0000932471-12-005655.txt : 20121128 0000932471-12-005655.hdr.sgml : 20121128 20121128140316 ACCESSION NUMBER: 0000932471-12-005655 CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: N-CSR PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 59 CONFORMED PERIOD OF REPORT: 20120930 FILED AS OF DATE: 20121128 DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20121128 EFFECTIVENESS DATE: 20121128 FILER: COMPANY DATA: COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: VANGUARD CHESTER FUNDS CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0000752177 IRS NUMBER: 232311358 FISCAL YEAR END: 0930 FILING VALUES: FORM TYPE: N-CSR SEC ACT: 1940 Act SEC FILE NUMBER: 811-04098 FILM NUMBER: 121228557 BUSINESS ADDRESS: STREET 1: PO BOX 2600 STREET 2: V26 CITY: VALLEY FORGE STATE: PA ZIP: 19482 BUSINESS PHONE: 6106691000 MAIL ADDRESS: STREET 1: P.O. BOX 2600 STREET 2: V26 CITY: VALLEY FORGE STATE: PA ZIP: 19482 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: VANGUARD PRIMECAP FUND/ DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 20011121 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: VANGUARD/PRIMECAP FUND INC DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19940608 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: PRIMECAP FUND INC DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19920703 0000752177 S000002568 Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund C000007070 Investor Shares VPMCX C000007071 Admiral Shares VPMAX 0000752177 S000002569 Vanguard Target Retirement Income Fund C000007072 Investor Shares VTINX 0000752177 S000002571 Vanguard Target Retirement 2015 Fund C000007074 Investor Shares VTXVX 0000752177 S000002572 Vanguard Target Retirement 2025 Fund C000007075 Investor Shares VTTVX 0000752177 S000002573 Vanguard Target Retirement 2035 Fund C000007076 Investor Shares VTTHX 0000752177 S000002574 Vanguard Target Retirement 2045 Fund C000007077 Investor Shares VTIVX 0000752177 S000012758 Vanguard Target Retirement 2010 Fund C000034437 Investor Shares VTENX 0000752177 S000012759 Vanguard Target Retirement 2020 Fund C000034438 Investor Shares VTWNX 0000752177 S000012760 Vanguard Target Retirement 2030 Fund C000034439 Investor Shares VTHRX 0000752177 S000012761 Vanguard Target Retirement 2040 Fund C000034440 Investor Shares VFORX 0000752177 S000012762 Vanguard Target Retirement 2050 Fund C000034441 Investor Shares VFIFX 0000752177 S000029700 Vanguard Target Retirement 2055 Fund C000091317 Investor Shares VFFVX 0000752177 S000035453 Vanguard Target Retirement 2060 Fund C000108861 Investor Shares VTTSX N-CSR 1 chesterfunds_final.htm VANGUARD CHESTER FUNDS chesterfunds_final.htm - Generated by SEC Publisher for SEC Filing

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: 811-04098

Name of Registrant: Vanguard Chester Funds

Address of Registrant:
P.O. Box 2600
Valley Forge, PA 19482

Name and address of agent for service:
Heidi Stam, Esquire
P.O. Box 876
Valley Forge, PA 19482

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (610) 669-1000

Date of fiscal year end: September 30

Date of reporting period: October 1, 2011 – September 30, 2012

Item 1: Reports to Shareholders


 

 

     
Annual Report | September 30, 2012
   
Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund
  

 



 

> For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund returned about 24%, trailing the return of its benchmark index and the average return of peer funds.

> The fund’s holdings in information technology, its largest sector on average, didn’t measure up to those of the benchmark, but its commitment to health care boosted performance.

> For the decade ended September 30, 2012, the fund’s average annual return of more than 10% outperformed the comparable returns of its benchmark index and peer funds by more than 2 percentage points.

Contents  
Your Fund’s Total Returns. 1
Chairman’s Letter. 2
Advisor’s Report. 9
Fund Profile. 13
Performance Summary. 14
Financial Statements. 16
Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns. 28
About Your Fund’s Expenses. 29
Trustees Approve Advisory Arrangement. 31
Glossary. 32

 

Please note: The opinions expressed in this report are just that—informed opinions. They should not be considered promises or advice. Also, please keep in mind that the information and opinions cover the period through the date on the front of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in your fund are spelled out in the prospectus.
See the Glossary for definitions of investment terms used in this report.
About the cover: Our cover photograph shows rigging on the HMSSurprise, a replica of an 18th-century Royal Navy frigate. It was featured in the 2003 movie Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, which was based on Patrick O’Brian’s sea novels, set amid the Napoleonic Wars. Vanguard was named for another ship of that era, the HMSVanguard, which was the flagship of British Admiral Horatio Nelson at the Battle of the Nile.


 

Your Fund’s Total Returns  
 
 
 
 
Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2012  
 
  Total
  Returns
Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund  
Investor Shares 24.17%
Admiral™ Shares 24.29
S&P 500 Index 30.20
Multi-Cap Growth Funds Average 25.46

Multi-Cap Growth Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

Admiral Shares carry lower expenses and are available to investors who meet certain account-balance requirements.

Your Fund’s Performance at a Glance
September 30, 2011, Through September 30, 2012

      Distributions Per Share
  Starting Ending Income Capital
  Share Price Share Price Dividends Gains
Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund        
Investor Shares $58.46 $69.39 $0.689 $2.104
Admiral Shares 60.69 72.03 0.785 2.182

 



 

Chairman’s Letter

Dear Shareholder,

Global stock markets began the fiscal year strongly and––after weathering some springtime disruption––also finished on a high note with four straight months of gains. Although Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund’s performance was strong for the 12 months ended September 30, 2012, it trailed its comparative standards.

The fund returned about 24% for the period, compared with about 30% for its benchmark, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, and 25% on average for peer multi-capitalization growth funds.

The PRIMECAP Fund’s returns often diverge from those of its benchmark and peers because of the advisor’s willingness to establish outsized stakes in what it considers the market’s most promising long-term investment opportunities. In recent years, the advisor has found those opportunities in information technology and health care companies. Over the past 12 months, the fund’s tech stocks weighed on relative performance, while its health care stocks gave it a boost.

On a separate note, I want to inform you that Vanguard has eliminated the redemption fee for your fund, effective May 23. The fund’s trustees determined that the fee, one of several measures in place to discourage frequent trading and protect the interests of long-term investors, was no longer needed.

2


 

If you hold fund shares in a taxable account, you may wish to review the table of after-tax returns, based on the highest federal income tax bracket, that appears later in this report.

Stocks notched a powerful rally, with help from central bankers
U.S. stocks surged 30% in the 12 months ended September 30, outpacing the gains of their international counterparts. The rally came amid moves by U.S. and European central bankers to quiet—at least temporarily—investors’ concerns about the U.S. economy and the finances of European governments and banks.

While U.S. stocks were the standouts, European and emerging markets stocks also posted double-digit results. The developed markets of the Pacific region were the weakest performers but still recorded a modest advance.

In July, the president of the European Central Bank declared that policymakers would do whatever was needed to preserve the euro common currency. That pronouncement was encouraging to investors, but Europe’s financial troubles are by no means resolved.

Vanguard economists believe the most likely scenario is that the Eurozone will “muddle through” for several years, with occasional spikes in market volatility, as fiscal tightening continues in the face of weak economic growth.

Market Barometer      
 
    Average Annual Total Returns
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012
  One Three Five
  Year Years Years
Stocks      
Russell 1000 Index (Large-caps) 30.06% 13.27% 1.22%
Russell 2000 Index (Small-caps) 31.91 12.99 2.21
Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Index 30.00 13.29 1.53
MSCI All Country World Index ex USA (International) 14.48 3.17 -4.12
 
Bonds      
Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Broad taxable market) 5.16% 6.19% 6.53%
Barclays Municipal Bond Index (Broad tax-exempt market) 8.32 5.99 6.06
Citigroup Three-Month U.S. Treasury Bill Index 0.05 0.08 0.63
 
CPI      
Consumer Price Index 1.99% 2.33% 2.11%

 

3


 

Bonds produced solid returns; future results may be more muted
Bonds once again advanced; the broad U.S. taxable market returned about 5% for the 12 months. Among U.S. Treasuries, long-term bonds were particularly strong as they benefited from the Federal Reserve’s bond-buying program.

As bond prices rose, the yield of the 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell to a record low in July, closing below 1.5%. (Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions.) By the end of the period, the yield had climbed, but it still remained low by historical standards.

Bondholders have enjoyed years of strong returns. But as Tim Buckley, our incoming chief investment officer, has noted, investors shouldn’t be surprised if future results are much more modest. As yields tumble, the scope for further declines—and price increases—diminishes.

The Federal Reserve announced on September 13 that it would continue to hold its target for short-term interest rates between 0% and 0.25% at least through mid-2015. The exceptionally low rates, in place since late 2008, kept a tight lid on returns from money market funds and savings accounts.

The fund’s technology holdingshindered relative performance
The PRIMECAP Fund seeks to invest in companies with underappreciated long-term growth prospects, a strategy that has served it well over the decades. The

Expense Ratios
Your Fund Compared With Its Peer Group

  Investor Admiral Peer Group
  Shares Shares Average
PRIMECAP Fund 0.45% 0.36% 1.34%

 

The fund expense ratios shown are from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012, and represent estimated costs for the current fiscal year. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the fund’s expense ratios were 0.45% for Investor Shares and 0.36% for Admiral Shares. The peer-group expense ratio is derived from data provided by Lipper Inc. and captures information through year-end 2011.

Peer group: Multi-Cap Growth Funds.

4


 

advisor has built a solid track record on a willingness to assemble a portfolio that can look very different from the market.

The flip side of this distinctive approach is that there are times when the fund’s performance trails the benchmark results. Such was the case over the 2012 fiscal year, when the fund lacked exposure to some of the technology sector’s brightest stars. PRIMECAP’s technology stocks climbed almost 19%. Those in the benchmark returned more than 30%. The fund hasn’t had meaningful exposure to certain companies that have best capitalized on the craze for smartphones and tablets. Instead, its tech holdings include a number of formerly high-flying companies that have fallen (temporarily, in the advisor’s judgment) from consumers’ and investors’ favor.

Industrial stocks were also a disappointment for PRIMECAP. The fund’s airline and logistics companies––which are susceptible to swings both large and small––struggled over the period.

Against these sore spots for the fund, health care stocks provided at least a partial salve. PRIMECAP’s health care holdings climbed about 35%, compared with 29% for the index sector. Almost all of the difference came from the biotech-nology industry, where the fund’s stocks benefited from developing drug pipelines and their strong financial position.

Total Returns
Ten Years Ended September 30, 2012

  Average
  Annual Return
PRIMECAP Fund Investor Shares 10.58%
S&P 500 Index 8.01
Multi-Cap Growth Funds Average 7.96
Multi-Cap Growth Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  

 

The figures shown represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost.

5


 

For more on the advisor’s strategy and outlook, please see the Advisor’s Report following this letter.

The long­term record testifies to the merit of a patient approach
PRIMECAP Management Company, the fund’s advisor, relies on deep fundamental research in an effort to uncover opportunities that will yield outsized rewards over the next three to five years. When it finds these companies, it invests heavily. The fund’s long-term record is a ringing validation of this approach.

But the key word there is long-term. I hope you’ll read the Investment Insight on page 6 for some additional thoughts regarding

Investment insight
          
Patience and perspective
              
Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund’s portfolio
looks very different from the makeup
of its benchmark index. Ideally, these
differences lead to benchmark-beating
long-term returns. At times, however,
different can mean subpar. A key to
success with PRIMECAP’s bold,
relatively concentrated approach is
patience during these patches of
weakness.
                  
The fund’s historical returns show
that short-term weakness has often
marked the path to superior long-term
returns. The fund’s Investor Shares
have outperformed the S&P 500 Index
in 59% of the 323 rolling 12-month
periods since their 1984 inception. That
figure is impressive, but look at it from
the other side: The fund has trailed the
index 41% of the time—132 occasions
when an impatient investor could have
grown frustrated.
                     
Over the 215 rolling ten-year periods
since its inception, however, the fund
has outperformed the S&P 500 Index
93.5% of the time in terms of average
yearly return—a powerful case for
patience and perspective with a strategy
designed not to mirror the market, but
to follow its own path toward potentially
superior results.
   
Percentage of periods in which Vanguard
PRIMECAP Fund outperformed the S&P 500
Index, November 1984–September 2012
   
         
Note: In the 323 12-month periods since November 30, 1984,
the fund’s Investor Shares outperformed the S&P 500 Index
191 times. In the 215 ten-year periods since November 30, 1984,
the Investor Shares outperformed the index 201 times, based
on average annual returns.
Sources: Vanguard and S&P.
                 

6


 

the kind of patience and tempered expectations that a distinctively managed fund such as this one can require from its investors.

For the ten years ended September 30, 2012, the PRIMECAP Fund generated an average annual return of 10.58%, more than 2 percentage points ahead of both its market benchmark, the S&P 500 Index, and the average return of peer funds. That means that over those ten years, an initial investment of $10,000 in the PRIMECAP Fund would have grown to $27,326, some $5,000 more than it would have earned had it grown at the benchmark’s rate of return.

These results are the product of PRIMECAP Management Company’s deep expertise. Vanguard’s historically low costs helped the advisor’s cause and allowed shareholders to keep more of the fund’s returns.

The lessons of the financial crisis remain relevant four years later
In September, the end of your fund’s fiscal year, we marked the fourth anniversary of Lehman Brothers’ collapse, the start of the 2008–2009 financial crisis. When the Lehman news broke, I was speaking to institutional clients at an event in Washington, D.C., all of three weeks into my new role as Vanguard’s CEO.

In the ensuing months, I was struck both by how fortunate I was to work with a great team of Vanguard “crew” and by the remarkable steadiness demonstrated by our clients. Many clients experienced significant losses, but signs of panic were few. On balance, they remained committed to their long-term investment programs and managed to benefit from the financial markets’ subsequent recovery.

As the crisis recedes further in time, it’s important not to lose sight of the lessons that it illuminated about investing and sound financial practices generally. First among those lessons is that diversification does work. Diversification didn’t immunize investors from the market’s decline, but it certainly helped to insulate them from the worst of it.

Second, saving money and living within your means are critical. Investors are acting on this lesson as they pay off debt, which is a form of saving, and increase their savings rates from the dangerously low levels that prevailed before the crisis.

Third, having the courage to stick with a sound investment plan—as so many of our clients did—is important during volatile, uncertain times. Investors who resisted the urge to bail out of stocks at the depths of the crisis have largely been rewarded in the succeeding years.

7


 

I am very optimistic that, if investors embrace these lessons, they can give themselves a better chance of reaching their long-term goals.

As always, thank you for entrusting your assets to Vanguard.

Sincerely,


F. William McNabb III
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
October 11, 2012

8


 

Advisor’s Report

For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund’s total returns of 24.17% for Investor Shares and 24.29% for Admiral Shares trailed both the 30.20% return of the unmanaged S&P 500 Index benchmark and the 25.46% average return of multi-capitalization growth fund competitors.

The investment environment
The stock market showed strong gains over the past 12 months despite a more challenging global economic outlook. Growth in U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) for the second quarter of 2012 was just 1.3%, suggesting a slowdown in the midst of an already tepid recovery. Consumer spending trends have been mixed, with signs of acceleration followed by periods of sluggishness as households struggle in the face of high unemployment, little growth in personal income, and a difficult housing market.

Despite news that the unemployment rate dropped below 8% in September for the first time since January 2009, job growth remains weak. The official unemployment rate likely understates the difficult job environment, since it does not reflect workers who are no longer seeking employment or those who are underemployed. Outside the United States, economic and geopolitical developments were largely negative. The sovereign-debt crisis continued to weigh on European economies, China showed signs of slowing economic growth, and tensions flared in the Middle East.

Management of the fund
Despite the subpar results of the past fiscal year, our investment approach remains consistent. We rely on fundamental research to identify companies whose revenues and earnings will, in our opinion, grow more rapidly over a three-to-five-year time frame than current valuations might suggest. We seek to capitalize on situations in which the fundamental value of a company significantly exceeds its current market value.

This investment strategy has led us to build and maintain significant investments in information technology and health care companies that we believe offer the potential for higher returns than the overall market will produce. These two sectors make up about 60% of the fund’s holdings (versus about 30% for the S&P 500 Index). Nine of the ten largest holdings in the fund are health care or information technology stocks.

Technology
The fund’s disappointing relative returns for the past 12 months were mainly due to poor stock selection in the information technology sector. The IT stocks in the S&P 500 Index returned 32.4% for the fiscal year. In comparison, the fund’s holdings in the sector returned only 18.8%. A major reason for this gap was the fund’s minimal position in Apple (+76%), which in August attained the highest market capitalization of any company in history. Notable detractors within the portfolio were Research In Motion (–63%) and

9


 

Hewlett-Packard (–22%). Several of the fund’s largest IT holdings, including Texas Instruments (+6%), Oracle (+10%), and Microsoft (+23%), had lower returns than the S&P 500; however, our holding in Google (+47%) partially offset these results.

Despite the disappointing results over the past 12 months, we remain enthusiastic about the fund’s information technology holdings for several reasons. Many of these companies are trading at attractive valuations, with good growth prospects and large cash balances. The adoption of mobile computing devices, such as smartphones and tablet computers, and the continued expansion of the internet through social networking and e-commerce applications are helping to drive growth in demand for semiconductors, computer hardware, software, storage, and technology-driven services such as consulting and data analytics. Some of the largest holdings in the portfolio, including Google, Qualcomm, Texas Instruments, Oracle, and Microsoft, are well-positioned to capitalize on these trends.

Health care
The fund’s health care stocks contributed favorably to its results. Two of our largest holdings, Biogen Idec (+60%) and Amgen (+56%), were among the biggest gainers. Biogen Idec reported favorable results from studies of its new oral drug to treat multiple sclerosis, while Amgen’s stock price increased following the company’s announcement in November 2011 of a share repurchase program that included a $5 billion Dutch tender offer.

We continue to believe that large pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and medical device companies will experience growth in revenues and earnings from new products, an aging global population, and growing demand in emerging markets. In the wake of a period of considerable political and regulatory challenges as well as an unusually high number of patent expirations, we are encouraged by an increase in new drug approvals by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in the past two years. For the longer term, we believe that the aging of populations in the United States, Europe, and Japan, along with rising standards of living in developing markets such as China and India, should lead to greater demand for health care products.

The health care industry spends tens of billions of dollars annually on research and development, which we believe will lead to the discovery of more effective treatments for many diseases, such as cancer, diabetes, and Alzheimer’s. For example, because of the rapid decline in the cost of sequencing human genomes, it is expected that millions of individuals globally will have their genome sequenced in the near future. Further, cancer cell genomes are being sequenced to gain an understanding of the specific mutations responsible for their proliferation.

10


 

The availability of this increasingly rich and broad set of genetic information is helping researchers better understand how patients with certain genetic traits develop diseases and respond to pathogens, chemicals, and drugs. That growing knowledge base is enabling the development of new, highly effective targeted drug therapies and associated diagnostic tests, bringing the possibility of personalized medicine closer to reality.

Other sectors
Poor stock selection in the industrial and consumer discretionary sectors hurt the fund’s relative returns. C.H. Robinson (–13%) and Sony (–38%) were the biggest detractors. The fund’s minimal exposure to the financial sector, combined with poor stock selection within the sector, also hurt returns. On the other hand, the fund benefited from having below-benchmark exposure to consumer staples and utilities, the two sectors with the lowest returns in the S&P 500 over the 12 months.

Outlook
As we enter fiscal year 2013, we are more tempered in our optimism for U.S. equities than we were a year ago. Valuations generally seem attractive relative to historical standards, especially given the low interest rate environment. Although the S&P 500 Index is considerably higher than it was a year ago, equities remain attractive compared with most other asset classes. As we write, the average dividend of the S&P 500 is almost 2%, which is still above the current yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond.

In the sectors where the fund has the greatest weightings, we find current valuations compelling. We believe that investors may be underestimating the growth potential of many companies. Although we expect the economic growth rate in the United States to be modest in the near future, we believe that, because of globalization and innovation, many U.S. companies can grow revenues and earnings at a faster rate than the GDP will grow. U.S. corporations generate an increasing portion of their revenues and earnings from abroad; last year, 46% of the revenues for S&P 500 companies came from outside the United States. Prospects for international growth are particularly attractive for companies in the information technology, health care, and industrial sectors.

We also believe that innovation by U.S. companies, particularly those in the information technology and health care sectors, should result in revenue and earnings growth opportunities that are not reflected in current expectations. These two sectors represent areas where we believe the United States has a strong competitive advantage relative to the rest of the world. We expect that the substantial investment in research and development will lead to new products and services that improve productivity for businesses and quality of life for consumers.

Furthermore, the stock market may be undervaluing the cash on the balance sheets of many companies. As U.S.

11


 

corporations have recovered from the recession, many have improved their balance sheets by paying down debt and growing their cash balances, which in the current low interest rate environment represent an underutilized asset. That asset could be a source of higher returns in the future. Companies with strong cash flows have seen considerable appreciation in their stock price as they returned cash to shareholders by raising dividends or by buying back shares.

In closing, we note that the fund’s returns have generally lagged those of the S&P 500 for the past two years. We are certainly disappointed with these results, but we accept that our low-turnover approach will not produce returns that exceed the index every year. Our disciplined strategy of continuing to add to high-conviction, out-of-favor positions as they decline ensures that if our view of the fundamentals ultimately proves correct, the fund will hold larger positions on the way up than it did on the way down. In our view, this approach is instrumental to delivering superior relative returns over the long run.

PRIMECAP Management Company
October 12, 2012

12


 

PRIMECAP Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Share-Class Characteristics  
  Investor Admiral
  Shares Shares
Ticker Symbol VPMCX VPMAX
Expense Ratio1 0.45% 0.36%
30-Day SEC Yield 1.23% 1.32%

 

Portfolio Characteristics    
      DJ
      U.S. Total
    S&P 500 Market
  Fund Index Index
Number of Stocks 121 500 3,638
Median Market Cap $44.7B $57.5B $35.6B
Price/Earnings Ratio 17.5x 16.1x 17.0x
Price/Book Ratio 3.0x 2.2x 2.2x
Return on Equity 22.1% 19.3% 18.0%
Earnings Growth Rate 12.0% 10.6% 10.4%
Dividend Yield 1.7% 2.1% 2.0%
Foreign Holdings 12.3% 0.0% 0.0%
Turnover Rate 6%
Short-Term Reserves 3.3%

 

Sector Diversification (% of equity exposure)
      DJ
      U.S. Total
    S&P 500 Market
  Fund Index Index
Consumer Discretionary 8.9% 11.0% 12.0%
Consumer Staples 1.2 10.9 9.5
Energy 4.9 11.3 10.4
Financials 5.0 14.6 16.0
Health Care 31.7 12.0 11.9
Industrials 13.6 9.8 10.6
Information Technology 30.6 20.1 19.2
Materials 3.9 3.5 3.9
Telecommunication      
Services 0.0 3.3 2.9
Utilities 0.2 3.5 3.6

 

Volatility Measures    
    DJ
    U.S. Total
  S&P 500 Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 0.97 0.97
Beta 1.05 1.00

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

 

Ten Largest Holdings (% of total net assets)
Amgen Inc. Biotechnology 6.3%
Biogen Idec Inc. Biotechnology 6.0
Google Inc. Class A Internet Software &  
  Services 4.5
Eli Lilly & Co. Pharmaceuticals 4.0
Roche Holding AG Pharmaceuticals 3.7
FedEx Corp. Air Freight &  
  Logistics 3.5
Microsoft Corp. Systems Software 3.5
Texas Instruments Inc. Semiconductors 3.1
Novartis AG Pharmaceuticals 3.1
Medtronic Inc. Health Care  
  Equipment 2.9
Top Ten   40.6%

The holdings listed exclude any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 


1 The expense ratios shown are from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012, and represent estimated costs for the current fiscal year. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the expense ratios were 0.45% for Investor Shares and 0.36% for Admiral Shares.

13


 

PRIMECAP Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: September 30, 2002, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
        Final Value
  One Five Ten of a $10,000
  Year Years Years Investment
PRIMECAP Fund Investor Shares 24.17% 2.25% 10.58% $27,326
S&P 500 Index 30.20 1.05 8.01 21,615
Multi-Cap Growth Funds Average 25.46 0.31 7.96 21,516
Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market 30.00 1.53 8.77 23,184

Multi-Cap Growth Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

        Final Value
  One Five Ten of a $50,000
  Year Years Years Investment
PRIMECAP Fund Admiral Shares 24.29% 2.36% 10.71% $138,342
S&P 500 Index 30.20 1.05 8.01 108,075
Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Index 30.00 1.53 8.77 115,920

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

14


 

PRIMECAP Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): September 30, 2002, Through September 30, 2012


PRIMECAP Fund Investor Shares
S&P 500 Index

 

15


 

PRIMECAP Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

      Market
      Value
    Shares ($000)
Common Stocks (97.0%)    
Consumer Discretionary (8.7%)  
* DIRECTV 13,843,062 726,207
  TJX Cos. Inc. 6,875,000 307,931
  Walt Disney Co. 5,575,000 291,461
  Limited Brands Inc. 5,512,950 271,568
  Carnival Corp. 5,242,600 191,040
  Whirlpool Corp. 2,185,800 181,225
* Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. 2,680,975 168,901
  Mattel Inc. 4,000,000 141,920
^ Sony Corp. ADR 9,750,000 114,075
* Amazon.com Inc. 270,000 68,666
  Lowe’s Cos. Inc. 900,000 27,216
  Time Warner Cable Inc. 235,000 22,339
  Macy’s Inc. 558,800 21,022
  Ross Stores Inc. 248,800 16,073
  VF Corp. 94,550 15,068
  Target Corp. 100,000 6,347
      2,571,059
Consumer Staples (1.2%)    
  Costco Wholesale Corp. 2,825,000 282,853
  Kellogg Co. 810,000 41,845
  PepsiCo Inc. 170,000 12,031
      336,729
Energy (4.7%)    
  Noble Energy Inc. 4,400,000 407,924
  Schlumberger Ltd. 3,682,200 266,334
  EOG Resources Inc. 2,262,300 253,491
  Petroleo Brasileiro SA    
  ADR Type A 4,473,800 98,737
  Hess Corp. 1,480,100 79,511
  Cenovus Energy Inc. 1,794,476 62,537
  Encana Corp. 2,535,000 55,567
  Exxon Mobil Corp. 515,000 47,097
  National Oilwell Varco Inc. 483,000 38,693

 

      Market
      Value
    Shares ($000)
* Cameron    
  International Corp. 635,000 35,604
* Southwestern Energy Co. 840,000 29,215
  Transocean Ltd. 250,000 11,223
  Petroleo Brasileiro    
  SA ADR 400,000 9,176
  Noble Corp. 200,000 7,156
      1,402,265
Financials (4.8%)    
  Marsh & McLennan    
  Cos. Inc. 17,275,300 586,151
  Charles Schwab Corp. 28,400,000 363,236
* Berkshire Hathaway Inc.    
  Class B 2,400,000 211,680
  Chubb Corp. 2,550,000 194,514
  American Express Co. 432,100 24,569
  Progressive Corp. 1,000,000 20,740
  Wells Fargo & Co. 600,000 20,718
  Weyerhaeuser Co. 300,000 7,842
      1,429,450
Health Care (30.7%)    
  Amgen Inc. 22,079,800 1,861,769
*,1 Biogen Idec Inc. 11,995,100 1,790,029
  Eli Lilly & Co. 24,700,800 1,171,065
  Roche Holding AG 5,900,000 1,103,575
  Novartis AG ADR 14,859,365 910,285
  Medtronic Inc. 20,107,552 867,038
  Johnson & Johnson 6,514,800 448,935
* Life Technologies Corp. 6,939,300 339,193
  GlaxoSmithKline plc ADR 5,644,000 260,978
* Boston Scientific Corp. 28,342,560 162,686
  Abbott Laboratories 1,528,700 104,808
  Sanofi ADR 1,205,000 51,887
  Stryker Corp. 259,000 14,416
  Zimmer Holdings Inc. 197,000 13,321
      9,099,985

 

16


 

PRIMECAP Fund    
 
 
 
      Market
      Value
    Shares ($000)
Industrials (13.2%)    
  FedEx Corp. 12,401,570 1,049,421
  Honeywell    
  International Inc. 8,810,800 526,445
  C.H. Robinson    
  Worldwide Inc. 5,995,800 351,054
  Southwest Airlines Co. 34,537,600 302,895
  Caterpillar Inc. 3,294,300 283,442
  United Parcel Service Inc.    
  Class B 3,731,700 267,078
  Union Pacific Corp. 1,974,200 234,338
  Boeing Co. 2,975,760 207,172
  Deere & Co. 1,961,500 161,804
  European Aeronautic    
  Defence and    
  Space Co. NV 4,233,700 134,188
* Alaska Air Group Inc. 3,242,300 113,675
  Donaldson Co. Inc. 1,992,000 69,142
  Expeditors International    
  of Washington Inc. 1,280,700 46,566
^ Canadian Pacific    
  Railway Ltd. 547,400 45,374
  PACCAR Inc. 1,000,000 40,025
  Pall Corp. 205,000 13,015
* United Continental    
  Holdings Inc. 560,000 10,920
* Delta Air Lines Inc. 1,173,000 10,745
  CSX Corp. 490,000 10,167
  Granite Construction Inc. 317,500 9,119
  Norfolk Southern Corp. 46,100 2,933
  Rockwell Automation Inc. 25,000 1,739
  Safran SA 42,000 1,511
  Republic Services Inc.    
  Class A 17,000 468
      3,893,236
Information Technology (29.7%)  
* Google Inc. Class A 1,755,425 1,324,468
  Microsoft Corp. 34,661,200 1,032,211
  Texas Instruments Inc. 33,456,500 921,727
* Adobe Systems Inc. 24,626,770 799,385
  Oracle Corp. 24,260,233 763,955
  Intuit Inc. 11,697,400 688,743
  QUALCOMM Inc. 10,023,250 626,353
  Intel Corp. 12,400,000 281,232
* EMC Corp. 9,622,800 262,414
  Accenture plc Class A 3,425,800 239,909
  Visa Inc. Class A 1,662,120 223,189
* Symantec Corp. 12,009,200 216,166
  Telefonaktiebolaget    
  LM Ericsson ADR 16,808,914 153,465
  Hewlett-Packard Co. 8,250,000 140,745
  KLA-Tencor Corp. 2,878,700 137,328
1 Plantronics Inc. 3,701,500 130,774

 

      Market
      Value
    Shares ($000)
* Micron Technology Inc. 20,000,000 119,700
* NVIDIA Corp. 7,635,700 101,860
  Applied Materials Inc. 8,324,600 92,944
  Motorola Solutions Inc. 1,834,000 92,709
*,^ Research In Motion Ltd. 10,438,600 78,289
  Corning Inc. 5,243,200 68,948
* NetApp Inc. 1,575,000 51,786
  ASML Holding NV 827,500 44,420
  Activision Blizzard Inc. 3,500,000 39,480
  Apple Inc. 52,000 34,698
  Cisco Systems Inc. 1,300,000 24,817
  Mastercard Inc. Class A 49,950 22,551
* Entegris Inc. 2,583,472 21,004
* SanDisk Corp. 400,000 17,372
  Analog Devices Inc. 350,000 13,716
  Altera Corp. 400,000 13,594
* Rambus Inc. 2,000,000 11,080
  Dell Inc. 400,000 3,944
      8,794,976
Materials (3.8%)    
  Monsanto Co. 5,912,460 538,152
  Potash Corp. of    
  Saskatchewan Inc. 12,246,200 531,730
  Praxair Inc. 625,000 64,925
  Domtar Corp. 3,400 266
      1,135,073
Telecommunication Services (0.0%)  
* Sprint Nextel Corp. 146,300 808
 
Utilities (0.2%)    
* AES Corp. 2,421,800 26,567
  Public Service Enterprise    
  Group Inc. 608,471 19,581
  NextEra Energy Inc. 179,440 12,620
      58,768
Total Common Stocks    
(Cost $17,765,145)   28,722,349
Temporary Cash Investment (3.7%)  
Money Market Fund (3.7%)    
2,3 Vanguard Market    
  Liquidity Fund, 0.163%    
  (Cost $1,082,832) 1,082,832,419  1,082,832
Total Investments (100.7%)    
(Cost $18,847,977)   29,805,181
Other Assets and Liabilities (-0.7%)  
Other Assets   57,670
Liabilities3   (252,838)
      (195,168)
Net Assets (100%)   29,610,013

 

17


 

PRIMECAP Fund  
 
 
 
  Market
  Value
  ($000)
Statement of Assets and Liabilities  
Assets  
Investments in Securities, at Value  
Unaffiliated Issuers 26,801,546
Affiliated Vanguard Funds 1,082,832
Other Affiliated Issuers 1,920,803
Total Investments in Securities 29,805,181
Receivables for Accrued Income 35,047
Other Assets 22,623
Total Assets 29,862,851
Liabilities  
Security Lending Collateral  
Payable to Brokers 95,464
Other Liabilities 157,374
Total Liabilities 252,838
Net Assets 29,610,013

 

At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:
  Amount
  ($000)
Paid-in Capital 18,147,718
Undistributed Net Investment Income 222,255
Accumulated Net Realized Gains 282,454
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)  
Investment Securities 10,957,204
Foreign Currencies 382
Net Assets 29,610,013
 
 
Investor Shares—Net Assets  
Applicable to 196,450,347 outstanding  
$.001 par value shares of beneficial  
interest (unlimited authorization) 13,631,754
Net Asset Value Per Share—  
Investor Shares $69.39
 
 
Admiral Shares—Net Assets  
Applicable to 221,826,051 outstanding  
$.001 par value shares of beneficial  
interest (unlimited authorization) 15,978,259
Net Asset Value Per Share—  
Admiral Shares $72.03

