,755  
4.597% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/25/283      1,166,000     1,184,652  
Molson Coors Brewing Co.:     
1.45% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/19      782,000     772,337  
2.10% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/21      2,059,000     1,985,277  
Pernod Ricard SA, 4.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/223      2,234,000     2,284,323  
    

12,798,902  

 

Food & Staples Retailing—0.2%             
Alimentation Couche-Tard, Inc., 2.35% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/13/193      2,505,000     2,480,930  
Kroger Co. (The):     
2.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/19      156,000     155,571  
4.45% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/1/47      642,000     599,410  
6.90% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/38      596,000     717,577  
    

3,953,488  

 

Food Products—0.5%             
Bunge Ltd. Finance Corp.:     
3.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/26      1,427,000     1,305,818  
3.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/24/20      2,226,000     2,225,934  
Campbell Soup Co., 3.30% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/21      2,322,000     2,311,270  
General Mills, Inc., 4.70% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/17/48      747,000     732,115  
Kraft Heinz Foods Co., 3.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/25      1,315,000     1,296,191  
Lamb Weston Holdings, Inc., 4.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/1/263      2,292,000     2,263,350  
Smithfield Foods, Inc.:     
2.70% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/31/203      1,001,000     986,586  
3.35% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/1/223      1,232,000     1,192,069  
Tyson Foods, Inc., 3.55% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/2/27      1,252,000     1,190,076  
    

13,503,409  

 

Tobacco—0.4%             
Altria Group, Inc., 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/31/24      1,613,000     1,648,585  

 

37        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Tobacco (Continued)             
BAT Capital Corp.:     
2.297% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/14/203    $             2,410,000       $            2,367,277  
3.557% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/273      1,257,000     1,179,604  
Imperial Brands Finance plc, 3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/21/223      2,197,000     2,193,543  
Philip Morris International, Inc., 2.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/2/22      2,059,000     1,990,729  
    

9,379,738  

 

Energy—2.7%             
Energy Equipment & Services—0.1%             
Halliburton Co., 5.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/45      521,000     555,879  
Helmerich & Payne International Drilling Co., 4.65% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/25      1,300,000     1,345,004  
Schlumberger Holdings Corp., 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/21/253      1,351,000     1,360,296  
    

3,261,179  

 

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels—2.6%             
Anadarko Petroleum Corp.:     
4.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/44      431,000     406,609  
6.20% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/40      380,000     429,555  
Andeavor, 3.80% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/1/28      1,893,000     1,827,268  
Andeavor Logistics LP/Tesoro Logistics Finance Corp.:     
4.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/1/27      1,208,000     1,193,699  
5.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/25      1,142,000     1,170,550  
Apache Corp., 4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/15/28      2,306,000     2,280,966  
Buckeye Partners LP, 3.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/1/26      557,000     513,152  
Columbia Pipeline Group, Inc.:     
3.30% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/20      2,069,000     2,063,540  
4.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/25      1,122,000     1,134,603  
ConocoPhillips Co.:     
4.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/26      247,000     267,462  
5.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/46      511,000     654,946  
Devon Energy Corp., 4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/15/42      545,000     533,791  
Energy Transfer Equity LP, 4.25% Sr. Sec. Nts., 3/15/23      1,755,000     1,764,302  
Energy Transfer Partners LP, 5.30% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/47      638,000     620,303  
Enterprise Products Operating LLC:     
4.85% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/42      541,000     554,994  
4.90% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/15/46      271,000     280,647  
EQT Corp., 2.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/1/20      2,304,000     2,255,506  
Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP, 5.80% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/1/21      887,000     935,440  
Kinder Morgan, Inc.:     
5.20% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/1/48      595,000     594,981  
5.55% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/45      1,012,000     1,056,847  
Lukoil International Finance BV, 6.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/9/203      16,315,000     16,966,131  
Noble Energy, Inc., 5.05% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/44      621,000     610,599  
ONEOK Partners LP, 8.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/1/19      1,389,000     1,427,396  
Pioneer Natural Resources Co., 3.45% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/21      2,375,000     2,381,297  
Resolute Energy Corp., 8.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/1/20      12,800,000     12,808,000  
Sabine Pass Liquefaction LLC:     
4.20% Sr. Sec. Nts., 3/15/28      1,232,000     1,199,973  

 

38        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels (Continued)             
Sabine Pass Liquefaction LLC: (Continued)
5.625% Sr. Sec. Nts., 2/1/21
   $             1,779,000       $            1,856,211  
Shell International Finance BV, 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/10/46      805,000     792,052  
Sunoco Logistics Partners Operations LP, 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/1/27      1,401,000     1,341,908  
TransCanada PipeLines Ltd., 7.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/39      521,000     697,886  
Western Gas Partners LP, 5.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/48      299,000     290,981  
Williams Cos., Inc. (The):     
3.70% Sr. Unsec. Unsub. Nts., 1/15/23      2,245,000     2,225,356  
3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/27      960,000     922,405  
    

64,059,356  

 

Financials—8.1%             
Capital Markets—2.2%             
Apollo Management Holdings LP, 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/30/243      1,355,000     1,359,380  
Blackstone Holdings Finance Co. LLC, 3.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/2/273      877,000     818,843  
Brookfield Asset Management, Inc., 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/25      1,851,000     1,828,468  
Credit Suisse AG (New York), 3.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/9/24      1,389,000     1,378,850  
Credit Suisse Group AG, 3.869% [US0003M+141] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/12/292,3      1,396,000     1,335,100  
Credit Suisse Group Funding Guernsey Ltd., 4.55% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/17/26      1,064,000     1,078,698  
E*TRADE Financial Corp., 5.875% [US0003M+443.5] Jr. Sub. Perpetual Bonds2,11      2,245,000     2,329,187  
Goldman Sachs Capital II, 4.00% [US0003M+76.75] Jr. Sub. Perpetual Bonds2,11      296,000     249,558  
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (The):     
3.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/16/26      1,238,000     1,179,893  
3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/25/26      1,223,000     1,199,198  
3.814% [US0003M+115.8] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/23/292      1,965,000     1,880,316  
4.017% [US0003M+137.3] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/31/382      946,000     881,020  
5.375% [US0003M+392.2] Jr. Sub. Perpetual Bonds2,11      16,468,000     16,879,700  
5.70% [US0003M+388.4] Jr. Sub. Perpetual Bonds, Series L2,11      11,792,000     11,970,177  
Morgan Stanley:     
4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/22/47      1,587,000     1,556,698  
5.00% Sub. Nts., 11/24/25      1,904,000     1,982,256  
MSCI, Inc., 4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/1/263      2,341,000     2,341,000  
Northern Trust Corp., 3.375% [US0003M+113.1] Sub. Nts., 5/8/322      861,000     812,595  
Raymond James Financial, Inc., 3.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/26      1,125,000     1,088,948  
TD Ameritrade Holding Corp., 3.30% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/1/27      1,419,000     1,372,240  
UBS Group Funding Switzerland AG:     
4.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/263      1,155,000     1,155,461  
4.253% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/23/283      943,000     945,422  
    

55,623,008  

 

Commercial Banks—3.7%             
ABN AMRO Bank NV, 4.40% [USSW5+219.7] Sub. Nts., 3/27/282,17      2,800,000     2,769,088  

 

39        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Commercial Banks (Continued)             
Bank of America Corp.:     
3.248% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/21/27    $             1,973,000       $        1,855,053  
3.366% [US0003M+81] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/23/262      1,965,000     1,898,875  
3.824% [US0003M+157.5] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/20/282      1,353,000     1,323,146  
4.271% [US0003M+131] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/23/292      1,803,000     1,817,391  
6.25% [US0003M+370.5] Jr. Sub. Perpetual Bonds2,11      28,813,000     30,433,731  
7.75% Jr. Sub. Nts., 5/14/38      1,620,000     2,210,803  
BB&T Corp., 2.85% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/26/24      1,831,000     1,761,107  
BNP Paribas SA:     
4.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/14/283      900,000     895,472  
4.625% Sub. Nts., 3/13/273      1,361,000     1,356,103  
BPCE SA, 4.50% Sub. Nts., 3/15/253      1,371,000     1,356,373  
Citigroup, Inc.:     
4.075% [US0003M+119.2] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/23/292      1,856,000     1,828,995  
4.281% [US0003M+183.9] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/24/482      1,840,000     1,782,694  
4.75% Sub. Nts., 5/18/46      910,000     900,646  
Citizens Bank NA (Providence RI):     
2.55% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/13/21      1,124,000     1,097,794  
2.65% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/26/22      471,000     456,105  
Compass Bank, 2.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/29/22      2,120,000     2,053,570  
Credit Agricole SA, 4.375% Sub. Nts., 3/17/253      2,296,000     2,264,556  
Fifth Third Bank (Cincinnati OH), 3.85% Sub. Nts., 3/15/26      1,209,000     1,190,393  
First Republic Bank, 4.375% Sub. Nts., 8/1/46      942,000     889,198  
HSBC Holdings plc:     
3.95% [US0003M+98.72] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/18/242      739,000     740,716  
4.041% [US0003M+154.6] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/13/282      923,000     903,429  
4.583% [US0003M+153.46] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/19/292      1,227,000     1,247,574  
Huntington Bancshares, Inc., 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/15/25      2,275,000     2,290,853  
Intesa Sanpaolo SpA, 3.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/14/273      1,672,000     1,438,203  
JPMorgan Chase & Co.:     
3.54% [US0003M+138] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/1/282      1,829,000     1,756,293  
3.782% [US0003M+133.7] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/1/282      3,432,000     3,357,803  
3.797% [US0003M+89] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/23/242      2,242,000     2,251,059  
Lloyds Banking Group plc:     
6.413% [US0003M+149.5] Jr. Sub. Perpetual Bonds2,3,11      125,000     126,875  
6.657% [US0003M+127] Jr. Sub. Perpetual Bonds2,11,12      1,913,000     1,972,781  
M&T Bank Corp., 3.55% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/26/23      918,000     919,863  
PNC Bank NA, 4.05% Sub. Nts., 7/26/28      1,580,000     1,600,922  
PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. (The), 3.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/19/27      1,742,000     1,671,254  
Regions Financial Corp., 2.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/14/22      1,285,000     1,247,239  
SunTrust Bank (Atlanta GA), 3.30% Sub. Nts., 5/15/26      812,000     774,432  
Synovus Financial Corp., 3.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/1/22      1,337,000     1,281,849  
Toronto-Dominion Bank (The), 3.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/19/23      1,791,000     1,800,171  
US Bancorp:     
3.10% Sub. Nts., 4/27/26      1,468,000     1,400,521  
3.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/27/27      448,000     432,111  
US Bank NA (Cincinnati OH), 3.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/24/23      2,573,000     2,574,796  

 

40        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount      Value    
Commercial Banks (Continued)                  
Wells Fargo & Co.:      
3.584% [US0003M+131] Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/22/282    $           1,938,000          $                 1,869,471    
4.75% Sub. Nts., 12/7/46      1,184,000        1,175,328    
     

 

 

 
       

 

92,974,636  

 

 

 

Consumer Finance—0.2%                  
American Express Co., 2.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/1/22      762,000        734,301    
American Express Credit Corp., 3.30% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/3/27      1,393,000        1,360,817    
Capital One Financial Corp., 3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/9/27      761,000        727,185    
Discover Financial Services:      
3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/4/25      926,000        891,969    
4.10% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/9/27      963,000        934,662    
Electricite de France SA, 6.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/26/193      1,657,000        1,682,092    
     

 

 

 
       

 

6,331,026  

 

 

 

Diversified Financial Services—0.2%                  
Berkshire Hathaway Energy Co.:      
2.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/18      690,000        689,590    
3.80% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/48      548,000        502,194    
Peachtree Corners Funding Trust, 3.976% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/15/253      909,000        900,653    
Precision Castparts Corp., 2.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/23      1,364,000        1,320,221    
Voya Financial, Inc., 5.65% [US0003M+358] Jr. Sub. Nts., 5/15/532      2,240,000        2,245,600    
     

 

 

 
               

 

5,658,258  

 

 

 

Insurance—1.3%                  
AXA Equitable Holdings, Inc., 4.35% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/20/283      1,243,000        1,206,126    
AXIS Specialty Finance plc, 5.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/1/45      1,226,000        1,218,611    
Boardwalk Pipelines LP, 4.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/15/24      1,165,000        1,190,816    
Brighthouse Financial, Inc., 3.70% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/22/27      478,000        427,510    
CNA Financial Corp., 3.45% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/27      1,749,000        1,643,037    
Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc. (The), 4.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/48      1,431,000        1,410,686    
Lincoln National Corp., 3.80% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/1/28      1,421,000        1,382,552    
Manulife Financial Corp., 4.061% [USISDA05+164.7] Sub. Nts., 2/24/322      1,402,000        1,341,524    
Marsh & McLennan Cos., Inc., 4.35% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/30/47      775,000        786,578    
MetLife, Inc., 10.75% Jr. Sub. Nts., 8/1/39      10,900,000        16,813,250    
Nuveen Finance LLC, 4.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/1/243      2,261,000        2,254,926    
Prudential Financial, Inc.:      
5.20% [US0003M+304] Jr. Sub. Nts., 3/15/442      1,742,000        1,752,888    
5.375% [US0003M+303.1] Jr. Sub. Nts., 5/15/452      426,000        431,325    
     

 

 

 
       

 

31,859,829  

 

 

 

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)—0.5%                  
American Tower Corp.:      
2.80% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/20      472,000        468,335    
3.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/23      1,889,000        1,822,442    
3.60% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/28      1,249,000        1,175,031    
5.05% Sr. Unsec. Unsub. Nts., 9/1/20      1,354,000        1,397,084    

 

41        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) (Continued)             
Crown Castle International Corp., 3.65% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/1/27    $             1,156,000       $          1,092,965  
Digital Realty Trust LP:     
3.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/1/20      208,000     208,472  
5.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/1/20      860,000     885,122  
HCP, Inc., 2.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/1/20      2,382,000     2,365,788  
Lamar Media Corp., 5.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/1/26      2,252,000     2,347,710  
VEREIT Operating Partnership LP, 3.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/6/19      859,000     858,909  
    

12,621,858  

 

Health Care—1.5%             
Biotechnology—0.3%             
AbbVie, Inc.:     
3.60% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/14/25      1,422,000     1,390,122  
4.70% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/14/45      420,000     411,403  
Amgen, Inc., 4.563% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/48      827,000     814,174  
Biogen, Inc., 5.20% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/45      599,000     645,282  
Celgene Corp.:     
3.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/25      1,384,000     1,365,943  
5.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/45      257,000     255,719  
Gilead Sciences, Inc., 4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/1/46      983,000     1,024,349  
Shire Acquisitions Investments Ireland DAC, 2.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/23/21      2,299,000     2,223,156  
    

8,130,148  

 

Health Care Equipment & Supplies—0.3%             
Abbott Laboratories:     
2.35% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/22/19      421,000     418,289  
3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/30/26      2,038,000     2,024,151  
Becton Dickinson & Co.:     
2.404% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/5/20      1,442,000     1,418,873  
3.70% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/6/27      1,806,000     1,732,538  
Hologic, Inc., 4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/15/253      89,000     86,108  
Medtronic, Inc., 4.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/45      995,000     1,066,971  
    

6,746,930  

 

Health Care Providers & Services—0.4%             
Cigna Corp., 5.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/20      2,090,000     2,157,143  
CVS Health Corp.:     
2.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/21      2,440,000     2,364,507  
5.05% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/25/48      2,113,000     2,149,593  
Fresenius Medical Care US Finance II, Inc., 5.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/31/223      3,044,000     3,226,995  
UnitedHealth Group, Inc., 2.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/15/23      1,860,000     1,816,349  
    

11,714,587  

 

Life Sciences Tools & Services—0.2%             
IQVIA, Inc., 5.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/15/263      2,151,000     2,132,179  
Life Technologies Corp., 6.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/1/20      1,799,000     1,869,752  

 

42        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Life Sciences Tools & Services (Continued)             
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc., 4.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/1/24    $                 904,000       $            925,981  
    

4,927,912  

 

Pharmaceuticals—0.3%             
Allergan Funding SCS, 3.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/12/20      2,382,000     2,376,377  
Bayer US Finance II LLC:     
3.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/15/233      2,244,000     2,246,352  
4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/15/283      1,624,000     1,612,591  
Elanco Animal Health, Inc., 4.90% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/28/283      974,000     983,300  
    

7,218,620  

 

Industrials—1.3%             
Aerospace & Defense—0.3%             
BAE Systems Holdings, Inc., 3.85% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/15/253      1,889,000     1,875,785  
Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc., 3.483% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/1/27      1,304,000     1,241,669  
L3 Technologies, Inc., 3.85% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/23      2,257,000     2,272,585  
Northrop Grumman Corp., 4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/43      1,295,000     1,344,928  
United Technologies Corp.:     
3.35% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/16/21      548,000     549,900  
3.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/16/25      1,370,000     1,378,084  
    

8,662,951  

 

Air Freight & Couriers—0.1%             
CH Robinson Worldwide, Inc., 4.20% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/28      1,170,000     1,162,200  
FedEx Corp., 4.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/47      489,000     464,912  
    

1,627,112  

 

Building Products—0.1%             

Allegion US Holding Co., Inc., 3.55% Sec. Nts., 10/1/27

 

    

 

1,951,000

 

 

 

 

1,801,655  

 

Electrical Equipment—0.1%             

Sensata Technologies BV, 4.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/15/233

 

    

 

2,231,000

 

 

 

 

2,239,366  

 

Industrial Conglomerates—0.1%             
GE Capital International Funding Co. Unlimited Co., 3.373% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/25      735,000        711,816  
Roper Technologies, Inc., 3.65% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/23      2,215,000     2,219,086  
    

2,930,902  

 

Machinery—0.2%             
Fortive Corp., 1.80% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/19      2,365,000     2,342,916  
John Deere Capital Corp., 2.70% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/6/23      1,042,000     1,018,327  
Nvent Finance Sarl, 4.55% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/283      1,210,000     1,196,985  
Stanley Black & Decker, Inc., 2.451% Sub. Nts., 11/17/18      514,000     513,868  
Wabtec Corp., 3.45% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/26      865,000     805,573  
     5,877,669  

 

43        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Professional Services—0.0%             

IHS Markit Ltd., 4.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/1/23

 

   $

 

            1,409,000

 

 

 

 

  $        1,414,143  

 

Road & Rail—0.2%             
Penske Truck Leasing Co. LP/PTL Finance Corp., 3.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/263      1,940,000     1,827,028  
Ryder System, Inc.:     
3.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/21      530,000     532,124  
3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/9/23      2,251,000     2,264,855  
    

4,624,007  

 

Trading Companies & Distributors—0.2%             
Air Lease Corp.:     
3.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/1/25      737,000     696,083  
3.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/1/27      763,000     716,370  
GATX Corp., 3.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/28      1,940,000     1,803,825  
United Rentals North America, Inc., 4.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/15/25      1,228,000     1,203,440  
    

4,419,718  

 

Information Technology—1.1%             
Communications Equipment—0.1%             
Motorola Solutions, Inc., 4.60% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/23/28     

 

1,747,000

 

 

 

 

1,742,072  

 

Electronic Equipment, Instruments, & Components—0.1%             
Arrow Electronics, Inc., 3.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/12/28      1,701,000     1,609,348  
CDW LLC/CDW Finance Corp., 5.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/1/24      368,000     384,560  
Tech Data Corp., 4.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/15/27      1,745,000     1,716,808  
    

3,710,716  

 

Internet Software & Services—0.1%             
VeriSign, Inc.:             
4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/27      1,285,000     1,243,237  
5.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/1/25      710,000     723,348  
    

1,966,585  

 

IT Services—0.2%             
DXC Technology Co.:     
2.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/27/20      1,678,000     1,663,953  
4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/27      1,734,000     1,771,273  
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc., 4.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/15/28      1,166,000     1,180,667  
    

4,615,893  

 

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment—0.1%             
Intel Corp., 3.734% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/8/47      676,000     634,583  
Microchip Technology, Inc., 3.922% Sr. Sec. Nts., 6/1/213      2,288,000     2,287,474  
     2,922,057  

 

44        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Software—0.4%             
Autodesk, Inc., 4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/25    $             708,000       $            714,621  
Dell International LLC/EMC Corp.:     
4.42% Sr. Sec. Nts., 6/15/213      1,975,000     2,009,788  
6.02% Sr. Sec. Nts., 6/15/263      1,460,000     1,549,027  
Open Text Corp., 5.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/233      1,538,000     1,595,675  
Oracle Corp.:     
2.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/23      1,464,000     1,403,996  
2.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/15/25      1,440,000     1,397,873  
VMware, Inc.:     
2.30% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/21/20      699,000     685,047  
3.90% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/21/27      1,151,000     1,091,550  
    

10,447,577  

 

Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals—0.1%             
Apple, Inc., 4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/13/45      1,407,000     1,471,998  
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co., 3.60% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 10/15/20      2,356,000     2,373,103  
    

3,845,101  

 

Materials—1.0%             
Chemicals—0.4%             
LyondellBasell Industries NV, 5.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/19      1,750,000     1,763,612  
Nutrien Ltd.:     
3.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/25      743,000     706,201  
4.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/35      513,000     477,860  
PolyOne Corp., 5.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/23      2,001,000     2,069,134  
RPM International, Inc.:     
3.45% Sr. Unsec. Unsub. Nts., 11/15/22      1,882,000     1,867,709  
3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/27      665,000     637,262  
Yara International ASA, 4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/283      1,730,000     1,760,358  
    

9,282,136  

 

Construction Materials—0.1%             
James Hardie International Finance DAC, 4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/253      1,430,000     1,393,363  
Martin Marietta Materials, Inc., 3.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/15/27      1,177,000     1,094,085  
    

2,487,448  

 

Containers & Packaging—0.3%             
International Paper Co.:     
3.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/15/27      1,038,000     962,283  
4.80% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/44      914,000     906,095  
Packaging Corp. of America:     
3.65% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/24      525,000     517,297  
4.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/1/23      1,744,000     1,809,734  
Silgan Holdings, Inc., 4.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/25      1,855,000     1,785,438  
WestRock Co., 4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/283      1,110,000     1,103,348  
     7,084,195  

 

45        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Metals & Mining—0.2%             
Anglo American Capital plc:     
3.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/11/243    $             582,000       $            552,705  
4.00% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/11/273      1,010,000     932,244  
ArcelorMittal, 6.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/25      2,055,000     2,241,251  
Goldcorp, Inc., 5.45% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/9/44      662,000     707,024  
    

4,433,224  

 

Paper & Forest Products—0.0%             
Georgia-Pacific LLC, 3.734% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/233      448,000     453,533  
Louisiana-Pacific Corp., 4.875% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/24      1,231,000     1,224,845  
    

1,678,378  

 

Telecommunication Services—0.9%             
Diversified Telecommunication Services—0.7%             
AT&T, Inc.:     
4.30% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/15/303      1,849,000     1,775,208  
4.35% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/45      1,843,000     1,582,499  
4.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/9/48      980,000     849,253  
British Telecommunications plc, 9.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 12/15/30      1,965,000     2,809,808  
Deutsche Telekom International Finance BV, 4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/21/283      1,079,000     1,087,167  
Telecom Italia SpA, 5.303% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/30/243      2,218,000     2,220,772  
Telefonica Emisiones SAU:     
4.103% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/8/27      657,000     639,988  
5.213% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/8/47      818,000     807,759  
7.045% Sr. Unsec. Unsub. Nts., 6/20/36      857,000     1,041,875  
T-Mobile USA, Inc., 6.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/26      2,159,000     2,287,871  
Verizon Communications, Inc.:     
4.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/46      952,000     844,177  
4.522% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/48      1,317,000     1,241,125  
5.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/23      565,000     606,494  
    

17,793,996  

 

Wireless Telecommunication Services—0.2%             
Vodafone Group plc:     
3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/16/24      2,269,000     2,252,415  
4.375% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/30/28      1,147,000     1,139,505  
6.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 2/27/37      701,000     787,711  
    

4,179,631  

 

Utilities—1.1%             
Electric Utilities—0.8%             
AEP Texas, Inc., 3.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/283      1,166,000     1,176,181  
Arizona Public Service Co., 4.20% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/48      777,000     776,176  
Duke Energy Corp.:     
3.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/27      1,179,000     1,107,687  
3.75% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/1/46      1,117,000     1,003,385  
Edison International:     
2.125% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/20      868,000     851,519  

 

46        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Electric Utilities (Continued)             
Edison International: (Continued)
2.95% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 3/15/23
   $             1,392,000       $            1,337,529  
EDP Finance BV, 3.625% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/243      1,587,000     1,533,709  
Emera US Finance LP, 2.15% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/15/19      1,968,000     1,954,048  
Exelon Corp.:     
2.45% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/21      1,131,000     1,100,948  
4.45% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/15/46      644,000     637,188  
FirstEnergy Corp., 3.90% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/15/27      1,265,000     1,244,597  
Indiana Michigan Power Co.:     
4.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/15/48      533,000     536,913  
4.55% Sr. Unsec. Nts., Series K, 3/15/46      577,000     607,203  
ITC Holdings Corp.:     
3.35% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/27      54,000     51,242  
5.30% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 7/1/43      527,000     590,632  
Mid-Atlantic Interstate Transmission LLC, 4.10% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/15/283      1,162,000     1,170,512  
NextEra Energy Operating Partners LP, 4.25% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 9/15/243      193,000     188,657  
Pennsylvania Electric Co., 5.20% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 4/1/20      368,000     376,697  
PPL WEM Ltd./Western Power Distribution Ltd., 5.375% Sr. Unsec. Unsub. Nts., 5/1/213      2,159,000        2,239,122  
Southern Co. Gas Capital Corp., 4.40% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 5/30/47      788,000     765,181  
Trans-Allegheny Interstate Line Co., 3.85% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 6/1/253      1,321,000     1,324,365  
    

20,573,491  

 

Multi-Utilities—0.3%             
Black Hills Corp., 2.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/11/19      1,228,000     1,226,582  
CenterPoint Energy Resources Corp., 4.50% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 1/15/21      820,000     837,463  
Dominion Energy, Inc.:     
2.579% Jr. Sub. Nts., 7/1/20      2,122,000     2,093,777  
4.90% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 8/1/41      857,000     902,176  
Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc., 1.60% Sr. Unsec. Nts., 11/15/19      1,897,000     1,868,558  
     6,928,556  
Total Non-Convertible Corporate Bonds and Notes (Cost $565,579,867)     

561,341,378  

 

Corporate Loans—3.4%             
Axalta Coating Systems US Holdings, Inc., Sr. Sec. Credit Facilities 1st Lien Term Loan, 4.084% [LIBOR4+175], 6/1/242      18,686,990     18,724,364  
Delos Finance Sarl, Sr. Sec. Credit Facilities 1st Lien Term Loan, Tranche B, 4.084% [LIBOR4+175], 10/6/232      17,000,000     17,076,160  
Hilton Worldwide Finance LLC, Sr. Sec. Credit Facilities 1st Lien Term Loan, Tranche B2, 3.815% [LIBOR12+175], 10/25/232      11,840,089     11,890,054  
Neiman Marcus Group Ltd. LLC, Sr. Sec. Credit Facilities 1st Lien Term Loan, 5.33% [LIBOR12+325], 10/25/202      3,233,811     3,011,486  
TransDigm, Inc., Sr. Sec. Credit Facilities 1st Lien Term Loan:     
Tranche F, 4.576%, [LIBOR12+250], 6/9/232      5,895,375     5,890,688  
Tranche G, 4.576%, [LIBOR4+250], 8/22/242      14,887,594     14,874,791  

 

47        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

     Principal Amount     Value  
Corporate Loans (Continued)             
Vistra Operations Co. LLC, Sr. Sec. Credit Facilities 1st Lien Term Loan, Tranche B2, 4.326% [LIBOR12+275], 12/14/232    $         13,513,108       $          13,530,743  
Total Corporate Loans (Cost $85,126,439)     

84,998,286  

 

Event-Linked Bonds—1.1%             
Acorn Re Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 4.883% [US0003M+275], 11/10/212,3      2,250,000     2,252,250  
Akibare Re Ltd.:     
4.237% [US0003M+190], 4/7/222,3      250,000     253,363  
4.681% [US0006M+234], 4/7/202,3      2,250,000     2,283,862  
Alamo Re Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 5.344% [T-BILL 1MO+325], 6/7/212,3      1,375,000     1,371,906  
Aozora Re Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 4.22% [US0006M+200], 4/7/212,3      2,250,000     2,290,838  
Cranberry Re Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 4.117% [US0006M+200], 7/13/202,3      2,250,000     2,285,213  
Golden State Re II Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 4.294% [T-BILL 3MO+220], 1/8/192,3      2,250,000     2,259,112  
International Bank for Reconstruction & Development:     
4.614% [US0003M+250], 2/15/212,12,17      2,500,000     2,494,375  
5.114% [US0003M+300], 2/15/212,3,17      2,083,000     2,098,935  
Long Point Re III Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 4.849% [T-BILL 3MO+275], 6/1/222,3      2,250,000     2,270,138  
Manatee Re II Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 6.349% [T-BILL 3MO+425], 6/7/212,3      2,000,000     2,029,100  
Merna Re Ltd.:     
4.099% [T-BILL 3MO+200], 4/8/202,3      750,000     755,513  
4.099% [T-BILL 3MO+200], 4/8/212,12      1,100,000     1,102,695  
4.349% [T-BILL 3MO+225], 4/8/192,3      250,000     251,462  
Nakama Re Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 4.28% [US0006M+220], 10/13/212,12      2,250,000     2,289,037  
Pelican IV Re Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 4.293% [US0003M+225], 5/7/212,3      2,250,000     2,269,912  
Total Event-Linked Bonds (Cost $28,454,728)     

28,557,711  

 

     Shares      
Structured Securities—0.4%             
Toronto-Dominion Bank (The), Enterprise Products Partners LP Equity Linked Nts., 5/30/19-6/6/19 (Cost $9,034,894)3      9,020,000     9,708,255  

 

                                      Notional            
                  Exercise Expiration                  Amount                Contracts       
                                  Price            Date                  (000’s)    (000’s)       
Exchange-Traded Option Purchased—0.1%                                
S&P 500 Index Call(Cost $1,321,459)    USD  2,850.000      10/19/18      USD 120,703    USD 013      3,092,960  

 

48        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

                                  Notional            
     Counter-        Exercise Expiration                  Amount                Contracts       
     party                        Price            Date                  (000’s)    (000’s)    Value  
Over-the-Counter Option Purchased—0.0%                            
CNH Currency Put1 (Cost $1,044,786)    GSCO-OT    CNH6.869      8/27/19      CNH 397,000    CNH 275,000    $ 1,033,175  

 

            Pay/Receive
Floating
Rate
     Floating
Rate
     Fixed
Rate
    

Expiration        

Date        

     Notional
Amount
(000’s)
        
Over-the-Counter Interest Rate Swaptions Purchased—0.2%

 

                 
Interest Rate Swap Maturing 04/30/31 Call1      GSCOI        Receive       

Six-Month
JPY BBA
LIBOR
 
 
 
     0.485%        4/27/21  JPY        5,250,000        846,196  
Interest Rate Swap maturing 1/28/30 Call1      GSCOI        Receive       

Three-
Month USD
BBA LIBOR
 
 
 
     2.974        1/24/20  USD        60,450        1,618,431  
Interest Rate Swap Maturing 1/28/31 Call1      GSCOI        Receive       

Six-Month
JPY BBA
LIBOR
 
 
 
     0.523        1/26/21  JPY        1,744,000        226,570  
Interest Rate Swap maturing 11/21/28 Call1      GSCOI        Receive       

Six-Month
JPY BBA
LIBOR
 
 
 
     0.850        11/19/18  JPY        512,000        704  
Interest Rate Swap maturing 11/24/30 Call1      BAC        Receive       

Three-
Month USD
BBA LIBOR
 
 
 
     2.595        11/20/20  USD        3,000        157,759  
Interest Rate Swap Maturing 12/16/30 Call1      BAC        Receive       

Three-
Month USD
BBA LIBOR
 
 
 
     2.619        12/14/20  USD        30,000            1,553,552  
Total Over-the-Counter Interest Rate Swaptions Purchased (Cost $4,887,180)

 

              4,403,212  

 

     Shares      
Investment Companies—19.1%             
Oppenheimer Institutional Government Money Market Fund, Cl. E, 1.91%14,15      49,969,794     49,969,794 
Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund, LLC14      15,497,138     269,972,549 
Oppenheimer Ultra-Short Duration Fund, Cl. Y14      27,727,533     138,637,663 
SPDR Gold Trust Exchange Traded Fund1,16      215,700    

24,484,107 

Total Investment Companies (Cost $491,054,858)     

483,064,113 

 

Total Investments, at Value (Cost $2,814,260,340)      109.7%       2,769,841,704 
Net Other Assets (Liabilities)      (9.7)          (243,932,769)
Net Assets      100.0%       $  2,525,908,935 
      

Footnotes to Consolidated Statement of Investments

1. Non-income producing security.

 

49        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Footnotes to Consolidated Statement of Investments (continued)

2. Represents the current interest rate for a variable or increasing rate security, determined as [Referenced Rate + Basis-point spread].

3. Represents securities sold under Rule 144A, which are exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. These securities have been determined to be liquid under guidelines established by the Board of Trustees. These securities amount to $269,939,775 or 10.69% of the Fund’s net assets at period end.

4. Interest-Only Strips represent the right to receive the monthly interest payments on an underlying pool of mortgage loans. These securities typically decline in price as interest rates decline. Most other fixed income securities increase in price when interest rates decline. The principal amount of the underlying pool represents the notional amount on which current interest is calculated. The price of these securities is typically more sensitive to changes in prepayment rates than traditional mortgage-backed securities (for example, GNMA pass-throughs). Interest rates disclosed represent current yields based upon the current cost basis and estimated timing and amount of future cash flows. These securities amount to $9,087,634 or 0.36% of the Fund’s net assets at period end.

5. Interest rate is less than 0.0005%.

6. Principal-Only Strips represent the right to receive the monthly principal payments on an underlying pool of mortgage loans. The value of these securities generally increases as interest rates decline and prepayment rates rise. The price of these securities is typically more volatile than that of coupon-bearing bonds of the same maturity. Interest rates disclosed represent current yields based upon the current cost basis and estimated timing of future cash flows. These securities amount to $68,532 or 0.00% of the Fund’s net assets at period end.

7. All or a portion of the security position is when-issued or delayed delivery to be delivered and settled after period end. See Note 4 of the accompanying Consolidated Notes.

8. This interest rate resets periodically. Interest rate shown reflects the rate in effect at period end. The rate on this variable rate security is not based on a published reference rate and spread but is determined by the issuer or agent based on current market conditions.

9. All or a portion of the security position is held in segregated accounts and pledged to cover margin requirements under certain derivative contracts. The aggregate market value of such securities is $262,288. See Note 6 of the accompanying Consolidated Notes.

10. All or a portion of the security position is held in accounts at a futures clearing merchant and pledged to cover margin requirements on open futures contracts and written options on futures, if applicable. The aggregate market value of such securities is $2,582,147. See Note 6 of the accompanying Consolidated Notes.

11. This bond has no contractual maturity date, is not redeemable and contractually pays an indefinite stream of interest.

12. Restricted security. The aggregate value of restricted securities at period end was $7,858,888, which represents 0.31% of the Fund’s net assets. See Note 4 of the accompanying Consolidated Notes. Information concerning restricted securities is as follows:

 

Security   

Acquisition

Dates

     Cost      Value      Unrealized
Appreciation/
(Depreciation)
 
International Bank for Reconstruction & Development, 4.614% [US0003M+250], 2/15/21      5/29/18      $         2,507,986      $         2,494,375      $ (13,611
Lloyds Banking Group plc, 6.657% [US0003M+127] Jr. Sub. Perpetual Bonds      6/20/14-10/24/14        2,157,261        1,972,781        (184,480
Merna Re Ltd., 4.099% [T-BILL 3MO+200], 4/8/21      6/18/18-7/31/18        1,105,709        1,102,695        (3,014
Nakama Re Ltd. Catastrophe Linked Nts., 4.28% [US0006M+220], 10/13/21      7/19/18        2,285,941        2,289,037                    3,096  
      $  8,056,897      $ 7,858,888      $ (198,009
                             

13. Number of contracts are less than 500.

 

50        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

Footnotes to Consolidated Statement of Investments (continued)

14. Is or was an affiliate, as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, at or during the reporting period, by virtue of the Fund owning at least 5% of the voting securities of the issuer or as a result of the Fund and the issuer having the same investment adviser. Transactions during the reporting period in which the issuer was an affiliate are as follows:

      Shares
August 31, 2017
     Gross
Additions
    Gross
Reductions
    Shares
August 31, 2018
 
Investment Company          
Oppenheimer Institutional Government Money Market Fund, Cl. E      65,992,768        779,020,221       795,043,195       49,969,794  
Oppenheimer Ultra-Short Duration Fund, Cl. Y      60,077,426        68,692,422       101,042,315       27,727,533  
Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund, LLC      15,497,138                    15,497,138  
      Value      Income     Realized
Gain (Loss)
   

Change in
Unrealized

Gain (Loss)

 
Investment Company          
Oppenheimer Institutional Government Money Market Fund, Cl. E    $ 49,969,794      $ 695,756     $     $  
Oppenheimer Ultra-Short Duration Fund, Cl. Y      138,637,663        3,607,995       (326,855     (10,208
Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund, LLC      269,972,549        15,289,698 a        511,762 a        (1,441,742 )a 
  

 

 

 
Total    $     458,580,006      $     19,593,449     $ 184,907     $ (1,451,950
  

 

 

 

a. Represents the amount allocated to the Fund from Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund, LLC.

15. Rate shown is the 7-day yield at period end.

16. All or a portion of this security is owned by the subsidiary. See Note 2 of the accompanying Consolidated Notes.

17. Represents securities sold under Regulation S, which are exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. These securities may not be offered or sold in the United States without and exemption from, or in a transaction not subject to, the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities amount to $7,362,398 or 0.29% of the Fund’s net assets at period end.

 

Forward Currency Exchange Contracts as of August 31, 2018

 

Counter

-party

   Settlement
Month(s)
     Currency
Purchased (000’s)
     Currency Sold
(000’s)
     Unrealized
Appreciation
     Unrealized
Depreciation
 
BAC      11/2018        USD          1,762        CNH          12,000      $ 11,275      $  
BOA      11/2018        USD          969        CNH          6,580        8,449         
CITNA-B      11/2018        USD          36,267        CNH          246,180        342,326         
DEU      09/2018        USD          14,983        CAD          19,900               272,277  
Total Unrealized Appreciation and Depreciation

 

        $         362,050      $         272,277  
                                    

 

Futures Contracts as of August 31, 2018
Description    Buy/Sell    Expiration
Date
     Number
of Contracts
     Notional Amount
(000’s)
   Value      Unrealized
Appreciation/
(Depreciation)
Euro-BONO    Sell      9/6/18        75      EUR      12,595    $     12,605,745      $       (10,494)
Euro-BTP    Sell      9/6/18        174      EUR      25,501      24,773,701      726,898 

 

51        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Futures Contracts (Continued)

 

Description    Buy/Sell      Expiration
Date
     Number
of Contracts
     Notional Amount
(000’s)
   Value      Unrealized
Appreciation/
(Depreciation)
 
Euro-BUND      Buy        9/13/18        250      EUR 46,813    $ 47,378,912      $ 565,584  
Euro-OAT S&P MID 400      Sell        9/6/18        70      EUR 12,436      12,562,449        (126,020
E-Mini Index United States Treasury Long      Buy        9/21/18        122      USD 24,485      24,956,320        471,275  
Bonds      Buy        12/19/18        45      USD 6,472      6,489,844        17,766  
United States Treasury Nts., 10 yr.      Sell        12/19/18        1,076      USD 129,386      129,405,813        (19,968
United States Treasury Nts., 2 yr.      Sell        12/31/18        1,967      USD 415,547      415,743,893        (197,363
United States Treasury Nts., 5 yr.      Sell        12/31/18        299      USD 33,944      33,906,133        37,432  
United States Ultra Bonds      Buy        12/19/18        384      USD 61,445      61,176,000        (268,539
                  $         1,196,571  
                       

 

Centrally Cleared Credit Default Swaps at August 31, 2018

 

Reference Asset    Buy/Sell
Protection
     Fixed
Rate
     Maturity
Date
     Notional
Amount
(000’s)
     Premiums
Received/
(Paid)
    Value    

Unrealized

Appreciation/

(Depreciation)

 
CDX.HY.29      Buy        5.000%        12/20/22        USD  1,500      $ 112,100     $ (122,680   $ (10,580
CDX.HY.30      Buy        5.000        6/20/23        USD  19,500        1,326,433       (1,536,905     (210,472
CDX.IG.23      Sell        1.000        12/20/19        USD  25,000        (177,124     292,435       115,311  
CDX.IG.25      Sell        1.000        12/20/20        USD  4,800        (50,881     85,163       34,282  
CDX.IG.26      Sell        1.000        6/20/21        USD  6,400        (86,068     130,051       43,983  
CDX.IG.30      Sell        1.000        6/20/23        USD  4,900        (87,539     96,258       8,719  
CDX.IG.30      Sell        1.000        6/20/23        USD  900        (16,005     17,680       1,675  
CDX.NA.HY.21      Buy        5.000        12/20/18        USD  14,229        881,408       (322,400     559,008  
CDX.NA.HY.25      Buy        5.000        12/20/20        USD  6,480        339,840       (480,450     (140,610
Federation of Malayasia      Buy        1.000        12/20/22        USD  33,400        495,511       (273,311     222,200  
Federation of Malayasia      Buy        1.000        12/20/22        USD  50,000        720,077       (409,152     310,925  
iTraxx.Main.27      Buy        1.000        6/20/22        EUR  32,500        775,487       (828,680     (53,193
iTraxx.Main.28      Buy        1.000        12/20/22        EUR  1,900        54,835       (43,276     11,559  
iTraxx.Main.29      Buy        1.000        6/20/23        EUR  2,400        45,742       (47,022     (1,280
Neiman Marcus Group LLC (The)      Buy        5.000        12/20/20        USD  3,095        179,341       90,742       270,083  
Total Centrally Cleared Credit Default Swaps

 

   $     4,513,157     $     (3,351,547)     $     1,161,610  
                                    

 

                                                                                                                                                        
Over-the-Counter Credit Default Swaps at August 31, 2018

 

Reference

Asset

   Counter-
party
    

Buy/Sell

Protection

     Fixed
Rate
     Maturity
Date
    

Notional

Amount

(000’s)

   Premiums
Received/
(Paid)
     Value      

Unrealized
Appreciation/

(Depreciation)

 
CDX.NA.HY.21      CITNA-B        Sell        5.000%        12/20/18      USD 1,543    $       861,248      $         4,038      $         865,286  
CDX.NA.HY.21      GSCOI        Sell        5.000        12/20/18      USD 469      256,347        1,228        257,575  

 

52        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

 

Over-the-Counter Credit Default Swaps (Continued)

 

                                        

Reference

Asset

   Counter-
party
    

Buy/Sell

Protection

     Fixed
Rate
     Maturity
Date
    Notional
Amount
(000’s)
    Premiums
Received/
(Paid)
     Value     

Unrealized
Appreciation/

(Depreciation)

 
CDX.NA.HY.25      GSCOI        Sell        5.000%        12/20/20       USD       1,975     $ 1,310,769      $ (345,866   $ 964,903   
Total Over-the-Counter Credit Default Swaps

 

  $       2,428,364      $     (340,600 )    $        2,087,764   
                                        

The table that follows shows the undiscounted maximum potential payment by the Fund related to selling credit protection in credit default swaps:

 

Type of Reference Asset on which

the Fund

Sold Protection

  

Total Maximum

Potential Payments
for Selling Credit
Protection
(Undiscounted)

  

Amount  

        Recoverable*  

  

Reference
Asset

Rating
Range**

 
Investment Grade Corporate Debt Indexes    $5,800,000    $—        BBB+  
Non-Investment Grade Corporate Debt Indexes    40,186,963    20,709,000                BB to B-  
  

 

  
Total                        $45,986,963          $20,709,000     
  

 

  

* Amounts recoverable includes potential payments from related purchased protection for instances where the Fund is the seller of protection. In addition, the Fund has no recourse provisions under the credit derivatives and holds no collateral which can offset or reduce potential payments under a triggering event.

** The period end reference asset security ratings, as rated by any rating organization, are included in the equivalent Standard & Poor’s rating category. The reference asset rating represents the likelihood of a potential credit event on the reference asset which would result in a related payment by the Fund.