 

 

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
* Non-income-producing security.
^ Part of security position is on loan to broker-dealers. The total value of securities on loan is $89,522,000.
1 Considered an affiliated company of the fund as the fund owns more than 5% of the outstanding voting securities of such company.
2 Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.
3 Includes $95,464,000 of collateral received for securities on loan.
ADR—American Depositary Receipt.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

18


 

PRIMECAP Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Dividends1,2 498,815
Interest2 834
Security Lending 1,449
Total Income 501,098
Expenses  
Investment Advisory Fees—Note B 61,222
The Vanguard Group—Note C  
Management and Administrative—Investor Shares 31,347
Management and Administrative—Admiral Shares 18,395
Marketing and Distribution—Investor Shares 3,142
Marketing and Distribution—Admiral Shares 2,471
Custodian Fees 472
Auditing Fees 26
Shareholders’ Reports—Investor Shares 130
Shareholders’ Reports—Admiral Shares 56
Trustees’ Fees and Expenses 60
Total Expenses 117,321
Net Investment Income 383,777
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Investment Securities Sold2 314,493
Foreign Currencies (444)
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 314,049
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)  
Investment Securities 5,338,102
Foreign Currencies (618)
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 5,337,484
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 6,035,310

1 Dividends are net of foreign withholding taxes of $16,614,000.
2 Dividend income, interest income, and realized net gain (loss) from affiliated companies of the fund were $10,841,000, $834,000, and ($30,951,000), respectively.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

19


 

PRIMECAP Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 383,777 297,306
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 314,049 1,074,285
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 5,337,484 (1,473,717)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 6,035,310 (102,126)
Distributions    
Net Investment Income    
Investor Shares (163,746) (168,148)
Admiral Shares (144,688) (119,031)
Realized Capital Gain    
Investor Shares (500,030) (183,757)
Admiral Shares (402,175) (121,296)
Total Distributions (1,210,639) (592,232)
Capital Share Transactions    
Investor Shares (3,252,493) (3,494,598)
Admiral Shares 2,590,407 1,843,532
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions (662,086) (1,651,066)
Total Increase (Decrease) 4,162,585 (2,345,424)
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 25,447,428 27,792,852
End of Period1 29,610,013 25,447,428

1 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $222,255,000 and $175,468,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

20


 

PRIMECAP Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
Investor Shares          
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $58.46 $60.36 $55.10 $62.76 $77.82
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .866 .651 .6311 .500 .552
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 12.857 (1.266) 5.076 (3.990) (10.913)
Total from Investment Operations 13.723 (.615) 5.707 (3.490) (10.361)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.689) (.614) (.447) (.508) (.476)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (2.104) (.671) (3.662) (4.223)
Total Distributions (2.793) (1.285) (.447) (4.170) (4.699)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $69.39 $58.46 $60.36 $55.10 $62.76
 
Total Return2 24.17% -1.23% 10.36% -4.01% -13.96%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $13,632 $14,359 $18,028 $17,795 $19,234
Ratio of Total Expenses to          
Average Net Assets 0.45% 0.45% 0.45% 0.49% 0.43%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 1.30% 0.95% 1.05%1 1.02% 0.76%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 6% 8% 5% 4% 11%

1 Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $.128 and 0.21%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Weyerhaeuser Co. in July 2010.
2 Total returns do not include transaction or account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable transaction and account service fees.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

21


 

PRIMECAP Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
Admiral Shares          
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $60.69 $62.65 $57.20 $65.19 $80.82
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .974 .738 .7111 .580 .664
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 13.333 (1.319) 5.269 (4.160) (11.327)
Total from Investment Operations 14.307 (.581) 5.980 (3.580) (10.663)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.785) (.683) (.530) (.612) (.586)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (2.182) (.696) (3.798) (4.381)
Total Distributions (2.967) (1.379) (.530) (4.410) (4.967)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $72.03 $60.69 $62.65 $57.20 $65.19
 
Total Return2 24.29% -1.14% 10.46% -3.90% -13.85%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $15,978 $11,088 $9,765 $9,222 $9,651
Ratio of Total Expenses to          
Average Net Assets 0.36% 0.36% 0.36% 0.37% 0.31%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 1.39% 1.04% 1.14%1 1.14% 0.88%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 6% 8% 5% 4% 11%

1 Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $.133 and 0.21%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Weyerhaeuser Co. in July 2010.
2 Total returns do not include transaction or account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable transaction and account service fees.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

22


 

PRIMECAP Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund offers two classes of shares: Investor Shares and Admiral Shares. Investor Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. Admiral Shares are designed for investors who meet certain administrative, service, and account-size criteria.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued at their fair values calculated according to procedures adopted by the board of trustees. These procedures include obtaining quotations from an independent pricing service, monitoring news to identify significant market- or security-specific events, and evaluating changes in the values of foreign market proxies (for example, ADRs, futures contracts, or exchange-traded funds), between the time the foreign markets close and the fund’s pricing time. When fair-value pricing is employed, the prices of securities used by a fund to calculate its net asset value may differ from quoted or published prices for the same securities. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Foreign Currency: Securities and other assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars using exchange rates obtained from an independent third party as of the fund’s pricing time on the valuation date. Realized gains (losses) and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investment securities include the effects of changes in exchange rates since the securities were purchased, combined with the effects of changes in security prices. Fluctuations in the value of other assets and liabilities resulting from changes in exchange rates are recorded as unrealized foreign currency gains (losses) until the assets or liabilities are settled in cash, at which time they are recorded as realized foreign currency gains (losses).

3. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

4. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

5. Security Lending: The fund may lend its securities to qualified institutional borrowers to earn additional income. Security loans are required to be secured at all times by collateral at least equal to the market value of securities loaned. The fund invests cash collateral received in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, and records a liability for the return of the collateral, during the period the securities are on loan. Security lending income represents fees charged to borrowers plus income earned on investing cash collateral, less expenses associated with the loan.

23


 

PRIMECAP Fund

6. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of capital shares prior to May 23, 2012, were credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. PRIMECAP Management Company provides investment advisory services to the fund for a fee calculated at an annual percentage rate of average net assets. For the year ended September 30, 2012, the investment advisory fee represented an effective annual rate of 0.21% of the fund’s average net assets.

C. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At September 30, 2012, the fund had contributed capital of $4,165,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 1.67% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

D. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

The following table summarizes the market value of the fund’s investments as of September 30, 2012, based on the inputs used to value them:

  Level 1 Level 2 Level 3
Investments ($000) ($000) ($000)
Common Stocks 27,483,074 1,239,275
Temporary Cash Investments 1,082,832
Total 28,565,906 1,239,275

 

24


 

PRIMECAP Fund

E. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund realized net foreign currency losses of $444,000, which decreased distributable net income for tax purposes; accordingly, such losses have been reclassified from accumulated net realized gains to undistributed net investment income.

The fund used a tax accounting practice to treat a portion of the price of capital shares redeemed during the year as distributions from net investment income and realized capital gains. Accordingly, the fund has reclassified $28,112,000 from undistributed net investment income, and $22,116,000 from accumulated net realized gains, to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $275,080,000 of ordinary income and $281,976,000 of long-term capital gains available for distribution.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $18,848,420,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $10,956,761,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $12,325,491,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $1,368,730,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

F. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $1,604,895,000 of investment securities and sold $3,591,698,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

G. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were:

      Year Ended September 30,
    2012   2011
  Amount Shares Amount Shares
  ($000) (000) ($000) (000)
Investor Shares        
Issued 1,018,574 15,661 1,479,247 22,334
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 657,028 10,847 348,370 5,369
Redeemed1 (4,928,095) (75,690) (5,322,215) (80,748)
Net Increase (Decrease) —Investor Shares (3,252,493) (49,182) (3,494,598) (53,045)
Admiral Shares        
Issued 3,650,726 54,056 3,378,773 49,378
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 511,390 8,139 221,992 3,298
Redeemed1 (1,571,709) (23,062) (1,757,233) (25,847)
Net Increase (Decrease) —Admiral Shares 2,590,407 39,133 1,843,532 26,829

1 Net of redemption fees for fiscal 2012 and 2011 of $545,000 and $1,090,000, respectively (fund totals). Effective May 23, 2012, the redemption fee was eliminated.

25


 

PRIMECAP Fund

H. Certain of the fund’s investments are in companies that are considered to be affiliated companies of the fund because the fund owns more than 5% of the outstanding voting securities of the company. Transactions during the period in securities of these companies were as follows:

      Current Period Transactions  
  Sept. 30, 2011   Proceeds from   Sept. 30, 2012
  Market Purchases Securities Dividend Market
  Value at Cost Sold Income Value
  ($000) ($000) ($000) ($000) ($000)
Alaska Air Group Inc. 135,096 54,721 NA1
Biogen Idec Inc. 1,146,164 34,098 1,790,029
Plantronics Inc. 105,308 1,110 130,774
Whirlpool Corp. 294,469 253,120 9,731 NA1
  1,681,037     10,841 1,920,803
1 Not applicable—At September 30, 2012, the security was still held, but the issuer was no longer an affiliated company of the fund.

 

I. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

26


 

Report of Independent Registered
Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees of Vanguard Chester Funds and the Shareholders of Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of net assets, the statement of assets and liabilities and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund (constituting a separate portfolio of Vanguard Chester Funds, hereafter referred to as the “Fund”) at September 30, 2012, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as “financial statements”) are the responsibility of the Fund’s management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at September 30, 2012 by correspondence with the custodian and by agreement to the underlying ownership records of the transfer agent, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

November 9, 2012

                     
Special 2012 tax information (unaudited) for Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund

 

This information for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, is included pursuant to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

The fund distributed $899,173,000 as capital gain dividends (from net long-term capital gains) to shareholders during the fiscal year.

The fund distributed $334,162,000 of qualified dividend income to shareholders during the fiscal year.

For corporate shareholders, 98.5% of investment income (dividend income plus short-term gains, if any) qualifies for the dividends-received deduction.

27


 

Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

This table presents returns for your fund both before and after taxes. The after-tax returns are shown in two ways: (1) assuming that an investor owned the fund during the entire period and paid taxes on the fund’s distributions, and (2) assuming that an investor paid taxes on the fund’s distributions and sold all shares at the end of each period.

Calculations are based on the highest individual federal income tax and capital gains tax rates in effect at the times of the distributions and the hypothetical sales. State and local taxes were not considered. After-tax returns reflect any qualified dividend income , using actual prior-year figures and estimates for 2012. (In the example, returns after the sale of fund shares may be higher than those assuming no sale. This occurs when the sale would have produced a capital loss. The calculation assumes that the investor received a tax deduction for the loss.)

The table shows returns for one share class only; returns for other share classes will differ. Please note that your actual after-tax returns will depend on your tax situation and may differ from those shown. Also note that if you own the fund in a tax-deferred account, such as an individual retirement account or a 401(k) plan, this information does not apply to you. Such accounts are not subject to current taxes.

Finally, keep in mind that a fund’s performance—whether before or after taxes—does not guarantee future results.

Average Annual Total Returns: PRIMECAP Fund Investor Shares
Periods Ended September 30, 2012

  One Five Ten
  Year Years Years
Returns Before Taxes 24.17% 2.25% 10.58%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 23.35 1.58 10.01
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 16.60 1.79 9.33

 

28


 

About Your Fund’s Expenses

As a shareholder of the fund, you incur ongoing costs, which include costs for portfolio management, administrative services, and shareholder reports (like this one), among others. Operating expenses, which are deducted from a fund’s gross income, directly reduce the investment return of the fund.

A typical fund’s expenses are expressed as a percentage of its average net assets. This figure is known as the expense ratio. The following examples are intended to help you understand the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your fund and to compare these costs with those of other mutual funds. The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 made at the beginning of the period shown and held for the entire period.

The accompanying table illustrates your fund’s costs in two ways:

Based on actual fund return. This section helps you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The ”Ending Account Value“ shown is derived from the fund‘s actual return, and the third column shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period.

To do so, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number given for your fund under the heading ”Expenses Paid During Period.“

Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return. This section is intended to help you compare your fund‘s costs with those of other mutual funds. It assumes that the fund had a yearly return of 5% before expenses, but that the expense ratio is unchanged. In this case—because the return used is not the fund’s actual return—the results do not apply to your investment. The example is useful in making comparisons because the Securities and Exchange Commission requires all mutual funds to calculate expenses based on a 5% return. You can assess your fund’s costs by comparing this hypothetical example with the hypothetical examples that appear in shareholder reports of other funds.

Note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight and help you compare ongoing costs only and do not reflect transaction costs incurred by the fund for buying and selling securities. Further, the expenses do not include any purchase, redemption, or account service fees described in the fund prospectus. If such fees were applied to your account, your costs would be higher. Your fund does not carry a “sales load.”

The calculations assume no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.

You can find more information about the fund’s expenses, including annual expense ratios, in the Financial Statements section of this report. For additional information on operating expenses and other shareholder costs, please refer to your fund’s current prospectus.

29


 

Six Months Ended September 30, 2012      
  Beginning Ending Expenses
  Account Value Account Value Paid During
PRIMECAP Fund 3/31/2012 9/30/2012 Period
Based on Actual Fund Return      
Investor Shares $1,000.00 $1,018.34 $2.28
Admiral Shares 1,000.00 1,018.81 1.87
Based on Hypothetical 5% Yearly Return      
Investor Shares $1,000.00 $1,022.81 $2.28
Admiral Shares 1,000.00 1,023.21 1.88

The calculations are based on expenses incurred in the most recent six-month period. The fund’s annualized six-month expense ratios for that period are 0.45% for Investor Shares and 0.37% for Admiral Shares. The dollar amounts shown as “Expenses Paid” are equal to the annualized expense ratio multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by the number of days in the most recent 12-month period.

30


 

Trustees Approve Advisory Agreement

The board of trustees of Vanguard PRIMECAP Fund has renewed the fund’s investment advisory agreement with PRIMECAP Management Company. The board determined that the retention of the advisor was in the best interests of the fund and its shareholders.

The board based its decision upon an evaluation of the advisor’s investment staff, portfolio management process, and performance. The trustees considered the factors discussed below, among others. However, no single factor determined whether the board approved the agreement. Rather, it was the totality of the circumstances that drove the board’s decision.

Nature, extent, and quality of services
The board considered the quality of the fund’s investment management over both the short and long term, and took into account the organizational depth and stability of the advisor. The board noted that PRIMECAP Management, founded in 1983, is recognized for its long-term approach to growth equity investing. Five experienced portfolio managers are responsible for separate subportfolios, and each portfolio manager employs a fundamental, research-driven approach in seeking to identify companies that have long-term growth potential overlooked by the market and are trading at attractive valuation levels. The firm has managed the fund since its inception in 1984.

The board concluded that the advisor’s experience, stability, depth, and performance, among other factors, warranted continuation of the advisory agreement.

Investment performance
The board considered the short- and long-term performance of the fund, including any periods of outperformance or underperformance of a relevant benchmark and peer group. The board noted that the fund has underperformed its benchmark and peer group over one- and three-year periods, but has outperformed over both five- and ten-year periods. The board concluded that the advisor has carried out the fund’s investment strategy in disciplined fashion. Information about the fund’s most recent performance can be found in the Performance Summary section of this report.

Cost
The board concluded that the fund’s expense ratio was well below the average expense ratio charged by funds in its peer group and that the fund’s advisory fee rate was also well below its peer-group average. Information about the fund’s expenses appears in the About Your Fund’s Expenses section of this report as well as in the Financial Statements section, which also includes information about the fund’s advisory fee rate.

The board did not consider profitability of PRIMECAP Management in determining whether to approve the advisory fee, because PRIMECAP Management is independent of Vanguard and the advisory fee is the result of arm’s-length negotiations.

The benefit of economies of scale
The board concluded that the fund’s shareholders benefit from economies of scale because of breakpoints in the advisory fee schedule. The breakpoints reduce the effective rate of the fee as the fund’s assets increase.

The board will consider whether to renew the advisory agreement again after a one-year period.

31


 

Glossary

30-Day SEC Yield. A fund’s 30-day SEC yield is derived using a formula specified by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Under the formula, data related to the fund’s security holdings in the previous 30 days are used to calculate the fund’s hypothetical net income for that period, which is then annualized and divided by the fund’s estimated average net assets over the calculation period. For the purposes of this calculation, a security’s income is based on its current market yield to maturity (for bonds), its actual income (for asset-backed securities), or its projected dividend yield (for stocks). Because the SEC yield represents hypothetical annualized income, it will differ—at times significantly—from the fund’s actual experience. As a result, the fund’s income distributions may be higher or lower than implied by the SEC yield.

Beta. A measure of the magnitude of a fund’s past share-price fluctuations in relation to the ups and downs of a given market index. The index is assigned a beta of 1.00. Compared with a given index, a fund with a beta of 1.20 typically would have seen its share price rise or fall by 12% when the index rose or fell by 10%. For this report, beta is based on returns over the past 36 months for both the fund and the index. Note that a fund’s beta should be reviewed in conjunction with its R-squared (see definition). The lower the R-squared, the less correlation there is between the fund and the index, and the less reliable beta is as an indicator of volatility.

Dividend Yield. Dividend income earned by stocks, expressed as a percentage of the aggregate market value (or of net asset value, for a fund). The yield is determined by dividing the amount of the annual dividends by the aggregate value (or net asset value) at the end of the period. For a fund, the dividend yield is based solely on stock holdings and does not include any income produced by other investments.

Earnings Growth Rate. The average annual rate of growth in earnings over the past five years for the stocks now in a fund.

Equity Exposure. A measure that reflects a fund’s investments in stocks and stock futures. Any holdings in short-term reserves are excluded.

Expense Ratio. A fund’s total annual operating expenses expressed as a percentage of the fund’s average net assets. The expense ratio includes management and administrative expenses, but does not include the transaction costs of buying and selling portfolio securities.

Foreign Holdings. The percentage of a fund represented by securities or depositary receipts of companies based outside the United States.

Inception Date. The date on which the assets of a fund (or one of its share classes) are first invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objective. For funds with a subscription period, the inception date is the day after that period ends. Investment performance is measured from the inception date.

Median Market Cap. An indicator of the size of companies in which a fund invests; the midpoint of market capitalization (market price x shares outstanding) of a fund’s stocks, weighted by the proportion of the fund’s assets invested in each stock. Stocks representing half of the fund’s assets have market capitalizations above the median, and the rest are below it.

Price/Book Ratio. The share price of a stock divided by its net worth, or book value, per share. For a fund, the weighted average price/book ratio of the stocks it holds.

32


 

Price/Earnings Ratio. The ratio of a stock’s current price to its per-share earnings over the past year. For a fund, the weighted average P/E of the stocks it holds. P/E is an indicator of market expectations about corporate prospects; the higher the P/E, the greater the expectations for a company’s future growth.

R-Squared. A measure of how much of a fund’s past returns can be explained by the returns from the market in general, as measured by a given index. If a fund’s total returns were precisely synchronized with an index’s returns, its R-squared would be 1.00. If the fund’s returns bore no relationship to the index’s returns, its R-squared would be 0. For this report, R-squared is based on returns over the past 36 months for both the fund and the index.

Return on Equity. The annual average rate of return generated by a company during the past five years for each dollar of shareholder’s equity (net income divided by shareholder’s equity). For a fund, the weighted average return on equity for the companies whose stocks it holds.

Short-Term Reserves. The percentage of a fund invested in highly liquid, short-term securities that can be readily converted to cash.

Turnover Rate. An indication of the fund’s trading activity. Funds with high turnover rates incur higher transaction costs and may be more likely to distribute capital gains (which may be taxable to investors). The turnover rate excludes in-kind transactions, which have minimal impact on costs.

33


 

This page intentionally left blank.


 

This page intentionally left blank.


 

The People Who Govern Your Fund

The trustees of your mutual fund are there to see that the fund is operated and managed in your best interests since, as a shareholder, you are a part owner of the fund. Your fund’s trustees also serve on the board of directors of The Vanguard Group, Inc., which is owned by the Vanguard funds and provides services to them on an at-cost basis.

A majority of Vanguard’s board members are independent, meaning that they have no affiliation with Vanguard or the funds they oversee, apart from the sizable personal investments they have made as private individuals. The independent board members have distinguished backgrounds in business, academia, and public service. Each of the trustees and executive officers oversees 179 Vanguard funds.

The following table provides information for each trustee and executive officer of the fund. More information about the trustees is in the Statement of Additional Information, which can be obtained, without charge, by contacting Vanguard at 800-662-7447, or online at vanguard.com.

InterestedTrustee1 and Delphi Automotive LLP (automotive components);
  Senior Advisor at New Mountain Capital; Trustee of
  The Conference Board.
F. William McNabb III
Board. Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Amy Gutmann
Years: Chairman of the Board of The Vanguard Group, Born 1949. Trustee Since June 2006. Principal
Inc., and of each of the investment companies served Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President
by The Vanguard Group, since January 2010; Director of the University of Pennsylvania; Christopher H.
of The Vanguard Group since 2008; Chief Executive Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science
Officer and President of The Vanguard Group and of in the School of Arts and Sciences with secondary
each of the investment companies served by The appointments at the Annenberg School for
Vanguard Group since 2008; Director of Vanguard Communication and the Graduate School of Education
Marketing Corporation; Managing Director of The of the University of Pennsylvania; Member of the
Vanguard Group (1995–2008). National Commission on the Humanities and Social
  Sciences; Trustee of Carnegie Corporation of New
  York and of the National Constitution Center; Chair
IndependentTrustees  of the U. S. Presidential Commission for the Study
  of Bioethical Issues.
 
Emerson U. Fullwood JoAnn Heffernan Heisen
Born 1948. Trustee Since January 2008. Principal Born 1950. Trustee Since July 1998. Principal
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Executive Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Corporate
Chief Staff and Marketing Officer for North America Vice President and Chief Global Diversity Officer
and Corporate Vice President (retired 2008) of Xerox (retired 2008) and Member of the Executive
Corporation (document management products and Committee (1997–2008) of Johnson & Johnson
services); Executive in Residence and 2010 (pharmaceuticals/medical devices/consumer
Distinguished Minett Professor at the Rochester products); Director of Skytop Lodge Corporation
Institute of Technology; Director of SPX Corporation (hotels), the University Medical Center at Princeton,
(multi-industry manufacturing), the United Way of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Center
Rochester, Amerigroup Corporation (managed health for Talent Innovation; Member of the Advisory Board
care), the University of Rochester Medical Center, of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs
Monroe Community College Foundation, and North at Syracuse University.
Carolina A&T University.
F. Joseph Loughrey
Rajiv L. Gupta Born 1949. Trustee Since October 2009. Principal
Born 1945. Trustee Since December 2001.2 Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President
Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: and Chief Operating Officer (retired 2009) of Cummins
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (retired 2009) Inc. (industrial machinery); Director of SKF AB
and President (2006–2008) of Rohm and Haas Co. (industrial machinery), Hillenbrand, Inc. (specialized
(chemicals); Director of Tyco International, Ltd. consumer services), the Lumina Foundation for
(diversified manufacturing and services), Hewlett-
Packard Co. (electronic computer manufacturing),

 


 

Education, and Oxfam America; Chairman of the Executive Officers  
Advisory Council for the College of Arts and Letters    
and Member of the Advisory Board to the Kellogg Glenn Booraem  
Institute for International Studies at the University Born 1967. Controller Since July 2010. Principal
of Notre Dame. Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal
  of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Controller of each of
Mark Loughridge the investment companies served by The Vanguard
Born 1953. Trustee Since March 2012. Principal Group; Assistant Controller of each of the investment
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Senior Vice companies served by The Vanguard Group (2001–2010).
President and Chief Financial Officer at IBM (information    
technology services); Fiduciary Member of IBM’s Thomas J. Higgins  
Retirement Plan Committee. Born 1957. Chief Financial Officer Since September
  2008. Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five
Scott C. Malpass Years: Principal of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Chief
Born 1962. Trustee Since March 2012. Principal Financial Officer of each of the investment companies
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chief served by The Vanguard Group; Treasurer of each of
Investment Officer and Vice President at the University the investment companies served by The Vanguard
of Notre Dame; Assistant Professor of Finance at the Group (1998–2008).  
Mendoza College of Business at Notre Dame; Member    
of the Notre Dame 403(b) Investment Committee; Kathryn J. Hyatt  
Director of TIFF Advisory Services, Inc. (investment Born 1955. Treasurer Since November 2008. Principal
advisor); Member of the Investment Advisory Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal of
Committees of the Financial Industry Regulatory The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Treasurer of each of the
Authority (FINRA) and of Major League Baseball. investment companies served by The Vanguard
  Group; Assistant Treasurer of each of the investment
André F. Perold companies served by The Vanguard Group (1988–2008).
Born 1952. Trustee Since December 2004. Principal    
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: George Heidi Stam  
Gund Professor of Finance and Banking at the Harvard Born 1956. Secretary Since July 2005. Principal
Business School (retired 2011); Chief Investment Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Managing
Officer and Managing Partner of HighVista Strategies Director of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; General Counsel
LLC (private investment firm); Director of Rand of The Vanguard Group; Secretary of The Vanguard
Merchant Bank; Overseer of the Museum of Fine Group and of each of the investment companies
Arts Boston. served by The Vanguard Group; Director and Senior
  Vice President of Vanguard Marketing Corporation.
Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.    
Born 1941. Trustee Since January 1993. Principal    
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, Vanguard Senior ManagementTeam
President, and Chief Executive Officer of NACCO    
Industries, Inc. (forklift trucks/housewares/lignite); Mortimer J. Buckley Michael S. Miller
Director of Goodrich Corporation (industrial products/ Kathleen C. Gubanich James M. Norris
aircraft systems and services) and the National Paul A. Heller Glenn W. Reed
Association of Manufacturers; Chairman of the Board Martha G. King George U. Sauter
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland and of Chris D. McIsaac  
University Hospitals of Cleveland; Advisory Chairman    
of the Board of The Cleveland Museum of Art.    
  Chairman Emeritus and Senior Advisor
Peter F. Volanakis  
Born 1955. Trustee Since July 2009. Principal John J. Brennan  
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President Chairman, 1996–2009  
and Chief Operating Officer (retired 2010) of Corning Chief Executive Officer and President, 1996–2008  
Incorporated (communications equipment); Director    
of SPX Corporation (multi-industry manufacturing);
Overseer of the Amos Tuck School of Business  Founder  
Administration at Dartmouth College; Advisor to the    
Norris Cotton Cancer Center. John C. Bogle  
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 1974–1996  
 

1 Mr. McNabb is considered an “interested person,” as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, because he is an officer of the Vanguard funds.
2 December 2002 for Vanguard Equity Income Fund, Vanguard Growth Equity Fund, the Vanguard Municipal Bond Funds, and the Vanguard State Tax-Exempt Funds.


 

 

P.O. Box 2600
Valley Forge, PA 19482-2600

 

Connect with Vanguard® > vanguard.com

Fund Information > 800-662-7447  
Direct Investor Account Services > 800-662-2739  
Institutional Investor Services > 800-523-1036  
Text Telephone for People  
With Hearing Impairment > 800-749-7273  
 
This material may be used in conjunction  
with the offering of shares of any Vanguard  
fund only if preceded or accompanied by  
the fund’s current prospectus.  
 
All comparative mutual fund data are from Lipper Inc. or  
Morningstar, Inc., unless otherwise noted.  
 
You can obtain a free copy of Vanguard’s proxy voting  
guidelines by visiting vanguard.com/proxyreporting or by  
calling Vanguard at 800-662-2739. The guidelines are  
also available from the SEC’s website, sec.gov. In  
addition, you may obtain a free report on how your fund  
voted the proxies for securities it owned during the 12  
months ended June 30. To get the report, visit either  
vanguard.com/proxyreporting or sec.gov.  
 
You can review and copy information about your fund at  
the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. To  
find out more about this public service, call the SEC at  
202-551-8090. Information about your fund is also  
available on the SEC’s website, and you can receive  
copies of this information, for a fee, by sending a  
request in either of two ways: via e-mail addressed to  
publicinfo@sec.gov or via regular mail addressed to the  
Public Reference Section, Securities and Exchange  
Commission, Washington, DC 20549-1520.  
 
 
  © 2012 The Vanguard Group, Inc.
  All rights reserved.
  Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor.
 
  Q590 112012

 


 

 

Annual Report | September 30, 2012
 
Vanguard Target Retirement Funds
 
 
 
Vanguard Target Retirement Income Fund
Vanguard Target Retirement 2010 Fund
Vanguard Target Retirement 2015 Fund
Vanguard Target Retirement 2020 Fund
Vanguard Target Retirement 2025 Fund
Vanguard Target Retirement 2030 Fund

 



 

> For the 12 months ended September 30, 2012, returns for the six Target Retirement Funds in this report ranged from 11.74% to 21.43%.

> As global stock markets turned in double-digit gains, Target Retirement Funds with the largest stock allocations performed best.

> Of the five underlying funds that make up the portfolios, Vanguard Prime Money Market Fund posted the weakest return, while Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund had the strongest.

Contents  
Your Fund’s Total Returns. 1
Chairman’s Letter. 2
Target Retirement Income Fund. 9
Target Retirement 2010 Fund. 19
Target Retirement 2015 Fund. 28
Target Retirement 2020 Fund. 37
Target Retirement 2025 Fund. 46
Target Retirement 2030 Fund. 55
Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns. 66
About Your Fund’s Expenses. 68
Glossary. 70

 

Please note: The opinions expressed in this report are just that—informed opinions. They should not be considered promises or advice. Also, please keep in mind that the information and opinions cover the period through the date on the front of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in your fund are spelled out in the prospectus.
See the Glossary for definitions of investment terms used in this report.
About the cover: Our cover photograph shows rigging on the HMSSurprise, a replica of an 18th-century Royal Navy frigate. It was featured in the 2003 movie Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, which was based on Patrick O’Brian’s sea novels, set amid the Napoleonic Wars. Vanguard was named for another ship of that era, the HMSVanguard, which was the flagship of British Admiral Horatio Nelson at the Battle of the Nile.


 

Your Fund’s Total Returns  
 
 
 
 
Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2012  
  Total
  Returns
Vanguard Target Retirement Income Fund 11.74%
Target Income Composite Index 11.79
Mixed-Asset Target Allocation Conservative Funds Average 12.44
Mixed-Asset Target Allocation Conservative Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2010 Fund 14.74%
Target 2010 Composite Index 14.90
Mixed-Asset Target 2010 Funds Average 13.18
Mixed-Asset Target 2010 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2015 Fund 16.76%
Target 2015 Composite Index 16.87
Mixed-Asset Target 2015 Funds Average 14.43
Mixed-Asset Target 2015 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2020 Fund 18.30%
Target 2020 Composite Index 18.62
Mixed-Asset Target 2020 Funds Average 16.59
Mixed-Asset Target 2020 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2025 Fund 19.89%
Target 2025 Composite Index 20.13
Mixed-Asset Target 2025 Funds Average 18.71
Mixed-Asset Target 2025 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2030 Fund 21.43%
Target 2030 Composite Index 21.65
Mixed-Asset Target 2030 Funds Average 19.76

 

Mixed-Asset Target 2030 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Investments in Target Retirement Funds are subject to the risks of their underlying funds. The year in the fund name refers to the approximate year (the target date) when an investor in the fund would retire and leave the work force. The fund will gradually shift its emphasis from more aggressive investments to more conservative ones based on its target date. An investment in a Target Retirement Fund is not guaranteed at any time, including on or after the target date.

1


 

 

 

 

Chairman’s Letter

Dear Shareholder,

In contrast to the previous year, global stock markets trumped their bond counterparts for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012. Despite continued worries about Europe’s debt crisis and a slowdown in emerging markets, the six Vanguard Target Retirement Funds covered in this report produced their best fiscal-year returns since inception.

This report features the performance of the Target Income Fund as well as the Target Retirement Funds dated 2010 through 2030. (Funds with target dates 2035 through 2060 are discussed in a separate report.) The funds covered in this report are designed for investors already in retirement or within 20 years of retirement; therefore, their allocations are more conservative, with a larger proportion of their assets in bonds than their longer-dated counterparts.

During the most recent fiscal year, the funds with larger stock allocations did best. Although investing in stocks can often result in more volatility, this time around, it turned out to be an advantage. Still, the fixed income portion of the funds’ portfolios also turned in respectable returns.

Please note that on October 2 we announced that we will transition to new benchmark indexes for 22 of our index funds, including Total Stock Market Index Fund and Total International Stock Market Index Fund. Both of those are among the underlying funds in the Target Retirement Funds. Total Stock’s new

2


 

benchmark will be the CRSP US Total Market Index, and the new benchmark for Total International will be the FTSE Global All Cap ex US Index. The transition, which will take place over several months, is expected to produce significant long-term savings for shareholders on licensing fees paid to index providers.

Stocks notched a powerful rally, with help from central bankers
U.S. stocks surged 30% in the 12 months ended September 30, 2012, outpacing the gains of their international counterparts. The rally came amid moves by U.S. and European central bankers to quiet—at least temporarily—investors’ concerns about the U.S. economy and the finances of European governments and banks.

While U.S. stocks were the standouts, European and emerging markets stocks also posted double-digit results. The developed markets of the Pacific region were the weakest performers but still recorded a modest advance.

In July, the president of the European Central Bank declared that policymakers would do whatever was needed to preserve the euro common currency. That pronouncement was encouraging to investors, but Europe’s financial troubles are by no means resolved. Vanguard economists believe the most likely scenario is that the Eurozone will “muddle through” for several years, with occasional spikes in market volatility, as fiscal tightening continues in the face of weak economic growth.