 

Glossary:    
Counterparty Abbreviations
BAC   Barclays Bank plc
BOA   Bank of America NA
CITNA-B   Citibank NA
DEU   Deutsche Bank AG
GSCOI   Goldman Sachs International
GSCO-OT   Goldman Sachs Bank USA
Currency abbreviations indicate amounts reporting in currencies
CAD   Canadian Dollar
CNH   Offshore Chinese Renminbi
EUR   Euro
JPY   Japanese Yen
Definitions    
BBA LIBOR   British Bankers’ Association London - Interbank Offered Rate
BONO   Spanish Government Bonds
BTP   Italian Treasury Bonds
BUND   German Federal Obligation
CDX.HY.29   Markit CDX High Yield Index
CDX.HY.30   Markit CDX High Yield Index
CDX.IG.23   Markit CDX Investment Grade Index
CDX.IG.25   Markit CDX Investment Grade Index
CDX.IG.26   Markit CDX Investment Grade Index
CDX.IG.30   Markit CDX Investment Grade Index

 

53        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED

STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Definitions (Continued)
CDX.NA.HY.21    Markit CDX North American High Yield
CDX.NA.HY.25    Markit CDX North American High Yield
H15T1Y    US Treasury Yield Curve Rate T Note Constant Maturity 1 Year
ICE LIBOR    Intercontinental Exchange London Interbank Offered Rate
iTraxx.Main.27    Credit Default Swap Trading Index for a Specific Basket of Securities
iTraxx.Main.28    Credit Default Swap Trading Index for a Specific Basket of Securities
iTraxx.Main.29    Credit Default Swap Trading Index for a Specific Basket of Securities
LIBOR01M    ICE LIBOR USD 1 Month
LIBOR03M    ICE LIBOR USD 3 Month
LIBOR4    London Interbank Offered Rate-Quarterly
LIBOR12    London Interbank Offered Rate-Monthly
MSCI    Morgan Stanley Capital International
OAT    French Government Bonds
S&P    Standard & Poor’s
T-BILL 1MO    US Treasury Bill 1 Month
T-BILL 3MO    US Treasury Bill 3 Month
US0001M    ICE LIBOR USD 1 Month
US0003M    ICE LIBOR USD 3 Month
US0006M    ICE LIBOR USD 6 Month
USISDA05    USD ICE Swap Rate 11:00am NY 5 Year
USSW5    USD Swap Semi 30/360 5 Year

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

54        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF

ASSETS AND LIABILITIES August 31, 2018

 

Assets         
Investments, at value—see accompanying consolidated statement of investments:   
Unaffiliated companies (cost $2,348,595,252)    $ 2,311,261,698     
Affiliated companies (cost $465,665,088)      458,580,006     
  

 

 

 
       2,769,841,704     
Cash      2,498,931     
Cash used for collateral on futures      1,143,800     
Cash used for collateral on OTC derivatives      259,000     
Cash used for collateral on centrally cleared swaps      6,323,417     
Unrealized appreciation on forward currency exchange contracts      362,050     
Swaps, at value (premiums received $1,117,595)      5,266     
Centrally cleared swaps, at value (net premiums paid $238,276)      712,329     
Receivables and other assets:   
Investments sold (including $78,078,340 sold on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis)      79,895,819     
Interest, dividends and principal paydowns      10,948,090     
Shares of beneficial interest sold      606,520     
Variation margin receivable      202,674     
Other      257,049     
  

 

 

 
Total assets     

 

2,873,056,649   

 

 

 

Liabilities         
Unrealized depreciation on forward currency exchange contracts      272,277     
Swaps, at value (premiums received $1,310,769)      345,866     
Centrally cleared swaps, at value (premiums received $4,751,433)      4,063,876     
Payables and other liabilities:   
Investments purchased (including $325,382,416 purchased on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis)      339,772,831     
Shares of beneficial interest redeemed      1,538,103     
Distribution and service plan fees      395,212     
Variation margin payable      379,059     
Trustees’ compensation      201,076     
Shareholder communications      23,078     
Other      156,336     
  

 

 

 
Total liabilities      347,147,714     
Net Assets    $ 2,525,908,935     
  

 

 

 
  
Composition of Net Assets         
Par value of shares of beneficial interest    $ 247,042     
Additional paid-in capital      2,561,772,331     
Accumulated net investment income      12,317,861     
Accumulated net realized loss on investments and foreign currency transactions      (8,543,101)    
Net unrealized depreciation on investments and translation of assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies      (39,885,198)    
  

 

 

 
Net Assets    $   2,525,908,935     
  

 

 

 

 

55        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF

ASSETS AND LIABILITIES Continued

 

Net Asset Value Per Share         
Class A Shares:   
Net asset value and redemption price per share (based on net assets of $1,462,784,920 and 142,341,704 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)    $ 10.28    
Maximum offering price per share (net asset value plus sales charge of 5.75% of offering price)    $ 10.91    
Class C Shares:   
Net asset value, redemption price (excludes applicable contingent deferred sales charge) and offering price per share (based on net assets of $321,786,091 and 32,416,704 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)    $ 9.93    
Class I Shares:   
Net asset value, redemption price and offering price per share (based on net assets of $130,975,801 and 12,748,752 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)    $ 10.27    
Class R Shares:   
Net asset value, redemption price (excludes applicable contingent deferred sales charge) and offering price per share (based on net assets of $74,277,085 and 7,337,070 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)    $ 10.12    
Class Y Shares:   
Net asset value, redemption price and offering price per share (based on net assets of $536,085,038 and 52,197,813 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)    $ 10.27    

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

56        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF

OPERATIONS For the Year Ended August 31, 2018

 

Allocation of Income and Expenses from Master Funds1         
Net investment income allocated from Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund, LLC:   
Interest    $     14,954,051     
Dividends      335,647     
Net expenses      (950,432)    

Net investment income allocated from Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund, LLC

 

    

 

14,339,266   

 

 

 

Investment Income         
Interest (net of foreign withholding taxes of $400)      47,061,694     
Dividends:   
Unaffiliated companies (net of foreign withholding taxes of $703,658)      27,358,658     
Affiliated companies      4,303,751     
Fee income on when-issued securities      5,705,149     

Total investment income

 

    

 

84,429,252   

 

 

 

Expenses         
Management fees      14,203,717     
Distribution and service plan fees:   
Class A      3,532,429     
Class B2      18,848     
Class C      3,503,600     
Class R      347,506     
Transfer and shareholder servicing agent fees:   
Class A      3,104,810     
Class B2      4,030     
Class C      714,825     
Class I      31,571     
Class R      142,264     
Class Y      1,220,184     
Shareholder communications:   
Class A      58,480     
Class B2      1,036     
Class C      12,725     
Class I      473     
Class R      2,027     
Class Y      17,727     
Custodian fees and expenses      166,256     
Trustees’ compensation      99,491     
Borrowing fees      93,904     
Other      305,928     
Total expenses      27,581,831     
Less reduction to custodian expenses      (1,465)    
Less waivers and reimbursements of expenses      (1,694,113)    

Net expenses

 

    

 

25,886,253   

 

 

 

Net Investment Income      72,882,265     

 

57        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF

OPERATIONS Continued

 

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)         
Net realized gain (loss) on:   
Investment transactions in:   

Unaffiliated companies

   $ 48,386,376       

Affiliated companies

     (326,855)      
Option contracts written      864,032       
Futures contracts      392,465       
Foreign currency transactions      (392,990)      
Forward currency exchange contracts      (5,185,582)      
Swap contracts      (2,415,818)      
Swaption contracts written      62,321       
Net realized gain allocated from Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund, LLC      511,762       
  

 

 

 
Net realized gain      41,895,711       
Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation on:   
Investment transactions in:   

Unaffiliated companies

     (16,806,873)      

Affiliated companies

     (10,208)      
Translation of assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies      (68,378)      
Forward currency exchange contracts      4,846,269       
Futures contracts      1,235,835       
Option contracts written      (864,032)      
Swap contracts      560,533       
Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation allocated from Oppenheimer Master Loan   
Fund, LLC      (1,441,742)      
  

 

 

 

Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation

 

    

 

(12,548,596)    

 

 

 

Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations    $     102,229,380       
  

 

 

 

1. The Fund invests in an affiliated mutual fund that expects to be treated as a partnership for tax purposes. See Note 4 of the accompanying Consolidated Notes.

2. Effective June 1, 2018, all Class B shares converted to Class A shares.

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

58        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS

 

     Year Ended     Year Ended
     August 31, 2018     August 31, 2017
Operations             
Net investment income    $ 72,882,265     $       68,000,837  
Net realized gain      41,895,711     169,977,459  
Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation      (12,548,596   (88,004,885) 
  

 

 

Net increase in net assets resulting from operations      102,229,380     149,973,411  
    
Dividends and/or Distributions to Shareholders             
Dividends from net investment income:     
Class A      (40,420,905   (44,632,911) 
Class B1      (39,050   (159,191) 
Class C      (6,992,077   (8,069,787) 
Class I      (3,139,141   (497,594) 
Class R      (1,660,873   (859,896) 
Class Y      (17,423,653   (15,247,130) 
  

 

 

     (69,675,699   (69,466,509) 
    
Beneficial Interest Transactions             
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from beneficial interest transactions:     
Class A      (140,607,809   (189,977,382) 
Class B1      (4,927,477   (7,423,467) 
Class C      (57,291,954   (56,832,545) 
Class I      109,506,241     4,521,969  
Class R      22,177,292     18,387,755  
Class Y      (93,347,864   125,398,162  
  

 

 

     (164,491,571   (105,925,508) 
    
Net Assets             
Total decrease      (131,937,890   (25,418,606) 
Beginning of period      2,657,846,825     2,683,265,431  
  

 

 

End of period (including accumulated net investment income of $12,317,861 and $13,547,898, respectively)    $   2,525,908,935     $  2,657,846,825  
  

 

 

1. Effective June 1, 2018, all Class B shares converted to Class A shares.

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

59        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

 

CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

 

Class A    Year Ended
August 31,
2018
    Year Ended
August 31,
2017
   Year Ended
August 31,
2016
   Year Ended
August 31,
2015
   Year Ended
August 29,
20141
Per Share Operating Data                            
Net asset value, beginning of period      $10.14     $9.84    $9.62    $10.03    $9.29   
Income (loss) from investment operations:              
Net investment income2      0.28     0.26    0.25    0.25    0.34
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)      0.13     0.31    0.25    (0.35)    0.71
  

 

 

Total from investment operations      0.41     0.57    0.50    (0.10)    1.05
Dividends and/or distributions to shareholders:              
Dividends from net investment income      (0.27)     (0.27)    (0.28)    (0.31)    (0.31)
Net asset value, end of period      $10.28     $10.14    $9.84    $9.62    $10.03
  

 

 

             
Total Return, at Net Asset Value3      4.10%     5.84%    5.31%    (1.07)%    11.44%
             
Ratios/Supplemental Data                            
Net assets, end of period (in thousands)      $1,462,785     $1,584,024    $1,723,245    $1,735,068    $1,730,245  
Average net assets (in thousands)      $1,524,510     $1,662,753    $1,712,506    $1,764,700    $1,627,867  
Ratios to average net assets:4,5              
Net investment income      2.79%     2.63%    2.66%    2.54%    3.55%
Expenses excluding specific expenses listed below      1.04%     1.05%    1.05%    1.05%    1.04%
Interest and fees from borrowings      0.00%6     0.00%6    0.00%6    0.00%6    0.00%
  

 

 

Total expenses7      1.04%     1.05%    1.05%    1.05%    1.04%
Expenses after payments, waivers and/or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses      0.97%     0.99%    1.00%    0.99%    0.98%
Portfolio turnover rate8      88%     92%    54%    79%    93%

 

60        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

1. Represents the last business day of the Fund’s reporting period.

2. Per share amounts calculated based on the average shares outstanding during the period.

3. Assumes an initial investment on the business day before the first day of the fiscal period, with all dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns. Total returns are not annualized for periods less than one full year. Returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares.

4. Annualized for periods less than one full year.

5. Includes the Fund’s share of the allocated expenses and/or net investment income from the master funds.

6. Less than 0.005%.

7. Total expenses including indirect expenses from affiliated fund fees and expenses were as follows:

 

  Year Ended August 31, 2018      1.06  
  Year Ended August 31, 2017      1.07  
  Year Ended August 31, 2016      1.07  
  Year Ended August 21, 2015      1.07  
  Year Ended August 29, 2014      1.06  

8. The portfolio turnover rate excludes purchase and sale transactions of To Be Announced (TBA) mortgage-related securities as follows:

      Purchase Transactions      Sale Transactions
        Year Ended August 31, 2018      $4,932,579,131      $5,044,273,340
        Year Ended August 31, 2017      $4,620,692,203      $4,544,059,262
        Year Ended August 31, 2016      $4,212,529,231      $4,192,313,269
        Year Ended August 21, 2015      $4,664,260,054      $4,590,883,479
        Year Ended August 29, 2014      $2,958,051,509      $2,894,379,022

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

61        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS Continued

 

Class C    Year Ended
August 31,
2018
     Year Ended
August 31,
2017
     Year Ended
August 31,
2016
     Year Ended
August 31,
2015
     Year Ended
August 29,
20141
 
Per Share Operating Data                                             
Net asset value, beginning of period      $9.81                $9.52                $9.32                $9.74                $9.03          
Income (loss) from investment operations:               
Net investment income2      0.20                 0.18                 0.17                 0.17                 0.26           
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)      0.11                 0.30                 0.24                 (0.35)                 0.69           
  

 

 

 
Total from investment operations      0.31                 0.48                 0.41                 (0.18)                 0.95           
Dividends and/or distributions to shareholders:               
Dividends from net investment income      (0.19)               (0.19)               (0.21)               (0.24)               (0.24)         
Net asset value, end of period              $9.93               $9.81               $9.52               $9.32               $9.74         
  

 

 

 
              
Total Return, at Net Asset Value3      3.24%        5.13%        4.47%        (1.89)%        10.66%  
              
Ratios/Supplemental Data                                             
Net assets, end of period (in thousands)      $321,786             $375,081            $420,117            $403,758            $296,136      
Average net assets (in thousands)      $350,563             $400,146            $413,522            $369,218            $230,619      
Ratios to average net assets:4,5               
Net investment income      2.02%              1.87%              1.87%              1.75%              2.76%        
Expenses excluding specific expenses listed below      1.80%              1.81%              1.82%              1.81%              1.82%        
Interest and fees from borrowings      0.00%6             0.00%6             0.00%6             0.00%6             0.00%        
  

 

 

 
Total expenses7      1.80%              1.81%              1.82%              1.81%              1.82%        
Expenses after payments, waivers and/or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses      1.73%              1.75%              1.76%              1.75%              1.76%        
Portfolio turnover rate8      88%                92%                54%                79%                93%          

 

62        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

1. Represents the last business day of the Fund’s reporting period.

2. Per share amounts calculated based on the average shares outstanding during the period.

3. Assumes an initial investment on the business day before the first day of the fiscal period, with all dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns. Total returns are not annualized for periods less than one full year. Returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares.

4. Annualized for periods less than one full year.

5. Includes the Fund’s share of the allocated expenses and/or net investment income from the master funds.

6. Less than 0.005%.

7. Total expenses including indirect expenses from affiliated fund fees and expenses were as follows:

 

  Year Ended August 31, 2018      1.82  
  Year Ended August 31, 2017      1.83  
  Year Ended August 31, 2016      1.84  
  Year Ended August 31, 2015      1.83  
  Year Ended August 29, 2014      1.84  

8. The portfolio turnover rate excludes purchase and sale transactions of To Be Announced (TBA) mortgage-related securities as follows:

      Purchase Transactions      Sale Transactions
        Year Ended August 31, 2018      $4,932,579,131      $5,044,273,340
        Year Ended August 31, 2017      $4,620,692,203      $4,544,059,262
        Year Ended August 31, 2016      $4,212,529,231      $4,192,313,269
        Year Ended August 21, 2015      $4,664,260,054      $4,590,883,479
        Year Ended August 29, 2014      $2,958,051,509      $2,894,379,022

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

63        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS Continued

 

Class I    Year Ended
August 31,
2018
     Year Ended
August 31,
2017
     Year Ended
August 31,
2016
     Year Ended
August 31,
2015
    

Period

Ended
August 29,
20141,2

 
Per Share Operating Data                                             
Net asset value, beginning of period      $10.14                $9.84                $9.62                $10.03                $9.60          
Income (loss) from investment operations:               
Net investment income3      0.32                 0.30                 0.30                 0.29                 0.26           
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)      0.12                 0.31                 0.24                 (0.35)               0.31           
  

 

 

 
Total from investment operations      0.44                 0.61                 0.54                 (0.06)               0.57           
Dividends and/or distributions to shareholders:               
Dividends from net investment income      (0.31)               (0.31)               (0.32)               (0.35)               (0.14)         
Net asset value, end of period      $10.27               $10.14               $9.84               $9.62               $10.03         
  

 

 

 
              
Total Return, at Net Asset Value4      4.44%              6.29%             5.78%              (0.65)%              6.01%        
              
Ratios/Supplemental Data                                             
Net assets, end of period (in thousands)      $130,976            $20,176            $15,142            $12,625            $10,894      
Average net assets (in thousands)      $105,548            $16,342            $14,088            $12,629                $7,047      
Ratios to average net assets:5,6               
Net investment income      3.19%               3.04%               3.08%               2.96%               3.87%         
Expenses excluding specific expenses listed below      0.63%               0.62%               0.63%               0.62%               0.64%         
Interest and fees from borrowings      0.00%7              0.00%7              0.00%7             0.00%7             0.00%       
  

 

 

 
Total expenses8      0.63%              0.62%              0.63%              0.62%              0.64%        
Expenses after payments, waivers and/or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses      0.57%               0.56%               0.57%               0.56%               0.58%         
Portfolio turnover rate9      88%                92%                54%                79%                93%          

 

64        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

1. Represents the last business day of the Fund’s reporting period.

2. For the period from December 27, 2013 (inception of offering) to August 29, 2014.

3. Per share amounts calculated based on the average shares outstanding during the period.

4. Assumes an initial investment on the business day before the first day of the fiscal period, with all dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns. Total returns are not annualized for periods less than one full year. Returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares.

5. Annualized for periods less than one full year.

6. Includes the Fund’s share of the allocated expenses and/or net investment income from the master funds.

7. Less than 0.005%.

8. Total expenses including indirect expenses from affiliated fund fees and expenses were as follows:

 

  Year Ended August 31, 2018      0.65  
  Year Ended August 31, 2017      0.64  
  Year Ended August 31, 2016      0.65  
  Year Ended August 21, 2015      0.64  
  Year Ended August 29, 2014      0.66  

9. The portfolio turnover rate excludes purchase and sale transactions of To Be Announced (TBA) mortgage-related securities as follows:

      Purchase Transactions      Sale Transactions
        Year Ended August 31, 2018      $4,932,579,131      $5,044,273,340
        Year Ended August 31, 2017      $4,620,692,203      $4,544,059,262
        Year Ended August 31, 2016      $4,212,529,231      $4,192,313,269
        Year Ended August 21, 2015      $4,664,260,054      $4,590,883,479
        Year Ended August 29, 2014      $2,958,051,509      $2,894,379,022

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

65        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS Continued

 

Class R    Year Ended
August 31,
2018
     Year Ended
August 31,
2017
   Year Ended
August 31,
2016
   Year Ended
August 31,
2015
   Year Ended
August 29,
20141
Per Share Operating Data                             
Net asset value, beginning of period      $10.00             $9.71           $9.50           $9.91           $9.18       
Income (loss) from investment operations:               
Net investment income2      0.25             0.23           0.23           0.22           0.31       
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)      0.12             0.30           0.24           (0.35)           0.70       
  

 

 

Total from investment operations      0.37             0.53           0.47           (0.13)           1.01       
Dividends and/or distributions to shareholders:               
Dividends from net investment income      (0.25)             (0.24)           (0.26)           (0.28)           (0.28)       
Net asset value, end of period      $10.12             $10.00           $9.71           $9.50           $9.91       
  

 

 

              
Total Return, at Net Asset Value3      3.73%           5.57%         5.02%         (1.32)%         11.15%     
              
Ratios/Supplemental Data                             
Net assets, end of period (in thousands)      $74,277          $51,324        $31,806        $27,151        $23,798    
Average net assets (in thousands)      $70,353          $37,273        $28,769        $25,957        $22,251    
Ratios to average net assets:4,5               
Net investment income      2.53%             2.33%           2.39%           2.28%           3.27%       
Expenses excluding specific expenses listed below      1.30%             1.30%           1.31%           1.30%           1.32%       
Interest and fees from borrowings      0.00%6           0.00%6          0.00%6         0.00%6          0.00%      
  

 

 

Total expenses7      1.30%             1.30%           1.31%          1.30%          1.32%      
Expenses after payments, waivers and/or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses      1.23%             1.24%            1.25%           1.24%           1.26%       
Portfolio turnover rate8      88%              92%            54%           79%           93%       

 

66        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

1. Represents the last business day of the Fund’s reporting period.

2. Per share amounts calculated based on the average shares outstanding during the period.

3. Assumes an initial investment on the business day before the first day of the fiscal period, with all dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns. Total returns are not annualized for periods less than one full year. Returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares.

4. Annualized for periods less than one full year.

5. Includes the Fund’s share of the allocated expenses and/or net investment income from the master funds.

6. Less than 0.005%.

7. Total expenses including indirect expenses from affiliated fund fees and expenses were as follows:

  Year Ended August 31, 2018      1.32  
  Year Ended August 31, 2017      1.32  
  Year Ended August 31, 2016      1.33  
  Year Ended August 31, 2015      1.32  
  Year Ended August 29, 2014      1.34  

8. The portfolio turnover rate excludes purchase and sale transactions of To Be Announced (TBA) mortgage-related securities as follows:

 

      Purchase Transactions      Sale Transactions
        Year Ended August 31, 2018      $4,932,579,131      $5,044,273,340
        Year Ended August 31, 2017      $4,620,692,203      $4,544,059,262
        Year Ended August 31, 2016      $4,212,529,231      $4,192,313,269
        Year Ended August 31, 2015      $4,664,260,054      $4,590,883,479
        Year Ended August 29, 2014      $2,958,051,509      $2,894,379,022

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

67        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS Continued

 

Class Y    Year Ended
August 31,
2018
     Year Ended
August 31,
2017
     Year Ended
August 31,
2016
     Year Ended
August 31,
2015
    Year Ended
August 29,
20141
 
Per Share Operating Data                                            
Net asset value, beginning of period      $10.14                $9.84                $9.62                $10.03               $9.29          
Income (loss) from investment operations:              
Net investment income2      0.31                 0.28                 0.27                 0.27                0.37           
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)      0.11                 0.31                 0.25                 (0.35)               0.70           
  

 

 

 
Total from investment operations      0.42                 0.59                 0.52                 (0.08)                1.07           
Dividends and/or distributions to shareholders:              
Dividends from net investment income      (0.29)               (0.29)               (0.30)                 (0.33)                (0.33)           
Net asset value, end of period      $10.27               $10.14               $9.84               $9.62              $10.03         
  

 

 

 
             
Total Return, at Net Asset Value3      4.25%        6.21%        5.47%        (0.82)%       11.74%  
             
Ratios/Supplemental Data                                            
Net assets, end of period (in thousands)      $536,085            $622,331            $480,847            $447,319           $280,000      
Average net assets (in thousands)      $598,353            $534,372            $453,299            $401,249           $162,609      
Ratios to average net assets:4,5              
Net investment income      3.02%               2.85%               2.86%               2.74%              3.77%         
Expenses excluding specific expenses listed below      0.80%               0.81%               0.82%               0.82%              0.81%         
Interest and fees from borrowings      0.00%6              0.00%6              0.00%6              0.00% 6             0.00%       
  

 

 

 
Total expenses7      0.80%               0.81%               0.82%               0.82%              0.81%         
Expenses after payments, waivers and/or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses      0.73%               0.75%               0.76%               0.76%              0.75%         
Portfolio turnover rate8      88%                92%                54%                79%               93%          

 

68        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

1. Represents the last business day of the Fund’s reporting period.

2. Per share amounts calculated based on the average shares outstanding during the period.

3. Assumes an initial investment on the business day before the first day of the fiscal period, with all dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns. Total returns are not annualized for periods less than one full year. Returns do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares.

4. Annualized for periods less than one full year.

5. Includes the Fund’s share of the allocated expenses and/or net investment income from the master funds.

6. Less than 0.005%.

7. Total expenses including indirect expenses from affiliated fund fees and expenses were as follows:

 

  Year Ended August 31, 2018      0.82  
  Year Ended August 31, 2017      0.83  
  Year Ended August 31, 2016      0.84  
  Year Ended August 21, 2015      0.84  
  Year Ended August 29, 2014      0.83  

8. The portfolio turnover rate excludes purchase and sale transactions of To Be Announced (TBA) mortgage-related securities as follows:

 

      Purchase Transactions      Sale Transactions
        Year Ended August 31, 2018      $4,932,579,131      $5,044,273,340
        Year Ended August 31, 2017      $4,620,692,203      $4,544,059,262
        Year Ended August 31, 2016      $4,212,529,231      $4,192,313,269
        Year Ended August 21, 2015      $4,664,260,054      $4,590,883,479
        Year Ended August 29, 2014      $2,958,051,509      $2,894,379,022

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

 

69        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS August 31, 2018

 

 

1. Organization

Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund (the “Fund”) is a diversified open-end management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“1940 Act”), as amended. The Fund’s investment objective is to seek total return. The Fund’s investment adviser is OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (“OFI Global” or the “Manager”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (“OFI” or the “Sub-Adviser”). The Manager has entered into a sub-advisory agreement with OFI.

The Fund offers Class A, Class C, Class I, Class R and Class Y shares, and previously offered Class B shares for new purchase through June 29, 2012. Subsequent to that date, no new purchases of Class B shares were permitted. Reinvestment of dividend and/or capital gain distributions and exchanges of Class B shares into and from other Oppenheimer funds were permitted through May 31, 2018. Effective June 1, 2018 (the “Conversion Date”), all Class B shares converted to Class A shares. Class A shares are sold at their offering price, which is normally net asset value plus a front-end sales charge. Class C and Class R shares are sold, and Class B shares were sold, without a front-end sales charge but may be subject to a contingent deferred sales charge (“CDSC”). Class R shares are sold only through retirement plans. Retirement plans that offer Class R shares may impose charges on those accounts. Class I and Class Y shares are sold to certain institutional investors or intermediaries without either a front-end sales charge or a CDSC, however, the intermediaries may impose charges on their accountholders who beneficially own Class I and Class Y shares. All classes of shares have identical rights and voting privileges with respect to the Fund in general and exclusive voting rights on matters that affect that class alone. Earnings, net assets and net asset value per share may differ due to each class having its own expenses, such as transfer and shareholder servicing agent fees and shareholder communications, directly attributable to that class. Class A, C and R shares have, and Class B shares had, separate distribution and/or service plans under which they pay, and Class B shares paid, fees. Class I and Class Y shares do not pay such fees. Previously issued Class B shares automatically converted to Class A shares 72 months after the date of purchase.

The following is a summary of significant accounting policies followed in the Fund’s preparation of financial statements in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States (“U.S. GAAP”).

 

 

2. Significant Accounting Policies

Security Valuation. All investments in securities are recorded at their estimated fair value, as described in Note 3.

Basis for Consolidation. The Fund has established a Cayman Islands exempted company, Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund Cayman Ltd. (the “Subsidiary”), which is wholly-owned and controlled by the Fund. The Fund and Subsidiary are both managed by the Manager. The Fund may invest up to 25% of its total assets in the Subsidiary. The Subsidiary invests primarily in commodity-linked derivatives (including commodity futures, financial futures, options and swap contracts) and certain fixed-income securities and other investments that may serve as

 

70        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

margin or collateral for its derivatives positions. The Fund applies its investment restrictions and compliance policies and procedures, on a look-through basis, to the Subsidiary.

The financial statements have been consolidated and include accounts of the Fund and the Subsidiary. Accordingly, all inter-company transactions and balances have been eliminated. At period end, the Fund owned 10,487 shares with net assets of $24,489,908 in the Subsidiary.

Other financial information at period end:

 

Total market value of investments    $                     24,484,107  
Net assets    $ 24,489,908  
Net income (loss)    $ (224,618)  
Net realized gain (loss)    $ —    
Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation    $ (2,593,385)  

Foreign Currency Translation. The books and records of the Fund are maintained in U.S. dollars. Any foreign currency amounts are translated into U.S. dollars on the following basis:

(1) Value of investment securities, other assets and liabilities — at the exchange rates prevailing at market close as described in Note 3.

(2) Purchases and sales of investment securities, income and expenses — at the rates of exchange prevailing on the respective dates of such transactions.

Although the net assets and the values are presented at the foreign exchange rates at market close, the Fund does not isolate the portion of the results of operations resulting from changes in foreign exchange rates on investments from the fluctuations arising from changes in prices of securities held. Such fluctuations are included with the net realized and unrealized gains or losses from investments shown in the Consolidated Statement of Operations.

For securities, which are subject to foreign withholding tax upon disposition, realized and unrealized gains or losses on such securities are recorded net of foreign withholding tax.

Reported net realized foreign exchange gains or losses arise from sales of foreign currencies, currency gains or losses realized between the trade and settlement dates on securities transactions, the difference between the amounts of dividends, interest, and foreign withholding tax reclaims recorded on the Fund’s books, and the U.S. dollar equivalent of the amounts actually received or paid. Net unrealized foreign exchange gains and losses arise from changes in the value of assets and liabilities other than investments in securities, resulting from changes in the exchange rate.

Allocation of Income, Expenses, Gains and Losses. Income, expenses (other than those attributable to a specific class), gains and losses are allocated on a daily basis to each class of shares based upon the relative proportion of net assets represented by such class. Operating expenses directly attributable to a specific class are charged against the operations of that class.

Dividends and Distributions to Shareholders. Dividends and distributions to shareholders, which are determined in accordance with income tax regulations and may differ from U.S. GAAP, are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income distributions, if any, are

 

71        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

declared and paid quarterly. Capital gain distributions, if any, are declared and paid annually or at other times as determined necessary by the Manager.

Investment Income. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date or upon ex-dividend notification in the case of certain foreign dividends where the ex-dividend date may have passed. Non-cash dividends included in dividend income, if any, are recorded at the fair value of the securities received. Withholding taxes on foreign dividends, if any, and capital gains taxes on foreign investments, if any, have been provided for in accordance with the Fund’s understanding of the applicable tax rules and regulations. Interest income, if any, is recognized on an accrual basis. Discount and premium, which are included in interest income on the Consolidated Statement of Operations, are amortized or accreted daily.

Return of Capital Estimates. Distributions received from the Fund’s investments in Real Estate Investments Trusts (REITs), generally are comprised of income and return of capital. The Fund records investment income and return of capital based on estimates. Such estimates are based on historical information available from each REIT and other industry sources. These estimates may subsequently be revised based on information received from REITs after their tax reporting periods are concluded.

Custodian Fees. “Custodian fees and expenses” in the Consolidated Statement of Operations may include interest expense incurred by the Fund on any cash overdrafts of its custodian account during the period. Such cash overdrafts may result from the effects of failed trades in portfolio securities and from cash outflows resulting from unanticipated shareholder redemption activity. The Fund pays interest to its custodian on such cash overdrafts, to the extent they are not offset by positive cash balances maintained by the Fund, at a rate equal to the Federal Funds Rate plus 2.00%. The “Reduction to custodian expenses” line item, if applicable, represents earnings on cash balances maintained by the Fund during the period. Such interest expense and other custodian fees may be paid with these earnings.

Security Transactions. Security transactions are recorded on the trade date. Realized gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost.

Indemnifications. The Fund’s organizational documents provide current and former 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.

Federal Taxes. The Fund intends to comply with provisions of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment companies and to distribute substantially all of its investment company taxable income, including any net realized gain on investments not offset

 

72        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

by capital loss carryforwards, if any, to shareholders. Therefore, no federal income or excise tax provision is required. The Fund files income tax returns in U.S. federal and applicable state jurisdictions. The statute of limitations on the Fund’s tax return filings generally remains open for the three preceding fiscal reporting period ends. The Fund has analyzed its tax positions for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2018, including open tax years, and does not believe there are any uncertain tax positions requiring recognition in the Fund’s financial statements.

Subchapter M requires, among other things, that at least 90% of the Fund’s gross income be derived from securities or derived with respect to its business of investing in securities (typically referred to as “qualifying income”). Income from commodity-linked derivatives may not be treated as “qualifying income” for purposes of the 90% gross income requirement. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has previously issued a number of private letter rulings which conclude that income derived from commodity index-linked notes and investments in a wholly-owned subsidiary will be “qualifying income.” As a result, the Fund will gain exposure to commodities through commodity-linked notes and its wholly-owned subsidiary.

The IRS has suspended the granting of private letter rulings pending further review. As a result, there can be no assurance that the IRS will not change its position with respect to commodity-linked notes and wholly-owned subsidiaries. In addition, future legislation and guidance from the Treasury and the IRS may adversely affect the Fund’s ability to gain exposure to commodities through commodity-linked notes and its wholly-owned subsidiary.

The Fund is required to include in income for federal income tax purposes all of the subsidiary’s net income and gains whether or not such income is distributed by the subsidiary. Net income and gains from the subsidiary are generally treated as ordinary income by the Fund, regardless of the character of the subsidiary’s underlying income. Net losses from the subsidiary do not pass through to the Fund for federal income tax purposes.

The tax components of capital shown in the following table represent distribution requirements the Fund must satisfy under the income tax regulations, losses the Fund may be able to offset against income and gains realized in future years and unrealized appreciation or depreciation of securities and other investments for federal income tax purposes.

 

Undistributed

Net Investment

Income

   Undistributed
Long-Term
Gain
     Accumulated
Loss
Carryforward1,2,3
    

Net Unrealized
Depreciation
Based on cost of

Securities and
Other Investments
for Federal Income
Tax Purposes

 

 

 
        
$2,245,706      $—        $—        $36,368,122  

1. During the reporting period, the Fund utilized $59,753,552 of capital loss carryforward to offset capital gains realized in that fiscal year.

2. During the previous reporting period, the Fund utilized $148,718,360 of capital loss carryforward to offset capital gains realized in that fiscal year.

3. During the reporting period, $98,529,920 of unused capital loss carryforward expired.

 

73        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

Net investment income (loss) and net realized gain (loss) may differ for financial statement and tax purposes. The character of dividends and distributions made during the fiscal year from net investment income or net realized gains are determined in accordance with federal income tax requirements, which may differ from the character of net investment income or net realized gains presented in those financial statements in accordance with U.S. GAAP. Also, due to timing of dividends and distributions, the fiscal year in which amounts are distributed may differ from the fiscal year in which the income or net realized gain was recorded by the Fund.

Accordingly, the following amounts have been reclassified for the reporting period. Net assets of the Fund were unaffected by the reclassifications.

Reduction

to Paid-in Capital

  

Reduction

to Accumulated

Net Investment

Income

    

Reduction

to Accumulated Net

Realized Loss
on Investments

 

 

 
$98,490,242      $ 4,436,603        $ 102,926,845  

The tax character of distributions paid during the reporting periods:

 

     Year Ended
August 31, 2018
     Year Ended
August 31, 2017
 

 

 
Distributions paid from:      
Ordinary income    $             69,675,699      $             69,466,509  

The aggregate cost of securities and other investments and the composition of unrealized appreciation and depreciation of securities and other investments for federal income tax purposes at period end are noted in the following table. The primary difference between book and tax appreciation or depreciation of securities and other investments, if applicable, is attributable to the tax deferral of losses or tax realization of financial statement unrealized gain or loss.

 

Federal tax cost of securities

    $ 2,804,436,051   

Federal tax cost of other investments

     767,193,021   
  

 

 

 
Total federal tax cost     $ 3,571,629,072   
  

 

 

 

Gross unrealized appreciation

    $ 55,717,522   

Gross unrealized depreciation

     (92,085,644)  
  

 

 

 
Net unrealized depreciation     $ (36,368,122)  
  

 

 

 

Use of Estimates. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of increases and decreases in net assets from operations during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

New Accounting Pronouncement. In March 2017, Financial Accounting Standards Board

 

74        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

(“FASB”) issued Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”), ASU 2017-08. This provides guidance related to the amortization period for certain purchased callable debt securities held at a premium. The ASU is effective for annual periods beginning after December 15, 2018, and interim periods within those annual periods. The Manager is evaluating the impacts of these changes on the financial statements.

 

 

3. Securities Valuation

The Fund calculates the net asset value of its shares as of 4:00 P.M. Eastern Time, on each day the New York Stock Exchange (the “Exchange”) is open for trading, except in the case of a scheduled early closing of the Exchange, in which case the Fund will calculate net asset value of the shares as of the scheduled early closing time of the Exchange.

The Fund’s Board has adopted procedures for the valuation of the Fund’s securities and has delegated the day-to-day responsibility for valuation determinations under those procedures to the Manager. The Manager has established a Valuation Committee which is responsible for determining a fair valuation for any security for which market quotations are not readily available. The Valuation Committee’s fair valuation determinations are subject to review, approval and ratification by the Fund’s Board at least quarterly or more frequently, if necessary.

Valuation Methods and Inputs

Securities are valued primarily using unadjusted quoted market prices, when available, as supplied by third party pricing services or broker-dealers.

The following methodologies are used to determine the market value or the fair value of the types of securities described below:

Equity securities traded on a securities exchange (including exchange-traded derivatives other than futures and futures options) are valued based on the official closing price on the principal exchange on which the security is traded, as identified by the Manager, prior to the time when the Fund’s assets are valued. If the official closing price is unavailable, the security is valued at the last sale price on the principal exchange on which it is traded, or if no sales occurred, the security is valued at the mean between the quoted bid and asked prices. Over-the-counter equity securities are valued at the last published sale price, or if no sales occurred, at the mean between the quoted bid and asked prices. Events occurring after the close of trading on foreign exchanges may result in adjustments to the valuation of foreign securities to more accurately reflect their fair value as of the time when the Fund’s assets are valued.

Shares of a registered investment company that are not traded on an exchange are valued at that investment company’s net asset value per share.

Corporate and government debt securities (of U.S. or foreign issuers) and municipal debt securities, short-term notes, mortgage-backed securities, collateralized mortgage obligations, and asset-backed securities are valued at the mean between the bid and asked prices utilizing evaluated prices obtained from third party pricing services or broker-dealers who may use matrix pricing methods to determine the evaluated prices. Pricing services generally price debt

 

75        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

3. Securities Valuation (Continued)

securities assuming orderly transactions of an institutional “round lot” size, but some trades may occur in smaller, “odd lot” sizes, sometimes at lower prices than institutional round lot trades. Standard inputs generally considered by third-party pricing vendors include reported trade data, broker-dealer price quotations, benchmark yields, issuer spreads on comparable securities, the credit quality, yield, maturity, as well as other appropriate factors.

Event-linked bonds, are valued at the mean between the bid and asked prices utilizing evaluated prices obtained from third party pricing services or broker-dealers. Standard inputs generally considered by third-party pricing vendors include reported trade data and broker-dealer price quotations.

Loans are valued at the mean between the bid and asked prices utilizing evaluated prices obtained from third party pricing services or broker-dealers. Standard inputs generally considered by third-party pricing vendors include information obtained from market participants regarding broker-dealer price quotations.

Structured securities, swaps, swaptions, and other over-the-counter derivatives are valued utilizing evaluated prices obtained from third party pricing services or broker-dealers. Standard inputs generally considered by third-party pricing vendors include market information relevant to the underlying reference asset such as the price of financial instruments, stock market indices, foreign currencies, interest rate spreads, commodities, credit spreads, credit event probabilities, index values, individual security values, forward interest rates, variable interest rates, volatility measures, and forward currency rates, or the occurrence of other specific events.

Forward foreign currency exchange contracts are valued utilizing current and forward currency rates obtained from third party pricing services. When the settlement date of a contract is an interim date for which a quotation is not available, interpolated values are derived using the nearest dated forward currency rate.

Futures contracts and futures options traded on a commodities or futures exchange will be valued at the final settlement price or official closing price on the principal exchange as reported by such principal exchange at its trading session ending at, or most recently prior to, the time when the Fund’s assets are valued.

Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or when a significant event has occurred that would materially affect the value of the security, are fair valued either (i) by a standardized fair valuation methodology applicable to the security type or the significant event as previously approved by the Valuation Committee and the Fund’s Board or (ii) as determined in good faith by the Manager’s Valuation Committee. The Valuation Committee considers all relevant facts that are reasonably available, through either public information or information available to the Manager, when determining the fair value of a security. Those standardized fair valuation methodologies include, but are not limited to, valuing securities at the last sale price or initially at cost and subsequently adjusting the value based on: changes in company specific fundamentals, changes in an appropriate securities index, or changes in the value of similar securities which may be further adjusted for any discounts related to security-specific resale restrictions. When possible, such methodologies use observable market inputs such as unadjusted quoted prices of similar securities, observable interest

 

76        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

3. Securities Valuation (Continued)

rates, currency rates and yield curves. The methodologies used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risks associated with investing in those securities nor can it be assured that the Fund can obtain the fair value assigned to a security if it were to sell the security.

Classifications

Each investment asset or liability of the Fund is assigned a level at measurement date based on the significance and source of the inputs to its valuation. Various data inputs may be used in determining the value of each of the Fund’s investments as of the reporting period end.

These data inputs are categorized in the following hierarchy under applicable financial accounting standards:

1) Level 1-unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (including securities actively traded on a securities exchange)

2) Level 2-inputs other than unadjusted quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability (such as unadjusted quoted prices for similar assets and market corroborated inputs such as interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risks, etc.)

3) Level 3-significant unobservable inputs (including the Manager’s own judgments about assumptions that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability).

The inputs used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risks associated with investing in those securities.

The Fund classifies each of its investments in investment companies which are publicly offered as Level 1. Investment companies that are not publicly offered, if any, are classified as Level 2 in the fair value hierarchy.

The table below categorizes amounts that are included in the Fund’s Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities at period end based on valuation input level:

 

    

Level 1—
Unadjusted

Quoted Prices

    

Level 2—

Other Significant
Observable Inputs

     Level 3—
Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
     Value    

 

 
Assets Table            
Investments, at Value:            
Common Stocks            

 Consumer Discretionary

   $             34,589,542      $      $                 —      $                 34,589,542   

 Consumer Staples

     59,201,239                      59,201,239   

 Energy

     79,636,708                      79,636,708   

 Financials

     146,842,273                      146,842,273   

 Health Care

     161,721,950        11,914,632               173,636,582   

 Industrials

     125,108,899                      125,108,899   

 Information Technology

     127,334,775                      127,334,775   

 Materials

     44,090,680                      44,090,680   

 Telecommunication Services

     38,262,015        8,267,491               46,529,506   

 Utilities

     41,541,577                      41,541,577   
Preferred Stocks      30,806,270        6,396,330               37,202,600   

 

77        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

3. Securities Valuation (Continued)

 

     

Level 1— 

Unadjusted 

Quoted Prices 

   

Level 2— 

Other Significant 

Observable Inputs 

   

Level 3—
Significant

Unobservable
Inputs

     Value   
Investments, at Value: (Continued)          
Asset-Backed Securities    $ —      $ 226,778,374      $ —       $ 226,778,374   
Mortgage-Backed Obligations      —        446,649,233        —         446,649,233   
U.S. Government Obligation      —        4,500,626       —         4,500,626   
Non-Convertible Corporate Bonds and Notes      —        561,341,378        —         561,341,378   
Corporate Loans      —        84,998,286        —         84,998,286   
Event-Linked Bonds      —        28,557,711        —         28,557,711   
Structured Securities      —        9,708,255        —         9,708,255   
Exchange-Traded Option Purchased      3,092,960        —        —         3,092,960   
Over-the-Counter Option Purchased      —        1,033,175        —         1,033,175   
Over-the-Counter Interest Rate          
Swaptions Purchased      —        4,403,212        —         4,403,212   
Investment Companies      213,091,564        269,972,549        —         483,064,113   
  

 

 

 
Total Investments, at Value      1,105,320,452        1,664,521,252        —         2,769,841,704   
Other Financial Instruments:          
Swaps, at value      —        5,266        —         5,266   
Centrally cleared swaps, at value      —        712,329        —         712,329   
Futures contracts      1,818,955        —        —         1,818,955   
Forward currency exchange contracts      —        362,050        —         362,050   
  

 

 

 
Total Assets    $     1,107,139,407      $ 1,665,600,897      $ —       $     2,772,740,304   
  

 

 

 
Liabilities Table          
Other Financial Instruments:          
Swaps, at value    $ —      $ (345,866   $ —       $ (345,866
Centrally cleared swaps, at value      —        (4,063,876     —         (4,063,876
Futures contracts      (622,384     —        —         (622,384
Forward currency exchange contracts      —        (272,277     —         (272,277
  

 

 

 
Total Liabilities    $ (622,384   $ (4,682,019   $ —       $ (5,304,403
  

 

 

 

Forward currency exchange contracts and futures contracts, if any, are reported at their unrealized appreciation/depreciation at measurement date, which represents the change in the contract’s value from trade date. All additional assets and liabilities included in the above table are reported at their market value at measurement date.

For the reporting period, there were no transfers between levels.

 

 

4. Investments and Risks

Investments in Affiliated Funds. The Fund is permitted to invest in other mutual funds advised by the Manager (“Affiliated Funds”). Affiliated Funds are open-end management investment companies registered under the 1940 Act, as amended. The Manager is the investment adviser of, and the Sub-Adviser provides investment and related advisory services to, the Affiliated Funds. When applicable, the Fund’s investments in Affiliated Funds are included in the Consolidated Statement of Investments. Shares of Affiliated Funds are valued

 

78        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

at their net asset value per share. As a shareholder, the Fund is subject to its proportional share of the Affiliated Funds’ expenses, including their management fee. The Manager will waive fees and/or reimburse Fund expenses in an amount equal to the indirect management fees incurred through the Fund’s investment in the Affiliated Funds.

Each of the Affiliated Funds in which the Fund invests has its own investment risks, and those risks can affect the value of the Fund’s investments and therefore the value of the Fund’s shares. To the extent that the Fund invests more of its assets in one Affiliated Fund than in another, the Fund will have greater exposure to the risks of that Affiliated Fund.

Investments in Money Market Instruments. The Fund is permitted to invest its free cash balances in money market instruments to provide liquidity or for defensive purposes. The Fund may invest in money market instruments by investing in Class E shares of Oppenheimer Institutional Government Money Market Fund (“IGMMF”), which is an Affiliated Fund. IGMMF is regulated as a money market fund under the 1940 Act, as amended. The Fund may also invest in money market instruments directly or in other affiliated or unaffiliated money market funds.