Market Barometer      
 
    Average Annual Total Returns
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012
  One Three Five
  Year Years Years
Stocks      
Russell 1000 Index (Large-caps) 30.06% 13.27% 1.22%
Russell 2000 Index (Small-caps) 31.91 12.99 2.21
Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Index 30.00 13.29 1.53
MSCI All Country World Index ex USA (International) 14.48 3.17 -4.12
 
Bonds      
Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Broad taxable market) 5.16% 6.19% 6.53%
Barclays Municipal Bond Index (Broad tax-exempt market) 8.32 5.99 6.06
Citigroup Three-Month U.S. Treasury Bill Index 0.05 0.08 0.63
 
CPI      
Consumer Price Index 1.99% 2.33% 2.11%

 

3


 

Bonds produced solid returns; future results may be more muted
Bonds once again advanced; the broad U.S. taxable market returned about 5% for the 12 months. Among U.S. Treasuries, long-term bonds were particularly strong as they benefited from the Federal Reserve’s bond-buying program.

As bond prices rose, the yield of the 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell to a record low in July, closing below 1.5%. (Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions.) By the end of the period, the yield had climbed, but it still remained low by historical standards.

Bondholders have enjoyed years of strong returns. But as Tim Buckley, our incoming chief investment officer, has noted, investors shouldn’t be surprised if future results are much more modest. As yields tumble, the scope for further declines—and price increases—diminishes.

The Federal Reserve announced on September 13 that it would continue to hold its target for short-term interest rates between 0% and 0.25% at least through mid-2015. The exceptionally low rates, in place since late 2008, kept a tight lid on returns from money market funds and savings accounts.

Expense Ratios
Your Fund Compared With Its Peer Group

  Acquired Fund Fees Peer Group
  and Expenses Average
Target Retirement Income Fund 0.17% 0.86%
Target Retirement 2010 Fund 0.17 0.59
Target Retirement 2015 Fund 0.17 0.57
Target Retirement 2020 Fund 0.17 0.63
Target Retirement 2025 Fund 0.18 0.55
Target Retirement 2030 Fund 0.18 0.62

The fund expense figures shown—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represent an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement Funds invest. The Target Retirement Funds do not charge any expenses or fees of their own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.16% for the Income Fund, 0.16% for the 2010 Fund, 0.16% for the 2015 Fund, 0.16% for the 2020 Fund, 0.17% for the 2025 Fund, and 0.17% for the 2030 Fund. Peer-group expense ratios are derived from data provided by Lipper Inc. and capture information through year-end 2011.

Peer groups: For the Income Fund, Mixed-Asset Target Allocation Conservative Funds; for the 2010 Fund, Mixed-Asset Target 2010 Funds; for the 2015 Fund, Mixed-Asset Target 2015 Funds; for the 2020 Fund, Mixed-Asset Target 2020 Funds; for the 2025 Fund, Mixed-Asset Target 2025 Funds, and for the Target Retirement 2030 Fund, Mixed-Asset Target 2030 Funds.

4


 

Stock-heavy funds delivered highest returns
Target Retirement Funds are designed to enable investors who have neither the time nor the inclination to manage a retirement portfolio to hold a diversified “fund of funds” that adjusts its asset allocation over time. Each portfolio shifts from a growth-oriented, stock-heavy asset allocation to one that is more conservative, focused on bonds and money market funds, as the target retirement date approaches. This gradual shift is critical for investors nearing or in retirement who are increasingly concerned about income and preserving their wealth.

Total Returns  
Inception Through September 30, 2012  
  Average
  Annual Return
Target Retirement Income Fund (Returns since inception: 10/27/2003) 5.69%
Target Income Composite Index 5.69
Mixed-Asset Target Allocation Conservative Funds Average 4.41
Mixed-Asset Target Allocation Conservative Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
Target Retirement 2010 Fund (Returns since inception: 6/7/2006) 5.58%
Target 2010 Composite Index 5.55
Mixed-Asset Target 2010 Funds Average 4.07
Mixed-Asset Target 2010 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
Target Retirement 2015 Fund (Returns since inception: 10/27/2003) 5.90%
Target 2015 Composite Index 5.87
Mixed-Asset Target 2015 Funds Average 4.82
Mixed-Asset Target 2015 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
Target Retirement 2020 Fund (Returns since inception: 6/7/2006) 5.04%
Target 2020 Composite Index 5.10
Mixed-Asset Target 2020 Funds Average 3.96
Mixed-Asset Target 2020 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Target Retirement 2025 Fund (Returns since inception: 10/27/2003) 5.79%
Target 2025 Composite Index 5.85
Mixed-Asset Target 2025 Funds Average 5.37
Mixed-Asset Target 2025 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Target Retirement 2030 Fund (Returns since inception: 6/7/2006) 4.48%
Target 2030 Composite Index 4.57
Mixed-Asset Target 2030 Funds Average 3.44
Mixed-Asset Target 2030 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  

 

The figures shown represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost.

5


 

Returns for the Vanguard Target Retirement Funds were largely driven by the proportion of their assets allocated to the underlying stock funds. Target Retirement 2030, which invested nearly 80% of its assets in stocks, led the pack with a return of 21.43% for the fiscal year. (Returns for the funds and their underlying funds in this report are for Investor Shares.) The Target Retirement Income Fund, intended for people in retirement, invested only about 30% of its assets in stocks. It had the smallest gain, returning 11.74%. (You may recall from my previous letter for the semiannual reporting period that we merged Vanguard Target Retirement 2005 Fund into Vanguard Target Retirement Income Fund.)

Not surprisingly, among the funds’ underlying investments, the star was the U.S. stock market. Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund notched a 30% gain for the period. Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund, which posted a 12-month return of –12% a year ago, made a significant turnaround during this latest fiscal period to return 15%.

Still, the underlying bond funds held their own. The standout performer was Vanguard Inflation-Protected Securities Fund, which aims to protect investors against the long-term effects of inflation by investing in bonds with a built-in inflation safeguard. As the Eurozone crisis reemerged in the spring and reports of slowing economic growth in the United States and other countries came with greater frequency, more investors turned to Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) because of their ability to protect purchasing power from unanticipated spikes in inflation. The Inflation-Protected Securities Fund returned about 9% for the fiscal year, the same as it did a year ago. Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund returned about 5%, also similar to last year. Vanguard Prime Money Market Fund’s 0.04% return fell slightly, a result of the near-0% yields on short-term U.S. Treasury bills and other money market instruments.

As I mentioned, bond investors have enjoyed years of robust returns, but we anticipate that results will be more modest in the future. A key to managing this risk is to know what to expect. Just as the stock market cannot be counted on to return double-digit gains continually, bond market expectations should also be kept in perspective.

The funds’ impressive record of tracking their indexes
Inception dates for the six Vanguard Target Retirement Funds included in this report range from 2003 through 2006. During their relatively short lifespans, the funds have experienced frequently volatile stock market environments. They have tracked their indexes closely, even though the benchmarks’ returns don’t reflect any operating or transaction costs. In addition, each fund’s average annual return has surpassed that of its appropriate peer group.

The funds’ tight benchmark tracking is a tribute to the skill of their investment advisors, Vanguard’s Equity Investment Group and Fixed Income Group, whose combined knowledge of portfolio construction and management techniques

6


 

reflects more than 20 years of indexing experience. For a look at how the funds’ costs compare with the average expenses of their respective peer groups, please see the table on page 4.

The lessons of the financial crisis remain relevant four years later
In September, the end of your fund’s fiscal year, we marked the fourth anniversary of Lehman Brothers’ collapse, the start of the 2008–2009 financial crisis. When the Lehman news broke, I was speaking to institutional clients at an event in Washington, D.C., all of three weeks into my new role as Vanguard’s CEO.

In the ensuing months, I was struck both by how fortunate I was to work with a great team of Vanguard “crew” and by the remarkable steadiness demonstrated by our clients. Many clients experienced significant losses, but signs of panic were few. On balance, they remained committed to their long-term investment programs and managed to benefit from the financial markets’ subsequent recovery.

As the crisis recedes further in time, it’s important not to lose sight of the lessons that it illuminated about investing and sound financial practices generally. First among those lessons is that diversification does work. Diversification didn’t immunize investors from the market’s decline, but it certainly helped to insulate them from the worst of it.

Second, saving money and living within your means are critical. Investors are acting on this lesson as they pay off debt, which is a form of saving, and increase their savings rates from the dangerously low levels that prevailed before the crisis.

Third, having the courage to stick with a sound investment plan—as so many of our clients did—is important during volatile, uncertain times. Investors who resisted the urge to bail out of stocks at the depths of the crisis have largely been rewarded in the succeeding years.

I am very optimistic that, if investors embrace these lessons, they can give themselves a better chance of reaching their long-term goals.

Sincerely,


F. William McNabb III
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
October 15, 2012

7


 

Your Fund’s Performance at a Glance
September 30, 2011, Through September 30, 2012

      Distributions Per Share
  Starting Ending Income Capital
  Share Price Share Price Dividends Gains
Target Retirement Income Fund $11.22 $12.23 $0.273 $0.021
Target Retirement 2010 Fund $21.91 $24.45 $0.596 $0.037
Target Retirement 2015 Fund $11.91 $13.54 $0.313 $0.020
Target Retirement 2020 Fund $20.83 $24.04 $0.513 $0.031
Target Retirement 2025 Fund $11.71 $13.70 $0.291 $0.013
Target Retirement 2030 Fund $19.81 $23.51 $0.468 $0.017

 

Asset Allocation on September 30, 2012      
      Short-Term
  Stocks Bonds Reserves
Target Retirement Income Fund 30.0% 65.1% 4.9%
Target Retirement 2010 Fund 43.3% 55.1% 1.6%
Target Retirement 2015 Fund 55.3% 44.7% 0.0%
Target Retirement 2020 Fund 63.7% 36.3% 0.0%
Target Retirement 2025 Fund 71.4% 28.6% 0.0%
Target Retirement 2030 Fund 78.7% 21.3% 0.0%

 

Note: The Income Fund’s allocations do not change. As of September 30, 2012, international stock weightings for the Income, 2010, 2015, 2020, 2025, and 2030 Funds were 9%, 13%, 17%, 19%, 22%, and 24% of assets, respectively.

8


 

Target Retirement Income Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VTINX
30-Day SEC Yield 2.01%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.17%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 45.1%
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 20.9
Vanguard Inflation-Protected Securities  
Fund Investor Shares 20.0
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 9.1
Vanguard Prime Money Market Fund  
Investor Shares 4.9

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target Barclays
  Income Aggregate
  Composite Bond
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.00
Beta 0.99 -0.04

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement Income Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.16%.

9


 

Target Retirement Income Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (10/27/2003) Investment
Target Retirement Income Fund 11.74% 5.06% 5.69% $16,394
Target Income Composite Index 11.79 4.99 5.69 16,384
Mixed-Asset Target Allocation        
Conservative Funds Average 12.44 3.31 4.41 14,699
Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index 5.16 6.53 5.47 16,091

 

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target Allocation Conservative Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

10


 

Target Retirement Income Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement Income Fund
Target Income Composite Index
For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

 

11


 

Target Retirement Income Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.9%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (20.9%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 54,652,194 1,958,735
 
International Stock Fund (9.1%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 59,790,919 850,825
 
Bond Funds (65.0%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 381,655,090 4,228,738
Vanguard Inflation-Protected Securities Fund Investor Shares 126,301,622 1,875,579
    6,104,317
Money Market Fund (4.9%)    
Vanguard Prime Money Market Fund Investor Shares 461,847,390 461,847
Total Investment Companies (Cost $8,435,184)   9,375,724
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.1%)    
Other Assets   27,239
Liabilities   (20,756)
    6,483
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 767,197,756 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   9,382,207
Net Asset Value Per Share   $12.23
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   8,478,008
Undistributed Net Investment Income   5,357
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (41,698)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   940,540
Net Assets   9,382,207

 

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

12


 

Target Retirement Income Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 172,142
Net Investment Income—Note B 172,142
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 28,571
Investment Securities Sold 9,370
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 37,941
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 522,955
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 733,038

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

13


 

Target Retirement Income Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 172,142 113,850
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 37,941 26,169
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 522,955 (11,577)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 733,038 128,442
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (168,784) (113,803)
Realized Capital Gain1 (9,699) (8,254)
Total Distributions (178,483) (122,057)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 3,254,326 2,148,360
Issued in Connection with Acquisition of    
Vanguard Target Retirement 2005 Fund—Note G 2,192,576
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 171,526 116,593
Redeemed (1,555,508) (1,129,601)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 4,062,920 1,135,352
Total Increase (Decrease) 4,617,475 1,141,737
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 4,764,732 3,622,995
End of Period2 9,382,207 4,764,732

 

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $9,699,000 and $8,254,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $5,357,000 and $1,999,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

14


 

Target Retirement Income Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $11.22 $11.13 $10.49 $10.19 $11.08
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .275 .3031 .288 .268 .427
Capital Gain Distributions Received .052 .0301
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments .977 .080 .640 .302 (.878)
Total from Investment Operations 1.304 .413 .928 .570 (.451)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.273) (.299) (.288) (.270) (.439)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.021) (.024)
Total Distributions (.294) (.323) (.288) (.270) (.439)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $12.23 $11.22 $11.13 $10.49 $10.19
 
Total Return2 11.74% 3.70% 8.97% 5.84% -4.23%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $9,382 $4,765 $3,623 $2,463 $2,046
Ratio of Total Expenses to          
Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.16% 0.17% 0.17% 0.21% 0.19%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.31% 2.65% 2.70% 2.78% 4.11%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 7% 14%3 12% 29%4 14%

 

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

15


 

Target Retirement Income Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement Income Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, bonds, and short-term reserves.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

16


 

Target Retirement Income Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $7,967,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses. The fund used capital loss carryforwards of $14,940,000 to offset taxable capital gains realized during the year ended September 30, 2012. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $43,292,000 to offset future net capital gains of $36,768,000 through September 30, 2016, and $6,524,000 through September 30, 2018.

The fund acquired additional realized losses of $46,279,000 to offset future net capital gains in connection with the acquisition of Vanguard Target Retirement 2005 Fund in February 2012 (see Note G); these losses have been reclassified from paid-in capital to accumulated net realized losses.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $8,436,200,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $939,524,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $968,512,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $28,988,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $4,361,476,000 of investment securities, including $2,223,588,000 of securities acquired in connection with acquisition of Vanguard Target Retirement 2005 Fund, and sold $516,050,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 274,845 187,588
Issued in Connection with Acquisition of    
Vanguard Target Retirement 2005 Fund 184,543
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 14,464 10,255
Redeemed (131,221) (98,730)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 342,631 99,113

 

G. On February 10, 2012, the fund acquired all the net assets of Vanguard Target Retirement 2005 Fund pursuant to a plan of reorganization approved by the funds’ board of trustees. The purpose of the transaction was to combine two funds with comparable investment objectives. The acquisition was accomplished by a tax-free exchange of 184,543,000 shares of the fund for 177,808,000 shares of the Vanguard Target Retirement 2005 Fund outstanding as of the close of business on February 10, 2012. The Vanguard Target Retirement 2005 Fund’s net assets as of the close of business on February 10, 2012, of $2,192,576,000, including $237,489,000 of unrealized appreciation, were combined with the fund’s net assets. The net assets of the fund immediately before the acquisition were $5,956,166,000. The net assets of the fund immediately following the acquisition were $8,148,742,000.

17


 

Target Retirement Income Fund

Assuming that the acquisition had been completed on October 1, 2011, the beginning of the fund’s reporting period, the fund’s pro forma results of operations for the year ended September 30, 2012, would be:

  ($000)
Net Investment Income 197,664
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 53,470
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 641,571
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 892,705

 

Because the combined funds have been managed as a single integrated fund since the acquisition was completed, it is not practical to separate the results of operations of Vanguard Target Retirement 2005 Fund that have been included in the fund’s statement of operations since February 10, 2012.

H. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

18


 

Target Retirement 2010 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VTENX
30-Day SEC Yield 2.03%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.17%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 41.8%
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 30.1
Vanguard Inflation-Protected Securities  
Fund Investor Shares 13.3
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 13.2
Vanguard Prime Money Market Fund  
Investor Shares 1.6

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target 2010 MSCI US
  Composite Broad Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.94
Beta 0.99 0.46

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2010 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.16%.

19


 

Target Retirement 2010 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (6/7/2006) Investment
Target Retirement 2010 Fund 14.74% 3.50% 5.58% $14,092
Target 2010 Composite Index 14.90 3.49 5.55 14,065
Mixed-Asset Target 2010 Funds        
Average 13.18 1.89 4.07 12,862
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 1.55 4.73 13,390

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2010 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

20


 

Target Retirement 2010 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2010 Fund
Target 2010 Composite Index
For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

 

21


 

Target Retirement 2010 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (100.0%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (30.1%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 51,686,723 1,852,452
 
International Stock Fund (13.2%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 56,967,820 810,652
 
Bond Funds (55.1%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 232,717,452 2,578,510
Vanguard Inflation-Protected Securities Fund Investor Shares 54,947,129 815,965
    3,394,475
Money Market Fund (1.6%)    
Vanguard Prime Money Market Fund Investor Shares 96,748,216 96,748
Total Investment Companies (Cost $5,557,780)   6,154,327
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.0%)    
Other Assets   15,703
Liabilities   (14,725)
    978
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 251,712,062 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   6,155,305
Net Asset Value Per Share   $24.45
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   5,535,540
Undistributed Net Investment Income   86,217
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (62,999)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   596,547
Net Assets   6,155,305

 

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

22


 

Target Retirement 2010 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 138,726
Net Investment Income—Note B 138,726
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 23,070
Investment Securities Sold 15,217
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 38,287
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 561,971
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 738,984

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

23


 

Target Retirement 2010 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 138,726 116,426
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 38,287 (17,864)
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 561,971 (1,898)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 738,984 96,664
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (132,211) (100,684)
Realized Capital Gain1 (8,208) (8,472)
Total Distributions (140,419) (109,156)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 1,935,277 1,835,448
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 138,772 107,920
Redeemed (1,264,685) (1,430,032)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 809,364 513,336
Total Increase (Decrease) 1,407,929 500,844
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 4,747,376 4,246,532
End of Period2 6,155,305 4,747,376

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $8,208,000 and $8,472,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $86,217,000 and $79,702,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

24


 

Target Retirement 2010 Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $21.91 $21.87 $20.39 $20.47 $23.54
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .571 .5601 .520 .553 .7441
Capital Gain Distributions Received .100 .0561
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 2.502 (.022) 1.455 .046 (3.354)
Total from Investment Operations 3.173 .594 1.975 .599 (2.610)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.596) (.511) (.495) (.679) (.460)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.037) (.043)
Total Distributions (.633) (.554) (.495) (.679) (.460)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $24.45 $21.91 $21.87 $20.39 $20.47
 
Total Return2 14.74% 2.68% 9.83% 3.47% -11.30%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $6,155 $4,747 $4,247 $3,065 $2,567
Ratio of Total Expenses to          
Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.16% 0.17% 0.17% 0.21% 0.19%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.51% 2.46% 2.67% 3.15% 3.34%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 12% 27%3 19% 41%4 18%

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

25


 

Target Retirement 2010 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2010 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, bonds, and short-term reserves.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

26


 

Target Retirement 2010 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $87,995,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $63,820,000 to offset future net capital gains. Of this amount, $47,220,000 is subject to expiration dates; $5,639,000 may be used to offset future net capital gains through September 30, 2017, $26,042,000 through September 30, 2018, and $15,539,000 through September 30, 2019. Capital losses of $16,600,000 realized beginning in fiscal 2012 may be carried forward indefinitely under the Regulated Investment Company Modernization Act of 2010, but must be used before any expiring loss carryforwards.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $5,558,737,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $595,590,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $634,125,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $38,535,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $1,509,598,000 of investment securities and sold $679,859,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 82,983 80,703
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 6,184 4,848
Redeemed (54,110) (63,101)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 35,057 22,450

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

27


 

Target Retirement 2015 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VTXVX
30-Day SEC Yield 2.03%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.17%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 40.3%
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 38.6
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 16.7
Vanguard Inflation-Protected Securities  
Fund Investor Shares 4.4

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target 2015 MSCI US
  Composite Broad Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.97
Beta 0.99 0.57

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2015 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.16%.

28


 

Target Retirement 2015 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (10/27/2003) Investment
Target Retirement 2015 Fund 16.76% 2.88% 5.90% $16,686
Target 2015 Composite Index 16.87 2.79 5.87 16,635
Mixed-Asset Target 2015 Funds        
Average 14.43 1.11 4.82 15,219
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 1.55 6.58 17,664

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2015 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

29


 

Target Retirement 2015 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2015 Fund
Target 2015 Composite Index
For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

 

30


 

Target Retirement 2015 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.9%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (38.6%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 181,437,430 6,502,717
 
International Stock Fund (16.7%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 197,496,533 2,810,377
 
Bond Funds (44.6%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 610,611,235 6,765,572
Vanguard Inflation-Protected Securities Fund Investor Shares 50,410,837 748,601
    7,514,173
Total Investment Companies (Cost $14,911,232)   16,827,267
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.1%)    
Other Assets   60,245
Liabilities   (49,215)
    11,030
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 1,243,979,492 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   16,838,297
Net Asset Value Per Share   $13.54
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   14,738,913
Undistributed Net Investment Income   247,068
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (63,719)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   1,916,035
Net Assets   16,838,297

 

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

31


 

Target Retirement 2015 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 394,621
Net Investment Income—Note B 394,621
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 61,580
Investment Securities Sold 29,798
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 91,378
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 1,819,354
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 2,305,353

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

32


 

Target Retirement 2015 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 394,621 311,191
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 91,378 68,394
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 1,819,354 (276,867)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 2,305,353 102,718
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (356,688) (288,841)
Realized Capital Gain1 (22,792) (25,117)
Total Distributions (379,480) (313,958)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 4,080,711 4,194,618
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 375,872 311,203
Redeemed (2,978,853) (3,325,763)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 1,477,730 1,180,058
Total Increase (Decrease) 3,403,603 968,818
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 13,434,694 12,465,876
End of Period2 16,838,297 13,434,694

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $22,792,000 and $25,117,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributionsare treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $247,068,000 and $209,135,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

33


 

Target Retirement 2015 Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $11.91 $12.03 $11.21 $11.34 $13.49
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .327 .2831 .285 .307 .3801
Capital Gain Distributions Received .053 .0311
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 1.583 (.134) .811 (.072) (2.190)
Total from Investment Operations 1.963 .180 1.096 .235 (1.810)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.313) (.276) (.276) (.365) (.340)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.020) (.024)
Total Distributions (.333) (.300) (.276) (.365) (.340)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $13.54 $11.91 $12.03 $11.21 $11.34
 
Total Return2 16.76% 1.40% 9.92% 2.66% -13.75%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $16,838 $13,435 $12,466 $9,507 $7,804
Ratio of Total Expenses to          
Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.16% 0.17% 0.17% 0.21% 0.18%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.59% 2.24% 2.62% 3.31% 3.02%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 13% 27%3 19% 37%4 24%

 

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

34


 

Target Retirement 2015 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2015 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

35


 

Target Retirement 2015 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $251,411,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $64,723,000 to offset future net capital gains. Of this amount, $27,719,000 is subject to expiration on September 30, 2018. Capital losses of $37,004,000 realized beginning in fiscal 2012 may be carried forward indefinitely under the Regulated Investment Company Modernization Act of 2010, but must be used before any expiring loss carryforwards.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $14,914,571,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $1,912,696,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $2,056,887,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $144,191,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $3,522,632,000 of investment securities and sold $1,973,507,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 317,087 332,265
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 30,534 25,097
Redeemed (232,130) (265,009)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 115,491 92,353

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

36


 

Target Retirement 2020 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VTWNX
30-Day SEC Yield 2.01%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.17%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 44.5%
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 36.3
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 19.2

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target 2020 MSCI US
  Composite Broad Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.98
Beta 1.00 0.66

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2020 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.16%.

37


 

Target Retirement 2020 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (6/7/2006) Investment
Target Retirement 2020 Fund 18.30% 2.30% 5.04% $13,642
Target 2020 Composite Index 18.62 2.36 5.10 13,694
Mixed-Asset Target 2020 Funds        
Average 16.59 1.11 3.96 12,781
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 1.55 4.73 13,390

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2020 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

38


 

Target Retirement 2020 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2020 Fund
Target 2020 Composite Index
For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

 

39


 

Target Retirement 2020 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.9%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (44.5%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 199,480,055 7,149,365
 
International Stock Fund (19.1%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 216,536,307 3,081,311
 
Bond Fund (36.3%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 526,410,612 5,832,630
Total Investment Companies (Cost $14,457,483)   16,063,306
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.1%)    
Other Assets   48,442
Liabilities   (33,919)
    14,523
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 668,727,769 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   16,077,829
Net Asset Value Per Share   $24.04
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   14,291,664
Undistributed Net Investment Income   232,148
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (51,806)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   1,605,823
Net Assets   16,077,829

 

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

40


 

Target Retirement 2020 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 359,941
Net Investment Income—Note B 359,941
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 45,477
Investment Securities Sold 34,418
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 79,895
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 1,764,009
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 2,203,845

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

41


 

Target Retirement 2020 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 359,941 229,705
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 79,895 (20,395)
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 1,764,009 (332,355)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 2,203,845 (123,045)
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (281,924) (195,538)
Realized Capital Gain1 (17,036) (15,414)
Total Distributions (298,960) (210,952)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 4,865,832 4,414,516
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 296,988 209,835
Redeemed (2,021,399) (2,149,043)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 3,141,421 2,475,308
Total Increase (Decrease) 5,046,306 2,141,311
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 11,031,523 8,890,212
End of Period2 16,077,829 11,031,523

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $17,036,000 and $15,414,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributionsare treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $232,148,000 and $154,131,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

42


 

Target Retirement 2020 Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $20.83 $21.17 $19.66 $20.03 $24.15
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .569 .4731 .5101 .5391 .6191
Capital Gain Distributions Received .079 .0441
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 3.106 (.378) 1.440 (.360) (4.329)
Total from Investment Operations 3.754 .139 1.950 .179 (3.710)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.513) (.444) (.440) (.549) (.410)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.031) (.035)
Total Distributions (.544) (.479) (.440) (.549) (.410)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $24.04 $20.83 $21.17 $19.66 $20.03
 
Total Return2 18.30% 0.53% 10.04% 1.44% -15.61%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $16,078 $11,032 $8,890 $5,706 $3,859
Ratio of Total Expenses to          
Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.16% 0.17% 0.17% 0.21% 0.19%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.62% 2.11% 2.51% 3.19% 2.79%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 8% 23%3 14% 27%4 15%

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

43


 

Target Retirement 2020 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2020 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

44


 

Target Retirement 2020 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $235,551,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $46,452,000 to offset future net capital gains. Of this amount, $32,992,000 is subject to expiration dates; $6,167,000 may be used to offset future net capital gains through September 30, 2017, $21,253,000 through September 30, 2018, and $5,572,000 through September 30, 2019. Capital losses of $13,460,000 realized beginning in fiscal 2012 may be carried forward indefinitely under the Regulated Investment Company Modernization Act of 2010, but must be used before any expiring loss carryforwards.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $14,466,240,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $1,597,066,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $1,738,888,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $141,822,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $4,282,042,000 of investment securities and sold $1,041,281,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 213,996 196,781
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 13,680 9,508
Redeemed (88,615) (96,606)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 139,061 109,683

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

45


 

Target Retirement 2025 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VTTVX
30-Day SEC Yield 2.00%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.18%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 49.8%
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 28.6
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 21.6

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target 2025 MSCI US
  Composite Broad Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.98
Beta 1.00 0.75

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2025 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.17%.

46


 

Target Retirement 2025 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (10/27/2003) Investment
Target Retirement 2025 Fund 19.89% 1.70% 5.79% $16,533
Target 2025 Composite Index 20.13 1.79 5.85 16,614
Mixed-Asset Target 2025 Funds        
Average 18.71 0.46 5.37 15,947
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 1.55 6.58 17,664

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2025 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

47


 

Target Retirement 2025 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2025 Fund
Target 2025 Composite Index
For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

 

48


 

Target Retirement 2025 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.9%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (49.7%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 277,621,300 9,949,947
 
International Stock Fund (21.6%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 303,815,060 4,323,288
 
Bond Fund (28.6%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 516,880,841 5,727,040
Total Investment Companies (Cost $17,684,215)   20,000,275
Temporary Cash Investment (0.0%)    
Money Market Fund (0.0%)    
1 Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 0.163% (Cost $2,107) 2,107,095 2,107
Total Investments (99.9%) (Cost $17,686,322)   20,002,382
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.1%)    
Other Assets   78,543
Liabilities   (59,345)
    19,198
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 1,461,730,901 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   20,021,580
Net Asset Value Per Share   $13.70
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   17,493,796
Undistributed Net Investment Income   288,040
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (76,316)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   2,316,060
Net Assets   20,021,580

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund is the 7-day yield.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

49


 

Target Retirement 2025 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 465,615
Net Investment Income—Note B 465,615
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 47,682
Investment Securities Sold 29,986
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 77,668
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 2,539,930
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 3,083,213

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

50


 

Target Retirement 2025 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 465,615 315,625
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 77,668 775
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 2,539,930 (492,656)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 3,083,213 (176,256)
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (378,248) (289,553)
Realized Capital Gain1 (16,898) (18,531)
Total Distributions (395,146) (308,084)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 4,781,176 4,556,327
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 391,525 305,363
Redeemed (2,836,642) (3,032,384)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 2,336,059 1,829,306
Total Increase (Decrease) 5,024,126 1,344,966
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 14,997,454 13,652,488
End of Period2 20,021,580 14,997,454

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $16,898,000 and $18,531,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $288,040,000 and $200,673,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

51


 

Target Retirement 2025 Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $11.71 $11.97 $11.11 $11.49 $14.26
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .331 .2571 .262 .279 .307
Capital Gain Distributions Received .036 .0201
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 1.927 (.271) .850 (.336) (2.767)
Total from Investment Operations 2.294 .006 1.112 (.057) (2.460)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.291) (.250) (.252) (.323) (.310)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.013) (.016)
Total Distributions (.304) (.266) (.252) (.323) (.310)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $13.70 $11.71 $11.97 $11.11 $11.49
 
Total Return2 19.89% -0.11% 10.12% 0.10% -17.61%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $20,022 $14,997 $13,652 $9,932 $7,769
Ratio of Total Expenses to          
Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.17% 0.18% 0.18% 0.21% 0.18%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.64% 2.01% 2.42% 3.09% 2.59%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 9% 23%3 11% 21%4 17%

 

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

52


 

Target Retirement 2025 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2025 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

53


 

Target Retirement 2025 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $291,946,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $74,491,000 to offset future net capital gains. Of this amount, $7,742,000 is subject to expiration on September 30, 2018. Capital losses of $66,749,000 realized beginning in fiscal 2012 may be carried forward indefinitely under the Regulated Investment Company Modernization Act of 2010, but must be used before any expiring loss carryforwards.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $17,692,053,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $2,310,329,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $2,544,957,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $234,628,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $4,010,871,000 of investment securities and sold $1,563,495,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 369,649 356,359
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 31,883 24,235
Redeemed (220,958) (239,602)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 180,574 140,992

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

54


 

Target Retirement 2030 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VTHRX
30-Day SEC Yield 1.98%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.18%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 55.1%
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 23.6
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 21.3

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target 2030 MSCI US
  Composite Broad Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.98
Beta 1.00 0.83

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2030 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.17%.

55


 

Target Retirement 2030 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (6/7/2006) Investment
Target Retirement 2030 Fund 21.43% 1.12% 4.48% $13,188
Target 2030 Composite Index 21.65 1.20 4.57 13,259
Mixed-Asset Target 2030 Funds        
Average 19.76 -0.02 3.44 12,378
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 1.55 4.73 13,390

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2030 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

56


 

Target Retirement 2030 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2030 Fund
Target 2030 Composite Index
For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

 

57


 

Target Retirement 2030 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.9%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (55.0%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 193,938,435 6,950,753
 
International Stock Fund (23.6%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 209,827,122 2,985,840
 
Bond Fund (21.3%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 242,921,482 2,691,570
Total Investment Companies (Cost $11,244,266)   12,628,163
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.1%)    
Other Assets   40,469
Liabilities   (21,724)
    18,745
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 537,857,496 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   12,646,908
Net Asset Value Per Share   $23.51
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   11,099,752
Undistributed Net Investment Income   177,537
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (14,278)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   1,383,897
Net Assets   12,646,908

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

58


 

Target Retirement 2030 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 282,814
Net Investment Income—Note B 282,814
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 19,986
Investment Securities Sold 15,633
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 35,619
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 1,624,548
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 1,942,981

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

59


 

Target Retirement 2030 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 282,814 155,961
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 35,619 (14,238)
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 1,624,548 (402,712)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 1,942,981 (260,989)
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (204,000) (132,260)
Realized Capital Gain1 (7,410) (7,366)
Total Distributions (211,410) (139,626)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 3,986,357 3,465,536
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 209,803 138,834
Redeemed (1,525,373) (1,491,969)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 2,670,787 2,112,401
Total Increase (Decrease) 4,402,358 1,711,786
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 8,244,550 6,532,764
End of Period2 12,646,908 8,244,550

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $7,410,000 and $7,366,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $177,537,000 and $98,723,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

60


 

Target Retirement 2030 Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $19.81 $20.36 $18.84 $19.63 $24.74
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .561 .398 .4531 .4661 .5221
Capital Gain Distributions Received .044 .011
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 3.580 (.542) 1.453 (.793) (5.262)
Total from Investment Operations 4.185 (.133) 1.906 (.327) (4.740)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.468) (.395) (.386) (.463) (.370)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.017) (.022)
Total Distributions (.485) (.417) (.386) (.463) (.370)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $23.51 $19.81 $20.36 $18.84 $19.63
 
Total Return2 21.43% -0.83% 10.21% -1.13% -19.43%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $12,647 $8,245 $6,533 $4,003 $2,359
Ratio of Total Expenses to          
Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.17% 0.18% 0.19% 0.21% 0.19%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.66% 1.91% 2.32% 2.92% 2.35%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 4% 19%3 9% 13%4 6%

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

61


 

Target Retirement 2030 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2030 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

62


 

Target Retirement 2030 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $179,006,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $7,257,000 that may be carried forward indefinitely to offset future capital gains.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $11,252,755,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $1,375,408,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $1,516,566,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $141,158,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $3,217,539,000 of investment securities and sold $465,100,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 180,472 157,714
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 10,019 6,410
Redeemed (68,762) (68,807)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 121,729 95,317

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

63


 

Report of Independent Registered
Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees of Vanguard Chester Funds and the Shareholders of Vanguard Target Retirement Income Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2010 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2015 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2020 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2025 Fund and Vanguard Target Retirement 2030 Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statements of net assets and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Vanguard Target Retirement Income Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2010 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2015 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2020 Fund and Vanguard Target Retirement 2025 Fund, and Vanguard Target Retirement 2030 Fund (collectively constituting six separate portfolios of Vanguard Chester Funds, hereafter referred to as the “Funds”) at September 30, 2012, the results of each of their operations for the year then ended, the changes in each of their net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as “financial statements”) are the responsibility of the Funds’ management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at September 30, 2012 by agreement to the underlying ownership records of the transfer agent, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

November 9, 2012

64


 

                               
Special 2012 tax information (unaudited) for Vanguard Target Retirement Funds

 

This information for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, is included pursuant to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

The funds distributed qualified dividend income to shareholders during the fiscal year as follows:

  Qualified Dividend Income
Fund ($000)
Target Retirement Income Fund 38,064
Target Retirement 2010 Fund 43,392
Target Retirement 2015 Fund 153,733
Target Retirement 2020 Fund 145,585
Target Retirement 2025 Fund 221,048
Target Retirement 2030 Fund 135,538

 

For corporate shareholders, the percentage of investment income (dividend income plus short-term gains, if any) that qualifies for the dividends-received deduction is as follows:

Fund Percentage
Target Retirement Income Fund 15.9%
Target Retirement 2010 Fund 21.1
Target Retirement 2015 Fund 25.7
Target Retirement 2020 Fund 29.8
Target Retirement 2025 Fund 33.2
Target Retirement 2030 Fund 37.1

 

65


 

Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

This table presents returns for your fund both before and after taxes. The after-tax returns are shown in two ways: (1) assuming that an investor owned the fund during the entire period and paid taxes on the fund’s distributions, and (2) assuming that an investor paid taxes on the fund’s distributions and sold all shares at the end of each period.