Investment in Oppenheimer Master Fund. The Fund is permitted to invest in entities sponsored and/or advised by the Manager or an affiliate. Certain of these entities in which the Fund invests are mutual funds registered under the 1940 Act, as amended, that expect to be treated as partnerships for tax purposes, specifically Oppenheimer Master Loan Fund,

LLC (the “Master Fund”). The Master Fund has its own investment risks, and those risks can affect the value of the Fund’s investments and therefore the value of the Fund’s shares. To the extent that the Fund invests more of its assets in the Master Fund, the Fund will have greater exposure to the risks of the Master Fund.

The investment objective of the Master Fund is to seek income. The Fund’s investment in the Master Fund is included in the Consolidated Statement of Investments. The Fund recognizes income and gain/(loss) on its investment in the Master Fund according to its allocated pro-rata share, based on its relative proportion of total outstanding Master Fund shares held, of the total net income earned and the net gain/(loss) realized on investments sold by the Master Fund. As a shareholder, the Fund is subject to its proportional share of the Master Fund’s expenses, including its management fee. The Manager will waive fees and/ or reimburse Fund expenses in an amount equal to the indirect management fees incurred through the Fund’s investment in the Master Fund. The Fund owns 20.1% of the Master Fund at period end.

Structured Securities. The Fund invests in structured securities whose market values, interest rates and/or redemption prices are linked to the performance of underlying foreign currencies, interest rate spreads, stock market indices, prices of individual securities, commodities or other financial instruments or the occurrence of other specific events. The structured securities are often leveraged, increasing the volatility of each note’s market value relative to the change in the underlying linked financial element or event. Fluctuations in

 

79        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

value of these securities are recorded as unrealized gains and losses in the accompanying Consolidated Statement of Operations. The Fund records a realized gain or loss when a structured security is sold or matures.

Event-Linked Bonds. The Fund may invest in “event-linked” bonds. Event-linked bonds, which are sometimes referred to as “catastrophe” bonds, are fixed income securities for which the return of principal and payment of interest is contingent on the non-occurrence of a specific trigger event, such as a hurricane, earthquake, or other occurrence that leads to physical or economic loss. If the trigger event occurs prior to maturity, the Fund may lose all or a portion of its principal in addition to interest otherwise due from the security. Event-linked bonds may expose the Fund to certain other risks, including issuer default, adverse regulatory or jurisdictional interpretations, liquidity risk and adverse tax consequences. The Fund records the net change in market value of event-linked bonds on the Consolidated Statement of Operations as a change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation on investments. The Fund records a realized gain or loss on the Consolidated Statement of Operations upon the sale or maturity of such securities.

Loans. The Fund invests in loans made to U.S. and foreign borrowers that are corporations, partnerships or other business entities. The Fund will do so directly as an original lender or by assignment or indirectly through participation agreements or certain derivative instruments. While many of these loans will be collateralized, the Fund can also invest in uncollateralized loans. Loans are often issued in connection with recapitalizations, acquisitions, leveraged buyouts, and refinancing of borrowers. The loans often pay interest at rates that float above (or are adjusted periodically based on) a benchmark that reflects current interest rates although the Fund can also invest in loans with fixed interest rates.

When investing in loans, the Fund generally will have a contractual relationship only with the lender, not with the relevant borrower. As a result, the Fund generally will have the right to receive payments of principal, interest, and any fees to which it is entitled only from the lender selling the participation and only upon receipt by the lender of the payments from the relevant borrower. The Fund may not directly benefit from the collateral supporting the debt obligation in which it has purchased the participation. As a result, the Fund will assume the credit risk of both the borrower and the institution selling the participation to the Fund.

Securities on a When-Issued or Delayed Delivery Basis. The Fund may purchase securities on a “when-issued” basis, and may purchase or sell securities on a “delayed delivery” basis. “When-issued” or “delayed delivery” refers to securities whose terms and indenture are available and for which a market exists, but which are not available for immediate delivery. Delivery and payment for securities that have been purchased by the Fund on a when-issued basis normally takes place within six months and possibly as long as two years or more after the trade date. During this period, such securities do not earn interest, are subject to market fluctuation and may increase or decrease in value prior to their delivery. The purchase of securities on a when-issued basis may increase the volatility of the Fund’s net

 

80        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

asset value to the extent the Fund executes such transactions while remaining substantially fully invested. When the Fund engages in when-issued or delayed delivery transactions, it relies on the buyer or seller, as the case may be, to complete the transaction. Their failure to do so may cause the Fund to lose the opportunity to obtain or dispose of the security at a price and yield it considers advantageous. The Fund may also sell securities that it purchased on a when-issued basis or forward commitment prior to settlement of the original purchase.

At period end, the Fund had purchased securities issued on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis and sold securities issued on a delayed delivery basis as follows:

 

When-Issued or

Delayed Delivery

Basis Transactions

 
Purchased securities      $325,382,416  
Sold securities      78,078,340  

The Fund may enter into “forward roll” transactions with respect to mortgage-related securities. In this type of transaction, the Fund sells a mortgage-related security to a buyer and simultaneously agrees to repurchase a similar security (same type, coupon and maturity) at a later date at a set price. During the period between the sale and the repurchase, the Fund will not be entitled to receive interest and principal payments on the securities that have been sold. The Fund records the incremental difference between the forward purchase and sale of each forward roll as realized gain (loss) on investments or as fee income in the case of such transactions that have an associated fee in lieu of a difference in the forward purchase and sale price.

Forward roll transactions may be deemed to entail embedded leverage since the Fund purchases mortgage-related securities with extended settlement dates rather than paying for the securities under a normal settlement cycle. This embedded leverage increases the Fund’s market value of investments relative to its net assets which can incrementally increase the volatility of the Fund’s performance. Forward roll transactions can be replicated over multiple settlement periods.

Risks of entering into forward roll transactions include the potential inability of the counterparty to meet the terms of the agreement; the potential of the Fund to receive inferior securities at redelivery as compared to the securities sold to the counterparty; and counterparty credit risk.

At period end, the counterparty pledged $722,607 of collateral to the Fund for forward roll transactions.

Restricted Securities. At period end, investments in securities included issues that are restricted. A restricted security may have a contractual restriction on its resale and is valued under methods approved by the Board of Trustees as reflecting fair value. Securities that are restricted are marked with an applicable footnote on the Consolidated Statement of Investments. Restricted securities are reported on a schedule following the Consolidated

 

81        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

Statement of Investments.

Equity Security Risk. Stocks and other equity securities fluctuate in price. The value of the Fund’s portfolio may be affected by changes in the equity markets generally. Equity markets may experience significant short-term volatility and may fall sharply at times. Different markets may behave differently from each other and U.S. equity markets may move in the opposite direction from one or more foreign stock markets. Adverse events in any part of the equity or fixed-income markets may have unexpected negative effects on other market segments.

The prices of individual equity securities generally do not all move in the same direction at the same time and a variety of factors can affect the price of a particular company’s securities. These factors may include, but are not limited to, poor earnings reports, a loss of customers, litigation against the company, general unfavorable performance of the company’s sector or industry, or changes in government regulations affecting the company or its industry.

 

 

5. Market Risk Factors

The Fund’s investments in securities and/or financial derivatives may expose the Fund to various market risk factors:

Commodity Risk. Commodity risk relates to the change in value of commodities or commodity indexes as they relate to increases or decreases in the commodities market. Commodities are physical assets that have tangible properties. Examples of these types of assets are crude oil, heating oil, metals, livestock, and agricultural products.

Credit Risk. Credit risk relates to the ability of the issuer of debt to meet interest and principal payments, or both, as they come due. In general, lower-grade, higher-yield debt securities are subject to credit risk to a greater extent than lower-yield, higher-quality securities.

Equity Risk. Equity risk relates to the change in value of equity securities as they relate to increases or decreases in the general market.

Foreign Exchange Rate Risk. Foreign exchange rate risk relates to the change in the U.S. dollar value of a security held that is denominated in a foreign currency. The U.S. dollar value of a foreign currency denominated security will decrease as the dollar appreciates against the currency, while the U.S. dollar value will increase as the dollar depreciates against the currency.

Interest Rate Risk. Interest rate risk refers to the fluctuations in value of fixed-income securities resulting from the inverse relationship between price and yield. For example, an increase in general interest rates will tend to reduce the market value of already issued fixed-income investments, and a decline in general interest rates will tend to increase their value. In addition, debt securities with longer maturities, which tend to have higher yields, are subject to potentially greater fluctuations in value from changes in interest rates than obligations with shorter maturities.

Volatility Risk. Volatility risk refers to the magnitude of the movement, but not the direction of the movement, in a financial instrument’s price over a defined time period.

 

82        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

5. Market Risk Factors (Continued)

Large increases or decreases in a financial instrument’s price over a relative time period typically indicate greater volatility risk, while small increases or decreases in its price typically indicate lower volatility risk.

 

 

6. Use of Derivatives

The Fund’s investment objective not only permits the Fund to purchase investment securities, it also allows the Fund to enter into various types of derivatives contracts, including, but not limited to, futures contracts, forward currency exchange contracts, credit default swaps, interest rate swaps, total return swaps, variance swaps and purchased and written options. In doing so, the Fund will employ strategies in differing combinations to permit it to increase, decrease, or change the level or types of exposure to market risk factors. These instruments may allow the Fund to pursue its objectives more quickly and efficiently than if it were to make direct purchases or sales of securities capable of effecting a similar response to market factors. Such contracts may be entered into through a bilateral over-the-counter (“OTC”) transaction, or through a securities or futures exchange and cleared through a clearinghouse.

Derivatives may have little or no initial cash investment relative to their market value exposure and therefore can produce significant gains or losses in excess of their cost due to changes in the market risk factors and the overall market. This use of embedded leverage allows the Fund to increase its market value exposure relative to its net assets and can substantially increase the volatility of the Fund’s performance. In instances where the Fund is using derivatives to decrease, or hedge, exposures to market risk factors for securities held by the Fund, there are also risks that those derivatives may not perform as expected resulting in losses for the combined or hedged positions. Some derivatives have the potential for unlimited loss, regardless of the size of the Fund’s initial investment.

Additional associated risks from investing in derivatives also exist and potentially could have significant effects on the valuation of the derivative and the Fund. Typically, the associated risks are not the risks that the Fund is attempting to increase or decrease exposure to, per its investment objectives, but are the additional risks from investing in derivatives. Examples of these associated risks are liquidity risk, which is the risk that the Fund will not be able to sell the derivative in the open market in a timely manner, and counterparty credit risk, which is the risk that the counterparty will not fulfill its obligation to the Fund.

The Fund’s actual exposures to these market risk factors and associated risks during the period are discussed in further detail, by derivative type, below.

Forward Currency Exchange Contracts

The Fund may enter into forward currency exchange contracts (“forward contracts”) for the purchase or sale of a foreign currency at a negotiated rate at a future date. Such contracts are traded in the OTC inter-bank currency dealer market.

Forward contracts are reported on a schedule following the Consolidated Statement of Investments. The unrealized appreciation (depreciation) is reported in the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities as a receivable (or payable) and in the Consolidated

 

83        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

Statement of Operations within the change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation). At contract close, the difference between the original cost of the contract and the value at the close date is recorded as a realized gain (loss) in the Consolidated Statement of Operations.

The Fund may enter into forward foreign currency exchange contracts in order to decrease exposure to foreign exchange rate risk associated with either specific transactions or portfolio instruments or to increase exposure to foreign exchange rate risk.

During the reporting period, the Fund had daily average contract amounts on forward contracts to buy and sell of $12,633,933 and $98,560,662, respectively.

Additional associated risk to the Fund includes counterparty credit risk. Counterparty credit risk arises from the possibility that the counterparty to a forward contract will default and fail to perform its obligations to the Fund.

Futures Contracts

A futures contract is a commitment to buy or sell a specific amount of a commodity, financial instrument or currency at a negotiated price on a stipulated future date. The Fund may buy and sell futures contracts and may also buy or write put or call options on these futures contracts. Futures contracts and options thereon are generally entered into on a regulated futures exchange and cleared through a clearinghouse associated with the exchange.

Upon entering into a futures contract, the Fund is required to deposit either cash or securities (initial margin) in an amount equal to a certain percentage of the contract value in an account registered in the futures commission merchant’s name. Subsequent payments (variation margin) are paid to or from the futures commission merchant each day equal to the daily changes in the contract value. Such payments are recorded as unrealized gains and losses. Should the Fund fail to make requested variation margin payments, the futures commission merchant can gain access to the initial margin to satisfy the Fund’s payment obligations.

Futures contracts are reported on a schedule following the Consolidated Statement of Investments. Securities held by a futures commission merchant to cover initial margin requirements on open futures contracts are noted in the Consolidated Statement of Investments. Cash held by a futures commission merchant to cover initial margin requirements on open futures contracts and the receivable and/or payable for the daily mark to market for the variation margin are noted in the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities. The net change in unrealized appreciation and depreciation is reported in the Consolidated Statement of Operations. Realized gains (losses) are reported in the Consolidated Statement of Operations at the closing or expiration of futures contracts.

The Fund may purchase and/or sell financial futures contracts and options on futures contracts to gain exposure to, or decrease exposure to interest rate risk, equity risk, foreign exchange rate risk, volatility risk, or commodity risk.

During the reporting period, the Fund had an ending monthly average market value of $161,675,038 and $381,364,762 on futures contracts purchased and sold, respectively.

Additional associated risks of entering into futures contracts (and related options) include the possibility that there may be an illiquid market where the Fund is unable to liquidate the

 

84        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

contract or enter into an offsetting position and, if used for hedging purposes, the risk that the price of the contract will correlate imperfectly with the prices of the Fund’s securities.

Option Activity

The Fund may buy and sell put and call options, or write put and call options. When an option is written, the Fund receives a premium and becomes obligated to sell or purchase the underlying security, currency or other underlying financial instrument at a fixed price, upon exercise of the option.

Options can be traded through an exchange or through a privately negotiated arrangement with a dealer in an OTC transaction. Options traded through an exchange are generally cleared through a clearinghouse (such as The Options Clearing Corporation). The difference between the premium received or paid, and market value of the option, is recorded as unrealized appreciation or depreciation. The net change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation is reported in the Consolidated Statement of Operations. When an option is exercised, the cost of the security purchased or the proceeds of the security sale are adjusted by the amount of premium received or paid. Upon the expiration or closing of the option transaction, a gain or loss is reported in the Consolidated Statement of Operations.

Foreign Currency Options. The Fund may purchase or write call and put options on currencies to increase or decrease exposure to foreign exchange rate risk. A purchased call, or written put option becomes more valuable as the price of the underlying financial instrument appreciates relative to the strike price. A purchased put, or written call option becomes more valuable as the price of the underlying financial instrument depreciates relative to the strike price.

Index/Security Options. The Fund may purchase or write call and put options on individual equity securities and/or equity indexes to increase or decrease exposure to equity risk. A purchased call or written put option becomes more valuable as the price of the underlying financial instrument appreciates relative to the strike price. A purchased put or written call option becomes more valuable as the price of the underlying financial instrument depreciates relative to the strike price.

During the reporting period, the Fund had an ending monthly average market value of $2,158,630 and $637,690 on purchased call options and purchased put options, respectively.

Options written, if any, are reported in a schedule following the Consolidated Statement of Investments and as a liability in the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Securities held in collateral accounts to cover potential obligations with respect to outstanding written options are noted in the Consolidated Statement of Investments.

The risk in writing a call option is the market price of the underlying security increasing above the strike price and the option being exercised. The Fund must then purchase the underlying security at the higher market price and deliver it for the strike price or, if it owns the underlying security, deliver it at the strike price and forego any benefit from the increase in the price of the underlying security above the strike price. The risk in writing a put option is the market price of the underlying security decreasing below the strike price and the option being exercised. The Fund must then purchase the underlying security at the strike price when the

 

85        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

market price of the underlying security is below the strike price. Alternatively, the Fund could also close out a written option position, in which case the risk is that the closing transaction will require a premium to be paid by the Fund that is greater than the premium the Fund received. When writing options, the Fund has the additional risk that there may be an illiquid market where the Fund is unable to close the contact. The risk in buying an option is that the Fund pays a premium for the option, and the option may be worth less than the premium paid or expire worthless.

Additional associated risks to the Fund include counterparty credit risk and liquidity risk. At period end, the Fund had no written options outstanding.

Swap Contracts

The Fund may enter into swap contract agreements with a counterparty to exchange a series of cash flows based on either specified reference rates, the price or volatility of asset or non-asset references, or the occurrence of a credit event, over a specified period. Swaps can be executed in a bi-lateral privately negotiated arrangement with a dealer in an OTC transaction (“OTC swaps”) or executed on a regulated market. Certain swaps, regardless of the venue of their execution, are required to be cleared through a clearinghouse (“centrally cleared swaps”). Swap contracts may include interest rate, equity, debt, index, total return, credit default, currency, and volatility swaps.

Swap contracts are reported on a schedule following the Consolidated Statement of Investments. The values of centrally cleared swap and OTC swap contracts are aggregated by positive and negative values and disclosed separately on the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities. The unrealized appreciation (depreciation) related to the change in the valuation of the notional amount of the swap is combined with the accrued interest due to (owed by) the Fund, if any, at termination or settlement. The net change in this amount during the period is included on the Consolidated Statement of Operations. The Fund also records any periodic payments received from (paid to) the counterparty, including at termination, under such contracts as realized gain (loss) on the Consolidated Statement of Operations.

Swap contract agreements are exposed to the market risk factor of the specific underlying reference rate or asset. Swap contracts are typically more attractively priced compared to similar investments in related cash securities because they isolate the risk to one market risk factor and eliminate the other market risk factors. Investments in cash securities (for instance bonds) have exposure to multiple risk factors (credit and interest rate risk). Because swaps have embedded leverage, they can expose the Fund to substantial risk in the isolated market risk factor.

Credit Default Swap Contracts. A credit default swap is a contract that enables an investor to buy or sell protection against a defined-issuer credit event, such as the issuer’s failure to make timely payments of interest or principal on a debt security, bankruptcy or restructuring. The Fund may enter into credit default swaps either by buying or selling protection on a corporate issuer, sovereign issuer, or a basket or index of issuers (the “reference asset”).

The buyer of protection pays a periodic fee to the seller of protection based on the

 

86        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

notional amount of the swap contract. The seller of protection agrees to compensate the buyer of protection for future potential losses as a result of a credit event on the reference asset. The contract effectively transfers the credit event risk of the reference asset from the buyer of protection to the seller of protection.

The ongoing value of the contract will fluctuate throughout the term of the contract based primarily on the credit risk of the reference asset. If the credit quality of the reference asset improves relative to the credit quality at contract initiation, the buyer of protection may have an unrealized loss greater than the anticipated periodic fee owed. This unrealized loss would be the result of current credit protection being cheaper than the cost of credit protection at contract initiation. If the buyer elects to terminate the contract prior to its maturity, and there has been no credit event, this unrealized loss will become realized. If the contract is held to maturity, and there has been no credit event, the realized loss will be equal to the periodic fee paid over the life of the contract.

If there is a credit event, the buyer of protection can exercise its rights under the contract and receive a payment from the seller of protection equal to the notional amount of the swap less the market value of specified debt securities issued by the reference asset. Upon exercise of the contract the difference between such value and the notional amount is recorded as realized gain (loss) and is included on the Consolidated Statement of Operations.

The Fund may purchase or sell credit protection through credit default swaps to increase or decrease exposure to the credit risk of individual issuers and/or indexes of issuers that are either unavailable or considered to be less attractive in the bond market.

For the reporting period, the Fund had ending monthly average notional amounts of $150,216,901 and $45,722,065 on credit default swaps to buy protection and credit default swaps to sell protection, respectively.

Additional associated risks to the Fund include counterparty credit risk and liquidity risk.

Swaption Transactions

The Fund may enter into a swaption contract which grants the purchaser the right, but not the obligation, to enter into a swap transaction at preset terms detailed in the underlying agreement within a specified period of time. The purchaser pays a premium to the swaption writer who bears the risk of unfavorable changes in the preset terms on the underlying swap.

Purchased swaptions are reported as a component of investments in the Consolidated Statement of Investments and the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Written swaptions are reported on a schedule following the Consolidated Statement of Investments and their value is reported as a separate asset or liability line item in the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities. The net change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation on written swaptions is separately reported in the Consolidated Statement of Operations. When a swaption is exercised, the cost of the swap is adjusted by the amount of premium paid or received. Upon the expiration or closing of an unexercised swaption contract, a gain or loss is reported in the Consolidated Statement of Operations for the amount of the premium paid or received.

 

87        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

The Fund generally will incur a greater risk when it writes a swaption than when it purchases a swaption. When the Fund writes a swaption it will become obligated, upon exercise of the swaption, according to the terms of the underlying agreement. Swaption contracts written by the Fund do not give rise to counterparty credit risk prior to exercise as they obligate the Fund, not its counterparty, to perform. When the Fund purchases a swaption it only risks losing the amount of the premium it paid if the swaption expires unexercised. However, when the Fund exercises a purchased swaption there is a risk that the counterparty will fail to perform or otherwise default on its obligations under the swaption contract.

The Fund may purchase swaptions which give it the option to enter into an interest rate swap in which it pays a floating or fixed interest rate and receives a fixed or floating interest rate in order to increase or decrease exposure to interest rate risk. Purchasing the fixed portion of this swaption becomes more valuable as the reference interest rate decreases relative to the preset interest rate. Purchasing the floating portion of this swaption becomes more valuable as the reference interest rate increases relative to the preset interest rate.

The Fund may purchase swaptions which give it the option to buy or sell credit protection through credit default swaps in order to decrease or increase exposure to the credit risk of individual issuers and/ or indexes of issuers. A swaption selling protection becomes more valuable as the likelihood of a credit event on the reference asset decreases. A swaption buying protection becomes more valuable as the likelihood of a credit event on the reference asset increases.

The Fund may write swaptions which give it the obligation, if exercised by the purchaser, to sell or buy credit protection through credit default swaps in order to increase or decrease exposure to the credit risk of individual issuers and/or indexes of issuers. A written swaption selling protection becomes more valuable as the likelihood of a credit event on the reference asset decreases. A written swaption buying protection becomes more valuable as the likelihood of a credit event on the reference asset increases.

During the reporting period, the Fund had an ending monthly average market value of $3,266,861 and $3,679 on purchased and written swaptions, respectively.

At period end, the Fund had no written swaption contracts outstanding.

Counterparty Credit Risk. Derivative positions are subject to the risk that the counterparty will not fulfill its obligation to the Fund. The Fund intends to enter into derivative transactions with counterparties that the Manager believes to be creditworthy at the time of the transaction.

The Fund’s risk of loss from counterparty credit risk on OTC derivatives is generally limited to the aggregate unrealized gain netted against any collateral held by the Fund. For OTC options purchased, the Fund bears the risk of loss of the amount of the premiums paid plus the positive change in market values net of any collateral held by the Fund should the counterparty fail to perform under the contracts. Options written by the Fund do not typically give rise to counterparty credit risk, as options written generally obligate the Fund and not the counterparty to perform.

To reduce counterparty risk with respect to OTC transactions, the Fund has entered

 

88        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

into master netting arrangements, established within the Fund’s International Swap and Derivatives Association, Inc. (“ISDA”) master agreements, which allow the Fund to make (or to have an entitlement to receive) a single net payment in the event of default (close-out netting) for outstanding payables and receivables with respect to certain OTC positions in swaps, options, swaptions, and forward currency exchange contracts for each individual counterparty. In addition, the Fund may require that certain counterparties post cash and/or securities in collateral accounts to cover their net payment obligations for those derivative contracts subject to ISDA master agreements. If the counterparty fails to perform under these contracts and agreements, the cash and/or securities will be made available to the Fund.

At period end, the Fund has required certain counterparties to post collateral of $5,245,909.

ISDA master agreements include credit related contingent features which allow counterparties to OTC derivatives to terminate derivative contracts prior to maturity in the event that, for example, the Fund’s net assets decline by a stated percentage or the Fund fails to meet the terms of its ISDA master agreements, which would cause the Fund to accelerate payment of any net liability owed to the counterparty.

For financial reporting purposes, the Fund does not offset derivative assets and derivative liabilities that are subject to netting arrangements in the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Bankruptcy or insolvency laws of a particular jurisdiction may impose restrictions on or prohibitions against the right of offset in bankruptcy, insolvency or other events.

The Fund’s risk of loss from counterparty credit risk on exchange-traded derivatives cleared through a clearinghouse and for centrally cleared swaps is generally considered lower than as compared to OTC derivatives. However, counterparty credit risk exists with respect to initial and variation margin deposited/paid by the Fund that is held in futures commission merchant, broker and/or clearinghouse accounts for such exchange-traded derivatives and for centrally cleared swaps.

With respect to centrally cleared swaps, such transactions will be submitted for clearing, and if cleared, will be held in accounts at futures commission merchants or brokers that are members of clearinghouses. While brokers, futures commission merchants and clearinghouses are required to segregate customer margin from their own assets, in the event that a broker, futures commission merchant or clearinghouse becomes insolvent or goes into bankruptcy and at that time there is a shortfall in the aggregate amount of margin held by the broker, futures commission merchant or clearinghouse for all its customers, U.S. bankruptcy laws will typically allocate that shortfall on a pro-rata basis across all the broker’s, futures commission merchant’s or clearinghouse’s customers, potentially resulting in losses to the Fund.

There is the risk that a broker, futures commission merchant or clearinghouse will decline to clear a transaction on the Fund’s behalf, and the Fund may be required to pay a termination fee to the executing broker with whom the Fund initially enters into the transaction. Clearinghouses may also be permitted to terminate centrally cleared swaps at any time. The Fund is also subject to the risk that the broker or futures commission merchant will improperly use the Fund’s assets deposited/paid as initial or variation margin to satisfy payment

 

89        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

obligations of another customer. In the event of a default by another customer of the broker or futures commission merchant, the Fund might not receive its variation margin payments from the clearinghouse, due to the manner in which variation margin payments are aggregated for all customers of the broker/futures commission merchant.

Collateral and margin requirements differ by type of derivative. Margin requirements are established by the broker, futures commission merchant or clearinghouse for exchange-traded and cleared derivatives, including centrally cleared swaps. Brokers, futures commission merchants and clearinghouses can ask for margin in excess of the regulatory minimum, or increase the margin amount, in certain circumstances.

Collateral terms are contract specific for OTC derivatives. For derivatives traded under an ISDA master agreement, the collateral requirements are typically calculated by netting the mark to market amount for each transaction under such agreement and comparing that amount to the value of any collateral currently pledged by the Fund or the counterparty.

For financial reporting purposes, cash collateral that has been pledged to cover obligations of the Fund, if any, is reported separately on the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities as cash pledged as collateral. Non-cash collateral pledged by the Fund, if any, is noted in the Consolidated Statement of Investments. Generally, the amount of collateral due from or to a party must exceed a minimum transfer amount threshold (e.g., $250,000) before a transfer has to be made. To the extent amounts due to the Fund from its counterparties are not fully collateralized, contractually or otherwise, the Fund bears the risk of loss from counterparty nonperformance.

The following table presents by counterparty the Fund’s OTC derivative assets net of the related collateral pledged by the Fund at period end:

 

             Gross Amounts Not Offset in the Consolidated  
Statement of Assets & Liabilities
       
Counterparty   

Gross Amounts
Not Offset in the
Consolidated
Statement

of Assets &
Liabilities*

    Financial
Instruments
Available for
Offset
    Financial
Instruments
Collateral
Received**
    Cash Collateral
Received**
    Net Amount  
Bank of America NA    $ 8,449     $ –      $ –      $ –      $ 8,449  
Barclays Bank plc      1,722,586       –        (1,722,586)       –        –   
Citibank NA      346,364       –        –        (100,000)       246,364  
Goldman Sachs Bank USA      1,033,175       –        –        (970,000)       63,175  
Goldman Sachs International      2,693,129       (345,866)       –        (2,244,000)       103,263  
  

 

 

 
   $ 5,803,703     $ (345,866)     $ (1,722,586)     $ (3,314,000)     $ 421,251  
  

 

 

 

*OTC derivatives are reported gross on the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Exchange traded options and margin related to centrally cleared swaps and futures, if any, are excluded from these reported amounts.

**Reported collateral posted for the benefit of the Fund within this table is limited to the net outstanding amount due from an individual counterparty. The collateral posted for the benefit of the Fund may exceed these amounts.

 

90        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

 

 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

The following table presents by counterparty the Fund’s OTC derivative liabilities net of the related collateral pledged by the Fund at period end:

 

            Gross Amounts Not Offset in the Consolidated  
Statement of Assets & Liabilities
       
Counterparty  

Gross Amounts
Not Offset in the
Consolidated
Statement

of Assets &
Liabilities*

    Financial
Instruments
Available for
Offset
  Financial
Instruments
Collateral
Pledged**
   

Cash Collateral

Pledged**

    Net Amount  
Deutsche Bank AG   $ (272,277)   $                    –   $ 262,288     $     $ (9,989)  
Goldman Sachs International     (345,866)     345,866                 –    
 

 

 

 
  $ (618,143)   $         345,866   $ 262,288     $     $ (9,989)  
 

 

 

 

*OTC derivatives are reported gross on the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Exchange traded options and margin related to centrally cleared swaps and futures, if any, are excluded from these reported amounts.

**Reported collateral pledged within this table is limited to the net outstanding amount due from the Fund. The securities pledged as collateral by the Fund as reported on the Consolidated Statement of Investments may exceed these amounts.

The following table presents the valuations of derivative instruments by risk exposure as reported within the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities at period end:

 

    

            Asset Derivatives

                Liability Derivatives  

Derivatives

Not Accounted

for as Hedging

Instruments

  

Consolidated

Statement of Assets

and Liabilities Location

   Value      

Consolidated

Statement of Assets

and Liabilities Location

   Value  
Credit contracts    Swaps, at value     $ 5,266     Swaps, at value     $ 345,866  
Credit contracts    Centrally cleared swaps, at value                  712,329     Centrally cleared swaps, at value      4,063,876  
Equity contracts    Variation margin receivable      58,560     
Interest rate contracts Variation margin receivable      144,114   Variation margin payable      379,059
Forward currency exchange contracts    Unrealized appreciation on foreign currency exchange contracts      362,050     Unrealized depreciation on foreign currency exchange contracts      272,277  
Equity contracts    Investments, at value      3,092,960 **      
Forward currency exchange contracts    Investments, at value      1,033,175 **      
Interest rate contracts Investments, at value      4,403,212 **      
     

 

 

 

    

 

 

 

Total        $ 9,811,666         $         5,061,078  
     

 

 

 

    

 

 

 

*Includes only the current day’s variation margin. Prior variation margin movements have been reflected in cash on the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities upon receipt or payment.

**Amounts relate to purchased option contracts and purchased swaption contracts, if any.

The effect of derivative instruments on the Consolidated Statement of Operations is as follows:

 

91        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

Amount of Realized Gain or (Loss) Recognized on Derivatives  

 

 

Derivatives

Not Accounted

for as Hedging

Instruments

   Investment
transactions
in unaffiliated
companies*
     Swaption
contracts
written
    

Option

contracts

written

    

Futures 

contracts 

 

 

 
Credit contracts    $ (131,399)      $ 62,321       $ —       $ —    
Equity contracts          15,218,308         —         —         518,432    
Forward currency exchange contracts      (2,872,153)        —         864,032         —    
Interest rate contracts      (2,394,646)        —         —         (125,967)   
  

 

 

 
Total    $ 9,820,110       $          62,321       $          864,032       $         392,465    
  

 

 

 

 

Amount of Realized Gain or (Loss) Recognized on Derivatives (Continued)  

 

 

Derivatives

Not Accounted

for as Hedging

Instruments

   Forward
currency
exchange
contracts
     Swap contracts      Total   

 

 
Credit contracts    $ —       $ (2,415,818)      $ (2,484,896)   
Equity contracts      —         —         15,736,740    
Forward currency exchange contracts      (5,185,582)        —         (7,193,703)   
Interest rate contracts      —         —         (2,520,613)   
  

 

 

 
Total    $     (5,185,582)      $     (2,415,818)      $     3,537,528    
  

 

 

 

*Includes purchased option contracts and purchased swaption contracts, if any.

 

Amount of Change in Unrealized Gain or (Loss) Recognized on Derivatives  

 

 

Derivatives

Not Accounted

for as Hedging

Instruments

   Investment
transactions
in unaffiliated
companies*
     Option
contracts
written
    

Futures 

contracts 

 

 

 
Credit contracts    $      $ —       $ —    
Equity contracts          2,087,044        —         471,275    
Forward currency exchange contracts      2,238,430        (864,032)        —    
Interest rate contracts      3,043,689        —         764,560    
  

 

 

 
Total    $ 7,369,163      $     (864,032)      $     1,235,835    
  

 

 

 
Amount of Change in Unrealized Gain or (Loss) Recognized on Derivatives (Continued)  

 

 

Derivatives

Not Accounted

for as Hedging

Instruments

   Forward
currency
exchange
contracts
     Swap contracts      Total  

 

 
Credit contracts    $      $ 560,533      $ 560,533  
Equity contracts                    2,558,319  
Forward currency exchange contracts      4,846,269               6,220,667  
Interest rate contracts                    3,808,249  
  

 

 

 
Total    $ 4,846,269      $ 560,533      $ 13,147,768  
  

 

 

 

 

92        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

 

 

6. Use of Derivatives (Continued)

*Includes purchased option contracts and purchased swaption contracts, if any.

 

 

7. Shares of Beneficial Interest

The Fund has authorized an unlimited number of $0.001 par value shares of beneficial interest of each class. Transactions in shares of beneficial interest were as follows:

     Year Ended August 31, 2018     Year Ended August 31, 2017     
     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount   

 

 
Class A         
Sold1      9,825,423     $ 100,102,620       13,503,190     $ 134,303,665     
Dividends and/or distributions reinvested      3,823,865       38,634,071       4,254,741       42,179,895     
Redeemed      (27,456,141     (279,344,500     (36,742,628     (366,460,942)    
  

 

 

 
Net decrease      (13,806,853   $ (140,607,809     (18,984,697   $ (189,977,382)    
  

 

 

 
        

 

 
Class B         
Sold      3,961     $ 39,659       40,700     $ 395,847     
Dividends and/or distributions reinvested      3,874       38,532       16,200       156,856     
Redeemed1      (502,920     (5,005,668     (820,551     (7,976,170)    
  

 

 

 
Net decrease      (495,085   $ (4,927,477     (763,651   $ (7,423,467)    
  

 

 

 
        

 

 
Class C         
Sold                  2,924,481     $ 28,829,257       5,462,749     $ 52,579,149     
Dividends and/or distributions reinvested      658,734       6,443,526       741,809       7,121,396     
Redeemed      (9,408,696     (92,564,737     (12,080,759     (116,533,090)    
  

 

 

 
Net decrease      (5,825,481   $ (57,291,954     (5,876,201   $ (56,832,545)    
  

 

 

 
        

 

 
Class I         
Sold      17,218,874     $       175,446,718       803,929     $ 8,050,947     
Dividends and/or distributions reinvested      311,216       3,136,436       50,101       496,570     
Redeemed      (6,771,239     (69,076,913     (403,679     (4,025,548)    
  

 

 

 
Net increase      10,758,851     $ 109,506,241       450,351     $ 4,521,969     
  

 

 

 
        

 

 
Class R         
Sold      3,492,826     $ 35,124,928       2,763,935     $ 27,328,592     
Dividends and/or distributions reinvested      164,782       1,640,319       84,256       825,249     
Redeemed      (1,452,411     (14,587,955     (992,909     (9,766,086)    
  

 

 

 
Net increase      2,205,197     $ 22,177,292       1,855,282     $ 18,387,755     
  

 

 

 
        

 

 
Class Y         
Sold      13,532,558     $ 137,664,987           28,295,834     $     282,621,289     
Dividends and/or distributions reinvested      1,432,646       14,457,761       1,253,476       12,435,046     
Redeemed      (24,149,383     (245,470,612     (17,057,606     (169,658,173)    
  

 

 

 
Net increase (decrease)      (9,184,179   $ (93,347,864     12,491,704     $ 125,398,162     
  

 

 

 
        

1. All outstanding Class B shares converted to Class A shares on June 1, 2018.

 

93        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

8. Purchases and Sales of Securities

The aggregate cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of securities, other than short-term obligations and investments in IGMMF, for the reporting period were as follows:

 

     Purchases      Sales  

 

 
Investment securities      $2,276,046,765                                 $2,433,968,541  
U.S. government and government agency obligations             1,390,563  
To Be Announced (TBA) mortgage-related securities      4,932,579,131        5,044,273,340  

 

 

9. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates

Management Fees. Under the investment advisory agreement, the Fund pays the Manager a management fee based on the daily net assets of the Fund at an annual rate as shown in the following table:

Fee Schedule

 
Up to $100 million      0.75  
Next $100 million      0.70    
Next $100 million      0.65    
Next $100 million      0.60    
Next $100 million      0.55    
Next $4.5 billion      0.50    
Over $5 billion      0.48    

The Manager also provides investment management related services to the Subsidiary. The Subsidiary pays the Manager a monthly management fee at an annual rate according to the above schedule. The Subsidiary also pays certain other expenses including custody and directors’ fees.

    The Fund’s effective management fee for the reporting period was 0.53% of average annual net assets before any Subsidiary management fees or any applicable waivers.

Sub-Adviser Fees. The Manager has retained the Sub-Adviser to provide the day-to-day portfolio management of the Fund and the Subsidiary. Under the Sub-Advisory Agreement, the Manager pays the Sub-Adviser an annual fee in monthly installments, equal to a percentage of the investment management fee collected by the Manager from the Fund and the Subsidiary, which shall be calculated after any investment management fee waivers. The fee paid to the Sub-Adviser is paid by the Manager, not by the Fund.

Transfer Agent Fees. OFI Global (the “Transfer Agent”) serves as the transfer and shareholder servicing agent for the Fund. The Fund pays the Transfer Agent a fee based on annual net assets, which shall be calculated after any applicable fee waivers. Fees incurred and average net assets for each class with respect to these services are detailed in the Consolidated Statement of Operations and Consolidated Financial Highlights, respectively.

Sub-Transfer Agent Fees. The Transfer Agent has retained Shareholder Services, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of OFI (the “Sub-Transfer Agent”), to provide the day-to-day transfer agent and shareholder servicing of the Fund. Under the Sub-Transfer Agency Agreement, the Transfer Agent pays the Sub-Transfer Agent an annual fee in monthly installments, equal to a

 

94        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

 

9. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates (Continued)

percentage of the transfer agent fee collected by the Transfer Agent from the Fund, which shall be calculated after any applicable fee waivers. The fee paid to the Sub-Transfer Agent is paid by the Transfer Agent, not by the Fund.

Trustees’ Compensation. The Fund’s Board of Trustees (“Board”) has adopted a compensation deferral plan for Independent Trustees that enables Trustees to elect to defer receipt of all or a portion of the annual compensation they are entitled to receive from the Fund. For purposes of determining the amount owed to the Trustees under the plan, deferred amounts are treated as though equal dollar amounts had been invested in shares of the Fund or in other Oppenheimer funds selected by the Trustees. The Fund purchases shares of the funds selected for deferral by the Trustees in amounts equal to his or her deemed investment, resulting in a Fund asset equal to the deferred compensation liability. Such assets are included as a component of “Other” within the asset section of the Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Deferral of Trustees’ fees under the plan will not affect the net assets of the Fund and will not materially affect the Fund’s assets, liabilities or net investment income per share. Amounts will be deferred until distributed in accordance with the compensation deferral plan.

Distribution and Service Plan (12b-1) Fees. Under its General Distributor’s Agreement with the Fund, OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc. (the “Distributor”) acts as the Fund’s principal underwriter in the continuous public offering of the Fund’s classes of shares.

Service Plan for Class A Shares. The Fund has adopted a Service Plan (the “Plan”) for Class A shares pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. Under the Plan, the Fund reimburses the Distributor for a portion of its costs incurred for services provided to accounts that hold Class A shares. Reimbursement is made periodically at an annual rate of up to 0.25% of the daily net assets of Class A shares of the Fund. The Distributor currently uses all of those fees to pay dealers, brokers, banks and other financial institutions periodically for providing personal service and maintenance of accounts of their customers that hold Class A shares. Any unreimbursed expenses the Distributor incurs with respect to Class A shares in any fiscal year cannot be recovered in subsequent periods. Fees incurred by the Fund under the Plan are detailed in the Consolidated Statement of Operations.

Distribution and Service Plans for Class B, Class C and Class R Shares. The Fund has adopted Distribution and Service Plans (the “Plans”) for Class C and Class R shares, and had previously adopted a similar plan for Class B shares, pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act to compensate the Distributor for distributing those share classes, maintaining accounts and providing shareholder services. Under the Plans, the Fund pays the Distributor an annual asset-based sales charge of 0.75% on Class C shares’ daily net assets and 0.25% on Class R shares’ daily net assets. The Fund paid the Distributor an annual asset-based sales charge of 0.75% on Class B shares prior to their Conversion Date. The Fund also pays a service fee under the Plans at an annual rate of 0.25% of daily net assets and previously paid this fee

 

95        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

9. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates (Continued)

for Class B prior to their Conversion Date. The Plans continue in effect from year to year only if the Fund’s Board of Trustees votes annually to approve their continuance at an in person meeting called for that purpose. Fees incurred by the Fund under the Plans are detailed in the Consolidated Statement of Operations.

Sales Charges. Front-end sales charges and CDSC do not represent expenses of the Fund. They are deducted from the proceeds of sales of Fund shares prior to investment or from redemption proceeds prior to remittance, as applicable. The sales charges retained by the Distributor from the sale of shares and the CDSC retained by the Distributor on the redemption of shares is shown in the following table for the period indicated.

 

Year Ended   

Class A

Front-End

Sales Charges

Retained by
Distributor

    

Class A

Contingent

Deferred

Sales Charges

Retained by
Distributor

    

Class B

Contingent

Deferred

Sales Charges

Retained by

Distributor1

    

Class C

Contingent

Deferred

Sales Charges

Retained by

Distributor

    

Class R

Contingent

Deferred

Sales Charges

Retained by

Distributor

 

 

 
August 31, 2018      $266,073        $24,491        $867        $21,159        $—  

1. Effective June 1, 2018, all Class B shares converted to Class A shares.

Waivers and Reimbursements of Expenses. The Manager has contractually agreed to waive the management fee it receives from the Fund in an amount equal to the management fee it receives from the Subsidiary. During the reporting period, the Manager waived $195,039. This fee waiver and/or expense reimbursement may not be amended or withdrawn for one year from the date of the Fund’s prospectus, unless approved by the Board.

Effective for the period January 1, 2017 through December 31, 2017, the Transfer Agent voluntarily waived and/or reimbursed Fund expenses in an amount equal to 0.015% of average annual net assets for Classes A, B, C, R and Y.

During the reporting period, the Transfer Agent waived fees and/or reimbursed the Fund for transfer agent and shareholder servicing agent fees as follows:

 

Class A      $78,774  
Class B1      190  
Class C      18,517  
Class R      3,116  
Class Y      31,679  

1. Effective June 1, 2018, all Class B shares converted to Class A shares.

The Manager will waive fees and/or reimburse Fund expenses in an amount equal to the indirect management fees incurred through the Fund’s investments in Affiliated Funds. During the reporting period, the Manager waived fees and/or reimbursed the Fund $1,366,798 for these management fees. This fee waiver and/or expense reimbursement may not be amended or withdrawn for one year from the date of the Fund’s prospectus, unless approved by the Board.

 

96        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

 

 

10. Borrowings and Other Financing

Joint Credit Facility. A number of mutual funds managed by the Manager participate in a $1.95 billion revolving credit facility (the “Facility”) intended to provide short-term financing, if necessary, subject to certain restrictions in connection with atypical redemption activity. Expenses and fees related to the Facility are paid by the participating funds and are disclosed separately or as other expenses on the Consolidated Statement of Operations. The Fund did not utilize the Facility during the reporting period.

 

 

11. Subsequent Event

On October 18, 2018, Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company (“MassMutual”), an indirect corporate parent of the Sub-Adviser and the Manager announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement, whereby Invesco Ltd. (“Invesco”), a global investment management company, will acquire the Sub-Adviser. As of the time of the announcement, the transaction is expected to close in the second quarter of 2019, pending necessary regulatory and other third-party approvals. This is subject to change.

 

97        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

 

 

To the Shareholders and Board of Trustees

Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund:

Opinion on the Consolidated Financial Statements

We have audited the accompanying consolidated statement of assets and liabilities of Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund (the “Fund”) and subsidiary, including the consolidated statement of investments, as of August 31, 2018, the related consolidated statement of operations for the year then ended, the consolidated statements of changes in net assets for each of the years in the two year period then ended, and the related consolidated notes (collectively, the “consolidated financial statements”) and the consolidated financial highlights for each of the years or periods in the five year period then ended. In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements and consolidated financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Fund and subsidiary as of August 31, 2018, the results of their consolidated operations for the year then ended, the changes in their consolidated net assets for each of the years in the two year period then ended, and the consolidated financial highlights for each of the years or periods in the five year period then ended, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

Basis for Opinion

These consolidated financial statements and consolidated financial highlights are the responsibility of the Fund’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these consolidated financial statements and consolidated financial highlights based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (“PCAOB”) and are required to be independent with respect to the Fund and subsidiary in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements and consolidated financial highlights are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial statements and consolidated financial highlights, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements and consolidated financial highlights. Such procedures also included confirmation of securities owned as of August 31, 2018, by correspondence with the custodian, brokers and the transfer agent, or by other appropriate auditing procedures. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements and consolidated financial highlights. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

KPMG LLP

We have not been able to determine the specific year that we began serving as the auditor of one or more Oppenheimer Funds investment companies, however we are aware that we have served as the auditor of one or more Oppenheimer Funds investment companies since at least 1969.

Denver, Colorado

October 25, 2018

 

98        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


FEDERAL INCOME TAX INFORMATION Unaudited

 

 

In early 2018, if applicable, shareholders of record received information regarding all dividends and distributions paid to them by the Fund during calendar year 2017.