Calculations are based on the highest individual federal income tax and capital gains tax rates in effect at the times of the distributions and the hypothetical sales. State and local taxes were not considered. After-tax returns reflect any qualified dividend income , using actual prior-year figures and estimates for 2012. (In the example, returns after the sale of fund shares may be higher than those assuming no sale. This occurs when the sale would have produced a capital loss. The calculation assumes that the investor received a tax deduction for the loss.)

Please note that your actual after-tax returns will depend on your tax situation and may differ from those shown. Also note that if you own the fund in a tax-deferred account, such as an individual retirement account or a 401(k) plan, this information does not apply to you. Such accounts are not subject to current taxes.

Finally, keep in mind that a fund’s performance—whether before or after taxes—does not guarantee future results.

Average Annual Total Returns: Target Retirement Funds
Periods Ended September 30, 2012

      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (10/27/2003)
Target Retirement Income Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 11.74% 5.06% 5.69%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 10.89 4.10 4.60
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 7.72 3.80 4.29
 
      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (6/7/2006)
Target Retirement 2010 Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 14.74% 3.50% 5.58%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 13.83 2.73 4.93
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 9.71 2.58 4.47
 
      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (10/27/2003)
Target Retirement 2015 Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 16.76% 2.88% 5.90%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 15.93 2.13 5.24
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 11.07 2.07 4.79

 

66


 

Average Annual Total Returns: Target Retirement Funds
Periods Ended September 30, 2012

      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (6/7/2006)
Target Retirement 2020 Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 18.30% 2.30% 5.04%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 17.57 1.71 4.53
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 12.10 1.67 4.10
 
      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (10/27/2003)
Target Retirement 2025 Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 19.89% 1.70% 5.79%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 19.20 1.12 5.26
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 13.17 1.19 4.80
 
      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (6/7/2006)
Target Retirement 2030 Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 21.43% 1.12% 4.48%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 20.82 0.67 4.08
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 14.20 0.77 3.70

 

67


 

About Your Fund’s Expenses

As a shareholder of the fund, you incur ongoing costs, which include costs for portfolio management, administrative services, and shareholder reports (like this one), among others. Operating expenses, which are deducted from a fund’s gross income, directly reduce the investment return of the fund.

A typical fund’s expenses are expressed as a percentage of its average net assets. The Target Retirement Funds have no direct expenses, but each fund bears its proportionate share of the costs for the underlying funds in which it invests. These indirect expenses make up the acquired fund fees and expenses, also expressed as a percentage of average net assets.

The following examples are intended to help you understand the ongoing cost (in dollars) of investing in your fund and to compare these costs with those of other mutual funds. The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 made at the beginning of the period shown and held for the entire period. The costs were calculated using the acquired fund fees and expenses for each Target Retirement Fund.

The accompanying table illustrates your fund’s costs in two ways:

Based on actual fund return. This section helps you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The ”Ending Account Value“ shown is derived from the fund‘s actual return, and the third column shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period.

To do so, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number given for your fund under the heading ”Expenses Paid During Period.“

Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return. This section is intended to help you compare your fund‘s costs with those of other mutual funds. It assumes that the fund had a yearly return of 5% before expenses, but that the expense ratio is unchanged. In this case—because the return used is not the fund’s actual return—the results do not apply to your investment. The example is useful in making comparisons because the Securities and Exchange Commission requires all mutual funds to calculate expenses based on a 5% return. You can assess your fund’s costs by comparing this hypothetical example with the hypothetical examples that appear in shareholder reports of other funds.

Note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight and help you compare ongoing costs only and do not reflect transaction costs incurred by the fund for buying and selling securities. Further, the expenses do not include any purchase, redemption, or account service fees described in the fund prospectus. If such fees were applied to your account, your costs would be higher. Your fund does not carry a “sales load.”

The calculations assume no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.

You can find more information about the fund’s expenses, including annual expense ratios, in the Financial Statements section of this report. For additional information on operating expenses and other shareholder costs, please refer to your fund’s current prospectus.

68


 

Six Months Ended September 30, 2012      
  Beginning Ending Expenses
  Account Value Account Value Paid During
  3/31/2012 9/30/2012 Period
Based on Actual Fund Return      
Target Retirement Income Fund $1,000.00 $1,033.89 $0.82
Target Retirement 2010 Fund $1,000.00 $1,030.78 $0.81
Target Retirement 2015 Fund $1,000.00 $1,027.31 $0.81
Target Retirement 2020 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.72 $0.81
Target Retirement 2025 Fund $1,000.00 $1,023.15 $0.86
Target Retirement 2030 Fund $1,000.00 $1,021.29 $0.86
Based on Hypothetical 5% Yearly Return      
Target Retirement Income Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.27 $0.81
Target Retirement 2010 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.27 $0.81
Target Retirement 2015 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.27 $0.81
Target Retirement 2020 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.27 $0.81
Target Retirement 2025 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.22 $0.86
Target Retirement 2030 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.22 $0.86

The calculations are based on the acquired fund fees and expenses for the most recent six-month period. The funds’ annualized expense figures for that period are (in order as listed from top to bottom above) 0.16%, 0.16%, 0.16%, 0.16%, 0.17%, and 0.17%. The dollar amounts shown as ”Expenses Paid” are equal to the annualized expense figures for the underlying funds multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by the number of days in the most recent 12-month period.

69


 

Glossary

30-Day SEC Yield. A fund’s 30-day SEC yield is derived using a formula specified by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Under the formula, data related to the fund’s security holdings in the previous 30 days are used to calculate the fund’s hypothetical net income for that period, which is then annualized and divided by the fund’s estimated average net assets over the calculation period. For the purposes of this calculation, a security’s income is based on its current market yield to maturity (for bonds), its actual income (for asset-backed securities), or its projected dividend yield (for stocks). Because the SEC yield represents hypothetical annualized income, it will differ—at times significantly—from the fund’s actual experience. As a result, the fund’s income distributions may be higher or lower than implied by the SEC yield.

Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses. Funds that invest in other Vanguard funds incur no direct expenses, but they do bear proportionate shares of the operating, administrative, and advisory expenses of the underlying funds, and they must pay any fees charged by those funds. The figure for acquired fund fees and expenses represents a weighted average of these underlying costs. Acquired is a term that the Securities and Exchange Commission applies to any mutual fund whose shares are owned by another fund.

Beta. A measure of the magnitude of a fund’s past share-price fluctuations in relation to the ups and downs of a given market index. The index is assigned a beta of 1.00. Compared with a given index, a fund with a beta of 1.20 typically would have seen its share price rise or fall by 12% when the index rose or fell by 10%. For this report, beta is based on returns over the past 36 months for both the fund and the index. Note that a fund’s beta should be reviewed in conjunction with its R-squared (see definition). The lower the R-squared, the less correlation there is between the fund and the index, and the less reliable beta is as an indicator of volatility.

Expense Ratio. A fund’s total annual operating expenses expressed as a percentage of the fund’s average net assets. The expense ratio includes management and administrative expenses, but does not include the transaction costs of buying and selling portfolio securities.

Inception Date. The date on which the assets of a fund (or one of its share classes) are first invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objective. For funds with a subscription period, the inception date is the day after that period ends. Investment performance is measured from the inception date.

R-Squared. A measure of how much of a fund’s past returns can be explained by the returns from the market in general, as measured by a given index. If a fund’s total returns were precisely synchronized with an index’s returns, its R-squared would be 1.00. If the fund’s returns bore no relationship to the index’s returns, its R-squared would be 0. For this report, R-squared is based on returns over the past 36 months for both the fund and the index.

70


 

Benchmark Information

Target 2010 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter, as well as the Barclays U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities Index; for short-term reserves, the Citigroup Three-Month Treasury Bill Index; and for U.S. stocks, the MSCI US Broad Market Index. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

Target 2015 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter, as well as the Barclays U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities Index; and for U.S. stocks, the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index through April 22, 2005, and the MSCI US Broad Market Index thereafter. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

Target 2020 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter; and for U.S. stocks, the MSCI US Broad Market Index. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

Target 2025 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter; and for U.S. stocks, the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index through April 22, 2005, and the MSCI US Broad Market Index thereafter. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

71


 

Target 2030 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter; and for U.S. stocks, the MSCI US Broad Market Index. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

Target Income Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter, as well as the Barclays U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities Index; for short-term reserves, the Citigroup Three-Month Treasury Bill Index; and for U.S. stocks, the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index through April 22, 2005, and the MSCI US Broad Market Index thereafter. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

72


 

This page intentionally left blank.


 

This page intentionally left blank.


 

This page intentionally left blank.


 

The People Who Govern Your Fund

The trustees of your mutual fund are there to see that the fund is operated and managed in your best interests since, as a shareholder, you are a part owner of the fund. Your fund’s trustees also serve on the board of directors of The Vanguard Group, Inc., which is owned by the Vanguard funds and provides services to them on an at-cost basis.

A majority of Vanguard’s board members are independent, meaning that they have no affiliation with Vanguard or the funds they oversee, apart from the sizable personal investments they have made as private individuals. The independent board members have distinguished backgrounds in business, academia, and public service. Each of the trustees and executive officers oversees 179 Vanguard funds.

The following table provides information for each trustee and executive officer of the fund. More information about the trustees is in the Statement of Additional Information, which can be obtained, without charge, by contacting Vanguard at 800-662-7447, or online at vanguard.com.

InterestedTrustee1 and Delphi Automotive LLP (automotive components);
  Senior Advisor at New Mountain Capital; Trustee of
  The Conference Board.
F. William McNabb III
Born 1957. Trustee Since July 2009. Chairman of the Amy Gutmann
Board. Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Born 1949. Trustee Since June 2006. Principal
Years: Chairman of the Board of The Vanguard Group, Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President
Inc., and of each of the investment companies served of the University of Pennsylvania; Christopher H.
by The Vanguard Group, since January 2010; Director Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science
of The Vanguard Group since 2008; Chief Executive in the School of Arts and Sciences with secondary
Officer and President of The Vanguard Group and of appointments at the Annenberg School for
each of the investment companies served by The Communication and the Graduate School of Education
Vanguard Group since 2008; Director of Vanguard of the University of Pennsylvania; Member of the
Marketing Corporation; Managing Director of The National Commission on the Humanities and Social
Vanguard Group (1995–2008). Sciences; Trustee of Carnegie Corporation of New
  York and of the National Constitution Center; Chair
of the U. S. Presidential Commission for the Study
IndependentTrustees of Bioethical Issues.
Emerson U. Fullwood JoAnn Heffernan Heisen
Born 1948. Trustee Since January 2008. Principal Born 1950. Trustee Since July 1998. Principal
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Executive Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Corporate
Chief Staff and Marketing Officer for North America Vice President and Chief Global Diversity Officer
and Corporate Vice President (retired 2008) of Xerox (retired 2008) and Member of the Executive
Corporation (document management products and Committee (1997–2008) of Johnson & Johnson
services); Executive in Residence and 2010 (pharmaceuticals/medical devices/consumer
Distinguished Minett Professor at the Rochester products); Director of Skytop Lodge Corporation
Institute of Technology; Director of SPX Corporation (hotels), the University Medical Center at Princeton,
(multi-industry manufacturing), the United Way of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Center
Rochester, Amerigroup Corporation (managed health for Talent Innovation; Member of the Advisory Board
care), the University of Rochester Medical Center, of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs
Monroe Community College Foundation, and North at Syracuse University.
Carolina A&T University.
  F. Joseph Loughrey
Rajiv L. Gupta Born 1949. Trustee Since October 2009. Principal
Born 1945. Trustee Since December 2001.2 Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President
Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: and Chief Operating Officer (retired 2009) of Cummins
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (retired 2009) Inc. (industrial machinery); Director of SKF AB
and President (2006–2008) of Rohm and Haas Co. (industrial machinery), Hillenbrand, Inc. (specialized
(chemicals); Director of Tyco International, Ltd. consumer services), the Lumina Foundation for
(diversified manufacturing and services), Hewlett-  
Packard Co. (electronic computer manufacturing),
 

 


 

Education, and Oxfam America; Chairman of the Executive Officers  
Advisory Council for the College of Arts and Letters    
and Member of the Advisory Board to the Kellogg Glenn Booraem  
Institute for International Studies at the University Born 1967. Controller Since July 2010. Principal
of Notre Dame. Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal
  of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Controller of each of
Mark Loughridge the investment companies served by The Vanguard
Born 1953. Trustee Since March 2012. Principal Group; Assistant Controller of each of the investment
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Senior Vice companies served by The Vanguard Group (2001–2010).
President and Chief Financial Officer at IBM (information    
technology services); Fiduciary Member of IBM’s Thomas J. Higgins  
Retirement Plan Committee. Born 1957. Chief Financial Officer Since September
  2008. Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five
Scott C. Malpass Years: Principal of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Chief
Born 1962. Trustee Since March 2012. Principal Financial Officer of each of the investment companies
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chief served by The Vanguard Group; Treasurer of each of
Investment Officer and Vice President at the University the investment companies served by The Vanguard
of Notre Dame; Assistant Professor of Finance at the Group (1998–2008).  
Mendoza College of Business at Notre Dame; Member    
of the Notre Dame 403(b) Investment Committee; Kathryn J. Hyatt  
Director of TIFF Advisory Services, Inc. (investment Born 1955. Treasurer Since November 2008. Principal
advisor); Member of the Investment Advisory Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal of
Committees of the Financial Industry Regulatory The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Treasurer of each of the
Authority (FINRA) and of Major League Baseball. investment companies served by The Vanguard
  Group; Assistant Treasurer of each of the investment
André F. Perold companies served by The Vanguard Group (1988–2008).
Born 1952. Trustee Since December 2004. Principal    
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: George Heidi Stam  
Gund Professor of Finance and Banking at the Harvard Born 1956. Secretary Since July 2005. Principal
Business School (retired 2011); Chief Investment Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Managing
Officer and Managing Partner of HighVista Strategies Director of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; General Counsel
LLC (private investment firm); Director of Rand of The Vanguard Group; Secretary of The Vanguard
Merchant Bank; Overseer of the Museum of Fine Group and of each of the investment companies
Arts Boston. served by The Vanguard Group; Director and Senior
  Vice President of Vanguard Marketing Corporation.
Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.    
Born 1941. Trustee Since January 1993. Principal    
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, Vanguard Senior ManagementTeam
President, and Chief Executive Officer of NACCO    
Industries, Inc. (forklift trucks/housewares/lignite); Mortimer J. Buckley Michael S. Miller
Director of Goodrich Corporation (industrial products/ Kathleen C. Gubanich James M. Norris
aircraft systems and services) and the National Paul A. Heller Glenn W. Reed
Association of Manufacturers; Chairman of the Board Martha G. King George U. Sauter
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland and of Chris D. McIsaac  
University Hospitals of Cleveland; Advisory Chairman    
of the Board of The Cleveland Museum of Art.    
Chairman Emeritus and Senior Advisor
   
Peter F. Volanakis John J. Brennan  
Born 1955. Trustee Since July 2009. Principal Chairman, 1996–2009  
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President Chief Executive Officer and President, 1996–2008  
and Chief Operating Officer (retired 2010) of Corning
Incorporated (communications equipment); Director    
of SPX Corporation (multi-industry manufacturing);    
Overseer of the Amos Tuck School of Business Founder  
Administration at Dartmouth College; Advisor to the    
Norris Cotton Cancer Center. John C. Bogle  
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 1974–1996  

 

1 Mr. McNabb is considered an “interested person,” as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, because he is an officer of the Vanguard funds.
2 December 2002 for Vanguard Equity Income Fund, Vanguard Growth Equity Fund, the Vanguard Municipal Bond Funds, and the Vanguard State Tax-Exempt Funds.


 

 

P.O. Box 2600
Valley Forge, PA 19482-2600

 

Connect with Vanguard® > vanguard.com

Fund Information > 800-662-7447  
Direct Investor Account Services > 800-662-2739  
Institutional Investor Services > 800-523-1036  
Text Telephone for People  
With Hearing Impairment > 800-749-7273  
 
This material may be used in conjunction  
with the offering of shares of any Vanguard  
fund only if preceded or accompanied by  
the fund’s current prospectus.  
 
All comparative mutual fund data are from Lipper Inc. or  
Morningstar, Inc., unless otherwise noted.  
 
You can obtain a free copy of Vanguard’s proxy voting  
guidelines by visiting vanguard.com/proxyreporting or by  
calling Vanguard at 800-662-2739. The guidelines are  
also available from the SEC’s website, sec.gov. In  
addition, you may obtain a free report on how your fund  
voted the proxies for securities it owned during the 12  
months ended June 30. To get the report, visit either  
vanguard.com/proxyreporting or sec.gov.  
 
You can review and copy information about your fund at  
the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. To  
find out more about this public service, call the SEC at  
202-551-8090. Information about your fund is also  
available on the SEC’s website, and you can receive  
copies of this information, for a fee, by sending a  
request in either of two ways: via e-mail addressed to  
publicinfo@sec.gov or via regular mail addressed to the  
Public Reference Section, Securities and Exchange  
Commission, Washington, DC 20549-1520.  
 
 
  © 2012 The Vanguard Group, Inc.
  All rights reserved.
  Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor.
 
  Q3080 112012

 


 

 

 

Annual Report | September 30, 2012
                
Vanguard Target Retirement Funds
                   
 
                    
Vanguard Target Retirement 2035
Vanguard Target Retirement 2040
Vanguard Target Retirement 2045
Vanguard Target Retirement 2050
Vanguard Target Retirement 2055
Vanguard Target Retirement 2060

 



 

> For the 12 months ended September 30, 2012, the returns of the six Target Retirement Funds in this report ranged from 8.70% to 23.56%.

> The funds closely tracked their composite index benchmarks and were ahead of the average returns of their respective peer groups.

> Of the three underlying funds that make up the portfolios, Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund posted the smallest return, while Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund had the strongest.

Contents  
Your Fund’s Total Returns. 1
Chairman’s Letter. 2
Target Retirement 2035 Fund. 9
Target Retirement 2040 Fund. 18
Target Retirement 2045 Fund. 27
Target Retirement 2050 Fund. 36
Target Retirement 2055 Fund. 45
Target Retirement 2060 Fund. 54
Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns. 65
About Your Fund’s Expenses. 67
Glossary. 69

 

Please note: The opinions expressed in this report are just that—informed opinions. They should not be considered promises or advice.
Also, please keep in mind that the information and opinions cover the period through the date on the front of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in your fund are spelled out in the prospectus.
See the Glossary for definitions of investment terms used in this report.
About the cover: Our cover photograph shows rigging on the HMSSurprise, a replica of an 18th-century Royal Navy frigate. It was featured in the 2003 movie Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, which was based on Patrick O’Brian’s sea novels, set amid the Napoleonic Wars. Vanguard was named for another ship of that era, the HMSVanguard, which was the flagship of British Admiral Horatio Nelson at the Battle of the Nile.


 

Your Fund’s Total Returns  
 
 
 
 
Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2012  
  Total
  Returns
Vanguard Target Retirement 2035 Fund 22.98%
Target 2035 Composite Index 23.16
Mixed-Asset Target 2035 Funds Average 21.38
Mixed-Asset Target 2035 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2040 Fund 23.43%
Target 2040 Composite Index 23.58
Mixed-Asset Target 2040 Funds Average 21.50
Mixed-Asset Target 2040 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2045 Fund 23.47%
Target 2045 Composite Index 23.58
Mixed-Asset Target 2045 Funds Average 22.95
Mixed-Asset Target 2045 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2050 Fund 23.46%
Target 2050 Composite Index 23.58
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average 22.46
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2055 Fund 23.56%
Target 2055 Composite Index 23.58
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average 22.46
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Vanguard Target Retirement 2060 Fund (Inception: 1/19/2012) 8.70%
Target 2060 Composite Index 8.77
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average 7.83
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.  

 

Investments in Target Retirement Funds are subject to the risks of their underlying funds. The year in the fund name refers to the approximate year (the target date) when an investor in the fund would retire and leave the work force. The fund will gradually shift its emphasis from more aggressive investments to more conservative ones based on its target date. An investment in a Target Retirement Fund is not guaranteed at any time, including on or after the target date.

1


 

 

 

 

Chairman’s Letter

Dear Shareholder,

In sharp contrast to the previous year, global stock markets produced double-digit gains for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012. Despite a few bumps tied to Europe’s debt problems and a slowdown in emerging markets, the Vanguard Target Retirement Funds covered in this report produced their best returns since inception.

This report covers the performance of Target Retirement Funds 2035 through 2060. (The Income Fund and the 2010 through 2030 Funds are discussed in a separate report.) Because the funds in this report are intended for investors who expect to retire in about 20 to 50 years, they’re more heavily invested in stocks than their shorter-dated counterparts. While a larger allocation to stocks can sometimes result in more volatility, during this past fiscal year it helped boost the funds’ performance. The fixed income portion of the funds’ portfolios turned in respectable but less notable returns.

Please note that on October 2 we announced that we will transition to new benchmark indexes for 22 of our index funds, including Total Stock Market Index Fund and Total International Stock Market Index Fund. Both of those funds are among the underlying funds in the Target Retirement Funds. Total Stock Market’s new benchmark will be the

2


 

CRSP US Total Market Index, and the new benchmark for Total International will be the FTSE Global All Cap ex US Index. The transition, which will take place over several months, is expected to provide shareholders with significant long-term savings on licensing fees paid to index providers.

Stocks notched a powerful rally, with help from central bankers
U.S. stocks surged 30% in the 12 months ended September 30, outpacing the gains of their international counterparts. The rally came amid moves by U.S. and European central bankers to quiet—at least temporarily—investors’ concerns about the U.S. economy and the finances of European governments and banks.

While U.S. stocks were the standouts, European and emerging markets stocks also posted double-digit results. The developed markets of the Pacific region were the weakest performers but still recorded a modest advance.

In July, the president of the European Central Bank declared that policymakers would do whatever was needed to preserve the euro common currency. That pronouncement was encouraging to investors, but Europe’s financial troubles are by no means resolved. Vanguard economists believe the most likely scenario is that the Eurozone will “muddle through” for several years, with occasional spikes in market volatility, as fiscal tightening continues in the face of weak economic growth.

Market Barometer      
 
    Average Annual Total Returns
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012
  One Three Five
  Year Years Years
Stocks      
Russell 1000 Index (Large-caps) 30.06% 13.27% 1.22%
Russell 2000 Index (Small-caps) 31.91 12.99 2.21
Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Index 30.00 13.29 1.53
MSCI All Country World Index ex USA (International) 14.48 3.17 -4.12
 
Bonds      
Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Broad taxable market) 5.16% 6.19% 6.53%
Barclays Municipal Bond Index (Broad tax-exempt market) 8.32 5.99 6.06
Citigroup Three-Month U.S. Treasury Bill Index 0.05 0.08 0.63
 
CPI      
Consumer Price Index 1.99% 2.33% 2.11%

 

3


 

Bonds produced solid returns; future results may be more muted
Bonds once again advanced; the broad U.S. taxable market returned about 5% for the 12 months. Among U.S. Treasuries, long-term bonds were particularly strong as they benefited from the Federal Reserve’s bond-buying program.

As bond prices rose, the yield of the 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell to a record low in July, closing below 1.5%. (Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions.) By the end of the period the yield had climbed, but it still remained low by historical standards.

Bondholders have enjoyed years of strong returns. But as Tim Buckley, our incoming chief investment officer, has noted, investors shouldn’t be surprised if future results are much more modest. As yields tumble, the scope for further declines—and price increases—diminishes.

The Federal Reserve announced on September 13 that it would continue to hold its target for short-term interest rates between 0% and 0.25% at least through mid-2015. The exceptionally low rates, in place since late 2008, kept a tight lid on returns from money market funds and savings accounts.

Expense Ratios
Your Fund Compared With Its Peer Group

  Acquired Fund Fees Peer Group
  and Expenses Average
Target Retirement 2035 Fund 0.19% 0.54%
Target Retirement 2040 Fund 0.19 0.63
Target Retirement 2045 Fund 0.19 0.54
Target Retirement 2050 Fund 0.19 0.62
Target Retirement 2055 Fund 0.19 0.62
Target Retirement 2060 Fund 0.18 0.62

 

The fund expense figures shown—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represent an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement Funds invest. The Target Retirement Funds do not charge any expenses or fees of their own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.18% for the 2035 Fund, 0.18% for the 2040 Fund, 0.18% for the 2045 Fund, 0.18% for the 2050 Fund, 0.18% for the 2055 Fund, and 0.18% (annualized since inception) for the 2060 Fund. Peer-group expense ratios are derived from data provided by Lipper Inc. and capture information through year-end 2011.

Peer groups: For the 2035 Fund, Mixed-Asset Target 2035 Funds; for the 2040 Fund, Mixed-Asset Target 2040 Funds; for the 2045 Fund, Mixed-Asset Target 2045 Funds; for the 2050, 2055, and 2060 Funds, Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds.

4


 

Funds’ returns strengthened as stock markets soared
The Target Retirement Funds are designed to enable investors who have neither the time nor the inclination to manage a retirement portfolio an opportunity to hold a diversified “fund of funds” that adjusts its asset allocation over time. Each portfolio shifts from a growth-oriented, stock-heavy asset allocation to one that is more conservative, focused on bonds, as the investor’s expected retirement date approaches.

As of September 30, the five funds with target dates from 2040 to 2060 held nearly 63% of their assets in U.S. stocks, 27% in international stocks, and 10% in bonds, while the 2035 Fund included slightly more bonds. The five funds’ returns ranged

Total Returns
Inception Through September 30, 2012

  Average
  Annual Return
Target Retirement 2035 Fund (Returns since inception: 10/27/2003) 5.99%
Target 2035 Composite Index 6.09
Mixed-Asset Target 2035 Funds Average 5.46
Mixed-Asset Target 2035 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Target Retirement 2040 Fund (Returns since inception: 6/7/2006) 4.26%
Target 2040 Composite Index 4.31
Mixed-Asset Target 2040 Funds Average 3.13
Mixed-Asset Target 2040 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Target Retirement 2045 Fund (Returns since inception: 10/27/2003) 6.36%
Target 2045 Composite Index 6.44
Mixed-Asset Target 2045 Funds Average 5.89
Mixed-Asset Target 2045 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  
 
Target Retirement 2050 Fund (Returns since inception: 6/7/2006) 4.34%
Target 2050 Composite Index 4.39
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average 3.25
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.  

 

The figures shown represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost.

The table does not include funds that have operated for less than three years.

5


 

from 8.70% for the 2060 Fund to 23.56% for the 2055 Fund. (The 2060 Fund was launched on January 19, 2012, and so its results reflect less than a full fiscal year of performance.)

Returns for the Target Retirement Funds were largely driven by the strength of their underlying stock funds. Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund briefly dipped into negative territory in the spring as worries about Europe’s debt crisis grew, but by the end of the fiscal period it had notched a 30% gain. (Returns for the underlying funds are for Investor Shares.) Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund, which posted a 12-month return of –12% a year ago, made a significant turnaround during this latest fiscal period to return 15%. Surprisingly, the best performers in the international fund were European stocks, which were battered for parts of the year but surged in the wake of renewed commitments by the European Central Bank.

Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund, the fixed income holding in each of the six funds, recorded a solid return of about 5%. Unlike last year, when the bond index fund was the best performer as investors sought the safety of U.S. Treasuries, investors this time around were more willing to take on risk.

The funds’ impressive record of tracking their indexes
The six Vanguard Target Retirement Funds included in this report have successfully tracked their indexes and produced competitive results since their inceptions.

The funds’ inception dates range from October 2003 to January 2012. During their relatively short lifespans, they have experienced frequently volatile stock market environments. They have tracked their indexes closely, even though the benchmarks’ returns don’t reflect any operating or transaction costs. In addition, each fund’s average annual return has surpassed that of its appropriate peer group.

The funds’ success is a tribute to the skill of their investment advisors, Vanguard’s Equity Investment Group and Fixed Income Group, whose combined experience in portfolio construction and management techniques reflect more than 20 years of indexing. For a look at how the funds’ costs compare with the average expenses of their respective peer groups, please see the table on page 4.

6


 

The lessons of the financial crisis remain relevant four years later
In September, the end of your fund’s fiscal year, we marked the fourth anniversary of Lehman Brothers’ collapse, the start of the 2008–2009 financial crisis. When the Lehman news broke, I was speaking to institutional clients at an event in Washington, D.C., all of three weeks into my new role as Vanguard’s CEO.

In the ensuing months, I was struck both by how fortunate I was to work with a great team of Vanguard “crew” and by the remarkable steadiness demonstrated by our clients. Many clients experienced significant losses, but signs of panic were few. On balance, they remained committed to their long-term investment programs and managed to benefit from the financial markets’ subsequent recovery.

As the crisis recedes further in time, it’s important not to lose sight of the lessons that it illuminated about investing and sound financial practices generally. First among those lessons is that diversification does work. Diversification didn’t immunize investors from the market’s decline, but it certainly helped to insulate them from the worst of it.

Second, saving money and living within your means are critical. Investors are acting on this lesson as they pay off debt, which is a form of saving, and increase their savings rates from the dangerously low levels that prevailed before the crisis.

Third, having the courage to stick with a sound investment plan—as so many of our clients did—is important during volatile, uncertain times. Investors who resisted the urge to bail out of stocks at the depths of the crisis have largely been rewarded in the succeeding years.

I am very optimistic that, if investors embrace these lessons, they can give themselves a better chance of reaching their long-term goals.

As always, thank you for entrusting your assets to Vanguard.

Sincerely,


F. William McNabb III
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
October 10, 2012

7


 

Your Fund’s Performance at a Glance
September 30, 2011, Through September 30, 2012

      Distributions Per Share
  Starting Ending Income Capital
  Share Price Share Price Dividends Gains
Target Retirement 2035 Fund $11.77 $14.15 $0.281 $0.006
Target Retirement 2040 Fund $19.26 $23.26 $0.444 $0.009
Target Retirement 2045 Fund $12.10 $14.61 $0.286 $0.005
Target Retirement 2050 Fund $19.17 $23.16 $0.439 $0.008
Target Retirement 2055 Fund $20.45 $24.81 $0.391 $0.013
Target Retirement 2060 Fund (Inception:        
1/19/2012) $20.00 $21.74 $0.000 $0.000

 

Asset Allocation on September 30, 2012      
      Short-Term
  Stocks Bonds Reserves
Target Retirement 2035 Fund 86.3% 13.7% 0.0%
Target Retirement 2040 Fund 89.9% 10.1% 0.0%
Target Retirement 2045 Fund 89.8% 10.2% 0.0%
Target Retirement 2050 Fund 89.8% 10.2% 0.0%
Target Retirement 2055 Fund 90.0% 10.0% 0.0%
Target Retirement 2060 Fund 90.1% 9.9% 0.0%

 

Note: As of September 30, 2012, international stock weightings for the 2035, 2040, 2045, 2050, 2055, and 2060 Funds were 26%, 27%, 27%, 27%, 27%, and 27% of assets, respectively.

8


 

Target Retirement 2035 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VTTHX
30-Day SEC Yield 1.97%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.19%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 60.3%
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 26.0
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 13.7

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target 2035 MSCI US
  Composite Broad Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.99
Beta 1.00 0.91

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2035 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.18%.