Dividends, if any, paid by the Fund during the reporting period which are not designated as capital gain distributions should be multiplied by the maximum amount allowable but not less than 41.70% to arrive at the amount eligible for the corporate dividend-received deduction.

A portion, if any, of the dividends paid by the Fund during the reporting period which are not designated as capital gain distributions are eligible for lower individual income tax rates to the extent that the Fund has received qualified dividend income as stipulated by recent tax legislation. The maximum amount allowable but not less than $31,497,212 of the Fund’s fiscal year taxable income may be eligible for the lower individual income tax rates. In early 2018, shareholders of record received information regarding the percentage of distributions that are eligible for lower individual income tax rates.

Recent tax legislation allows a regulated investment company to designate distributions not designated as capital gain distributions, as either interest related dividends or short-term capital gain dividends, both of which are exempt from the U.S. withholding tax applicable to non U.S. taxpayers. For the reporting period, the maximum amount allowable but not less than $35,388,326 of the ordinary distributions to be paid by the Fund qualifies as an interest related dividend.

The foregoing information is presented to assist shareholders in reporting distributions received from the Fund to the Internal Revenue Service. Because of the complexity of the federal regulations which may affect your individual tax return and the many variations in state and local tax regulations, we recommend that you consult your tax advisor for specific guidance.

 

99        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


BOARD APPROVAL OF THE FUND’S INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENTS Unaudited

 

 

The Fund has entered into an investment advisory agreement with OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (“OFI Global” or the “Adviser”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (“OFI” or the “Sub-Adviser”) (“OFI Global” and “OFI” together the “Managers”) and OFI Global has entered into a sub-advisory agreement with OFI whereby OFI provides investment sub-advisory services to the Fund (collectively, the “Agreements”).    Each year, the Board of Trustees (the “Board”), including a majority of the independent Trustees, is required to determine whether to approve the terms of the Agreements and the renewal thereof. The Investment Company Act of 1940 requires that the Board request and evaluate, and that the Managers provide, such information as may be reasonably necessary to evaluate the terms of the Agreements. The Board employs an independent consultant to prepare a report that provides information, including comparative information that the Board requests for that purpose. In addition to in-person meetings focused on this evaluation, the Board receives information throughout the year regarding Fund services, fees, expenses and performance.

The Managers and the independent consultant provided information to the Board on the following factors: (i) the nature, quality and extent of the Managers’ services, (ii) the comparative investment performance of the Fund and the Managers, (iii) the fees and expenses of the Fund, including comparative fee and expense information, (iv) the profitability of the Managers and their affiliates, including an analysis of the cost of providing services, (v) whether economies of scale are realized as the Fund grows and whether fee levels reflect these economies of scale for Fund investors and (vi) other benefits to the Managers from their relationship with the Fund. The Board was aware that there are alternatives to retaining the Managers.

Outlined below is a summary of the principal information considered by the Board as well as the Board’s conclusions.

Nature, Quality and Extent of Services. The Board considered information about the nature, quality and extent of the services provided to the Fund and information regarding the Managers’ key personnel who provide such services. The Managers’ duties include providing the Fund with the services of the Sub-Adviser’s portfolio managers and investment team, who provide research, analysis and other advisory services in regard to the Fund’s investments; and securities trading services. OFI Global is responsible for oversight of third-party service providers; monitoring compliance with applicable Fund policies and procedures and adherence to the Fund’s investment restrictions; risk management; and oversight of the Sub-Adviser. OFI Global is also responsible for providing certain administrative services to the Fund. Those services include providing and supervising all administrative and clerical personnel who are necessary in order to provide effective corporate administration for the Fund; compiling and maintaining records with respect to the Fund’s operations; preparing and filing reports required by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission; preparing periodic reports regarding the operations of the Fund for its shareholders; preparing proxy materials for shareholder meetings; and preparing the registration statements required by federal and state securities laws for the sale of the Fund’s shares. OFI Global also provides the Fund with office space, facilities and equipment.

 

100        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

    

 

The Board also considered the quality of the services provided and the quality of the Managers’ resources that are available to the Fund. The Board took account of the fact that the Sub-Adviser has over fifty years of experience as an investment adviser and that its assets under management rank it among the top mutual fund managers in the United States. The Board evaluated the Managers’ advisory, administrative, accounting, legal, compliance and risk management services, among other services, and information the Board has received regarding the experience and professional qualifications of the Managers’ key personnel and the size and functions of their staff. In its evaluation of the quality of the portfolio management services provided, the Board considered the experience of Michelle Borré and Krishna Memani, the portfolio managers for the Fund, and the Sub-Adviser’s investment team and analysts. The Board members also considered the totality of their experiences with the Managers as directors or trustees of the Fund and other funds advised by the Managers. The Board considered information regarding the quality of services provided by affiliates of the Managers, which the Board members have become knowledgeable about through their experiences with the Managers and in connection with the review or renewal of the Fund’s service agreements or service providers. The Board concluded, in light of the Managers’ experience, reputation, personnel, operations and resources that the Fund benefits from the services provided under the Agreements.

Investment Performance of the Managers and the Fund. Throughout the year, the Managers provided information on the investment performance of the Fund, the Adviser and the Sub-Adviser, including comparative performance information. The Board also reviewed information, prepared by the Managers and by the independent consultant, comparing the Fund’s historical performance to relevant benchmarks or market indices and to the performance of other retail funds in the 30% to 50% equity allocation category. The Board considered the Managers’ assertion that the performance among funds within the 30% to 50% equity allocation category may vary significantly due to the range of equity allocations, which results in significantly different risk profiles among funds in the category. The Board considered that, while the Fund underperformed its category median for all periods, recent underperformance was largely the result of underperformance in 2017. To that end, the Board noted that the Fund ranked in the 2nd, 2nd, and 3rd quintiles of its category for the 2014, 2015 and 2016 calendar years, respectively. Given the effect of a single year’s performance on the overall performance record of the Fund, the calendar year-end performance for each of the prior three years, and recent personnel changes in the investment team, the Board considered it was reasonable to allow the portfolio management team time to address the single year 2017 underperformance.

Fees and Expenses of the Fund. The Board reviewed the fees paid to the Adviser and the other expenses borne by the Fund. The Board noted that the Adviser, not the Fund, pays the Sub-Adviser’s fee under the sub-advisory agreement. The independent consultant provided comparative data in regard to the fees and expenses of the Fund and other retail front-end load funds in the 30% to 50% equity allocation category with comparable asset levels and distribution features. The Board considered that the Fund’s contractual

 

101        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


BOARD APPROVAL OF THE FUND’S INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND SUB-ADVISORY

AGREEMENTS Unaudited / Continued

 

management fee was lower than its peer group median and category median and its total expenses were lower than its category median and equal to its peer group median. The Board noted that the Adviser has contractually agreed to waive fees and/or reimburse Fund expenses in an amount equal to the management fees it receives from the Fund’s subsidiary; this waiver and/or reimbursement will continue to be in effect for so long as the Fund invests in the subsidiary and may not be terminated unless approved by the Board. The Board further noted that the Adviser has also contractually agreed to waive fees and/or reimburse expenses in an amount equal to the management fees incurred indirectly through the Fund’s investment in funds managed by the Adviser or its affiliates; this waiver and/or reimbursement may not be amended or withdrawn for one year from the date of the Fund’s prospectus, unless approved by the Board. Finally, the Board considered that the Adviser, in its capacity as the Fund’s transfer agent, voluntarily waived and/or reimbursed the Fund for transfer agent fees in an amount equal to 0.015% of average annual net assets, and that effective January 1, 2018, after discussions with the Board, the Fund’s transfer agent fee rate was decreased.

Economies of Scale and Profits Realized by the Managers. The Board considered information regarding the Managers’ costs in serving as the Fund’s investment adviser and sub-adviser, including the costs associated with the personnel and systems necessary to manage the Fund, and information regarding the Managers’ profitability from their relationship with the Fund. The Board also considered that the Managers must be able to pay and retain experienced professional personnel at competitive rates to provide quality services to the Fund. The Board reviewed whether the Managers may realize economies of scale in managing and supporting the Fund. The Board noted that the Fund currently has management fee breakpoints, which are intended to share with Fund shareholders economies of scale that may exist as the Fund’s assets grow and which are appropriate given the Fund’s current size.

Other Benefits to the Managers. In addition to considering the profits realized by the Managers, the Board considered information that was provided regarding the direct and indirect benefits the Managers receive as a result of their relationship with the Fund, including compensation paid to the Managers’ affiliates and research provided to the Adviser in connection with permissible brokerage arrangements (soft dollar arrangements).

Conclusions. These factors were also considered by the independent Trustees meeting separately from the full Board, assisted by experienced counsel to the Fund and to the independent Trustees. Fund counsel and the independent Trustees’ counsel are independent of the Managers within the meaning and intent of the Securities and Exchange Commission Rules.

Based on its review of the information it received and its evaluations described above, the Board, including a majority of the independent Trustees, decided to continue the Agreements through August 31, 2019. In arriving at its decision, the Board did not identify any factor

 

102        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


    

 

or factors as being more important than others, but considered all of the above information, and considered the terms and conditions of the Agreements, including the management fees, in light of all the surrounding circumstances.

 

103        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


PORTFOLIO PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND GUIDELINES;

UPDATES TO STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Unaudited

 

 

The Fund has adopted Portfolio Proxy Voting Policies and Guidelines under which the Fund votes proxies relating to securities (“portfolio proxies”) held by the Fund. A description of the Fund’s Portfolio Proxy Voting Policies and Guidelines is available (i) without charge, upon request, by calling the Fund toll-free at 1.800.CALL OPP (225.5677), (ii) on the Fund’s website at www.oppenheimerfunds.com, and (iii) on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the Fund is required to file Form N-PX, with its complete proxy voting record for the 12 months ended June 30th, no later than August 31st of each year. The Fund’s voting record is available (i) without charge, upon request, by calling the Fund toll-free at 1.800.CALL OPP (225.5677), and (ii) in the Form N-PX filing on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.

The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first quarter and the third quarter of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. The Fund’s Form N-Q filings are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Those forms may be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. Information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330.

Householding—Delivery of Shareholder Documents

This is to inform you about OppenheimerFunds’ “householding” policy. If more than one member of your household maintains an account in a particular fund, OppenheimerFunds will mail only one copy of the fund’s prospectus (or, if available, the fund’s summary prospectus), annual and semiannual report and privacy policy. The consolidation of these mailings, called householding, benefits your fund through reduced mailing expense, and benefits you by reducing the volume of mail you receive from OppenheimerFunds. Householding does not affect the delivery of your account statements.

Please note that we will continue to household these mailings for as long as you remain an OppenheimerFunds shareholder, unless you request otherwise. If you prefer to receive multiple copies of these materials, please call us at 1.800.CALL-OPP (225-5677). You may also notify us in writing or via email. We will begin sending you individual copies of the prospectus (or, if available, the summary prospectus), reports and privacy policy within 30 days of receiving your request to stop householding.

 

104        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS Unaudited

 

 

Name, Position(s) Held with the Fund, Length of Service, Year of Birth    Principal Occupation(s) During the Past 5 Years; Other Trusteeships/Directorships Held; Number of Portfolios in the Fund Complex Currently Overseen
INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES    The address of each Trustee in the chart below is 6803 S. Tucson Way, Centennial, Colorado 80112-3924. Each Trustee serves for an indefinite term, or until his or her resignation,retirement, death or removal. Each of the Trustees in the chart below oversees 58 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex.

Robert J. Malone,

Chairman of the Board of Trustees (since 2016), Trustee (since 2002) Year of Birth: 1944

   Chairman - Colorado Market of MidFirst Bank (since January 2015); Chairman of the Board (2012-2016) and Director (August 2005-January 2016) of Jones International University (educational organization); Trustee of the Gallagher Family Foundation (non-profit organization) (2000-2016); Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Director of Steele Street Bank Trust (commercial banking) (August 2003-January 2015); Director of Opera Colorado Foundation (non-profit organization) (2008-2012); Director of Colorado UpLIFT (charitable organization) (1986-2010); Director of Jones Knowledge, Inc. (2006-2010); Former Chairman of U.S. Bank-Colorado (subsidiary of U.S. Bancorp and formerly Colorado National Bank) (July 1996-April 1999); Director of Commercial Assets, Inc. (real estate investment trust) (1993-2000); Director of U.S. Exploration, Inc. (oil and gas exploration) (1997-February 2004); Chairman of the Board (1991-1994) and Trustee (1985-1994) of Regis University; and Chairman of the Board (1990-1991) and Member (1984-1999) of Young Presidents Organization. Mr. Malone has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since 2002, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Board’s deliberations.

Andrew J. Donohue,

Trustee (since 2017)

Year of Birth: 1950

   Director, Mutual Fund Directors Forum (since February 2018); Of Counsel, Shearman & Sterling LLP (since September 2017); Chief of Staff of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (regulator) (June 2015-February 2017); Managing Director and Investment Company General Counsel of Goldman Sachs (investment bank) (November 2012-May 2015); Partner at Morgan Lewis & Bockius, LLP (law firm) (March 2011-October 2012); Director of the Division of Investment Management of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (regulator) (May 2006-November 2010); Global General Counsel of Merrill Lynch Investment Managers (investment firm) (May 2003-May 2006); General Counsel (October 1991-November 2001) and Executive Vice President (January 1993-November 2001) of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (investment firm) (June 1991-November 2001). Mr. Donohue has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since 2017, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Board’s deliberations.

Richard F. Grabish,

Trustee (since 2012)

Year of Birth: 1948

   Formerly Senior Vice President and Assistant Director of Sales and Marketing (March 1997-December 2007), Director (March 1987-December 2007) and Manager of Private Client Services (June 1985-June 2005) of A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc. (broker/dealer and investment firm); Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of A.G. Edwards Trust Company, FSB (March 2001-December 2007); President and Vice Chairman of A.G. Edwards Trust Company, FSB (investment adviser) (April 1987-March 2001); President of A.G. Edwards Trust Company, FSB (investment adviser) (June 2005-December 2007). Mr. Grabish has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since 2001, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Board’s deliberations.

 

105        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS Unaudited / Continued

 

Beverly L. Hamilton,

Trustee (since 2002)

Year of Birth: 1946

   Trustee of Monterey Institute for International Studies (educational organization) (2000-2014); Board Member of Middlebury College (educational organization) (December 2005-June 2011); Director of the Board (1991-2016), Vice Chairman of the Board (2006-2009) and Chairman of the Board (2010-2013) of American Funds’ Emerging Markets Growth Fund, Inc. (mutual fund); Director of The California Endowment (philanthropic organization) (April 2002-April 2008); Director (February 2002-2005) and Chairman of Trustees (2006-2007) of the Community Hospital of Monterey Peninsula; President of ARCO Investment Management Company (February 1991-April 2000); Member of the investment committees of The Rockefeller Foundation (2001-2006) and The University of Michigan (since 2000); Advisor at Credit Suisse First Boston’s Sprout venture capital unit (venture capital fund) (1994-January 2005); Trustee of MassMutual Institutional Funds (investment company) (1996-June 2004); Trustee of MML Series Investment Fund (investment company) (April 1989-June 2004); Member of the investment committee of Hartford Hospital (2000-2003); and Advisor to Unilever (Holland) pension fund (2000-2003). Ms. Hamilton has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since 2002, during which time she has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Board’s deliberations.

Victoria J. Herget,

Trustee (since 2012)

Year of Birth:1951

   Board Chair (2008-2015) and Director (2004-Present) of United Educators (insurance company); Trustee (since 2000) and Chair (2010-2017) of Newberry Library (independent research library); Trustee, Mather LifeWays (senior living organization) (since 2001); Independent Director of the First American Funds (mutual fund family) (2003-2011); former Managing Director (1993-2001), Principal (1985-1993), Vice President (1978-1985) and Assistant Vice President (1973-1978) of Zurich Scudder Investments (investment adviser) (and its predecessor firms); Trustee (1992-2007), Chair of the Board of Trustees (1999- 2007), Investment Committee Chair (1994-1999) and Investment Committee member (2007-2010) of Wellesley College; Trustee, BoardSource (non-profit organization) (2006-2009) and Chicago City Day School (K-8 School) (1994- 2005). Ms. Herget has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since 2012, during which time she has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Board’s deliberations.

Karen L. Stuckey,

Trustee (since 2012)

Year of Birth: 1953

   Member (since May 2015) of Desert Mountain Community Foundation Advisory Board (non-profit organization); Partner (1990-2012) of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (professional services firm) (held various positions 1975-1990); Trustee (1992-2006); member of Executive, Nominating and Audit Committees and Chair of Finance Committee (1992-2006), and Emeritus Trustee (since 2006) of Lehigh University; member, Women’s Investment Management Forum (professional organization) (since inception) and Trustee of Jennies School for Little Children (non-profit) (2011-2014). Ms. Stuckey has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since 2012, during which time she has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Board’s deliberations.

 

106        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


James D. Vaughn,

Trustee (since 2012)

Year of Birth:1945

   Retired; former managing partner (1994-2001) of Denver office of Deloitte & Touche LLP, (held various positions in Denver and New York offices from 1969- 1993); Trustee and Chairman of the Audit Committee of Schroder Funds (2003- 2012); Board member and Chairman of Audit Committee of AMG National Trust Bank (since 2005); Trustee and Investment Committee member, University of South Dakota Foundation (since 1996); Board member, Audit Committee Member and past Board Chair, Junior Achievement (since 1993); former Board member, Mile High United Way, Boys and Girls Clubs, Boy Scouts, Colorado Business Committee for the Arts, Economic Club of Colorado and Metro Denver Network. Mr. Vaughn has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since 2012, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Board’s deliberations.
INTERESTED TRUSTEE AND OFFICER    Mr. Steinmetz is an “Interested Trustee” because he is affiliated with the Manager and the Sub-Adviser by virtue of his positions as Chairman and director of the Sub-Adviser and officer and director of the Manager. Both as a Trustee and as an officer, Mr. Steinmetz serves for an indefinite term, or until his resignation, retirement, death or removal. Mr. Steinmetz’s address is 225 Liberty Street, New York, New York 10281-1008. Mr. Steinmetz is an officer of 106 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex.

Arthur P. Steinmetz,

Trustee (since 2015), President and Principal Executive Officer (since 2014)

Year of Birth: 1958

   Chairman of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (since January 2015); CEO and Chairman of OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (since July 2014), President of OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (since May 2013), a Director of OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (since January 2013), Director of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (since July 2014), President, Management Director and CEO of Oppenheimer Acquisition Corp. (OppenheimerFunds, Inc.‘s parent holding company) (since July 2014), and President and Director of OFI SteelPath, Inc. (since January 2013). Chief Investment Officer of the OppenheimerFunds advisory entities (January 2013-December 2013); Executive Vice President of OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (January 2013-May 2013); Chief Investment Officer of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (October 2010-December 2012); Chief Investment Officer, Fixed-Income, of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (April 2009-October 2010); Executive Vice President of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (October 2009-December 2012); Director of Fixed Income of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (January 2009-April 2009); and a Senior Vice President of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (March 1993-September 2009).
OTHER OFFICERS OF THE FUND    The addresses of the Officers in the chart below are as follows: for Mr. Memani, Mss. Borré, Lo Bessette, Foxson and Picciotto, 225 Liberty Street, New York, New York 10281-1008, for Mr. Petersen, 6803 S. Tucson Way, Centennial, Colorado 80112-3924. Each Officer serves for an indefinite term or until his or her resignation, retirement, death or removal.

Michelle Borré,

Vice President (since 2009)

Year of Birth: 1967

   Senior Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (since January 2016); Senior Portfolio Manager of the Sub-Adviser (since April 2009);Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (April 2003-January 2016); Senior Research Analyst of the Sub-Adviser (February 2003-April 2009). Ms. Borre held various positions, including Managing Director and Partner, at J&W Seligman (July 1996 -January 2003); Adjunct Professor of Finance and Economics at Columbia Business School (2003-2013); Served on the Executive Advisory Board at the Heilbrunn Center for Graham and Dodd Investing at Columbia Business School (from 2004 to 2005).

 

107        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS Unaudited / Continued

 

Krishna Memani,

Vice President (since 2009)

Year of Birth: 1960

   President of the Sub-Adviser (since January 2013); Executive Vice President of the Manager (since January 2014); Chief Investment Officer of the OppenheimerFunds advisory entities (since January 2014); Chief Investment Officer, Fixed Income of the Sub-Adviser (January 2013-December 2013); Head of the Investment Grade Fixed Income Team of the Sub-Adviser (March 2009-January 2014); Director of Fixed Income of the Sub-Adviser (October 2010-December 2012); Senior Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (March 2009-December 2012); Senior Vice President of OFI Global Institutional, Inc. (April 2009-December 2012). Managing Director and Head of the U.S. and European Credit Analyst Team at Deutsche Bank Securities (June 2006-January 2009); Chief Credit Strategist at Credit Suisse Securities (August 2002-March 2006); Managing Director and Senior Portfolio Manager at Putnam Investments (September 1998-June 2002).

Cynthia Lo Bessette,

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (since 2016)

Year of Birth: 1969

   Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (since February 2016); Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel of OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (March 2015-February 2016); Chief Legal Officer of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. and OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc. (since February 2016); Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of Oppenheimer Acquisition Corp. (since February 2016); General Counsel of OFI SteelPath, Inc., OFI Advisors, LLC and Index Management Solutions, LLC (since February 2016); Chief Legal Officer of OFI Global Institutional, Inc., HarbourView Asset Management Corporation, OFI Global Trust Company, Oppenheimer Real Asset Management, Inc., OFI Private Investments Inc., Shareholder Services, Inc. and Trinity Investment Management Corporation (since February 2016); Corporate Counsel (February 2012-March 2015) and Deputy Chief Legal Officer (April 2013-March 2015) of Jennison Associates LLC; Assistant General Counsel (April 2008-September 2009) and Deputy General Counsel (October 2009-February 2012) of Lord Abbett & Co. LLC.

Jennifer Foxson,

Vice President and Chief Business Officer (since 2014)

Year of Birth: 1969

   Senior Vice President of OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc. (since June 2014); Vice President of OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc. (April 2006-June 2014); Vice President of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (January 1998-March 2006); Assistant Vice President of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (October 1991-December 1998).

Mary Ann Picciotto,

Chief Compliance Officer and Chief Anti-Money Laundering Officer (since 2014)

Year of Birth: 1973

   Senior Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer of OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (since March 2014); Chief Compliance Officer of OppenheimerFunds, Inc., OFI SteelPath, Inc., OFI Global Institutional, Inc., Oppenheimer Real Asset Management, Inc., OFI Private Investments Inc., Harborview Asset Management Corporation, Trinity Investment Management Corporation, and Shareholder Services, Inc. (since March 2014); Managing Director of Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc. and certain of its various affiliated entities; Chief Compliance Officer of various Morgan Stanley Funds (May 2010-January 2014); Chief Compliance Officer of Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc. (April 2007-January 2014).

Brian S. Petersen,

Treasurer and Principal Financial & Accounting Officer (since 1999)

Year of Birth: 1959

   Senior Vice President of OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (since January 2017); Vice President of OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (January 2013-January 2017); Vice President of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (February 2007-December 2012); Assistant Vice President of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (August 2002-2007).

The Fund’s Statement of Additional Information contains additional information about the Fund’s Trustees and Officers and is available without charge upon request by calling 1.800.CALL OPP (225.5677).

 

108        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND

 

Manager    OFI Global Asset Management, Inc.
Sub-Adviser    OppenheimerFunds, Inc.
Distributor    OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc.

Transfer and Shareholder

Servicing Agent

   OFI Global Asset Management, Inc.
Sub-Transfer Agent   

Shareholder Services, Inc.

DBA OppenheimerFunds Services

Independent Registered

Public Accounting Firm

   KPMG LLP
Legal Counsel    Ropes & Gray LLP

 

 

 

© 2018 OppenheimerFunds, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

109        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


PRIVACY NOTICE

As an Oppenheimer fund shareholder, you are entitled to know how we protect your personal information and how we limit its disclosure.

Information Sources

We obtain non-public personal information about our shareholders from the following sources:

 

Applications or other forms.

 

When you create a user ID and password for online account access.

 

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If you visit oppenheimerfunds.com and do not log on to the secure account information areas, we do not obtain any personal information about you. When you do log on to a secure area, we do obtain your user ID and password to identify you. We also use this information to provide you with products and services you have requested, to inform you about products and services that you may be interested in and assist you in other ways.

We do not collect personal information through our website unless you willingly provide it to us, either directly by email or in those areas of the website that request information. In order to update your personal information (including your mailing address, email address and phone number) you must first log on and visit your user profile.

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We do not disclose any non-public personal information (such as names on a customer list) about current or former customers to anyone, except as permitted by law.

Disclosure of Information

Copies of confirmations, account statements and other documents reporting activity in your fund accounts are made available to your financial advisor (as designated by you). We may also use details about you and your investments to help us, our financial service affiliates, or firms that jointly market their financial products and services with ours, to better serve your investment needs or suggest educational material that may be of interest to you. If this requires us to provide you with an opportunity to “opt in” or “opt out” of such information sharing with a firm not affiliated with us, you will receive notification on how to do so, before any such sharing takes place.

Right of Refusal

We will not disclose your personal information to unaffiliated third parties (except as permitted by law), unless we first offer you a reasonable opportunity to refuse or “opt out” of such disclosure.

 

110        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


Internet Security and Encryption

In general, the email services provided by our website are encrypted and provide a secure and private means of communication with us. To protect your own privacy, confidential and/ or personal information should only be communicated via email when you are advised that you are using a secure website.

As a security measure, we do not include personal or account information in non-secure emails, and we advise you not to send such information to us in non-secure emails. Instead, you may take advantage of the secure features of our website to encrypt your email correspondence. To do this, you will need to use a browser that supports Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol.

 

All transactions conducted via our websites, including redemptions, exchanges and purchases, are secured by the highest encryption standards available. SSL is used to establish a secure connection between your PC and OppenheimerFunds’ server. It transmits information in an encrypted and scrambled format.

 

Encryption is achieved through an electronic scrambling technology that uses a “key” to code and then decode the data. Encryption acts like the cable converter box you may have on your television set. It scrambles data with a secret code so that no one can make sense of it while it is being transmitted. When the data reaches its destination, the same software unscrambles the data.

 

You can exit the secure area by closing your browser or, for added security, you can use the Log Out button before you close your browser.

Other Security Measures

We maintain physical, electronic and procedural safeguards to protect your personal account information. Our employees and agents have access to that information only so that they may offer you products or provide services, for example, when responding to your account questions.

How You Can Help

You can also do your part to keep your account information private and to prevent unauthorized transactions. If you obtain a user ID and password for your account, safeguard that information. Strengthening your online credentials–your online security profile–typically your user name, password, and security questions and answers, can be one of your most important lines of defense on the Internet. For additional information on how you can help prevent identity theft, visit https://www. oppenheimerfunds.com/security.

Who We Are

This joint notice describes the privacy policies of the Oppenheimer funds, OppenheimerFunds, Inc., each of its investment adviser subsidiaries, OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc. and OFI Global Trust Co. It applies to all Oppenheimer fund accounts you presently have, or may open in the future, using your Social Security number—whether or not you remain a shareholder of our funds. This notice was last updated as of November 2017. In the event it is updated or changed, we will post an updated notice on our website at oppenheimerfunds.com. If you have any questions about this privacy policy, email us by clicking on the Contact Us section of our website at oppenheimerfunds.com, write to us at P.O. Box 5270, Denver, CO 80217-5270, or call us at 800 CALL OPP (225 5677).

 

111        OPPENHEIMER CAPITAL INCOME FUND


 

LOGO

OppenheimerFunds®

The Right Way

to Invest

 

Visit us at oppenheimerfunds.com for 24-hr access to account information and transactions or call us at 800.CALL OPP (800.225.5677) for 24-hr automated information and automated transactions. Representatives also available Mon–Fri 8am-8pm ET.

 

Visit Us

oppenheimerfunds.com

   

Call Us

800 225 5677

 

   

Follow us

LOGO

 

 

Oppenheimer funds are distributed by OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc.

225 Liberty Street, New York, NY 10281-1008

© 2018 OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

RA0300.001.0818 October 25, 2018

   


Item 2. Code of Ethics.

The registrant has adopted a code of ethics that applies to the registrant’s principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer or controller or persons performing similar functions.

Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert.

The Board of Trustees of the registrant has determined that Karen L. Stuckey, the Chairwoman of the Board’s Audit Committee, is the audit committee financial expert and that Ms. Stuckey is “independent” for purposes of this Item 3.

Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services.

 

(a)

Audit Fees

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed $78,400 in fiscal 2018 and $77,100 in fiscal 2017.

 

(b)

Audit-Related Fees

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed $3,500 in fiscal 2018 and $6,000 in fiscal 2017.

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed $292,986 in fiscal 2018 and $289,000 in fiscal 2017 to the registrant’s investment adviser or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant.

Such services include: Internal control reviews, GIPS attestation procedures, custody audits, incremental, and additional, audit services.

 

(c)

Tax Fees

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed no such fees in fiscal 2018 and no such fees in fiscal 2017.

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed $533,392 in fiscal 2018 and $528,317 in fiscal 2017 to the registrant’s investment adviser or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant.


Such services include: tax compliance, tax planning and tax advice. Tax compliance generally involves preparation of original and amended tax returns, claims for a refund and tax payment-planning services. Tax planning and tax advice includes 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

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed no such fees in fiscal 2018 and no such fees in fiscal 2017.

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed no such fees in fiscal 2018 and no such fees in fiscal 2017 to the registrant’s investment adviser or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant.

Such fees would include the cost to the principal accountant of attending audit committee meetings and consultations regarding the registrant’s retirement plan with respect to its Trustees.

 

(e)

(1) During its regularly scheduled periodic meetings, the registrant’s audit committee will pre-approve all audit, audit-related, tax and other services to be provided by the principal accountants of the registrant.

The audit committee has delegated pre-approval authority to its Chairman for any subsequent new engagements that arise between regularly scheduled meeting dates provided that any fees such pre-approved are presented to the audit committee at its next regularly scheduled meeting.

Under applicable laws, pre-approval of non-audit services may be waived provided that: 1) the aggregate amount of all such services provided constitutes no more than five percent of the total amount of fees paid by the registrant to its principal accountant during the fiscal year in which services are provided 2) such services were not recognized by the registrant at the time of engagement as non-audit services and 3) such services are promptly brought to the attention of the audit committee of the registrant and approved prior to the completion of the audit.

(2) 0%

 

(f)

Not applicable as less than 50%.

 

(g)

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed $826,378 in fiscal 2018 and $817,317 in fiscal 2017 to the registrant and the registrant’s investment adviser or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant related to non-audit fees. Those billings did not include any prohibited non-audit services as defined by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.


(h)

The registrant’s audit committee of the board of Trustees has considered whether the provision of non-audit services that were rendered to the registrant’s investment adviser, and any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the investment adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant that were not pre-approved pursuant to paragraph (c)(7)(ii) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X is compatible with maintaining the principal accountant’s independence. No such services were rendered.

Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants

Not applicable.

Item 6. Schedule of Investments.

a) Not applicable. The complete schedule of investments is included in Item 1 of this Form N-CSR.

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. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers.

Not applicable.

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

The Fund’s Governance Committee Provisions with Respect to Nominations of Directors/Trustees to the Respective Boards

None


Item 11. Controls and Procedures.

Based on their evaluation of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-3(c)) as of 8/31/2018, the registrant’s principal executive officer and principal financial officer found the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures to provide reasonable assurances that information required to be disclosed by the registrant in the reports that it files under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (a) is accumulated and communicated to registrant’s management, including its principal executive officer and principal financial officer, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure, and (b) is recorded, processed, summarized and reported, within the time periods specified in the rules and forms adopted by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

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

Item 12. Disclosure of Securities Lending Activities for Closed-End Management Investment Companies.

Not applicable.

Item 13. Exhibits.

 

(a)

(1) Exhibit attached hereto.

(2) Exhibits attached hereto.


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.

 

Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund
By:   /s/ Arthur P. Steinmetz
  Arthur P. Steinmetz
  Principal Executive Officer
Date:   10/19/2018

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/ Arthur P. Steinmetz
  Arthur P. Steinmetz
  Principal Executive Officer
Date:   10/19/2018

 

By:   /s/ Brian S. Petersen
  Brian S. Petersen
  Principal Financial Officer
Date:   10/19/2018
EX-99.CODE ETH 2 d635712dex99codeeth.htm CODE OF ETHICS Code of Ethics

CODE OF ETHICS FOR PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE AND FINANCIAL OFFICERS OF THE OPPENHEIMER FUNDS, OPPENHEIMERFUNDS, INC., OFI GLOBAL ASSET MANAGEMENT, INC. AND OFI STEELPATH, INC.

This Code of Ethics for Principal Executive and Financial Officers (referred to in this document as the “Code”) has been adopted by each of the investment companies for which OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (“OFI”), OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. (“OFI Global”) , OFI SteelPath, Inc. (“OFI SteelPath”) or one of OFI’s other subsidiaries (referred to collectively in this document as “OFI”) acts as investment adviser (individually, a “Fund” and collectively, the “Funds”), and by OFI to effectuate compliance with Section 406 under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and the rules adopted to implement Section 406.

This Code applies to OFI’s and each Fund’s principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer or controller, or persons performing similar functions (“Covered Officers”). A listing of positions currently within the ambit of Covered Officers is attached as Exhibit A.1

INTRODUCTION / DEFINITION / POLICY STATEMENT:

In general, the principles that govern honest and ethical conduct, including the avoidance of conflicts of interest between personal and professional relationships, reflect, at the minimum, the following: (1) the duty at all times in performing any responsibilities as a Fund financial officer, controller, accountant or principal executive officer to place the interests of the Funds ahead of personal interests; (2) the fundamental standard that Covered Officers should not take inappropriate advantage of their positions; (3) the duty to assure that a Fund’s financial statements and reports to its shareholders are prepared honestly and accurately in accordance with applicable rules, regulations and accounting standards; and (4) the duty to conduct the Funds’ business and affairs in an honest and ethical manner. Each Covered Officer should be sensitive to situations that may give rise to actual as well as apparent conflicts of interest.

It is acknowledged that, as a result of the contractual relationship between each Fund and OFI, of which the Covered Officers are also officers or employees, and subject to OFI’s fiduciary duties to each Fund, the Covered Officers may, in the normal course of their duties, be involved in establishing policies and implementing decisions that will have different effects on OFI and the Funds. It is further acknowledged that the participation of the Covered Officers in such activities is inherent in the contractual relationship between each Fund and OFI and is consistent with the expectations of the Board of Trustees/Directors of the performance by the Covered Officers of their duties as officers of the Funds.

 

1

The obligations imposed by this Code on Covered Officers are separate from and in addition to any obligations that may be imposed on such persons as Covered Persons under the Code of Ethics adopted by OFI and the Funds under Rule 17j-1 of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended and any other code of conduct applicable to Covered Officers in whatever capacity they serve. This Code does not incorporate by reference any provisions of the Rule 17j-1 Code of Ethics and accordingly, any violations or waivers granted under the Rule 17j-1 Code of Ethics will not be considered a violation or waiver under this Code.


POLICY DETAILS:

 

A.

POLICY STATEMENT

Overview. As a means of implementing Section 406 of SOX (“Section 406”), the SEC has adopted certain rules that require a mutual fund to disclose:

 

   

Whether or not it has adopted a code of ethics that applies to the mutual fund’s principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer, controller or any other person that performs similar functions (each a “Covered Officer” and, collectively, the “Covered Officers”);

 

   

Why, if it has not adopted such code, it has not done so; and

 

   

Amendments to, and waivers from, the code of ethics relating to any of the Covered Officers.

Section 406 defines a “code of ethics” to mean such standards as are reasonable necessary to promote:

 

   

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 the periodic reports required to be filed by the issuer; and

 

   

Compliance with applicable laws, rules and regulations.

This Code of Ethics for Principal Executive and Financial Officers (the “Executive Code”) sets forth standards and procedures to ensure compliance with SOX Section 406 and shall apply to each Covered Officer of the Funds and ETF Trust (referred to herein as the “Funds”).

Honest and ethical conduct. This Executive Code is intended to assure that the behavior of Covered Officers does not put, or appear to put, the interests of other parties above those of the Funds and that conflicts of interest are identified and handled ethically. A conflict of interest occurs when a Covered Officer allows, or appears to allow, advantages that could otherwise be avoided or ameliorated, to other parties at the expense of a Fund. Such advantages may benefit a Covered Officer’s own private interests over the interests of the Funds. Conflicts of interest may also arise when, in addition to serving as a Covered Officer of the Funds, a Covered Officer also holds a position as an officer or employee of an investment adviser or other entity retained by a Fund. A conflict of interest may be created if a Covered Officer who also serves as an officer or employee of an investment adviser to the Funds, provides benefits to another party that are improper, or that are a breach of the Covered Officer’s fiduciary relationship to the Funds, if the benefit was derived from such Covered Officer’s position with the Funds.

The compliance programs and procedures of the Funds and the investment adviser(s) to the Funds are designed to prevent, or identify and correct, violations of provisions set forth in the Investment Company Act and the Investment Advisers Act, including certain conflict of interest provisions. The obligations imposed by this Executive Code on Covered Officers are separate and in addition to any obligations imposed on such persons under any other procedures, such as the Code of Ethics adopted by the Funds and the investment advisers to the Funds pursuant to Rule 17j-1 under the Investment Company Act. This Executive Code does not, and is not intended to, repeat or replace these programs and procedures. Violations of such other programs and procedures shall be addressed in accordance with the applicable program or procedure, unless or until it is determined that a violation of such program and procedure is also a violation of this Executive Code.


If a Covered Officer becomes aware of a conflict of interest or perceives there to be a conflict of interest, such Covered Officer shall promptly report the matter to the Funds’ Chief Compliance Officer or the OFI General Counsel. Upon receipt of a report, the Chief Compliance Officer or OFI General Counsel will take prompt steps to determine whether a conflict or perceived conflict of interest exists. If it is determined that an actual or perceived conflict of interest exists, the Chief Compliance Officer or OFI General Counsel will take steps to resolve the conflict or the appearance of a conflict. If it is determined that no conflict or appearance of a conflict exists, the Chief Compliance Officer or OFI General Counsel shall meet with the Covered Officer to advise him or her of such finding and of his or her reason for taking no action. In lieu of determining whether a conflict or appearance of conflict exists, the matter may be referred to the Funds’ Boards.

Prohibited Activity: No Covered Officer shall, in connection with carrying out his or her duties on behalf of the Funds:

 

   

Use information concerning business and affairs of the Funds, including the investment intentions of the Funds, for personal gain to himself or herself, his or her family or friends or any other person, or in a manner detrimental to the interests of the Funds or the shareholders of the Funds;

 

   

Use his or her ability to influence investment intentions for personal gain to himself or herself, his or her family or friends or any other person or in a manner detrimental to the Funds or the shareholders of the Funds;

 

   

Use his or her personal influence or personal relationships to influence the preparation and issuance of financial reports of a Fund whereby the Covered Officer would benefit personally to the detriment of Funds or the shareholders of the Funds;

 

   

Intentionally take any action or fail to take any action in connection with his or her official acts on behalf of the Funds that causes the Funds to violate applicable laws, rules and regulations;

 

   

Employ any device, scheme, artifice or manipulative practice to defraud the Funds or the shareholders of the Funds;

 

   

Intentionally cause the Funds to make any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact that conflicts with statements made in official documents, regulatory filings, financial statements or communications to the public;

 

   

Intentionally cause the Funds to fail to comply with applicable laws, rules and regulations, including failure to comply with the requirement of full, fair, accurate, understandable and timely disclosure in reports and documents that the Funds file with, or submit to, the SEC and in other public communications;


   

Intentionally mislead or fail to provide material information to the independent auditors of the Funds or to the Board of Trustees/Directors or the officers of the Funds or their investment adviser(s) in connection with financial reporting matters;

 

   

Intentionally cause a Fund to be financially disadvantaged or to bear unwarranted expenses;

 

   

Retaliate against others for, or otherwise discourage the reporting of, actual or apparent violations of this Code.

Waivers. Covered Officers requesting a waiver of any of the provisions of the Executive Code must submit a written request for such waiver to the Compliance Department, setting forth the basis of such request and all necessary facts upon which such request can be evaluated.

The Compliance Department shall review such request and make a written determination thereon, which shall be binding. The Compliance Department may, in reviewing such request, consult in its discretion with legal counsel to the Funds, or the Board, if applicable.

In determining whether to waive any of the provisions of this Code, the Compliance Department shall consider whether the proposed waiver:

 

   

Is prohibited by this Executive Code;

 

   

Is consistent with honest and ethical conduct; and

 

   

Will result in a conflict of interest between the Covered Officer’s personal and professional obligations to a Fund.

For purposes of clarification, a determination by a Board as to the appropriate handling of a conflict of interest that has been disclosed to it and that does not involve unethical or fraudulent conduct does not constitute a waiver of this Executive Code.

Sanctions. Any violation of this Executive Code shall be subject to the imposition of such sanctions as may be deemed appropriate under the circumstances and may include, without limitation, a letter of censure, suspension from employment or termination of employment.

 

B.

POLICY IMPLEMENTATION

Each Covered Officer shall:

 

   

Certify that he or she has received, read and understands his or her obligations under the Executive Code (upon becoming subject to the Executive Code and annually thereafter); and

 

   

At least annually, all Covered Officers shall certify that they have compiled with the requirements of the Executive Code and that they have disclosed or reported violations of the Executive Code to the Chief Compliance Officer; and

 

   

Promptly report to the Chief Compliance Officer of the Funds or the General Counsel if he or she becomes aware of any actual or perceived conflict of interest.


The Compliance Department shall:

 

   

Maintain the current list of Covered Officers;

 

   

Furnish each Covered Officer with this Executive Code when such individual becomes subject to the Executive Code and annually thereafter;

 

   

Periodically inform each Covered Officer of his or her duties and obligations under this Executive Code;

 

   

Provide Fund Treasury with information with respect to amendments to, or waivers of, this Executive Code;

 

   

Provide the Boards with a quarterly report setting forth:

 

   

A description of any report submitted by a Covered Officer of a conflict of interest or perceived conflict of interest and the disposition thereof;

 

   

A description of any request for a waiver from the Executive Code and the disposition thereof;

 

   

Any violation of the Executive Code that has been reported or detected and the sanction imposed;

 

   

Any other significant information arising under the Executive Code.

Fund Treasury shall ensure that the applicable Form N-CSR:

 

   

Provides disclosure to the effect that the Funds have adopted the Executive Code;

 

   

Includes the current Executive Code as an exhibit; and

 

   

Provides disclosure with respect to any waivers that have been granted under the Executive Code.

Amendments. At least annually, the Board of each Fund shall review the Executive Code and consider whether any amendments are necessary or desirable. Proposed amendments to the Executive Code shall be presented to the Boards for review and approval at such times other than the annual review as deemed necessary or desirable by the Chief Compliance Officer.

 

Approved by the Denver Board of the Oppenheimer Funds on August 2016

Approved by the New York of the Oppenheimer Funds on September 2016

Approved by OFI Legal and Compliance on July 2016


Exhibit A

Positions Covered by this Code of Ethics for Principal Executive and Financial Officers*

Each Oppenheimer fund

President (Principal Executive Officer)

Treasurer (Principal Financial Officer)

OppenheimerFunds, Inc., OFI Global Asset Management, Inc., OFI SteelPath, Inc., and VTL Associates, LLC

President (Principal Executive Officer)

Chief Executive Officer (Principal Executive Officer)

Chief Financial Officer Principal Financial Officer)

Treasurer (Principal Financial Officer)

 

*

There are no other positions with the Funds, OFI, OFI Global, OFI SteelPath, Inc., or VTL Associates, LLC held by persons who perform similar functions to those listed above.

EX-99.CERT 3 d635712dex99cert.htm SECTION 302 CERTIFICATIONS Section 302 Certifications

Exhibit 99.CERT

Section 302 Certifications

CERTIFICATIONS

I, Arthur P. Steinmetz, certify that:

 

1.

I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund;

 

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

 

  (a)

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

 

  (b)

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

 

  (c)

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

 

  (d)

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


5.

The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of Trustees (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: 10/19/2018

 

/s/ Arthur P. Steinmetz
Arthur P. Steinmetz
Principal Executive Officer


Exhibit 99.CERT

Section 302 Certifications

CERTIFICATIONS

I, Brian S. Petersen, certify that:

 

1.

I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund;

 

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

 

  (a)

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

 

  (b)

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

 

  (c)

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

 

  (d)

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


5.

The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of Trustees (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: 10/19/2018

 

/s/ Brian S. Petersen
Brian S. Petersen
Principal Financial Officer
EX-99.906CERT 4 d635712dex99906cert.htm SECTION 906 CERTIFICATIONS Section 906 Certifications

EX-99.906CERT

Section 906 Certifications

CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C SECTION 1350,

AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO

SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

Arthur P. Steinmetz, Principal Executive Officer, and Brian S. Petersen, Principal Financial Officer, of Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund (the “Registrant”), each certify to the best of his knowledge that:

 

1.

The Registrant’s periodic report on Form N-CSR for the period ended 8/31/2018 (the “Form N-CSR”) fully complies with the requirements of Section 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended; and

 

2.

The information contained in the Form N-CSR fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Registrant. This certification is being furnished to the Commission solely pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1350 and is not being filed as part of the Form N-CSR filed with the Commission.

 

Principal Executive Officer     Principal Financial Officer
Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund     Oppenheimer Capital Income Fund
/s/ Arthur P. Steinmetz     /s/ Brian S. Petersen
Arthur P. Steinmetz     Brian S. Petersen
Date: 10/19/2018     Date: 10/19/2018
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