9


 

Target Retirement 2035 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (10/27/2003) Investment
Target Retirement 2035 Fund 22.98% 0.83% 5.99% $16,813
Target 2035 Composite Index 23.16 0.91 6.09 16,957
Mixed-Asset Target 2035 Funds        
Average 21.38 -0.15 5.46 16,076
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 1.55 6.58 17,664

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2035 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

10


 

Target Retirement 2035 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2035 Fund
Target 2035 Composite Index

 

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

11


 

Target Retirement 2035 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.9%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (60.2%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 238,956,741 8,564,210
 
International Stock Fund (26.0%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 259,431,590 3,691,711
 
Bond Fund (13.7%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 175,510,300 1,944,654
Total Investments (99.9%) (Cost $12,486,627)   14,200,575
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.1%)    
Other Assets   59,771
Liabilities   (40,340)
    19,431
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 1,004,639,249 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   14,220,006
Net Asset Value Per Share   $14.15
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   12,373,626
Undistributed Net Investment Income   198,122
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (65,690)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   1,713,948
Net Assets   14,220,006

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

12


 

Target Retirement 2035 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 331,291
Net Investment Income—Note B 331,291
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 14,954
Investment Securities Sold 16,841
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 31,795
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 2,077,103
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 2,440,189

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

13


 

Target Retirement 2035 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 331,291 196,416
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 31,795 1,505
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 2,077,103 (502,631)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 2,440,189 (304,710)
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (249,484) (181,829)
Realized Capital Gain1 (5,327) (40,834)
Total Distributions (254,811) (222,663)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 3,574,347 3,401,770
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 252,543 220,834
Redeemed (2,031,576) (2,078,454)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 1,795,314 1,544,150
Total Increase (Decrease) 3,980,692 1,016,777
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 10,239,314 9,222,537
End of Period2 14,220,006 10,239,314

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $5,327,000 and $9,246,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $198,122,000 and $116,315,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

14


 

Target Retirement 2035 Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $11.77 $12.22 $11.31 $11.90 $15.25
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .344 .235 .250 .2731 .293
Capital Gain Distributions Received .016 .006
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 2.307 (.402) .898 (.564) (3.353)
Total from Investment Operations 2.667 (.161) 1.148 (.291) (3.060)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.281) (.236) (.238) (.299) (.290)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.006) (.053)
Total Distributions (.287) (.289) (.238) (.299) (.290)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $14.15 $11.77 $12.22 $11.31 $11.90
 
Total Return2 22.98% -1.55% 10.24% -1.85% -20.42%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $14,220 $10,239 $9,223 $6,780 $5,030
Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.18% 0.19% 0.19% 0.21% 0.18%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.68% 1.81% 2.24% 2.88% 2.28%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 6% 18%3 6% 9%4 10%

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information aboutany applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

15


 

Target Retirement 2035 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2035 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the period ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

16


 

Target Retirement 2035 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $199,713,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $60,815,000 that may be carried forward indefinitely to offset future capital gains.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $12,493,094,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $1,707,481,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $1,918,772,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $211,291,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the period ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $2,608,198,000 of investment securities and sold $729,608,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 269,022 257,014
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 20,171 16,883
Redeemed (154,290) (158,773)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 134,903 115,124

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

17


 

Target Retirement 2040 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VFORX
30-Day SEC Yield 1.96%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.19%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 62.7%
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 27.2
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 10.1

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target 2040 MSCI US
  Composite Broad Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.99
Beta 1.01 0.93

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2040 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.18%.

18


 

Target Retirement 2040 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (6/7/2006) Investment
Target Retirement 2040 Fund 23.43% 0.90% 4.26% $13,016
Target 2040 Composite Index 23.58 0.92 4.31 13,055
Mixed-Asset Target 2040 Funds        
Average 21.50 -0.44 3.13 12,148
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 1.55 4.73 13,390

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2040 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

19


 

Target Retirement 2040 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2040 Fund
Target 2040 Composite Index

 

20

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.


 

Target Retirement 2040 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.8%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (62.7%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 139,526,471 5,000,629
 
International Stock Fund (27.1%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 152,105,073 2,164,455
 
Bond Fund (10.0%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 72,252,619 800,559
Total Investment Companies (Cost $7,025,045)   7,965,643
Temporary Cash Investment (0.0%)    
Money Market Fund (0.0%)    
1 Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 0.163% (Cost $994) 994,230 994
Total Investments (99.8%) (Cost $7,026,039)   7,966,637
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.2%)    
Other Assets   25,591
Liabilities   (9,898)
    15,693
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 343,195,564 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   7,982,330
Net Asset Value Per Share   $23.26
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   6,936,892
Undistributed Net Investment Income   110,201
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (5,361)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   940,598
Net Assets   7,982,330

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund is the 7-day yield.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

21


 

Target Retirement 2040 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 178,202
Net Investment Income—Note B 178,202
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 6,250
Investment Securities Sold 5,071
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 11,321
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 1,107,410
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 1,296,933

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

22


 

Target Retirement 2040 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 178,202 88,335
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 11,321 27,057
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 1,107,410 (344,764)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 1,296,933 (229,372)
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (121,325) (74,229)
Realized Capital Gain1 (2,459) (14,523)
Total Distributions (123,784) (88,752)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 2,765,586 2,363,000
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 122,539 88,014
Redeemed (1,056,098) (986,609)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 1,832,027 1,464,405
Total Increase (Decrease) 3,005,176 1,146,281
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 4,977,154 3,830,873
End of Period2 7,982,330 4,977,154

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $2,459,000 and $14,523,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $110,201,000 and $53,324,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

23


 

Target Retirement 2040 Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $19.26 $20.03 $18.52 $19.36 $24.70
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .559 .369 .393 .4351 .4941
Capital Gain Distributions Received .022 .006
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 3.872 (.705) 1.485 (.849) (5.464)
Total from Investment Operations 4.453 (.330) 1.878 (.414) (4.970)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.444) (.368) (.368) (.426) (.370)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.009) (.072)
Total Distributions (.453) (.440) (.368) (.426) (.370)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $23.26 $19.26 $20.03 $18.52 $19.36
 
Total Return2 23.43% -1.87% 10.23% -1.61% -20.40%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $7,982 $4,977 $3,831 $2,330 $1,199
Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.18% 0.19% 0.19% 0.21% 0.19%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.69% 1.79% 2.23% 2.78% 2.24%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 3% 15%3 7% 9%4 4%

 

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

24


 

Target Retirement 2040 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2040 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

25


 

Target Retirement 2040 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $110,636,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short-term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $7,031,835,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $934,802,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $1,030,036,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $95,234,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $2,088,588,000 of investment securities and sold $203,161,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 127,086 108,785
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 5,969 4,097
Redeemed (48,337) (45,683)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 84,718 67,199

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

26


 

Target Retirement 2045 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VTIVX
30-Day SEC Yield 1.96%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.19%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 62.8%
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 27.0
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 10.2

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target 2045 MSCI US
  Composite Broad Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.99
Beta 1.01 0.93

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2045 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.18%.

27


 

Target Retirement 2045 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (10/27/2003) Investment
Target Retirement 2045 Fund 23.47% 0.88% 6.36% $17,344
Target 2045 Composite Index 23.58 0.92 6.44 17,452
Mixed-Asset Target 2045 Funds        
Average 22.95 -0.37 5.89 16,670
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 1.55 6.58 17,664

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2045 Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

28


 

Target Retirement 2045 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): October 27, 2003, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2045 Fund
Target 2045 Composite Index

 

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

29


 

Target Retirement 2045 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.8%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (62.7%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 142,842,943 5,119,491
 
International Stock Fund (27.0%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 154,615,017 2,200,172
 
Bond Fund (10.1%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 74,679,824 827,453
Total Investment Companies (Cost $7,168,191)   8,147,116
Temporary Cash Investment (0.0%)    
Money Market Fund (0.0%)    
1 Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 0.163% (Cost $1,270) 1,270,433 1,270
Total Investments (99.8%) (Cost $7,169,461)   8,148,386
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.2%)    
Other Assets   30,720
Liabilities   (16,080)
    14,640
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 558,919,785 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   8,163,026
Net Asset Value Per Share   $14.61
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   7,102,941
Undistributed Net Investment Income   112,258
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (31,098)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   978,925
Net Assets   8,163,026

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund is the 7-day yield.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

30


 

Target Retirement 2045 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 188,310
Net Investment Income—Note B 188,310
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 6,866
Investment Securities Sold 17,379
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 24,245
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 1,185,281
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 1,397,836

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

31


 

Target Retirement 2045 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 188,310 106,266
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 24,245 7,614
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 1,185,281 (321,143)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 1,397,836 (207,263)
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (138,613) (97,564)
Realized Capital Gain1 (2,423) (41,929)
Total Distributions (141,036) (139,493)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 2,414,872 2,176,140
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 140,029 138,621
Redeemed (1,350,612) (1,184,181)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 1,204,289 1,130,580
Total Increase (Decrease) 2,461,089 783,824
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 5,701,937 4,918,113
End of Period2 8,163,026 5,701,937

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $2,423,000 and $20,965,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $112,258,000 and $62,561,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

32


 

Target Retirement 2045 Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $12.10 $12.64 $11.70 $12.29 $15.75
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .354 .237 .257 .2811 .303
Capital Gain Distributions Received .014 .005
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 2.433 (.436) .929 (.570) (3.463)
Total from Investment Operations 2.801 (.194) 1.186 (.289) (3.160)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.286) (.242) (.246) (.301) (.300)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.005) (.104)
Total Distributions (.291) (.346) (.246) (.301) (.300)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $14.61 $12.10 $12.64 $11.70 $12.29
 
Total Return2 23.47% -1.82% 10.23% -1.77% -20.42%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $8,163 $5,702 $4,918 $3,560 $2,493
Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.18% 0.19% 0.19% 0.21% 0.18%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.70% 1.79% 2.24% 2.86% 2.28%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 7% 16%3 6% 10%4 9%

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

33


 

Target Retirement 2045 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2045 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

34


 

Target Retirement 2045 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $112,933,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short-term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $30,381,000 that may be carried forward indefinitely to offset future net capital gains.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $7,170,853,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $977,533,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $1,097,333,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $119,800,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $1,708,182,000 of investment securities and sold $455,381,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 176,519 159,565
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 10,863 10,276
Redeemed (99,852) (87,425)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 87,530 82,416

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

35


 

Target Retirement 2050 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VFIFX
30-Day SEC Yield 1.96%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.19%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 62.8%
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 27.0
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 10.2

 

Total Fund Volatility Measures  
  Target 2050 MSCI US
  Composite Broad Market
  Index Index
R-Squared 1.00 0.99
Beta 1.01 0.93

These measures show the degree and timing of the fund’s fluctuations compared with the indexes over 36 months.

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2050 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.18%.

36


 

Target Retirement 2050 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


    Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
      Since Final Value
  One Five Inception of a $10,000
  Year Years (6/7/2006) Investment
Target Retirement 2050 Fund 23.46% 0.88% 4.34% $13,074
Target 2050 Composite Index 23.58 0.92 4.39 13,113
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds        
Average 22.46 -0.50 3.25 12,236
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 1.55 4.73 13,390

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

37


 

Target Retirement 2050 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): June 7, 2006, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2050 Fund
Target 2050 Composite Index

 

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

38


 

Target Retirement 2050 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.7%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (62.7%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 60,606,332 2,172,131
 
International Stock Fund (26.9%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 65,630,504 933,922
 
Bond Fund (10.1%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 31,672,163 350,928
Total Investment Companies (Cost $3,051,246)   3,456,981
Temporary Cash Investment (0.0%)    
Money Market Fund (0.0%)    
1 Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 0.163% (Cost $600) 600,448 600
Total Investments (99.7%) (Cost $3,051,846)   3,457,581
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.3%)    
Other Assets   14,448
Liabilities   (4,711)
    9,737
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 149,730,707 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   3,467,318
Net Asset Value Per Share   $23.16
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   3,020,662
Undistributed Net Investment Income   46,793
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (5,872)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   405,735
Net Assets   3,467,318

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund is the 7-day yield.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

39


 

Target Retirement 2050 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 75,474
Net Investment Income—Note B 75,474
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 2,605
Investment Securities Sold 1,261
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 3,866
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 465,291
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 544,631

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

40


 

Target Retirement 2050 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 75,474 36,062
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 3,866 24,874
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 465,291 (159,824)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 544,631 (98,888)
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (50,671) (30,163)
Realized Capital Gain1 (923) (19,891)
Total Distributions (51,594) (50,054)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 1,387,997 1,174,424
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 51,071 49,545
Redeemed (538,920) (518,202)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 900,148 705,767
Total Increase (Decrease) 1,393,185 556,825
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 2,074,133 1,517,308
End of Period2 3,467,318 2,074,133

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $923,000 and $10,109,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $46,793,000 and $21,990,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

41


 

Target Retirement 2050 Fund          
 
 
Financial Highlights          
 
 
For a Share Outstanding     Year Ended September 30,
Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $19.17 $20.10 $18.58 $19.43 $24.79
Investment Operations          
Net Investment Income .549 .360 .399 .4311 .5031
Capital Gain Distributions Received .022 .006
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)          
on Investments 3.866 (.682) 1.492 (.866) (5.493)
Total from Investment Operations 4.437 (.316) 1.891 (.435) (4.990)
Distributions          
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.439) (.370) (.371) (.415) (.370)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.008) (.244)
Total Distributions (.447) (.614) (.371) (.415) (.370)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $23.16 $19.17 $20.10 $18.58 $19.43
 
Total Return2 23.46% -1.89% 10.26% -1.73% -20.41%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data          
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $3,467 $2,074 $1,517 $924 $409
Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.18% 0.19% 0.19% 0.21% 0.19%
Ratio of Net Investment Income to          
Average Net Assets 2.70% 1.79% 2.21% 2.74% 2.27%
Portfolio Turnover Rate 4% 15%3 10% 8%4 4%

1 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.
4 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s bond investments from Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund to Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

42


 

Target Retirement 2050 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2050 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2009–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

43


 

Target Retirement 2050 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $46,986,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short-term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $6,063,000 that may be carried forward indefinitely to offset future net capital gains.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $3,051,848,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $405,733,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $443,094,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $37,361,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $1,020,461,000 of investment securities and sold $99,828,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 64,017 54,294
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 2,499 2,317
Redeemed (25,002) (23,901)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 41,514 32,710

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements

44


 

Target Retirement 2055 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VFFVX
30-Day SEC Yield 1.96%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.19%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 62.8%
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 27.2
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 10.0

 

Fund Asset Allocation

 

 

 

1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2055 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, the acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.18%.

45


 

Target Retirement 2055 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: August 18, 2010, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


  Average Annual Total Returns  
  Periods Ended September 30, 2012  
    Since Final Value
  One Inception of a $10,000
  Year (8/18/2010) Investment
Target Retirement 2055 Fund 23.56% 12.18% $12,757
Target 2055 Composite Index 23.58 12.32 12,792
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds      
Average 22.46 10.62 12,385
MSCI US Broad Market Index 30.30 16.38 13,789

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

46


 

Target Retirement 2055 Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): August 18, 2010, Through September 30, 2012


Target Retirement 2055 Fund
Target 2055 Composite Index

 

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

47


 

Target Retirement 2055 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.3%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (62.4%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 6,625,092 237,443
 
International Stock Fund (27.0%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 7,228,698 102,864
 
Bond Fund (9.9%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 3,410,724 37,791
Total Investment Companies (Cost $358,276)   378,098
Temporary Cash Investment (0.0%)    
Money Market Fund (0.0%)    
1 Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 0.163% (Cost $179) 178,673 179
Total Investments (99.3%) (Cost $358,455)   378,277
Other Assets and Liabilities (0.7%)    
Other Assets   3,324
Liabilities   (827)
    2,497
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 15,350,366 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   380,774
Net Asset Value Per Share   $24.81
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   356,394
Undistributed Net Investment Income   4,443
Accumulated Net Realized Gains   115
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   19,822
Net Assets   380,774

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund is the 7-day yield.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

48


 

Target Retirement 2055 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  Year Ended
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 6,645
Net Investment Income—Note B 6,645
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 186
Investment Securities Sold 228
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 414
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 35,775
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 42,834

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

49


 

Target Retirement 2055 Fund    
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets    
 
  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  ($000) ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets    
Operations    
Net Investment Income 6,645 1,085
Realized Net Gain (Loss) 414 (164)
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 35,775 (16,009)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 42,834 (15,088)
Distributions    
Net Investment Income (2,904) (146)
Realized Capital Gain1 (97) (34)
Total Distributions (3,001) (180)
Capital Share Transactions    
Issued 286,736 163,181
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 2,985 180
Redeemed (73,016) (25,727)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 216,705 137,634
Total Increase (Decrease) 256,538 122,366
Net Assets    
Beginning of Period 124,236 1,870
End of Period2 380,774 124,236

1 Includes fiscal 2012 and 2011 short-term gain distributions totaling $97,000 and $34,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $4,443,000 and $945,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

50


 

Target Retirement 2055 Fund      
 
 
Financial Highlights      
 
 
      Aug. 18,
  Year Ended 20101 to
  September 30, Sept. 30,
For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period 2012 2011 2010
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $20.45 $20.98 $20.00
Investment Operations      
Net Investment Income .540 .3882 .063
Capital Gain Distributions Received .022 .001
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments 4.202 (.698) .917
Total from Investment Operations 4.764 (.309) .980
Distributions      
Dividends from Net Investment Income (.391) (.179)
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains (.013) (.042)
Total Distributions (.404) (.221)
Net Asset Value, End of Period $24.81 $20.45 $20.98
 
Total Return3 23.56% -1.58% 4.90%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data      
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $381 $124 $2
Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.18% 0.19% 0.22%4
Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets 2.76% 1.71% 2.73%4
Portfolio Turnover Rate 3% 12%5 3%

1 Inception.
2 Calculated based on average shares outstanding.
3 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the periods shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
4 Annualized.
5 Excludes the value of mutual fund shares delivered and received in connection with a change in the fund’s international equity investments from Vanguard European, Pacific, and Emerging Markets Stock Index Funds to Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund because those transactions were effected in kind and did not cause the fund to incur transaction costs.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

51


 

Target Retirement 2055 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2055 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for all open federal income tax years (September 30, 2010–2012), and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the year ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

52


 

Target Retirement 2055 Fund

The fund used a tax accounting practice to treat a portion of the price of capital shares redeemed during the year as distributions from net investment income and realized capital gains. Accordingly, the fund has reclassified $243,000 from undistributed net investment income, and $4,000 from accumulated net realized gains, to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $4,460,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. Tax-basis amounts required to be distributed in December 2011 included short-term gain distributions received from Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund in December 2011. Short-term capital gain distributions received are treated as ordinary income for tax purposes, and cannot be offset by capital losses.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $358,455,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $19,822,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $20,987,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $1,165,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $225,343,000 of investment securities and sold $7,434,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  Year Ended September 30,
  2012 2011
  Shares Shares
  (000) (000)
Issued 12,295 7,096
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions 136 8
Redeemed (3,155) (1,119)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 9,276 5,985

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

53


 

Target Retirement 2060 Fund

Fund Profile
As of September 30, 2012

Total Fund Characteristics  
Ticker Symbol VTTSX
30-Day SEC Yield 1.95%
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses1 0.18%

 

Allocation to Underlying Vanguard Funds  
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund  
Investor Shares 63.3%
Vanguard Total International Stock Index  
Fund Investor Shares 26.8
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund  
Investor Shares 9.9

 

Fund Asset Allocation


1 This figure—drawn from the prospectus dated January 26, 2012—represents an estimate of the weighted average of the expense ratios and any transaction fees charged by the underlying mutual funds (the ”acquired” funds) in which the Target Retirement 2060 Fund invests. The fund does not charge any expenses or fees of its own. For the period from inception through September 30, 2012, the annualized acquired fund fees and expenses were 0.18%.

54


 

Target Retirement 2060 Fund

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: January 19, 2012, Through September 30, 2012
Initial Investment of $10,000


  Total Returns  
  Period Ended September 30, 2012  
  Since Final Value
  Inception of a $10,000
  (1/19/2012) Investment
Target Retirement 2060 Fund 8.70% $10,870
Target 2060 Composite Index 8.77 10,877
Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds    
Average 7.83 10,783
MSCI US Broad Market Index 10.73 11,073

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

Mixed-Asset Target 2050+ Funds Average: Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

"Since Inception" performance is calculated from the inception date for both the fund and its comparative standards.

 

See Financial Highlights for dividend and capital gains information.

55


 

Target Retirement 2060 Fund

Fiscal-Period Total Returns (%): January 19, 2012, Through September 30, 2012


                    
Target Retirement 2060 Fund
Target 2060 Composite Index

 

For a benchmark description, see the Glossary.

56


 

Target Retirement 2060 Fund

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets
As of September 30, 2012

The fund reports a complete list of its holdings in regulatory filings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

    Market
    Value
  Shares ($000)
Investment Companies (99.3%)    
U.S. Stock Fund (62.9%)    
Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares 583,112 20,899
 
International Stock Fund (26.6%)    
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund Investor Shares 621,142 8,839
 
Bond Fund (9.8%)    
1 Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor Shares 295,177 3,270
Total Investment Companies (Cost $31,779)   33,008
Temporary Cash Investment (1.0%)    
Money Market Fund (1.0%)    
1 Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 0.163% (Cost $325) 324,571 325
Total Investments (100.3%) (Cost $32,104)   33,333
Other Assets and Liabilities (-0.3%)    
Other Assets   242
Liabilities   (346)
    (104)
Net Assets (100%)    
Applicable to 1,528,822 outstanding $.001 par value shares of    
beneficial interest (unlimited authorization)   33,229
Net Asset Value Per Share   $21.74
 
 
At September 30, 2012, net assets consisted of:    
    Amount
    ($000)
Paid-in Capital   31,837
Undistributed Net Investment Income   334
Accumulated Net Realized Losses   (171)
Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)   1,229
Net Assets   33,229

 

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.
1 Affiliated fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund is the 7-day yield.
See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

57


 

Target Retirement 2060 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Operations  
 
  January 19, 20121 to
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Investment Income  
Income  
Income Distributions Received 334
Net Investment Income—Note B 334
Realized Net Gain (Loss)  
Capital Gain Distributions Received 1
Investment Securities Sold (172)
Realized Net Gain (Loss) (171)
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities 1,229
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 1,392
1 Inception.  

 

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

58


 

Target Retirement 2060 Fund  
 
 
Statement of Changes in Net Assets  
 
  January 19, 20121 to
  September 30, 2012
  ($000)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets  
Operations  
Net Investment Income 334
Realized Net Gain (Loss) (171)
Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) 1,229
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations 1,392
Distributions  
Net Investment Income
Realized Capital Gain
Capital Share Transactions  
Issued 43,919
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions
Redeemed (12,082)
Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions 31,837
Total Increase (Decrease) 33,229
Net Assets  
Beginning of Period
End of Period2 33,229

1 Inception.
2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $334,000.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

59


 

Target Retirement 2060 Fund  
 
 
Financial Highlights  
 
 
  January 19, 20121 to
For a Share Outstanding Throughout the Period September 30, 2012
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period $20.00
Investment Operations  
Net Investment Income .218
Capital Gain Distributions Received .002
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments 1.520
Total from Investment Operations 1.740
Distributions  
Dividends from Net Investment Income
Distributions from Realized Capital Gains
Total Distributions
Net Asset Value, End of Period $21.74
 
Total Return2 8.70%
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data  
Net Assets, End of Period (Millions) $33
Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets
Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses 0.18%3
Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets 2.99%3
Portfolio Turnover Rate 40%

1 Inception.
2 Total returns do not include account service fees that may have applied in the period shown. Fund prospectuses provide information about any applicable account service fees.
3 Annualized.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

60


 

Target Retirement 2060 Fund

Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard Target Retirement 2060 Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund follows a balanced investment strategy by investing in selected Vanguard funds to achieve its targeted allocation of assets to U.S. stocks, international stocks, and bonds.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Investments are valued at the net asset value of each underlying Vanguard fund determined as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken for its open federal income tax period ended September 30, 2012, and has concluded that no provision for federal income tax is required in the fund’s financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Income and capital gain distributions received are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

B. Under a service agreement, The Vanguard Group furnishes investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services to the fund. The service agreement provides that the fund’s expenses may be reduced or eliminated to the extent of savings realized by the Vanguard funds by the operation of the fund. Accordingly, all incremental expenses for services provided by Vanguard and all other expenses incurred by the fund during the period ended September 30, 2012, were borne by the funds in which the fund invests. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard and the funds in which the fund invests.

C. Various inputs may be used to determine the value of the fund’s investments. These inputs are summarized in three broad levels for financial statement purposes. The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

Level 1Quoted prices in active markets for identical securities.
Level 2Other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.).
Level 3Significant unobservable inputs (including the fund’s own assumptions used to determine the fair value of investments).

At September 30, 2012, 100% of the market value of the fund’s investments was determined based on Level 1 inputs.

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences are primarily attributed to tax deferral of losses on wash sales and will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

61


 

Target Retirement 2060 Fund

For tax purposes, at September 30, 2012, the fund had $335,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. At September 30, 2012, the fund had available capital losses totaling $4,000 that may be carried forward indefinitely to offset future net capital gains.

At September 30, 2012, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $32,272,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $1,061,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $1,229,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $168,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the period ended September 30, 2012, the fund purchased $38,648,000 of investment securities and sold $6,696,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. Capital shares issued and redeemed were:

  January 19, 20121 to
  September 30, 2012
  Shares
  (000)
Issued 2,110
Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions
Redeemed (581)
Net Increase (Decrease) in Shares Outstanding 1,529
1 Inception.  

 

G. In preparing the financial statements as of September 30, 2012, management considered the impact of subsequent events for potential recognition or disclosure in these financial statements.

62


 

Report of Independent Registered
Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees of Vanguard Chester Funds and the Shareholders of Vanguard Target Retirement 2035 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2040 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2045 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2050 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2055 Fund, and Vanguard Target Retirement 2060 Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statements of net assets and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Vanguard Target Retirement 2035 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2040 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2045 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2050 Fund, Vanguard Target Retirement 2055 Fund at September 30, 2012, the results of each of their operations, the changes in each of their net assets and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated and the financial position of Vanguard Target Retirement 2060 Fund (collectively constituting six separate portfolios of Vanguard Chester Funds, hereafter referred to as the “Funds”) at September 30, 2012, the results of its operations, the changes in its net assets and the financial highlights for the period January 19, 2012 (commencement of operations) through September 30, 2012, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as “financial statements”) are the responsibility of the Funds’ management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at September 30, 2012 by agreement to the underlying ownership records of the transfer agent, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

November 9, 2012

63


 

                          
Special 2012 tax information (unaudited) for Vanguard Target Retirement Funds

 

This information for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2012, is included pursuant to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

The funds distributed capital gain dividends (from net long-term capital gains) to shareholders during the fiscal year as follows:

  Capital Gain Dividends
Fund ($000)
Target Retirement 2035 Fund
Target Retirement 2040 Fund
Target Retirement 2045 Fund
Target Retirement 2050 Fund
Target Retirement 2055 Fund 4
Target Retirement 2060 Fund

 

The funds distributed qualified dividend income to shareholders during the fiscal year as follows:

  Qualified Dividend Income
Fund ($000)
Target Retirement 2035 Fund 185,342
Target Retirement 2040 Fund 92,450
Target Retirement 2045 Fund 105,470
Target Retirement 2050 Fund 38,596
Target Retirement 2055 Fund 2,232
Target Retirement 2060 Fund

 

For corporate shareholders, the percentage of investment income (dividend income plus short-term gains, if any) that qualifies for the dividends-received deduction is as follows:

Fund Percentage
Target Retirement 2035 Fund 40.5%
Target Retirement 2040 Fund 42.2
Target Retirement 2045 Fund 41.8
Target Retirement 2050 Fund 42.2
Target Retirement 2055 Fund 43.5
Target Retirement 2060 Fund 47.5

 

64


 

Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

This table presents returns for your fund both before and after taxes. The after-tax returns are shown in two ways: (1) assuming that an investor owned the fund during the entire period and paid taxes on the fund’s distributions, and (2) assuming that an investor paid taxes on the fund’s distributions and sold all shares at the end of each period.

Calculations are based on the highest individual federal income tax and capital gains tax rates in effect at the times of the distributions and the hypothetical sales. State and local taxes were not considered. After-tax returns reflect any qualified dividend income , using actual prior-year figures and estimates for 2012. (In the example, returns after the sale of fund shares may be higher than those assuming no sale. This occurs when the sale would have produced a capital loss. The calculation assumes that the investor received a tax deduction for the loss.)

Please note that your actual after-tax returns will depend on your tax situation and may differ from those shown. Also note that if you own the fund in a tax-deferred account, such as an individual retirement account or a 401(k) plan, this information does not apply to you. Such accounts are not subject to current taxes.

Finally, keep in mind that a fund’s performance—whether before or after taxes—does not guarantee future results.

Average Annual Total Returns: Target Retirement Funds
Periods Ended September 30, 2012

      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (10/27/2003)
Target Retirement 2035 Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 22.98% 0.83% 5.99%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 22.41 0.37 5.57
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 15.25 0.54 5.07
 
      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (6/7/2006)
Target Retirement 2040 Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 23.43% 0.90% 4.26%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 22.90 0.47 3.89
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 15.54 0.61 3.53
 
      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (10/27/2003)
Target Retirement 2045 Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 23.47% 0.88% 6.36%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 22.92 0.40 5.95
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 15.57 0.57 5.42

 

65


 

Average Annual Total Returns: Target Retirement Funds
Periods Ended September 30, 2012

      Since
  One Five Inception
  Year Years (6/7/2006)
Target Retirement 2050 Fund         
Returns Before Taxes 23.46% 0.88% 4.34%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 22.93 0.43 3.94
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 15.55 0.58 3.59
 
      Since
  One   Inception
  Year   (8/18/2010)
Target Retirement 2055 Fund      
Returns Before Taxes 23.56%   12.18%
Returns After Taxes on Distributions 23.11   11.87
Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares 15.57   10.32
 
The Target Retirement 2060 Fund is not listed because the fund has operated for less than one year.    

 

66


 

About Your Fund’s Expenses

As a shareholder of the fund, you incur ongoing costs, which include costs for portfolio management, administrative services, and shareholder reports (like this one), among others. Operating expenses, which are deducted from a fund’s gross income, directly reduce the investment return of the fund.

A typical fund’s expenses are expressed as a percentage of its average net assets. The Target Retirement Funds have no direct expenses, but each fund bears its proportionate share of the costs for the underlying funds in which it invests. These indirect expenses make up the acquired fund fees and expenses, also expressed as a percentage of average net assets.

The following examples are intended to help you understand the ongoing cost (in dollars) of investing in your fund and to compare these costs with those of other mutual funds. The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 made at the beginning of the period shown and held for the entire period. The costs were calculated using the acquired fund fees and expenses for each Target Retirement Fund.

The accompanying table illustrates your fund’s costs in two ways:

Based on actual fund return. This section helps you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The ”Ending Account Value“ shown is derived from the fund‘s actual return, and the third column shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period.

To do so, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number given for your fund under the heading ”Expenses Paid During Period.“

Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return. This section is intended to help you compare your fund‘s costs with those of other mutual funds. It assumes that the fund had a yearly return of 5% before expenses, but that the expense ratio is unchanged. In this case—because the return used is not the fund’s actual return—the results do not apply to your investment. The example is useful in making comparisons because the Securities and Exchange Commission requires all mutual funds to calculate expenses based on a 5% return. You can assess your fund’s costs by comparing this hypothetical example with the hypothetical examples that appear in shareholder reports of other funds.

Note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight and help you compare ongoing costs only and do not reflect transaction costs incurred by the fund for buying and selling securities. Further, the expenses do not include any purchase, redemption, or account service fees described in the fund prospectus. If such fees were applied to your account, your costs would be higher. Your fund does not carry a “sales load.”

The calculations assume no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.

You can find more information about the fund’s expenses, including annual expense ratios, in the Financial Statements section of this report. For additional information on operating expenses and other shareholder costs, please refer to your fund’s current prospectus.

67


 

Six Months Ended September 30, 2012      
  Beginning Ending Expenses
  Account Value Account Value Paid During
  3/31/2012 9/30/2012 Period
Based on Actual Fund Return      
Target Retirement 2035 Fund $1,000.00 $1,019.45 $0.91
Target Retirement 2040 Fund $1,000.00 $1,019.28 $0.91
Target Retirement 2045 Fund $1,000.00 $1,019.54 $0.91
Target Retirement 2050 Fund $1,000.00 $1,019.37 $0.91
Target Retirement 2055 Fund $1,000.00 $1,019.73 $0.91
Target Retirement 2060 Fund $1,000.00 $1,022.58 $0.91
Based on Hypothetical 5% Yearly Return      
Target Retirement 2035 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.17 $0.91
Target Retirement 2040 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.17 $0.91
Target Retirement 2045 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.17 $0.91
Target Retirement 2050 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.17 $0.91
Target Retirement 2055 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.17 $0.91
Target Retirement 2060 Fund $1,000.00 $1,024.17 $0.91

 

The calculations are based on the acquired fund fees and expenses for the most recent six-month period. The funds’ annualized expense figures for the period are (in order as listed from top to bottom above) 0.18%, 0.18%, 0.18%, 0.18%, 0.18%, and 0.18%. The dollar amounts shown as ”Expenses Paid” are equal to the annualized average weighted expense ratio for the underlying funds multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by the number of days in the most recent 12-month period.

68


 

Glossary

30-Day SEC Yield. A fund’s 30-day SEC yield is derived using a formula specified by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Under the formula, data related to the fund’s security holdings in the previous 30 days are used to calculate the fund’s hypothetical net income for that period, which is then annualized and divided by the fund’s estimated average net assets over the calculation period. For the purposes of this calculation, a security’s income is based on its current market yield to maturity (for bonds), its actual income (for asset-backed securities), or its projected dividend yield (for stocks). Because the SEC yield represents hypothetical annualized income, it will differ—at times significantly—from the fund’s actual experience. As a result, the fund’s income distributions may be higher or lower than implied by the SEC yield.

Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses. Funds that invest in other Vanguard funds incur no direct expenses, but they do bear proportionate shares of the operating, administrative, and advisory expenses of the underlying funds, and they must pay any fees charged by those funds. The figure for acquired fund fees and expenses represents a weighted average of these underlying costs. Acquired is a term that the Securities and Exchange Commission applies to any mutual fund whose shares are owned by another fund.

Beta. A measure of the magnitude of a fund’s past share-price fluctuations in relation to the ups and downs of a given market index. The index is assigned a beta of 1.00. Compared with a given index, a fund with a beta of 1.20 typically would have seen its share price rise or fall by 12% when the index rose or fell by 10%. For this report, beta is based on returns over the past 36 months for both the fund and the index. Note that a fund’s beta should be reviewed in conjunction with its R-squared (see definition). The lower the R-squared, the less correlation there is between the fund and the index, and the less reliable beta is as an indicator of volatility.

Expense Ratio. A fund’s total annual operating expenses expressed as a percentage of the fund’s average net assets. The expense ratio includes management and administrative expenses, but does not include the transaction costs of buying and selling portfolio securities.

Inception Date. The date on which the assets of a fund (or one of its share classes) are first invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objective. For funds with a subscription period, the inception date is the day after that period ends. Investment performance is measured from the inception date.

R-Squared. A measure of how much of a fund’s past returns can be explained by the returns from the market in general, as measured by a given index. If a fund’s total returns were precisely synchronized with an index’s returns, its R-squared would be 1.00. If the fund’s returns bore no relationship to the index’s returns, its R-squared would be 0. For this report, R-squared is based on returns over the past 36 months for both the fund and the index.

69


 

Benchmark Information

Target 2035 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter; and for U.S. stocks, the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index through April 22, 2005, and the MSCI US Broad Market Index thereafter. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

Target 2040 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter; and for U.S. stocks, the MSCI US Broad Market Index. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

Target 2045 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter; and for U.S. stocks, the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index through April 22, 2005, and the MSCI US Broad Market Index thereafter. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

Target 2050 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the Select Emerging Markets Index through August 23, 2006, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index through December 31, 2009, and the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index thereafter; and for U.S. stocks, the MSCI US Broad Market Index. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

70


 

Target 2055 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks of developed markets, the MSCI EAFE Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for emerging markets stocks, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index through December 15, 2010, and the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index thereafter; for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index; and for U.S. stocks, the MSCI US Broad Market Index. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

Target 2060 Composite Index: Derived by applying the fund’s target asset allocation to the results of the following benchmarks: for international stocks, the MSCI ACWI ex USA IMI Index; for U.S. stocks, the MSCI US Broad Market Index; and for bonds, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Float Adjusted Index. MSCI international benchmark returns are adjusted for withholding taxes.

71


 

The People Who Govern Your Fund

The trustees of your mutual fund are there to see that the fund is operated and managed in your best interests since, as a shareholder, you are a part owner of the fund. Your fund’s trustees also serve on the board of directors of The Vanguard Group, Inc., which is owned by the Vanguard funds and provides services to them on an at-cost basis.

A majority of Vanguard’s board members are independent, meaning that they have no affiliation with Vanguard or the funds they oversee, apart from the sizable personal investments they have made as private individuals. The independent board members have distinguished backgrounds in business, academia, and public service. Each of the trustees and executive officers oversees 179 Vanguard funds.

The following table provides information for each trustee and executive officer of the fund. More information about the trustees is in the Statement of Additional Information, which can be obtained, without charge, by contacting Vanguard at 800-662-7447, or online at vanguard.com.

InterestedTrustee1 and Delphi Automotive LLP (automotive components);
  Senior Advisor at New Mountain Capital; Trustee of
  The Conference Board.
F. William McNabb III
Born 1957. Trustee Since July 2009. Chairman of the  Amy Gutmann
Board. Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Born 1949. Trustee Since June 2006. Principal
Years: Chairman of the Board of The Vanguard Group, Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President
Inc., and of each of the investment companies served of the University of Pennsylvania; Christopher H.
by The Vanguard Group, since January 2010; Director Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science
of The Vanguard Group since 2008; Chief Executive in the School of Arts and Sciences with secondary
Officer and President of The Vanguard Group and of appointments at the Annenberg School for
each of the investment companies served by The Communication and the Graduate School of Education
Vanguard Group since 2008; Director of Vanguard of the University of Pennsylvania; Member of the
Marketing Corporation; Managing Director of The National Commission on the Humanities and Social
Vanguard Group (1995–2008). Sciences; Trustee of Carnegie Corporation of New
  York and of the National Constitution Center; Chair
  of the U. S. Presidential Commission for the Study
IndependentTrustees of Bioethical Issues.
 
  JoAnn Heffernan Heisen
Emerson U. Fullwood Born 1950. Trustee Since July 1998. Principal
Born 1948. Trustee Since January 2008. Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Corporate
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Executive Vice President and Chief Global Diversity Officer
Chief Staff and Marketing Officer for North America (retired 2008) and Member of the Executive
and Corporate Vice President (retired 2008) of Xerox Committee (1997–2008) of Johnson & Johnson
Corporation (document management products and (pharmaceuticals/medical devices/consumer
services); Executive in Residence and 2010 products); Director of Skytop Lodge Corporation
Distinguished Minett Professor at the Rochester (hotels), the University Medical Center at Princeton,
Institute of Technology; Director of SPX Corporation the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Center
(multi-industry manufacturing), the United Way of for Talent Innovation; Member of the Advisory Board
Rochester, Amerigroup Corporation (managed health of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs
care), the University of Rochester Medical Center,  at Syracuse University.
Monroe Community College Foundation, and North
Carolina A&T University. F. Joseph Loughrey
Born 1949. Trustee Since October 2009. Principal
Rajiv L. Gupta Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President
Born 1945. Trustee Since December 2001.2 and Chief Operating Officer (retired 2009) of Cummins
Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Inc. (industrial machinery); Director of SKF AB
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (retired 2009) (industrial machinery), Hillenbrand, Inc. (specialized
and President (2006–2008) of Rohm and Haas Co. consumer services), the Lumina Foundation for
(chemicals); Director of Tyco International, Ltd.  
(diversified manufacturing and services), Hewlett-  
Packard Co. (electronic computer manufacturing),
 

 


 

Education, and Oxfam America; Chairman of the Executive Officers  
Advisory Council for the College of Arts and Letters    
and Member of the Advisory Board to the Kellogg Glenn Booraem  
Institute for International Studies at the University Born 1967. Controller Since July 2010. Principal
of Notre Dame. Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal
  of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Controller of each of
Mark Loughridge the investment companies served by The Vanguard
Born 1953. Trustee Since March 2012. Principal Group; Assistant Controller of each of the investment
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Senior Vice companies served by The Vanguard Group (2001–2010).
President and Chief Financial Officer at IBM (information    
technology services); Fiduciary Member of IBM’s Thomas J. Higgins  
Retirement Plan Committee. Born 1957. Chief Financial Officer Since September
  2008. Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five
Scott C. Malpass Years: Principal of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Chief
Born 1962. Trustee Since March 2012. Principal Financial Officer of each of the investment companies
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chief served by The Vanguard Group; Treasurer of each of
Investment Officer and Vice President at the University the investment companies served by The Vanguard
of Notre Dame; Assistant Professor of Finance at the Group (1998–2008).  
Mendoza College of Business at Notre Dame; Member    
of the Notre Dame 403(b) Investment Committee; Kathryn J. Hyatt  
Director of TIFF Advisory Services, Inc. (investment Born 1955. Treasurer Since November 2008. Principal
advisor); Member of the Investment Advisory Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal of
Committees of the Financial Industry Regulatory The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Treasurer of each of the
Authority (FINRA) and of Major League Baseball. investment companies served by The Vanguard
  Group; Assistant Treasurer of each of the investment
André F. Perold companies served by The Vanguard Group (1988–2008).
Born 1952. Trustee Since December 2004. Principal    
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: George Heidi Stam  
Gund Professor of Finance and Banking at the Harvard Born 1956. Secretary Since July 2005. Principal
Business School (retired 2011); Chief Investment Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Managing
Officer and Managing Partner of HighVista Strategies Director of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; General Counsel
LLC (private investment firm); Director of Rand of The Vanguard Group; Secretary of The Vanguard
Merchant Bank; Overseer of the Museum of Fine Group and of each of the investment companies
Arts Boston. served by The Vanguard Group; Director and Senior
  Vice President of Vanguard Marketing Corporation.
Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.    
Born 1941. Trustee Since January 1993. Principal    
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, Vanguard Senior ManagementTeam
President, and Chief Executive Officer of NACCO    
Industries, Inc. (forklift trucks/housewares/lignite); Mortimer J. Buckley Michael S. Miller
Director of Goodrich Corporation (industrial products/ Kathleen C. Gubanich James M. Norris
aircraft systems and services) and the National Paul A. Heller Glenn W. Reed
Association of Manufacturers; Chairman of the Board Martha G. King George U. Sauter
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland and of Chris D. McIsaac  
University Hospitals of Cleveland; Advisory Chairman    
of the Board of The Cleveland Museum of Art.    
  Chairman Emeritus and Senior Advisor
Peter F. Volanakis    
Born 1955. Trustee Since July 2009. Principal John J. Brennan  
Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President Chairman, 1996–2009  
and Chief Operating Officer (retired 2010) of Corning Chief Executive Officer and President, 1996–2008  
Incorporated (communications equipment); Director    
of SPX Corporation (multi-industry manufacturing);
Overseer of the Amos Tuck School of Business Founder  
Administration at Dartmouth College; Advisor to the    
Norris Cotton Cancer Center. John C. Bogle  
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 1974–1996  

 

1 Mr. McNabb is considered an “interested person,” as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, because he is an officer of the Vanguard funds.
2 December 2002 for Vanguard Equity Income Fund, Vanguard Growth Equity Fund, the Vanguard Municipal Bond Funds, and the Vanguard State Tax-Exempt Funds.


 

 

P.O. Box 2600
Valley Forge, PA 19482-2600

 

Connect with Vanguard® > vanguard.com

Fund Information > 800-662-7447  
Direct Investor Account Services > 800-662-2739  
Institutional Investor Services > 800-523-1036  
Text Telephone for People  
With Hearing Impairment > 800-749-7273  
 
This material may be used in conjunction  
with the offering of shares of any Vanguard  
fund only if preceded or accompanied by  
the fund’s current prospectus.  
 
All comparative mutual fund data are from Lipper Inc. or  
Morningstar, Inc., unless otherwise noted.  
 
You can obtain a free copy of Vanguard’s proxy voting  
guidelines by visiting vanguard.com/proxyreporting or by  
calling Vanguard at 800-662-2739. The guidelines are  
also available from the SEC’s website, sec.gov. In  
addition, you may obtain a free report on how your fund  
voted the proxies for securities it owned during the 12  
months ended June 30. To get the report, visit either  
vanguard.com/proxyreporting or sec.gov.  
 
You can review and copy information about your fund at  
the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. To  
find out more about this public service, call the SEC at  
202-551-8090. Information about your fund is also  
available on the SEC’s website, and you can receive  
copies of this information, for a fee, by sending a  
request in either of two ways: via e-mail addressed to  
publicinfo@sec.gov or via regular mail addressed to the  
Public Reference Section, Securities and Exchange  
Commission, Washington, DC 20549-1520.  
 
 
  © 2012 The Vanguard Group, Inc.
  All rights reserved.
  Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor.
 
  Q3080B 112012

 


 

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. The Code of Ethics was amended during the reporting period covered by this report to make certain technical, non-material changes.

Item 3: Audit Committee Financial Expert. The following members of the Audit Committee have been determined by the Registrant’s Board of Trustees to be Audit Committee Financial Experts serving on its Audit Committee, and to be independent: Rajiv L. Gupta, Amy Gutmann, JoAnn Heffernan Heisen, F. Joseph Loughrey, Mark Loughridge, Scott C. Malpass, André F. Perold, and Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.


 

Item 4: Principal Accountant Fees and Services.

(a) Audit Fees.

Audit Fees of the Registrant

Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2012: $204,000 Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2011: $206,000

Aggregate Audit Fees of Registered Investment Companies in the Vanguard Group.

Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2012: $4,809,780
Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2011: $3,978,540

(b) Audit-Related Fees.

Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2012: $1,812,565
Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2011: $1,341,750

Includes fees billed in connection with assurance and related services provided to the Registrant, The Vanguard Group, Inc., Vanguard Marketing Corporation, and other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group.

(c) Tax Fees.

Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2012: $490,518
Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2011: $373,830

Includes fees billed in connection with tax compliance, planning and advice services provided to the Registrant, The Vanguard Group, Inc., Vanguard Marketing Corporation, and other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group and related to income and excise taxes.

(d) All Other Fees.

Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2012: $16,000
Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2011: $16,000

Includes fees billed for services related to risk management and privacy matters. Services were provided to the Registrant, The Vanguard Group, Inc., Vanguard Marketing Corporation, and other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group.

(e) (1) Pre-Approval Policies. The policy of the Registrant’s Audit Committee is to consider and, if appropriate, approve before the principal accountant is engaged for such services, all specific audit and non-audit services provided to: (1) the Registrant; (2) The Vanguard Group, Inc.; (3) other entities controlled by The Vanguard Group, Inc. that provide ongoing services to the Registrant; and (4) other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group. In making a determination, the Audit Committee considers whether the services are consistent with maintaining the principal accountant’s independence.

     In the event of a contingency situation in which the principal accountant is needed to provide services in between scheduled Audit Committee meetings, the Chairman of the Audit Committee would be called on to consider and, if appropriate, pre-approve audit or permitted non-audit services in an amount sufficient to complete services through the next Audit Committee meeting, and to determine if such services would be consistent with maintaining the accountant’s independence. At the next scheduled Audit Committee meeting, services and fees would be presented to the Audit Committee for formal consideration, and, if appropriate,


 

approval by the entire Audit Committee. The Audit Committee would again consider whether such services and fees are consistent with maintaining the principal accountant’s independence.

     The Registrant’s Audit Committee is informed at least annually of all audit and non-audit services provided by the principal accountant to the Vanguard complex, whether such services are provided to: (1) the Registrant; (2) The Vanguard Group, Inc.; (3) other entities controlled by The Vanguard Group, Inc. that provide ongoing services to the Registrant; or (4) other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group.

     (2) No percentage of the principal accountant’s fees or services were approved pursuant to the waiver provision of paragraph (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.

(f) For the most recent fiscal year, over 50% of the hours worked under the principal accountant’s engagement were not performed by persons other than full-time, permanent employees of the principal accountant.

(g) Aggregate Non-Audit Fees.

Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2012: $506,518
Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2011: $389,830

Includes fees billed for non-audit services provided to the Registrant, The Vanguard Group, Inc., Vanguard Marketing Corporation, and other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group.

(h) For the most recent fiscal year, the Audit Committee has determined that the provision of all non-audit services was consistent with maintaining the principal accountant’s independence.


 

Item 5: Audit Committee of Listed Registrants.

Not Applicable.

Item 6: Investments.

Not Applicable.

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

Not Applicable.

Item 8: Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies.

Not Applicable.

Item 9: Purchase of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers.

Not Applicable.

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

Not Applicable.

Item 11: Controls and Procedures.

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

     (b) Internal Control Over Financial Reporting. There were no significant changes in Registrant’s Internal Control Over Financial Reporting or in other factors that could significantly affect this control subsequent to the date of the evaluation, including any corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.


 

Item 12: Exhibits.

(a) Code of Ethics.
(b) Certifications.

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.

  VANGUARD CHESTER FUNDS
 
By: /s/ F. WILLIAM MCNABB III*
  F. WILLIAM MCNABB III
  CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
 
Date: November 16, 2012

 

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.

  VANGUARD CHESTER FUNDS
 
By: /s/ F. WILLIAM MCNABB III*
  F. WILLIAM MCNABB III
  CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
 
Date: November 16, 2012

 

  VANGUARD CHESTER FUNDS
 
By: /s/ THOMAS J. HIGGINS*
  THOMAS J. HIGGINS
  CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER
 
Date: November 16, 2012

 

* By: /s/ Heidi Stam

Heidi Stam, pursuant to a Power of Attorney filed on March 27, 2012 see file Number 2-11444, Incorporated by Reference.


 
EX-31 2 cert_302.htm CERTIFICATION 302 cert_302.htm - Generated by SEC Publisher for SEC Filing

 

CERTIFICATIONS

 

I, F. William McNabb III, certify that:

 

1. I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Vanguard Chester Funds;

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

Date: November 16, 2012

/s/ F. William McNabb III

 

F. William McNabb III

 

Chief Executive Officer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

CERTIFICATIONS

 

I, Thomas J. Higgins, certify that:

 

1. I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Vanguard Chester Funds;

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

Date: November 16, 2012

/s/ Thomas J Higgins

 

Thomas J. Higgins

 

Chief Financial Officer

 

EX-32 3 cert_906.htm CERTIFICATION 906 cert_906.htm - Generated by SEC Publisher for SEC Filing

 

 

Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350,

As Adopted Pursuant to

Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

 

 

Name of Issuer: Vanguard Chester Funds

 

            In connection with the Report on Form N-CSR of the above-named issuer that is accompanied by this certification, the undersigned hereby certifies, to his knowledge, that:

 

1.     The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

 

2.     The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer.

 

 

Date: November 16, 2012

/s/ F. William McNabb III

 

F. William McNabb III

 

Chief Executive Officer

 

 

   

 


 

 

 

 

Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350,

As Adopted Pursuant to

Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

 

 

Name of Issuer:  Vanguard Chester Funds

 

            In connection with the Report on Form N-CSR of the above-named issuer that is accompanied by this certification, the undersigned hereby certifies, to his knowledge, that:

 

1. The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

 

2. The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer.

 

 

Date: November 16, 2012

/s/ Thomas J Higgins

 

Thomas J. Higgins

 

Chief Financial Officer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                              

 

EX-99.CODE ETH 4 codeofethics.htm CODE OF ETHICS codeofethics.htm - Generated by SEC Publisher for SEC Filing

 

     

 

the vanguard FUNDS’

CODE OF Ethics

fOR

SENIOR executive and FINANCIAL OFFICERS

I.                   Introduction 

 The Board of Trustees of each registered investment company that is managed, sponsored, and distributed by The Vanguard Group, Inc. (“VGI”) (each a “Vanguard Fund” and collectively the “Vanguard Funds”) has adopted this code of ethics (the “Code”) as required by Section 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.  The Code applies to the individuals in positions listed on Exhibit A (the “Covered Officers”).  All Covered Officers, along with employees of The Vanguard Group, Inc., are subject to separate and distinct obligations from this Code under a Code of Ethics adopted pursuant to Rule 17j-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“17j-1 Code of Ethics”), policies to prevent the misuse of non-public information, and other internal compliance guidelines and policies that may be in effect from time to time.

This Code is designed to promote:

·         Honest and ethical conduct, including the ethical handling of conflicts of interest;

·         Full, fair, accurate, timely, and understandable disclosure in reports and documents that a Vanguard Fund files with, or submits to, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, or in other public communications made by the Vanguard Funds or VGI;

·         Compliance with applicable laws, governmental rules, and regulations;

·         Prompt internal reporting to those identified in the Code of violations of the Code; and

·         Accountability for adherence to the Code.

II.                Actual or Apparent Conflicts of Interest

A.  Covered Officers should conduct all activities in accordance with the following principles:

1.   Shareholders’ interests come first. In the course of fulfilling their duties and responsibilities to Vanguard Fund shareholders, Covered Officers must at all times place the interests of Vanguard Fund shareholders first.  In particular, Covered Officers must avoid serving their own personal interests ahead of the interests of Vanguard Fund shareholders.

 

2.   Conflicts of interest must be avoided.  Covered Officers must avoid any situation involving an actual or potential conflict of interest or possible impropriety with respect to their duties and responsibilities to Vanguard Fund shareholders.

 

 

III.14b.1

 


 

 

 

3.   Compromising situations must be avoided.  Covered Officers must not take advantage of their position of trust and responsibility.  Covered Officers must avoid any situation that might compromise or call into question their exercise of full independent judgment in the best interests of Vanguard Fund shareholders.

 

All activities of Covered Officers should be guided by and adhere to these fiduciary standards regardless of whether the activity is specifically described in this Code.

 

B.  Restricted Activities

 

 

1.   Prohibition on secondary employment.  Covered Officers are prohibited from accepting or serving in any form of secondary employment.  Secondary employment that does not create a potential conflict of interest may be approved by the General Counsel of VGI.

 

2.      Prohibition on service as director or public official.  Unless approved by the General Counsel of VGI, Covered Officers are prohibited from serving on the board of directors of any publicly traded company or in an official capacity for any federal, state, or local government (or governmental agency or instrumentality).

 

3.      Prohibition on misuse of Vanguard time or property.  Covered Officers are prohibited from making use of time, equipment, services, personnel or property of any Vanguard entity for any purposes other than the performance of their duties and responsibilities in connection with the Vanguard Funds or other Vanguard-related entities.

III.             Disclosure and Compliance

A.  Each Covered Officer should be familiar with the disclosure requirements generally applicable to the Vanguard Funds.

 

B.  Each Covered Officer should not knowingly misrepresent, or cause others to misrepresent, facts about the Vanguard Funds to others, including to the Vanguard Funds’ directors and auditors, or to government regulators and self-regulatory organizations.

 

C.  Each Covered Officer should, to the extent appropriate within the Covered Officer’s area of responsibility, consult with other officers and employees of VGI and advisers to a Vanguard Fund with the goal of promoting full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure in the reports and documents the fund files with, or submits to, the SEC and in other public communications made by a Vanguard Fund.

 

D.  It is the responsibility of each Covered Officer to promote compliance with the standards and restrictions imposed by applicable laws, rules, regulations, and the 17j-1 Code of Ethics.

 

 

III.14b.2

 


 

 

   

 

IV.             Reporting and Accountability

 

A.  Each Covered Officer must:

 

1.      Upon adoption or amendment of the Code (or thereafter as applicable, upon becoming a Covered Officer), affirm in writing that he or she has received, read, and understands the Code;

 

2.      Affirm at least annually in writing that he or she has complied with the requirements of the Code;

 

3.      Not retaliate against any other Covered Officer or any employee of VGI for reports of potential violations of the Code that are made in good faith; and

 

4.      Notify the General Counsel of VGI promptly if the Covered Officer knows of any violations of this Code.

 

B.  The Vanguard Funds will use the following procedures in investigating and enforcing this Code:

 

1.      The General Counsel of VGI is responsible for applying this Code to specific situations and has the authority to interpret this Code in any particular situation.  The General Counsel will report on an as-needed basis to the Board of Trustees regarding activities subject to the Code. 

2.      The General Counsel will take all appropriate action to investigate any potential violations of the Code that are reported to him.

 

3.      If, after investigation, the General Counsel believes that no material violation of the Code has occurred, the General Counsel is not required to take any further action.

 

4.      Any matter that the General Counsel believes is a material violation of the Code will be reported to the Chief Compliance Officer and the Board of Trustees of the Vanguard Funds.

 

5.      If the Board of Trustees of the Vanguard Funds concurs that a material violation of the Code has occurred, the Board will consider appropriate action.  Appropriate action may include reassignment, suspension, or dismissal of the applicable Covered Officer(s), or any other sanctions the Board deems appropriate.  Appropriate action may also include review of, and appropriate modifications to, applicable policies and procedures.

 

6.      Any changes to or waiver of this Code will, to the extent required, be disclosed as provided by SEC rules.

 

III.14b.3

   

 


 

 

      

 

Other Policies and Procedures

This Code shall be the sole code of conduct adopted by the Vanguard Funds for purposes of Section 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the rules and forms applicable to registered investment companies thereunder. Insofar as other policies or procedures of the Vanguard Funds, VGI, or other service providers govern or purport to govern the behavior or activities of the Covered Officers, they are superseded by this Code to the extent that they overlap or conflict with the provisions of this Code.

 

VGI’s and the Vanguard Funds’ 17j-1 Code of Ethics, policies to prevent the misuse of non-public information, and other internal compliance guidelines and policies that may be in effect from time to time are separate requirements applying to the Covered Officers and others, and are not part of this Code.

VI.       Amendments

            This Code may not be materially amended except by the approval of a majority vote of the independent trustees of the Vanguard Funds’ Board of Trustees.  Non-material, technical, and administrative revisions of the Code do not have to be approved by the Board of Trustees.   Amendments must be in writing and communicated promptly to the Covered Officers, who shall affirm receipt of the amended Code in accordance with Section IV. A. 1. 

VII.     Confidentiality

            All reports and records prepared or maintained pursuant to this Code shall be considered confidential and shall be maintained and protected accordingly.  Except as otherwise required by law or this Code, such matters shall not be disclosed to anyone other than the Vanguard Funds’ Board of Trustees, VGI’s General Counsel and the Chief Compliance Officer of VGI and the Vanguard Funds.

 

Last Reviewed: March 23, 2012

III.14b.4

      

 


 

 

EXHIBIT A

to the vanguard FUNDS’

 CODE OF Ethics

fOR

SENIOR executive and FINANCIAL OFFICERS

 

Covered Officers:

Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of The Vanguard Group, Inc. and the Vanguard Funds

Managing Director of Strategy and Finance of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Chief Financial Officer of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Controller of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Director of Domestic Finance of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Director of International Finance of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Assistant Controller(s) of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Principal of Internal Audit, The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Chief Financial Officer of the Vanguard Funds

Treasurer of the Vanguard Funds

Controller of the Vanguard Funds

Assistant Treasurer(s) of the Vanguard Funds

Assistant Controller(s) of the Vanguard Funds

 

 

 

 

 

 

III.14b.5

GRAPHIC 5 primecap_59x10x1.jpg begin 644 primecap_59x10x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M,0#5`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`]`HHHH`***HW.KZ=:'$]Y"K?W0V3^0YH`O45GVNLV-W.((I6 M$C#*AXV3=],@9J35+LV5A)*B[I3A(E_O.3@#\S0!`.#GF@!:***`"BBB@`HHHH`***S] M$GEN-,269R[EY`6/?#L!^@H`T****`"BJFI7OV"U\X1^8Q=45,XR6('7\:L[ MT\PQ[EW@9*YYQZXH`=1110`455O-1M+%HEN9@C2L%1<$DGZ"K5`!1110`444 M4`%%96K:K/I\B+'9/(C`9G)(1/K@$_I21#4[V(21ZC9I&>AMXM_ZDX_2@"0Z M%II&(#^X@7^555TR5A^_U.\D/^RRQC_P`= M`I3HM@YS+"TQ_P"FTC2?^A$T`4?$-]9I]B87,)EANXVVAP6`SAOT--NM3@N] M8M$A2>>*W4S,(XF.6/RKV[9)S4U_9VZ7NEV]O!%$#<&0[$"\(I/;W(JSIX$F MI:E.>HE6$>P5`?YL:`&2:C?G!MM'F<'O+*D?Z9-2:9>W%S)[FO;LLQB>;RX@3QM3C(^IS3=)<.^HWSL!').0K$\;$`7/TX- M`&K16;/JJO'"MAMFEN`6C+`A54=7;OC^=9D.HWD,5S-]H:Z1V6"U+*%$DASD MK@?='X]#0!M2:E9Q7B6;SJ+A^D?4_P#UJ?>IJ*)`S$?4L?RH`[-[ZV2^CLFD'VB12ZICL*CU*_%C'&%C::>9MD4 M2]7/]!ZFL.P7SM8L=1?F2[DG=>.1&%`4?ES^-;MQ:/+J-I=*Z@0AU96&-K:#P[I\@-PX".W4(HY);W..GO0!%91'5 M-6BEER9`1F>`/UH`T:***`"J$NDV[3&>W+VLYY+PG&[ZK MT/XBK]%`&C/EO^1X/YBGKJ]F)!'.YMI#T6=2F?H3P?P-7J M:RJZE74,IZ@C(-`&9;RK>Z]+)&P>*UA$88'(WL%U#V]NH3>@ZY)/))QQQU-=/10!R<[;M4N/[6 M$MG:R(BQPJFXR*,_+N7.!G.0/6G:F'O9[(/87D.G1!@HB3YW.,`;1]T8R.?? MI7544`WJ?9K*VG0BU3D1H`?F;'?...PS5*]U62^6ZO$@>=+9F\C MVRWMG+;.S*LJE25ZXJ95"J%4 M8`&`*`,=H1:ZKHT`QMC@EC'OA5_PK9ICQHY4NBL5.5)&<'U%/H`YV*W-WXTN M)SS'9Q*O_`R./T)I#H^K++)+#>PKBZ:>.+YMKY/\9'/3C`XK=@MHK=I6C7#3 M.7P1PK%`VTA1DG@8^\?TKJ,#.<C6D=I=NRN)WS'MW$`DX+$#[S#FNAAFOY9TWVL<$'.XO)N<^F`..N.] M7````!@"EH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`* :***`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`__]D_ ` end GRAPHIC 6 primecap_59x15x1.jpg begin 644 primecap_59x15x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` MD`#F`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`[U)8Y&=4<,4;:P!Z'&]?(D6"2[+OLEV[D\L`9 MP<_>'2HH[/6/+AC\V0"1!YKM+DQLN<`<_P`7RYQZ&@#H*3(W;,X*YI%T[46E21HYU>2.)9&6Y/`#G<,[L_=^O?G MU`.FHK#MM/O8)0Z-*#OE7YYBP"8.S@D]\>]5K2PU*2:%;@W"PY'G#S2N3M;) M^^2>=O3'TH`Z3(W;&*:5)Y'E,<>]=H!8D$>A(]^]`&W17.M;7I8E8 M;O['OX@\_P#>?=QG.[IN[9]ZE,6J!EC"7&/.#F3SE(">7C;US][VQWH`W:*R MM!BNX8I5NUD'(VF1LD\<\;F[^_/H*U:`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`* M***`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BLR752FI&T$*<,H^>7:[`CJJD?,!]<^U/M]9LYH M3(6>/')5XV!QNVC''//I0!H45G6^L6TJCS28W+E,8+`?.5!)`P,D=ZT:`"BB MB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BJ-QJ(@:X1H_GCV;!N^^&X';CG/Y4T MZO;B55!;9AB[,K*5QM_A(SSN%`&A15234K2.1D>7YE.&`4G;TZ\<#D<]*M4` M+168=6Q>M;^7&<2F/`E^?[N[.W'3\:?'K%H;=)97,9,8=AM8A?EW8SC!..<= M:`-"BJ,NK6J0LX9V90?D\MMW`!Y&,@H;&>F10!)15";4 M&2=U2*,QQN(V9Y0A+$`X4$8.`1W%._M6SV[O,?;SSY3]!P3TZ#UZ4`7:*I_V MI9?\]Q]QGZ'HIP>WKVJ!-;MVFV,DB)ALNR-P5;;SQP/6261W)+LX0[LXX^[QT[8-:=4_L M5Q_T%+O_`+YB_P#B*/L5Q_T%+O\`[YB_^(H`&TV-IFF>W MK5;_`(1^SV[A"@CD'^Z/>KD48AA2-*J_8KC_H*7?\`WS%_\11]BN/^@I=_]\Q?_$4`%QIJ3M*1/-&LI!D1-N&( MQSR"1P`.*:VE1&-4669,*R$J1EE8Y(.1_+FLJ.>_?S,ZC/\`++(@^2+HKD#^ M#T%/\R^_Z"5Q_P!\1?\`Q%`&@=%M-Y;YQF59,!N!CM].22/>E_LF$^<#)*1* M&!&1\H9MQQQZ^M9WF7W_`$$KC_OB+_XBCS+[_H)7'_?$7_Q%`'0452T>:6?3 ME>>0R2"212Q`!(#L!T`'0"B@#%GN[R/4K^%)I2MS)Y$7S$^4P522/3AF/X4M MMK<\,5C#N60O%'O,G+,6SSDMD]/0_45T]%'0#FX-4O/MEB\[Q!+F%68A6")D M\<9ZGIGWIJZW>W#)S#`GF)O8@'8"V-K?,?UQWXKIJ*`,749HQJ+I>WXU^>*XNHXQ$PB20KN7!!4#K\V>&.X MA>&5=T;C##.,B@"II=Z]V9PSQ2K&P"RPC"OD`^IZ?6K])2T`%%%%`!1110!1 MOYQ!=61>41QL[!B6P#\AQFL^[UR6.ZEBMS"Z@';D9[`YX;)'/H/K6]10!@76 MLW5LY7-N[AW0Q!2'`"YW?>Z=_H>M:>F74EW;N\@7*N5#)C##UX)^G7M4HLX1 M<^?M8R9)&78@$C&0,X'%3T`4M*_X]'_Z^)__`$:]7:I:5_QZ/_U\3_\`HUZN MT`%%%%`%+2O^/1_^OB?_`-&O5VJ6E?\`'H__`%\3_P#HUZNT`%%%%`'-0=9_ M^OB;_P!&-4M10=9_^OB;_P!&-4M`!1110!?T+_D&#_KM-_Z,:BC0O^08/^NT MW_HQJ*`-&BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`I:5_QZ/\` M]?$__HUZNUDZ?:S20RNE_<1*;B?"(L9`_>MZJ3^M6?L5Q_T%+O\`[YB_^(H` MNT52^Q7'_04N_P#OF+_XBC[%#K/_P!?$W_HQJEIUAI)F@D=KZZ!,\P. M!'SB1AG[G?K5G^Q!_P!!"[_*/_XB@"I15O\`L0?]!"[_`"C_`/B*/[$'_00N M_P`H_P#XB@"30O\`D&#_`*[3?^C&HI=$3RM/\O<6VSS+N;&3B5N3BB@#0HHH MH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"N>-U1^-=#12 M`YRVUF[2&-!$)2L(.&.7;]WNW?>SC/'3\>U(NJSK?7#+/#[8,`9XW M$=S7244P,*36;AY+HVK6S10!F!VEM^-O&0?<\UIV4\LIG2;87ADV;D4@'Y0> MA)]?6K5%`%+2O^/1_P#KXG_]&O5VJ6E?\>C_`/7Q/_Z->KM`!1110!2TK_CT M?_KXG_\`1KU=JEI7_'H__7Q/_P"C7J[0`4444`4M*_X]'_Z^)_\`T:]7:I:5 M_P`>C_\`7Q/_`.C7J[0`4444`4M*_P"/1_\`KXG_`/1KT4:5_P`>C_\`7Q/_ M`.C7HH`NT444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`%+2O\`CT?_ M`*^)_P#T:]7:R=/M9I(972_N(E-Q/A$6,@?O6]5)_6K/V*X_Z"EW_P!\Q?\` MQ%`%VBJ7V*X_Z"EW_P!\Q?\`Q%'V*X_Z"EW_`-\Q?_$4`&E?\>C_`/7Q/_Z- M>KM8^F6<[6KD:C=+^_F&`L7_`#U;GE._6K?V*X_Z"EW_`-\Q?_$4`7:*I?8K MC_H*7?\`WS%_\11]BN/^@I=_]\Q?_$4`&E?\>C_]?$__`*->KM8^F6<[6KD: MC=+^_F&`L7_/5N>4[]:M_8KC_H*7?_?,7_Q%`%VBJ7V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]B MN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`10`:5_P`>C_\`7Q/_`.C7HINC*5L64L7(GF!9L9/[UN3C MBB@"_1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`%'5FVVR'SQ#^\'+.4#?[)86V%QN^< MKD9;/;/`/X5:\/RR36;M+([G*BC2O\`CT?_`*^)_P#T:]%`%VBBB@`HHHH`****`"BB MB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`I:5_QZ/_`-?$_P#Z->KM4%TYXRXAU"ZC1G9] MBB,@%F+'&4)ZDT[[%I7:J69B-L1Y8DG^#U)I M_P!BN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`10!=HJE]BN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`11]BN/^@I=_\`?,7_ M`,10`:5_QZ/_`-?$_P#Z->KM9\6F20H5CU*[52S,1MB/+$D_P>I-/^Q7'_04 MN_\`OF+_`.(H`NT52^Q7'_04N_\`OF+_`.(H^Q7'_04N_P#OF+_XB@`TK_CT B?_KXG_\`1KT5-:6PM(!$KO)\S,6?&268L>@`ZD]J*`/_V3\_ ` end GRAPHIC 7 primecap_59x16x1.jpg begin 644 primecap_59x16x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M8@'?`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`]`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB M@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****` M"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@"O)<%[.66T7S73>JJ>,LI(( M_,&LE-9N/[,,@,,MR"3MVE=JCJ67.1Z=>XJ]I\23Z?-%(NY'GG!'_;5Z5-&L M%@:%K<2*W5I"6;\SS0`VWOII+Q5<1^3(\B*`#N!0XR3GG.#V]*@?5+A`SE(B MKB3RA@@J5<+\QSSG.>U7#IML&=HP\3,",QN1MSC.T=!G':E_LZTW2$Q9\P$, M"Q(P3DX&>,GGB@"C)J5VC31`0&2W5W=MIPX4*<`9X/S= MC_\`7Q/_`.C7J[5+2O\`CT?_`*^)_P#T:]6W=8T+NP55&2S'``H`=158W]F$ M#F[@"GHWF#!_6G&\M@[H;B$.@RREQE1ZGTH`GHJN;ZT$:R&ZA$;'"MY@P3Z` MU/0`M%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!11 M10`44TLJ]2!]33?.C_OK^=`$E%1-<1*,[P?I5:?4%C4L2L:_WG.*`+U%8CZQ M;_Q7\`]O,44Q-5M6^[?19_ZZ@4`;U%9<5TSJ'CFWKZALBK"7A_C7/N*`+E%5 M&O?[J?F:$O.?G7CU%`%NBFHZN,J0:=0`4444`%%%%`!12$@#).*B:YB7^+/T MH`FHJM]L3/W6QZU.K*XRIR*`'44G3K5>6[5>$^8^O:@"P3CK4;7$2_Q`_3FJ M,DKR'YCGVIE`%W[9'Z-^5.CN4=MO(/;-9WFQ_P!]?SI5=6^ZP/T-`&O15*"Z MVC;)DCL:)+MCP@VCU[T`6GD2,98XJNUY\WRIQ[FJ4TR1H9)I`JCJS&J!U93. M(HX2Q/3>P1F^@/\`7%`&\MXG\2L/I3'O#_`OXFLK[=C[]KIGF/_`)%:K-UG[,^(!.V,B,X^ M8]NO%4_#[;])1]RMNEE.Y.A_>-R/:M*@#'>"=;)0\$K;Y3-<`;26QS@`$]2` M/IUHN89WNE==/+I&7;RRT81R1PP[Y/?/'7VK8HH`P)+&\W>;%9[>)=-"DK-O`Z[5)_D*`-BBL4^(K<@F-)FYVX$$AYZXZ>E,/B`$KB"X( M.>1`W'K0!NT5@'Q+:HP621D8C.&A?./RJ)M8#Z MFN:>?6F=9@"@F]@P>A#KS4+ZO&WW6GDSTV1M@_CC%!L;4&A M[QB/D7!]3S0!;9@HRQ`'O5:6[[1C\35.>=44R3R!5'5F.`*S3JC7)9-/A,A' M`ED!"9].F3^GUH`U6=G.68FFUEK!JD\7[VY\ER#Q&!@>@Z$\^M#Z+'/&%N)9 M)2`,EW8Y.>>_Y8Q0!<>_LXWV/=0AO3>.*M1R%2&1NOIT-4?[,M"Z,T2L4.5R MHX'I5;^S9K:1I;6XD4;23&@&"WH%/`H`V9)GD^\>/0=*S[K5+6V;87,DO011 M#4`&.UBR`VWYY!GMTP/QH33%>0M<-<7"L6&V9QM7TX'K6F`!T%%`&>NE6RQ M,HL[?+(.N3\WU]*9-I:JH-DHMI%;*21]<8YW9ZC/:M.B@#,CU40RB"]^5B,K M*JG:_P"'4&@ZHUP66T51CN_+'KT00@N!Z`#A/J.:TE@C4@X)(.06)8@XQU/M4E% M`%9+"VB+-%'Y;,I4E&()!_K[]:=#9V\(;9$/G(+%B6)QTR34]%`$VB?\@[_M MO-_Z-:M"L_1/^0=_VWF_]&M6A0`4444`%%%%`$,UU;V^//GBBSTWN%S^=4VU M_2E8C[;&Q5=QV9;`_"H9[*U6\DE%M")"V2^P9R>IS2@`=`!]*`)EUW2F!QJ% MOQZN!_.H7UU)5']GVTMUG^,CRT_,]?P!I:*`(6GU>7_EO:P>RQ%_U)'\JB:W MOY7)FU24H3]R-%48_4U;HH`J0:;:6[^8D0:0]7",XJW10!EK%J\$>5FAN",?*_?UP<#]FDQ-(LMR\D\H4C+.<`^H]#]*OA0"2``3R?>EHH`* M***`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@";1/^0=_P!MYO\`T:U: M%9^B?\@[_MO-_P"C6K0H`****`"BBB@#(6VU"Z:24SP0@R.JHUNQ.T,0#G>, MY`!Z=Z=_9U__`,_MM_X#-_\`%UJTE`&((I6("ZM8$EMH`A/)]/\`6=:%BE9E M5=6L"6.%`A/)]!^\J=M(9Y-[SKN8_,5CQE]"`/[.O_P#G]MO_``&;_P"+J*6SU&.2!5N('$CE686S?(-I.3\_ MJ`/QK:HH`RO[.O\`_G]MO_`9O_BZCDMKF)U234K-&;[H:`@GZ?O*V:I7]B;W M:K2*L>"&79DD]CG/;^=`%%(9I&54U2Q8MRH6$G/T_>>QJ2.RO)4#QW]JZ-R& M6W)!_P#(E']B%I'9[HCS"&?8FTY`8#&2<<-[UH65O]DM4@W[PG&<8[^E`%'^ MSK__`)_;;_P&;_XNHK6SU&>UAEDN((G=`S1M;-E21G!^?M6U10!D/8WD:%WO M[5549+-;D`#_`+^5%Y4O'_$VL.5W?ZD]/7_6=*V)T:2%T1E5B,!F7<`?7'>L MQ]%W;,3A=C*_^KSEQGD\]#GD?K0`R.WN)FVQ:G9.<9PL!/'_`'\]ZE_LZ_\` M^?VV_P#`9O\`XNI;'36LYRXGW*V2R@$!F..<9([=A6A0!BK9ZB;J2(W$`145 MA)]F;#$E@1]_M@?G4O\`9U__`,_MM_X#-_\`%UJT4`8CPS1LROJMBK)RP:$@ MCZ_O/,]/^6E7+G3GGN3/YR`J08P8\[>F<\\YQ^@JH M/#Y5(E2[(\D$(=I!YSG.",]?;\:`)AI]\1D7MM_X#-_\745Q9ZC#&&2X@D)= M%VBV;@%@"?O]@<_A6PB[45NVW)Q_Y$I9-$+NS"X`!#*!Y?16+$]^OS=?:M&W@\ MGS"6W-(Y8G&/8#\``*`*']G7_P#S^VW_`(#-_P#%U%;V>HS1EGN((R'==IMF MY`8@'[_<#/XUM44`97]G7_\`S^VW_@,W_P`74`CE8@#5K`DG:,0GD^G^LZUM MUE2:,TQ8R7"Y?(4S9(0#_:UA@@D'R>PZG_6>QJ_?V)O=JM(JQX(9=F23V.<]OYU4;0V= MG9KE29"&;]UQD`@8YXZ_I0`L=E>2('CO[5U/1EMR0?\`R)3O[.O_`/G]MO\` MP&;_`.+J[96QM+<1&0R-N9BQ&,DDD_SJQ0!BVMGJ,]K#+)<01.Z!FC:V;*DC M.#\_:GO8WD:%WO[5549+-;D`#_OY6O4O^LZ4];6Z:0QKJ-F9`,E1`94BZ,%W#SAM8-QLYW%=N>?YN5P<+MPHFZD MB-Q`$5%82?9FPQ)8$??[8'YUM44`97]G7_\`S^VW_@,W_P`74+PS1LROJMBK M)RP:$@CZ_O/W(&?^_E,$$Y;:-4L2=VS'DG[WI_K.M:5[;-=0B)75`3\V5W9'<= M1C-5HM*\MLF4'#*5^3&`K$XZ]>>M`$$5K=3`F+4;.0*<';`3@_\`?RI/[.O_ M`/G]MO\`P&;_`.+JY9VS6XD+NKN[9)5-O'88R>`*LT`4='BDAL/+F'SB:7)V M[<_O&.0/0]:O444`8MNWV._GDDB`C+NSR&!@RCC'S=&SZ"J[VTQ\[RX)1+ME M\]MA'F`N"H!_B^7.,=.E=%10!S4UL2)2MI+Y#"06R"(C8Y"X.W'R\AL$XQ^- M=&F0B[NN.:=10`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!111 M0`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%` K!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110!__V3\_ ` end GRAPHIC 8 primecap_59x17x1.jpg begin 644 primecap_59x17x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M90'?`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`]`HJE_9=O_STN_\`P,E_^*H_LNW_`.>EW_X&2_\`Q5`%&YU> M>)Y0C6[JK,%X.3@@'OVR<_0]*M:?>RW,[H[0LH7(,8]\>IZ]?Q'6I/[+M_\` MGI=_^!DO_P`51_9=O_STN_\`P,E_^*H0%VBJ7]EV_P#STN__``,E_P#BJ/[+ MM_\`GI=_^!DO_P`50!=HJE_9=O\`\]+O_P`#)?\`XJC^R[?_`)Z7?_@9+_\` M%4`4;G5YXGE"-;NJLP7@Y."`>_;)S]#TJUIM_+=W$T>)Y0C6[JK,%X.3@@'OVR<_0]*M:;?R74TLEW_`.!DO_Q5']EV_P#STN__``,E_P#BJ`+M%4O[+M_^>EW_`.!DO_Q5']EV M_P#STN__``,E_P#BJ`*-SJ\\3RA&MW568+PE7-/NYK MJ20.8V1`.44C)R?<]@#^-._LNW_YZ7?_`(&2_P#Q5']EV_\`STN__`R7_P"* MH`NT52_LNW_YZ7?_`(&2_P#Q5']EV_\`STN__`R7_P"*H`NT52_LNW_YZ7?_ M`(&2_P#Q5']EV_\`STN__`R7_P"*H`HW.KSQ/*$:W=59@O!R<$`]^V3GZ'I4 M^F:C+=W,L3^60F<%!C.,<]3US_\`KJ?^R[?_`)Z7?_@9+_\`%4?V7;_\]+O_ M`,#)?_BJ$!=HJE_9=O\`\]+O_P`#)?\`XJC^R[?_`)Z7?_@9+_\`%4`7:*I? MV7;_`//2[_\``R7_`.*H_LNW_P">EW_X&2__`!5`%&YU>>)Y0C6[JK,%X.3@ M@'OVR<_0]*L:=J$UU=212"(JH)#)WP0,]3U_SFIO[+M_^>EW_P"!DO\`\51_ M9=O_`,]+O_P,E_\`BJ$!=HJE_9=O_P`]+O\`\#)?_BJ/[+M_^>EW_P"!DO\` M\50!=HJE_9=O_P`]+O\`\#)?_BJ/[+M_^>EW_P"!DO\`\50!5.I3F[:*-H&7 MS"BG!R2"!CKVSS]#4VGWTMU-LD\O_5AL*#D'"GGGOD_E4G]EV_\`STN__`R7 M_P"*H_LNW_YZ7?\`X&2__%4("[15+^R[?_GI=_\`@9+_`/%4?V7;_P#/2[_\ M#)?_`(J@"[15+^R[?_GI=_\`@9+_`/%4?V7;_P#/2[_\#)?_`(J@"J=2G-VT M4;0,OF%%.#DD$#'7MGGZ&K=C6V\Q#)DC#AL*?7H:HJ\*QM&]Q#*'N/.+E7!`P.G M!YXQ]*JWO_'[M:N2LO^/VW_ M`.NB_P`ZVM3U":T=U@"2,L1?9M)(.<`G!Z?AV/-`&G161=:K+'.ZQJBQJ@(D M=3C/?T]A]@ZBJT6H3RQR$JB,M MPL>UE(.PE1G'KS0!IU4NK]+698FBE8L!M*XP><8Y-)#*0VUCL!!`/(ZCKTJ@9X= MJ@33+M?<"L>"!C&.&_SZ5#>_\?MQ_P!=&_G4-`&SIE[;6_\`HZ&=S))D%U7J M?7!]:U9+B&$XEFC0@9^9@.,XS^=I M!SP1Z?K0!>>[MD)#W$2D#)RX&!ZU+6(84,CLTS;74*5$>./ES_%W"X_&M>"= M)]VT$;?6@!9ID@C,DAPH(&<$]?I4?VVWPQ\S(67RCA3PWI^M4[O5+4^;;R)- MP2I*@=C]:JQWEA$KK&MR%:02$<'Y@0>Y]J`-F">.XCWQ$EH]_Y4`:5%8MS]H: M99*SS&0$3<+V&!CKC^O-`&Y16=IAAMH!"T]ON+#"QR`CH!Q]<9_&G:@]U'(I MA:01E?FV1[B#N7GH>Q-#`OT5C7,VH;-\)E!$:Y7RNKD'('RD\$#\ZV!TH`AO M#*+9S`2)!@C`R>M52UV48+),&:?:A\L?*@.#GCV)'U%9%W=7"WDZK<2@"1@` M'/'-1?;+K_GYF_[[-`'2V1E:WW3EBQ9B-P`(7/&<`=L5%?7S6CA1#O#+D'<> MNX#&`">]8EK=7#7"`W$I&V<8QQ0!:HHHH`****`"BBB@ M`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HJ"\E>&V>2/;N7'WAQC/-9QU2;R'<-!N60+M[D>G7J/ M\B@#8HJGIETUY9K*^-V<'`P.GU/KZTS4+R6UD4*8@C+G1QAJ'H! M?HK(N-4FB5'`CVLB-TR02&R.H[KBM:@!:***`"BBB@`HHHH`Y>[NKA;R=5N) M0!(P`#GCFHOMEU_S\S?]]FB]_P"/VX_ZZ-_.H:`+5O_\?MQ_UT;^=0UH3:3J'2=3BE#[+0X[>>W_`,15G[)J?_/&T_\``AO_ M`(B@!*NZ=_RT_#^M4_LFI_\`/&T_\"&_^(J:V34X-W^C6C;L?\O+#_VG0!C7 MO_'[NI'"+8P MY/KBLC^T[[_GRM_\`P);_`.(J6"\U"?=M ML[48];EO_C=`&3=W5PMY.JW$H`D8`!SQS47VRZ_Y^9O^^S5J;2=3EGDDV6@W ML6QY[<9/^Y4?]BZG_=M/^_S?_$4`):W5PUPH:XE(YX+GTK0\Z7_GH_\`WT:J M0Z3J<4H?9:'';SV_^(JS]DU/_GC:?^!#?_$4`.\Z7_GH_P#WT:N6#L_F;F+8 MQU.?6J/V34_^>-I_X$-_\14ULFIP;O\`1K1MV/\`EY8?^TZ`-2BL=]3U-'9? M[)#;21E9F(/T^2H6UZ\5"[:=&%#;23<'&?3[G6@#>J*68121(58^:VT$=!P3 MS^59$.L:A>W&3_N5'_8NI_W;3_O M\W_Q%`$-I_Q\I^/\JTJKPZ3J<4H?9:'';SV_^(JS]DU/_GC:?^!#?_$4`)5W M3O\`EI^']:I_9-3_`.>-I_X$-_\`$5-;)J<&[_1K1MV/^7EA_P"TZ`-2BBB@ M`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`" MBBB@`HHHH`****`.2O?^/VX_ZZ-_.H:UKG1[B2>656CPS%@,G/7Z5G+;2LC, M0%`B\[D]1@?X_3@T`+:?\?*?C_*M*L_3T\V5Y%9"(OO?,"?3M]:T*8@J[IW_ M`"T_#^M4JNZ=_P`M/P_K2&$^GVI8R&U:1F.3M?'\R*R6L7^SREK66.3SFV@` MMA=N5'&0><#/UKI**`,JUTR-8&.PB8.P5F)'&XXX^E-NX6M(#+(5V@@<''4X M[X%:]036EO/S)$I;(.X<-Q[CF@#'EF6*;RR"S;`_RD'@X]_?Z5K6D#0;]Q!S MCI1]AM^,HQPNT`NV`/IGVJS0`4444`%%%%`!1110`R1&<861D]UQ_4&JLEB[ M1/&LJA7DWME,Y'<=1UJ[10!7M+*.1@SQHS+T)4$BH190`C"N,+L M&)&X'H.?:K-%`%(Z?#%%)]GC(=O5R>XSU/M5.:-X`ID4@,0H(YY/TZ5LU6DL MTDD1_,E&Q]^W?D$_0Y_2@#*>5(X4EF_]0W_`,C_`/V-'_">_P#4-_\`(_\`]C110`?\)[_U#?\` MR/\`_8T?\)[_`-0W_P`C_P#V-%%`!_PGO_4-_P#(_P#]C1_PGO\`U#?_`"/_ M`/8T44`'_">_]0W_`,C_`/V-'_">_P#4-_\`(_\`]C110`?\)[_U#?\`R/\` M_8T?\)[_`-0W_P`C_P#V-%%`!_PGO_4-_P#(_P#]C1_PGO\`U#?_`"/_`/8T M44`'_">_]0W_`,C_`/V-'_">_P#4-_\`(_\`]C110`?\)[_U#?\`R/\`_8T? M\)[_`-0W_P`C_P#V-%%`!_PGO_4-_P#(_P#]C1_PGO\`U#?_`"/_`/8T44`' M_">_]0W_`,C_`/V-'_">_P#4-_\`(_\`]C110`?\)[_U#?\`R/\`_8T?\)[_ M`-0W_P`C_P#V-%%`!_PGO_4-_P#(_P#]C1_PGO\`U#?_`"/_`/8T44`'_">_ M]0W_`,C_`/V-'_">_P#4-_\`(_\`]C110`?\)[_U#?\`R/\`_8T?\)[_`-0W M_P`C_P#V-%%`!_PGO_4-_P#(_P#]C1_PGO\`U#?_`"/_`/8T44`'_">_]0W_ M`,C_`/V-'_">_P#4-_\`(_\`]C110`?\)[_U#?\`R/\`_8T?\)[_`-0W_P`C M_P#V-%%`!_PGO_4-_P#(_P#]C1_PGO\`U#?_`"/_`/8T44`'_">_]0W_`,C_ M`/V-'_">_P#4-_\`(_\`]C110`?\)[_U#?\`R/\`_8T?\)[_`-0W_P`C_P#V M-%%`!_PGO_4-_P#(_P#]C1_PGO\`U#?_`"/_`/8T44`'_">_]0W_`,C_`/V- M'_">_P#4-_\`(_\`]C110`?\)[_U#?\`R/\`_8T?\)[_`-0W_P`C_P#V-%%` M!_PGO_4-_P#(_P#]C1_PGO\`U#?_`"/_`/8T44`'_">_]0W_`,C_`/V-'_"> M_P#4-_\`(_\`]C110`?\)[_U#?\`R/\`_8T?\)[_`-0W_P`C_P#V-%%`!_PG MO_4-_P#(_P#]C1_PGO\`U#?_`"/_`/8T44`'_">_]0W_`,C_`/V-'_">_P#4 --_\`(_\`]C110!__V3\_ ` end GRAPHIC 9 primecap_59x1x1.jpg begin 644 primecap_59x1x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M.P#%`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`]`HHI&8*I9B``,DGM0`M<_JWB9+&\%O;PBX9,F8[MH7'4#U( M[U3O?%T,YDM[??"F[!N,C(7N57U]/SKG;J6'4;_;Q;6L,96-68!L#)R<]23S M^/XT`=[;:Q:RE$FW6TKC*I-QN_W6Z-^!K0)`&2<"N7M;+7/[+@'F6UU$\8)M M[M,E?;/?\:Q=9;4+2(6>WS$J/;I0!Z'17,>'=4D@M4@O'S M$K>7N8_-`V2`CY[>A_"NGH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****` M"BBB@`HHHH`*KZ@TB6$[12+$ZQDAV7(7CKBH-7N)H8(4MF*RS3+&&`!P.2># M[*:YK6M:O9O#\9?[/&MU&#N1SN?^\H7''US_`#H`YVSW2JX92XP9'7Y1N`.3 M\S=._3Z<]K.A:9'JU]/"1L!B9D()PC9X!_6J\]SOTRVA945XU8`@9)4L3R<\ M'.>PX^M06H59@\LAC3!&]8P^#],B@#6@TLPJ&+E8]^QLL`%;^Z3@[3Z'!!SV MIFLVL"7%M9P1RQ7#-B19E08SC&&0#(Z\UJ6>NV<.F&SM;6*`[@]/:@#^`3\WN/_K&M31]:^RLEO=,?L[`&-V.?+!Z]R.5QZ9]/Y?3FNE!R,CI0`M%%%`!1110`4444`%%%% M`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110!E:[.EK'9W4AQ'#O'^->AWNG6UY!*DD$99U(WE`2"1C.?6O,;BTECO)8)>)( MFPP<8R?\]Z`)[JW*06TTB[(Y(PVW?DXR!G\><#VS5CPW:W-]()`-X4>8N[=@9Z$CN#G\!5[P[?KHMS-(ZB19%V\,(J294C^XW8,,GY?<=*P]-MGN=3AM5=5+/MW,- MP_+N*ZZ[\5PS6DT20%6=&4$MP,C&>G;.:Y?3#]@U&"Z8H_EMN*Y(_I_G-`'0 M7/AU[-$:]NIKFT0'+1C!@/9L%(Z#\_Y4`2Z);WVL6`LK@[+%'RQVC('4(I]?Y?H.QCBCBA6&-`L:KM"]@*( M(8[>%(84"1H,*HZ"I*`.'E+:+XF'S,(5DR,GC8W^&3^5:_BEF1 M4^T8W`?X&Y_PE.F?WI?\`OBK-IKEE=K,T M)D(A7>^4[5C:+87;ZG<:@\/V>)@^$SR<]L50\.7,-L+XSRJFZ`A=QQN/H/>B M[!T:;3Y>ECK;'5;34!*;:0L(@"Y*D8SGU^E54\2Z6TFSSV'^T4(%(+98-&TXP1*B,H,A48RVT8SZ_Q47)C0A9)[N_X!XCU>UOX(?LYN-)L#$"ZB$$C@X...#UYQ]*R-7%J=!TU[<1[P-KE>N<@SWHJ6BJ.%ZA65<^'-*N[AYY[7 M?*YRS>8XR?P-:M%`&+_PBFB?\^7_`)%?_&C_`(131/\`GR_\BO\`XUM44`8O M_"*:)_SY?^17_P`:/^$4T3_GR_\`(K_XUM44`4]/TNRTP.+*`1>9C=\Q./Q/%,_P"$;TG_`)]/_(C_`.-:M%*Q?M9_S,H3Z/87$,,, MT!>.`$1@NWR@_C["N?U"XMUU5+34[3;9P`K$WS%B.W.>177TC*&&&`(]Q0T5 M"JX[Z_,X:Q4-XA0Z-YH@#KDG.-O?/MUZUU+Z%ICSF9K1"[')Y./RSBM`*%&% M``]J6A(=2NY--:&?#HNG0)(D=L`DHPZEF8'TX)IJ:#I:*ZK:+AQ@Y8G\LGC\ M*TJ*=C/VD^[,K_A&])_Y]/\`R(_^-7FLX'M!:O&&A"A=K$G@=.>M3T46!SD] MV98\/:6(C']FRI;=]]LY^N:OV\$=M`D,(*QH,*"2<#\:EHH%* GRAPHIC 10 primecap_59x1x2.jpg begin 644 primecap_59x1x2.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@! M,`'X`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`Z@32_P#/5_\`OHT&:7_GJ_\`WT:8*#6-S4<9Y?\`GJ__`'T: M432_\]7_`.^C41ZTX47`F$LG_/1_^^C2^;)_ST;\Z8*6F!DZY<7<4L317,R* M01A7(YJOI&HW3WVV6[E9",`,Y/-:>JPK-8R9'*#<#Z$5S,;&(!AU]10!V7FR M?\]'_,T[S9/^>C?G4,3;XU;U`-2"F(?YLG]]OSH\R3_GHWYTV@4@'B23^^WY MTOF/_?;\Z8*6@!WF/_?;\Z/,?^^WYTTT4`/$C_WV_.LG79KF$Q213S(#D':Y M`K4%5]1B6:QE!7<0I(]C0"W&:3=RSV*EY69@2"2W-7?,?^^WYUS^A2A;AHR< M!EX'O6[0F#1()'_OM^='F/\`WV_.F"BF(>9'_OM^=)YC_P!]OSIF:44`/\Q_ M[[?G0'?^^WYTVE%`#M[_`-YOSHWO_>;\Z0T4@%WO_>;\Z-[_`-YOSI**`%WO M_>;\Z4._]X_G3:*`,C7YKJ$+)'<2HIX`5R.?PJIX=OKJ2]>.>YED#+G#N3CZ M9J[KZ;[93S\O)XK$T0JNJ1/(.IPO/0U">I=M!OB"YU*RU215O;E8W^=`)6`P M>W6LQ=5U)B3_`&A=X_Z[-_C7;:QI<>IVVQCL=>4?'(]OI7#7=I+IUPUO,5+# MG(.1S6J9G85M5U(=-1N_^_S?XTU=6U,_\Q&[_P"_[?XU6D8'BC<`.M4(G;5] M3!_Y"-W_`-_V_P`:3^V-3_Z"-W_W_;_&JA.6)II.30!>&KZGC_D(W?\`W_;_ M`!J6'5=2.6;4+O`_Z;-_C5%8P!\_3U%.D;:=HZ#I[T`:46L:@K!VO[G@\*96 M(KI-(U2>]M=SSN9%)!&X_A7"[CU[^M;7AE@;UBS[0J]SC)I@==Y\W_/5_P#O MHT>?-_SUD_[Z--I*@H<9YO\`GM)_WT:/M$W_`#VD_P"^C3#24`2BXF_YZO\` M]]&E\^;_`)ZO_P!]&H:<*EE$AGF_YZO_`-]&FF>;_GM)_P!]&FTAH3"P[[1- M_P`]I/\`OHT?:)O^>TG_`'T:8:2J$2_:)O\`GK)_WT:0W$W_`#VD_P"^C3** MD8OVB?\`Y[2?]]&D^T3_`//:3_OHTTBFXI#L2?:)_P#GM)_WT:0W,_\`SVD_ M[Z-,I#1<+#_M,_\`SWD_[[-1M=7`/^OE_P"^S2&F,*8#H+FY-];J;B4J95!& M\X(S13+8?Z=;_P#75?YT5<3.1HBE-%+BLS08:44AZTX4`/'2E%(.E.%,0V1! M(C(W1A@UR-Q"T-R86ZJ?SKL*P=>BV722@<.N"?<4`7=(N?.A,;'+1XZ^E:0K MG=!E"7#!^LO&?>NCH$Q**6DH`44M(*=0`E%%%`A12D`C!Z4@IPH`Y>8?9-5; M8-JJ^0/:ND4AE##D$9%9.OQ;7BG`[%3_`$JUI$OFV2@GYD.#213V+PHI<4N* M9(TB@4IHI@**=2"EI`!I*6B@`I<4"B@!#28IU)0!1UB/S-/<#J"#7-66%OX6 MSA5<#7'2A@_HHK MLHG5X496W`@GB#(^8XI@EQT44%V M;[QQ["K$.,<2'YL_2F,RC[J#\:7D#@`#WI#QSC-,!N7([XI5`V_,<^@I"_O2 M`%SZ4"%;&>/RI\9PP)'TI/+&7+$0?XA77@@@$<@UQTL)@NVC;JAQ71Z/<>?:8[H M=M`,OTE+24"`4X4VG"@!#1110(44X4T4\4`5=2B,UA,@&3MR/PYK+T.<1W#1 M-_'P/J*W37-3HUEJ7(X#;Q[C-)E(Z8"C%-BD62-77HPR*?3)$(I*<:2@`%.I M!2T`)1110`HI:04M``124M%`#2`>",BN/ODVW4V!CD\>E=>U<[KT:+2(8^92.1FL;P_.5GEA)^5AD"M>>39&[XR M54D#UIK8'N<1=UC)8@)W-5LJO'3W%/NYWFF9F+D9_84`!3;U&:3DIB';L]!BCDGD]>U"\KCN*4?-] M10`^-$+KO;:,C-=_;[/(C$9RFT8Q7GP//:NET'58([<6\S%6W<,>AH!'0TTT M*Z,2%8$CK@TIJ2A***2@!PHI`:6I90E-(I](10!'2BE(I*8A:0TM(:0QIHHI M*0Q#333C330`ML/]-@_ZZ+_.BG6W_'W!_P!=%_G16D2)%L4HI!2UF6--`H:D M%`$BT\5&M2"F(.]+244`<]K4)CO#(!@2#.?>I=!G\E_*8C$G\ZNZS#YM@Q`R M4(-8,,F+J+D@`@G%`'8TE"D$`@Y!HH$)3A244`!H%!H%`APIPZ4T4X4`!ZUB M:_"WR7`Z`;3[<\5MM56_@-S:/&.IY&:&-$&C3^;:^61S'QGVK1%<_HL_E7)B M/23C\16^*$##-&:#13$.%+313A2`2BBB@!:6DI:`"BBBF`QJRM;@62U\TG#1 M]..N:U6JK=Q>?;O%G&X<'WJ7L-;G)P2&VNHY`"2#R/45T+'-8$JF.5O5#BMB MWE\ZW23C)'-$"Y&)X@@@C$;*@1SGH,`UA%N<(#7<2P+"`: MN6=H;J9(C,(R>F[UJ@,UL^'+2.[O2TA;]T`P`[G-`#I++4]/G+1AS@??3D5+ M:>(YX?DND$F#][H:ZNJESIMI=`B6%^!@U M?7Q%9YPRR+^&:5AIFS15[*9IZA]_?MSG]X<"G; MN+F['10ZI:"]M$CE$KR3H@"]LL.315#1O#[PZE;33R@E)58*GJ"**J-NA,K] M3I0:7-1J>*=FLS0#29I33UN`PW+.!E9>?Q[T`C8TB8S6*ENJG%7:P]$G\MQ"3PPX M^M;9-`"T4T&G4""BDHH$.%/%1BG@T`*:2@FDS0!SMY&;'4=R''\:^U=#$V^- M7QC<`:RM?ARDF_9588XV\QC@+CDFA2N*4;,U;,YB7!^\H-2. MI(YZ^U/DLFL%AB8\[/F]CUQ^M&,CK2N,H2VMOO,C@DMU&>`:BETL-S!)UZ*W M^-7+A,H13+%FW%F.`HP/K57)Y3(*>62&ZCBM#0KO['?!FX1_E:IKRUAD97), M9Z9`ZU2DM9822J%P.C#I5)ID--'>`A@"#D&EK+T*^^TV2I+A9DXV]"1ZUITF MBDP--(IU(:0%:>SM[C_70HY]2.:SI_#MK(24=X_8<@5L&B@#EW\,W`8[)HV' M;.15=]`U%%)5%;V5Z["ES1=A9'%G3]71.(Y<>S4\6>L.HW)-@?[5=C12YA\I MR!TS568,PD)]W'^-`T*_9@2%&>[-76FFFG<+&`GAP\%YQ[@+5E-!M`P+%W'H M3Q6K332`KQ6-K`V8H$4^H'-6*3-*#2*)+;_CZA_WU_G11;?\?4/^^/YT54") ME72KQ;NT5AG*_*<^HJ]NKF=%W)?LL.[RF7XDT9-`$ MRFI`:K!J>&-`$^:`:BW4!J`)@:HZW$9+(,/X&!_"K.ZE.'0JPR",&F(YRRD\ MN]63'"&NI5@RAAT(R*Y$'RB^.H)%=%I\FZRB]0,4ALNYIP-0[J4/0(E-)FF% MZ;OH"Q*#3@:@#TH>@+$^:,U'OI-]`6"[A6YMGC;C/(/H:QM#E,=V(\\,#FMO M=D5SETAM;YPG&""M)C78ZDFDS4,YU6.&Y M6T4(P?Y7?/0GC%94Z,DGEG@BIM-TPJ5N+@?-U"^E6=5CW%)\=5VGZBHFNI<' MT%MIQ+&`3EUX-2FLZTG\E@&P%?KGM6@:J+YHBM9C'J'(BE6?:"R9PQ[>]3-5 M6XY`!SMYS[UFUJ;-^Z5[NZ,K9)SN.<^]-4G@U4NLL%;&W!X%6HVW1AAZ5:,A ML_W"14=I@EB1D9S3F)(HMP%W%CQGIZTQ#[J4"!RW`XQ]:A64[8R#3[IMMM(" M!M88JE$6A"Y.4_E2`U+2-8]01U8H=W/?BNC-[9,A0"*T5E##*L#]#26H/0NB3FGE^*HJYS3]YJK"N6P]/#\U2WFG"0T6"Y= M+T;ZJ"0TAEHL%RYYE`DJAYU'GTK#*NIPA;D%0-K\_C5K3)P':+VS4%V?-13_ M`'345DY1R_3-0]&5T-TR4"3WJ@9_>FFY`[U5@-$R^]1F7!ZU0-T/6F-]4-70-%'*!R&VD^U- M%Q[T]95E5XSCYE(&?7'%#6@UN.TJ;-N5)Y!_2KOF5B63^5(<]QBKOGCUH6PG MN7_,I1)5#SQZTX3CUIV$7?,H\RJ?G#UI#-[T6`N^93A)5`3>].$P]:5AE[S* M-V>^/.]5;67R6WG[K<&N>+Y6;M`<'Y<5%;N3" M-O;M6A>0^7<,-^0O'IFLQ!Y4[#H">*+B18<$M_.FJ%CVL_/)`&>M2%LJ32DH M!'D;F8X`_K33$ROJ,A6T;Y#@G%4[5Q+$$;J*OW.7C*MT.?I61"K)<%1U4T^@ MMF:`/D/@_=/Z5+'G:YZTEH[#>J)K? M5)86"S`L.^>M;$%U%<\1/EO[O>LM!#=)N*!OZ5$;&2-]\+$$=*=Q\MMC=+%# MA@0?>E5\]ZQ8]2N86`NU,H'`#?XU=@FBN8V=)TB/41MU_.G<6C+QD`I#(,52 M;SP,LIP?:D4R&E>M-*L>U1,AHN.Q.)<\&F@D;5'<\U"`:G7&5 M/\ZF0$LK%6(-0,YI[L9$#D=R*A84-E)"ES32YIM%38 M12B4^M0&@&J(+/F'UI1,P.035<&EI@:$V3(LN.)`&&/IS^M1LY5B":6W9I+8 MKG/E$MCT!_\`KC]:CF7Y0P/L:B.CL4]202GUI1(?6JRFI`:T(L3B0^M#2GUJ M'.*EB@:8,S,(XU&6=N`*3&"RDG%33SQV&UKE@SD9$0.3^/I6=-J<,2&*Q7?, M3_KBO\A5>*)Y)#)&.:`+J,C$J^-K#'-9LD>P M[",>M65;(I9RLL(W?ZQ3P?45C474T@^A##*2/+;&5'!]:F3,%[#([87*GCTK M,+E)2<#(]:U+G]Y#`Q`SL!)'?TJ'+0JVH:M%&DJGT!9CGDDUS]^?*F5^H/IZ M5U-XHEME"KN:10[$>@%M4(B(\M]N?O"FRKY15_7BDN-YF0Q(7P>0`3BI&B9U*LK#VQ2L*X^-LMD M=JZ#39C-9H6SD<JA8*&!&2<176?9% M*@XZBL+3?#UQV>(;@;HE.0#T/XUH07-M=;?*.QB.5<_P`C M4\H212CJ&4]C63>7'1 MCA0:J23:AJ+`.Y6(\[0,**NY#+]Q>6=D%VG[3-UVC[H_QK.N)KS4W+S,4C[* M.`/PJS!IL4+[S\S58>/(P*!&?#"L(PN2?4U**D$1S3UMR:12(@:4U86T)I3: MXI7&5@,U(J4X0D&I52K1#8B(*E"TJI4@2@$R,"ES@\T_RS2%#4,M%2Z@*`OC MY6Y!JU;CS--C)SN1MGU'7^M.1!(K12$;2#@GL:;9Y!EMG!P!O^A%<\E;0U3O MJ6896:P**H+AO+'K@\BLB<',\2N<$*> MI[YI,A9",9?K]:L0R0!I/F`+CL:EC)9>%*GV']*8N6E`,1=B>N,DU-Y3C)7* M8/(;C%`@7>?E++S[\T#>N0S#\Z1UD=L8`8#.<]:@DN,'9(-KJ._<4P)L.3^\ MB#`=\9HAF1)PP`#CCCBFI.&C!#I]Z=Q6+\-XLO!X-2,W%9' ME2)+N3YD//O3H+EEDV@Y'3%5<5BZS$&A9#FHQ(L@RII0*8BTCTYSQ4$9Q4AZ M4`-+4F>*0BD%`Q=Q%('-!Z5&3S2`G$G%0RR<4F>*KSOP:=@N/LIMVIVH_P"F MR?\`H0HJGI[_`/$XLQZSI_Z$**:(9SU;5JZSV$>T$-%\C9[]P?\`/I6-BM'2 MGP)X23\ZY50.X_\`K9I2V'%ZG3:-=+Y2PA>3D_>_I5^5@*Y/[2UL5GC^]$1P M>X/6M/\`M:*:`2!L9'(]*<7H*2U+LT@`JFTHSUK/N-47/!S5.3421A13$D:4 MEP`>M1_:5]:R6N9'IH=Z11KR212+AP#5![9"?W9_`U#N<]:?'NWCFD,FADOK M-<0NV/3J#5V/7(SA;FV*G'WHS_2GP=*<]K#)RR#/K3:$F()8V!E0Y7/RG%.> M"66+S4&X`?-ZU$EN(5**3M)SBG76^2W\N)B&7!!'%9-:V-$^I&8I5(WQNN?4 M8J1$;=C!SZ5!#J.J6\V[>TA_VAFE35]1629MN6?OLZ4*`W,THDXJ7RV/13S[ M5CQ:MJ(A*!,]2 M.-5X.YJJ26^J3-NDN'Y]6J$Z?(&)DD!!INX(MRI:0>7YMXGS]?+&[%,6_P!. MA:;CY=Y`!-5ULHU[DT[R8\CY02*FQIJ/DU6\G!B@18$/7RQS^=6[#SC9 MND[EC&=ZDG)P<`C^50)P*M6CJ)MC_=D&P^V:36@EHQDD43.KE`6'?%6%QCBF M$%?,0C)!(_*EC.11!Z"D28I=O%*!4@7(JV01)%DU82+VI8TJRB5FS1$(CQVI M&C]JM[*:4J1E!HZ;MP:MNE0E>:M,A@BU,%J-!4HJA(-HJ-EJ6F-4,M$++4D` M\R9'P2ZC:RC^)32)$\K[4'N3V`JV9H;"WST9AUQR??Z5$DNHTV-\FWL9MS.) M)7XQG@`^WK69J*2>>^[)RQY]:K32M-)@$ER<@G^=6[IF:"!CN8A,$XQR*B.Y M;1B2XBN3DW>H;^,[58=CGZ4]"68`CC'Y59!)%,5E9T?8Q&,> MV*47!QLD[=#5.YFC20_*AMB4.!ZCC\*>\<01T-: M3*#$P..>3GU-5F3=((I`,`=?:@1+'.&C7;39;?,OFQG#$9*GO5$J]JV5.8\_ ME5Z&;S64`]A1L/B"8>6" M#WJD["MQ*?01'(.11!@%V8\'-++TJ$L<*B]S6,C5`PVN5]*4&DG4HPYR"*CW5) M1?B<8J;?Q6?')BIA**WBS&2+#-5>09I#+3&D%4V$8C645$5P:D+TQF%2:ZH< MHXIP)!R.HIJ,,4N:?0SUN7YSN\N8<&1=Y^N2#4:G#'C%-A)>U<=?+8$>P/7^ ME/XP#WSBL8Z.QH]43+4RBH`:LIR*T9D21CFK*"JR<&K"&H9:)0.*0B@&@GBI M*('%1%>:L-43"FA,8%`-/Q4>>:=FK)'TP(78*O4TA?%2&06Z]C*XZ?W142=B MEJ2(8U0QC[HYD<]*QM0NHY)3)\VW_:-7KR5(K58F),CG-6XP>:@N=P8..0."?2H]-;$9C)SM;BI[D,;9U7!WI^M-NXPZ'`ZCK3`L1D-$,\YXJC=(T-QO MSE'.:?92E@J'@CJ#5J=%>)@1D#I[B@"".7D!>M;MO=+.NT\..OO7,Q[H)BKY MP.03WK0LYC'(&(Z?K51=A-7-=CS2;JC$@<;ATI-U:&9(6II:F;J,TACJ@FZ& MIL\5#+TJD2RG9#_B;V?_`%W3_P!"%%26@_XFMI_UW3_T(44,2.8#8I"<]3^% M-I0*0S4TQ]UM+'_=8.![HQLR)-^!'IZ4S2Y`EXJD$^8"G'N,5;NED% MO*FW+`8((YK/:1HM8F?:2^5(.,@\&MV%01D*"*IJ:T+A@\B2KT=%Y]\<_J#6!!*[,YQ&@RQ_I4BR-/=*SX"YR>,`#WIC, M;:`1+GS&Y<]2/:HHC_H=Q(YVACL'J>]83=W8VBK*Y3U&:,RNXY!/!/>F*ACC M`'4\FHG.^98EZ=6]>*?(6;)SA?4T#*=TK32I`KC-QZBAZ`BO=LP*EQ\O3\*8KA3DAK/C`WE"Y!%"U$R MV'7?[&FRH'//)J-8B>%HH&260,=YL!^5AWK1/7)'3I65O(D60= M_M0P*%N^;F9.@#9%6I?F4X__5520A-1`7C,YK2C?>F3 MU[U<7?0B2%W*7-1R'(I@,LCG5;3_KNG_H0HIMB?^)K: M?]=T_P#0A10Q'+TO:E"C%!QBI`52000>1Z5OO(7E6>/*I*-X[D'O^N:YXD]! M6S:.LFF(J$EXCM?/N21C]:F9<#)E#+*ZL>AYQ5_2;FW@+B8,"WW6SP/K5;44 M"7.X9PPS^-5E.3DCCTJD2SL$VE`RNK*>A!I>UDS6E-W M1E46I,TG%1B6HV(Q4.[FFTB4V7!/3C/QUJCFEW>]*R*NRPT]*DV>]5&/O2Q- M\W6FD2VR]O)J6V3S9QG[J_,Q]`*J@U>M#Y-K)*<$O\B@_J:*XT M=;*UNQ:25P!@#:..])>*E.S*:N9R>:"#GD5827+8<8J%E<'@C:>F:0B0G&?PQ5,E$\B$OE:TXI-\* MG'..163#(5.UOPK2M'#6XXY7BD,AOAY;0OCY]V#^-3K@CG@5#J"%[;S,_<.1 M3XB644`1R9:1\]Q3+%F5!%W!Y%228\Q0*@A)CNY">_(H$7IT!CSW0YJK,&N+ M9U`R>H^M70NZ+']X8YJL6"-M`P#TI@4[*;Y=A^\#BM*!MF*S6U[>:044@!FSQ^@K0T:0[IX2V`Z;@,=2/_K9K M..*LZ=,D%]%++G8K?-@9XI/8:W+FHQDVH.>5.3S66.E;UU&I$R-RI^Z?;M6# MTI0V*FM10HFP#QWYJ.UD62S9"?FC.\>X.`?Z42,`@.,&G#W96(DKJXC]*ASS3B^14# M/AJT9FB8T5'OXI0]2,<:1.&I&:D5^:I":+J]*T9V,,$=NN"RC+D#N>U9UJ#- M/'&O5C5F\G\R61T4*.>G?ZUG6>EBJ2UN+IN?/GE`RX4A1Z?YS6?=,%1BQR?T M%7;`^7ITLBY\QR!Q[_Y%9M_A(6).3BL4:LGM6'V6(D9RH(%5-1G:GHY#,C=145L0!M)^[4DBY`;HV>U0]RD,FCR%QTYJ#S3@<9]"*T#!+'A MI4P``N*H6C%59<88$BF(FGPI4<$DX MJM-D7<3=LD58G4*@8\G-5KTXB!7/!%"!FE&Q?GT'Z5'+PS9'*\@TD#CRU7UY MITG^M&[H1BF(I7O[R!'`)"G&:KVTFQB,X!Z5H2@;'BQV-98Y`QU%,1JQ[74A MN0W&*3[-"'P8U./:J]O+TYJX3N7/<4X/6PIK2Y(+:W//E+GZ4TV\&<^4N?I2 MK)@4QI.:V,BU8!?[3M<*!^^3M[BBHM/DSJEH/^FR?^A"BDQG+49I*6D`4444 M`;T:DS18=Q:OV[845GYJ>*3%- M(&S2WU%,6QKS7);^ M-?LZ28.[I6=NQ6M(#*LJ@;@%]:S1;DTXQN*4K#=]/5Z<+8U(ML:V4&9.:(BV M:8U5R$^T*.3Z4N#5\6OM3A:CTH]F'M3-\MC3EA;-:8MAZ4\6P M]*KV8O:$&GC;.JMG:_R'\:LLO+QN,X)`^HIRP;2"."*?=C$L6S1I3ES710*'%1F$D]*U/+\SY\8W`,]* MTHT2+3YV?/+``#N>:QKV1FC..!TKDJ_%8Z:?PW-"W_;-9.HC$7S=3V]*A;ELO1*%10>@4"J&H-NE5/YU.RL5)B7/<\FUSSM)Y(J2)HW=$#`L_`Q446DLY\RX<[CR0*O1VJ1'Y%`]ZW]A?< MQ]M8S-1-W'.8Y3@$8&.A`_\`U5GX8_>SQ6]?V4EPADCP77^$]ZPG9\D9Q[46 MMH*]]31@8R0AFQD<''Z&I8AMG4@\5E6\QAE#$D@\,/:M4'##&#CH?6LI*S-8 MNZ+:CDD]!5)7`N)>.]7">0JU7GVK./=>:0Q)\M&68],5%(@< M`"F<&+VIH3#3GW0AFY(X%6;D_NQC^]6?IS$AD'&&-:4AS"WTXI]1=!CX4J^> MO%9K@1W,@Z`\BM!,O%ZXJG>@%XY!]#0@(N8WR.AZ5?A?.!UJHP$B''44Z"2@ M"VWRGCI43,:F`#CWIK1UTQ]Y7.>7NNP[3,_VM9_]=T_]"%%2:9'C5+0_]-D_ M]"%%*2L"=SF*6DHJ2A:***`+.G.4OH@.CG8?QXK2FC$D#1NV%`W9QTQS6*IP MP//![5T$S),XD3(689Y]^M9RWN:1VL<_2TKKM=E_NG'--K0S)(VP0.U6A$QJ MFH)/%;UM`7@1F')%7%7);L9ZP&I5@-:0MQZ5(+<>E:,Y'XD9JYBC:K@HPRK#!J)KFC8J#L[E# M3V\Q60D<=*M^6*R[8_9K[8YQABIS6S44G>-BZJL[D?EBC8*DHK4R(]@H\NI* M*`*]^@%I'EL#.S8QT!`_6M[5E/EPL3\NW`'6_#-7;8CRG!.=I_6J>HY:,M_DU"W+ M>Q?!)55QSBJ-\`LZX/.,$U=1_P!V"!R0*I7R;9U.Y_2A@9ZJ%X;^'BM+3(@5>3UXJ@XQ(Q:MG30! M9+CU-715YD57:`XQTW94QI*[3C(P@P020".UIK!]#ESUYQ5N"\*QJC@D+T(_E59EVGI29(Z<5DUJUHQ, M3QV[GUIO<2V(X6P-H'M45P,VY&.0>GI4L(V2," M7-]>:9"0),=,5/<`&/?W!S1U`L0O\RGM5WRPP!'0UEQ-Q6M:N'A'JO%;T7K8 MQK+2Y)81XU&V/_35/YBBIK(?Z?;_`/75?YBBKJ;F<-CB*2G2(4PD,MB%(SY+$#CL>GZYK(J_I+GS9(LD;UX'N.?\`&IEL5'<;J*!+ ME2$VAAG.?O'O5,\'%:.IH6B23T.,5G'K1'8);CXG*2*V`<'.#776P\Z!),8W M#.*Y6S:,741G&8PW(KM(]I12F-N.,5M`QF1B.G".I**T)&B,4X(*6EH``HI0 M!24M`&;J:;)UDZAA_*DTR38Y)Z.<5;U!0UFYQDCFLJ-BLD84XV\US3]V=SHA M[T;'04E(I#*"#D$4M=%SG%HI*6F`4M)10`M%&:*`%HI**0&;JZ*D\YS_`/JJ]:R"6W1@<\8/UJ/4$\RR<`9*D,*KZ5*/GC)[Y%8+W9V-W[T+FC14 M4ES!%GS)D3'J:SY=?M%7]V))&]`,"MG-(Q46S5HZ=>*Y^37;B5<00A3ZGFH7 M75=2`WEMO3KM%3S]BN3N;>KJ1Y;L?DV@*,]:YN\M@!$X/0')JI?DM&?:K-JU4;\$2QL3P1P*NP@>4C'[H7@>M4M0+&2,GISS1U&5I3AXCW MW<5K[>K'H/UK)N,>2I]",5J(S/#&>Y7)HZ!U*\V-^3W%;-E@6<8''']:R)@" M1GH*U+=@+9`/2M:'Q,RK?"2L:0-49:D#5V'*3YI'"O&R,H8,,$&H]]&^DU?0 M:=M3G;K2KA9&V1G;U&#FJ#QF)BLBD'T-=<9*YK4R6OI2>.:QE%(UC)LMZ<0; M;"#'S59E7,#(G)(_.L[2V(:09XP#6H`<%F]./:N=[FZV*B-L3C[V/RJ.W)YS MG.>E.BV@$GJ3P*CMV_>.3ZFD,1TQ>(6ZD&KT;`8'?M5&93]HC;IS5Y,9R>U, M2(AN^T/D8YJ215,F,]1@XJ,N6N7]>*D<8*GUH`S'^6;WSBKJ`,FTU4N1LF8> MAS4]NV1SWIL2(X6YQGH>:T["3YV4]^:S)0$N"!T/-6;9PDJGMFJ@[23%)7C8 MW;+_`(_[?_KJO\Q13+$_\3"V_P"NJ_S%%;U-SGI['*7\7EW#8)8'G)ZU4KN.M8A&#@UFU9V-+WU$S12\49H`*GL95AO8I'.%#MX2"XACEQ]]QLGI5S3[Q+:8N\`E..,]JT3L9M7.P!R`:6L&?Q!-\I2W15^N:A_M MZ[\XL8EV_P!W%7SD\ATN:,US<>OW2@AH58GVZ4]?$%P(B/LZ[O6CG0(E& M[-GSV^;BJPN1=;I0NPLW*^E95&I&M--&[92%[92W4<5/FL<:@;&$$Q^8N1D9 MQB@^(X_.&+(F/_>YJHST(E#4V,TF:Q1XAD\QMMFN.W7BF'6]09658%7G((0U M7/Y"Y#>S1SZ5SG]HZG)'M5"#ZA*1QJ]RHRTB@?A1SOL'(NYTA8*P4L`?0FHF MO+5"1)5"6_WCBGQ:%:)][<_U-6H].M8Q@1`_6BTNX7B4TUJXGO(2D(2$L`P4 M9..],D1HY&BR5;D9Z5L(B(,*H`]A5+5$8.L^,J0%SZ&LJD;:FE.5]#.30IW? M=+(.>2V+-3U*Y'XT=`ZDDJ9"YZ@\U:CD"QJ/:JKK\F?4U&\I5MOI6M#XF95O MA1>:44WS1ZU0:8TWSC75]9]_&9G#Q MC+=Z57)I=V`>_!XJ9:HJ.C(--!2Z*D8^4YK5&3P>G?WK'LY=ET"W\7%;"\+S MZ?E7-+JZ@W8^E M4IV^=".@(JXA)%`$;D?:CCT&?>GR%CANU1,H6[/.20*?*_"@=,T`5+L8E.>X MS3;=\D4^[R61CTQBH(CAL>]/H+J6;@#"OT.%E[@9_&H8VR.M` M&_IK;KZT(_YZI_,457T5LWMJ/2=?_0A16\G=)F$59M#V&^-EZ9%8]SI=P7=P M%(Z\5NK97H_Y<[C_`+]-_A4@L[P#/V2?_OV:N2B]62F]CC&4HQ4@@CUI*V=1 MT?499FE6RN6R<8$+?X53_L;4_P#H'7G_`'X;_"LC0I4N,U=_L?4_^@;>?]^& M_P`*/['U3_H&WG_?AO\`"@"W8.C:=Y8_UD;DGC^$_P#UZJ:DK!T8$D$8Y[5= MTS3=2AE=7T^Z"NI&3"V`1R.WMC\:EO-,OWMMJV-T2#NP(F_PK/:1IO$P0M2@ MA1GH:L?V1JG_`$#;O_OPW^%)_8^J$\Z=>?\`?AO\*T,S7TFUB-L)F`=F]>U: M'EQYSL7\JHZ-;:A&A@EL+I0.06A8#^5:GV.Z_P"?:;_O@UHGH0[D/EQ_W%_* MD\J+&/+7\JL?8[K_`)]IO^^#1]CNO^?:;_O@T!J5F@A(P8U_*D%O#G_5K^56 M_L=U_P`^TW_?!I/L=U_S[3?]\&DQE<6\.?\`5K^55KV%(U1HU"C.#BM,6=U_ MS[R_]\&FSV-P\+`VTIXR!L/6DU=6&G9F5;.'N/G`*].:TO)B)SY:_E6>EA?* MO_'E<9/_`$R;_"M>*VN3$I-O,#@9!0U%-]"JG7_O@T?9KC_GWE_[X-;&1$!["EJ7[-X!^QSD+QQ&QS^E7Y+.Y;I;S?\`?!J*3TLRJJUNBBSTP/S5EM/N MC_R[3?\`?LTW^SKO_GUF_P"_9K6Z,K,9?1E;I@3G`&3^%8UX0&P.PKH]3M;Q MYP%M9F55`RL9()[UC7>FWY;Y+&Z/TB;_``KB2=SM;(;`G*\_P&I+K"QL3C/\ MJDL=.U!&7=8W(QGK"W^%23:9>E"?L=P?0")O\*+:AN M>:FMK"^6%OE-_A4ECIE^D;JUG<`ESR8F']*=@N$K$J<=A^54IL M^5AN0#IFK4;$#C_P#52/I5^64"PNNO)\EO\*LQZ=?*!_H-S_WZ;_"E8=RB MP/VHY[@8J28@1@=\U*=.U%KHM]@NL`8!\EO\*?+IE^T?%C_DM_A22!LM:& FQ_M6U'K,G_H0HJ32=.OX]4M'>RN459D+,T3``;ASTHJUL0]S_]D_ ` end GRAPHIC 11 primecap_59x3x1.jpg begin 644 primecap_59x3x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M'@`L`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`]`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`*I:M$TMD=@D+JZD!">>1Z=:NT (4`%%%%`'_]D_ ` end GRAPHIC 12 primecap_59x40x1.jpg begin 644 primecap_59x40x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M.P"Z`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`]`HHJ&ZN$M+:2XESLC4L<=:`)20H)8@`HHN+9K M_4))Y)XX[J21=DGFF/9US@XZ``=_3K0!Z';ZA;SR>5N,*4;7_`"/7ZC(J MRTB*ZHSJ&;.T$\GZ5SMU;W@A*?VE87L(/`O`!M_$=3[\5S5S<7']IAGNT=8` M-LD;EQ$-PSLRW)_$T`>DT5FZ9J:W.V&5U,K+N21?NS+ZKZ'U7J*TJ`"BBB@` MHHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`*R/%+F/0+IA*\?`'RXRV3C' MXYI=>>;RO+@=T9899\HV"2JX`_-@?PKEO%%Y<3PV\#W:3JRB0JB8*DC^+WY_ M^L.*`,EB\=MM+O$5`(C8D*V5`R`!C."#SCCUS5C2X+&>QO3)+&;[*&D:W>7805./DX.<,".1 M^(H`W[73XH!%*V'BE`,3R2/$KCT#`_*?9LY[&LD72R:S->11*R1C>L-RV_>H MP",L3DXY_"M"\\417T&VYA=D//V9/E4D=-S9R1GL`*QM*M8[RZ:*:Z%L&4E7 M;[I/H3D8[_E0!T2K"R_:=/.VWD<%HB=I@D[<_P`/LW3L>,8WM*U3[2?LUQ\M MRO'*[=^.O'8CN/Q&16-HT5K<13V-LT,=U`6P=PD6:,]5;'WAV]1P>#D4ODK= M2?8Y7>VO8L""5C\V1T1CWQ_"W<9[Y%`'645DZ3J'^ M?\!?N;RVM-OVB>.+=TWMC-`TF]$3T5'%-%-")8G5XSR&4Y!IEO>6UT6%O.DI M7[VTYQ0%F3T444""BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBH9[JWM@#<3QQ9Z;V`S^=`TK[$U M%0K=6[%`LT9,@R@W#YA[5-0#5C!U^[\EHI8HW+8>%BR,J*K8&2V,8R%KBM3N M_/GA<2&1DC526.>1U&.P'0?GWKTR]MEO+.:VM<[+-;3%3+<3N5/\`$`>IYZ^YS_G-7]-UTZ9"\-K.RH[;\-$IP2,? MT%`%SQ)HL.F6_F)GRY)1B4LQ9?E/RD9P0<=>HQWIGA#3K?5/MHN@66/9M`.. MN[/-5=3UW^U;=8;J9S&K;P%0#G!_H2/U]JKVFHII\,\=G=3Q><`&8("3C/3T MZGH:`-Z^EM/#DZK`J22(^]"GW\'JCGT()P>O'3O5*ZU6Z\07T$4,*Q$'Y?+^ M_P"N-Q^F_6NDT/1H]*@RQ$ERX M^>3'Z#V_SZ4`3:;IRV0>5R)+F7_62H/;\_YT:/-VB1Q#<,$1P."I8$`GVX_*K.KR7,.I+:7$L\&GK MA%\L$`IC]:@]!PC)NW74V]-\0)J$)W@8AU9!G<"N.*KZ=^()[1G9M,E-NK[1*7V[O?&*?>>($@TVWOH8/-CF8K@OM*G\CZ M&N7/G7\=PMW+=27B`-%$02.OS<=N/I1/>1/H%O9Y(FBF+,I'8Y_QI7*^KPTT MZZG1P^)@T$EQ-9R10*OR/G.]_P"Z#C'K^58VN:O+J=A"7LG@3S-R.6R&X((Z M"KU];/>^$K,VP\PP@,RKR>A!K-O;Y+GP[:P!&5[>0*V1QT.*&.E"%^:*Z_<= M'I>GQ2V5C<,S!EC1L#U`_P#K#\JV:H:&ROHUH5(($8''J*OU2.&HVY.X4444 MS,****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`Q_$%A>WL47V*;;L)+1[MN[TYK- MU"PUG5Q#'/:6]NL?\08?T)X]JZJBE8VA6<4DDM"&S@%K:0VX;=Y:!<^N!4U% 3%,R;N[A1110(****`"BBB@#_V3\_ ` end GRAPHIC 13 primecap_59x8x1.jpg begin 644 primecap_59x8x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` MN`#=`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`Z>YOS;S.AA)"Q[U;*A;2XF!S--N;<'?(RX.,@\8[#IB@"/\` MM=/M1@\M1\V`2^,#N3QQQR/6K<][:6[A)[F&)B,@/(%)'KS3+BPCN&W,SJ0` M%QCY<'/&1W_H*L1H(HDC7.U`%&?04Q"HZR(KHP96&0P.01ZTM5-)_P"019?] M<$_]!%6Z0PHHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`JLVH6R.RM)C9G)*G;P M,D9Q@GVJS68UA<_;!*C1JB.TB#<2"Q!'(QQUYY_#F@"[#=13([(S83[P92I' M&>A&:9]OM_($VYQ&<8)C89SZ#&345M;3Q^>76,>2>.<8X[_7-7Z8@HHHI#"BBB@`HHHH`****`*FD_\`((LO^N"?^@BK=5-) M_P"019?]<$_]!%6Z`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`*S+S_CY?\/Y5IUF7 MG_'R_P"'\J`(:***`"BBB@`HHHH`LV'^O;_=_J*T*S[#_7M_N_U%:%`!1110 M!7U"5X;*62-MK@<'&>>GGNAA61_G5=QVA2`V!COV[8YK:=%D0 MHZAE88*L,@U']CM=JK]FAVJVY1L&`?4>]`$JG?\?+_A_*M.LR\_X^7_#^5`$-%%%`!1110`4444`6 M;#_7M_N_U%:%9]A_KV_W?ZBM"@`HHHH`**1F"J68@*!DD]!47VRUV*_VF':Q MVJ=XP3Z#WH`FHHHH`J:3_P`@BR_ZX)_Z"*MU4TG_`)!%E_UP3_T$5;H`**** M`$8A5+,0`.23VJ+[9:B+S#,9^M.N4,EM*@&2R$`9QVK+6&]"1L8Y M6,1_=AC&6`VX.0"`1^.:`-5I8U56:10K$!23P2>F*0W$(=D,T89<;AN&1GIF MJ"V?\`'R_X?RK3K,O/^/E_P_E0!#1110`4 M444`%%%%`%FP_P!>W^[_`%%:%9]A_KV_W?ZBM"@`HHHH`JZE#)<6,L47WSC' M3GG..>*SI+2[?SF,!?S4DC&[8&&X+AFQQV/3G&*VZ*`$4;5`)R0,9J&>RM;E MP\]M#*P&`SQACCTYJ>BF(J:3_P`@BR_ZX)_Z"*MU4TG_`)!%E_UP3_T$5;I# M(KLE;29E)!$;$$=N*YK[7<_\_$O_`'V:Z2\_X\I_^N;?RKE:`)OM=S_S\2_] M]FC[7<_\_$O_`'V:AHH`F^UW/_/Q+_WV:/M=S_S\2_\`?9J&B@";[7<_\_$O M_?9H^UW/_/Q+_P!]FH:*`.ETMVDT^)G8LQSDDY/4U;JGI'_(-B_'^9JY0`5F M7G_'R_X?RK3K,O/^/E_P_E0!#1110`4444`%%%%`%FP_U[?[O]16A6?8?Z]O M]W^HK0H`****`"BHYY5@A:1\X4=!U/L*S!J5V8-Q2%9$65W!!(PC8P.>OO\` MI0!KT4BG?\>4__`%S;^5P*(`JY)PI*YSU!QU'MTJW10`4444"*FD_\`((LO^N"? M^@BK=5-)_P"019?]<$_]!%6Z!D-Y_P`>4_\`US;^5TCG<,[3`@8^29T'Y*13$1Z3_P`@BR_ZX)_Z"*MU4TG_ M`)!%E_UP3_T$5;I#(;S_`(\I_P#KFW\JY6NJO/\`CRG_`.N;?RKE:`"BBB@` MHHHH`****`.DTC_D&Q?C_,UW^[_45H5GV'^O;_`'?ZBM"@`HHHH`** M**`"BBB@"II/_((LO^N"?^@BK=5-)_Y!%E_UP3_T$5;H`AO/^/*?_KFW\JY6 MNJO/^/*?_KFW\JY6@`HHHH`****`"BBB@#I-(_Y!L7X_S-7*IZ1_R#8OQ_F: MN4`%9EY_Q\O^'\JTZS+S_CY?\/Y4`0T444`%%%%`!1110!9L/]>W^[_45H5G MV'^O;_=_J*T*`"BBB@`JC?WH..H]J`)5.Y0WJ,U#/=QP.%=9B2,_)"[C\U!J>BF(S-.O8X-.M8I M(KI7CA16'V60X(`!_AJQ_:,'_/.Z_P#`67_XFK='2D,S[F_BDM946.Z+,A`' MV67KC_=K`V3?\^MU_P"`[_X5U4-S!.2(9XY"!D['!P/PISS11MM>5%/'!8#K M0!R>R;_GUNO_``'?_"C9-_SZW7_@._\`A77`A@"I!!Y!'>EH`Y#9-_SZW7_@ M._\`A1LF_P"?6Z_\!W_PKJ3=VP"$W$0$G"?./F[<>M34`G7D<%E'')%=*XSD?99#W/^S5G^T8/^>=U_X"R_ M_$U95U8D*P)7J`>E.H`J?VC!_P`\[K_P%E_^)JCG^[ M6PS*BEF(50,DDX`%,BGAGSY,LM`&-Y_\`TPNO M_`:3_P")H\__`*877_@-)_\`$UO44`9%I=I'*2\-T!MQ_P`>LG_Q-7/[1@_Y MYW7_`("R_P#Q-6Z*`*G]HP?\\[K_`,!9?_B:G@G2="R"0`''SQLA_)@*DHH` M****`"BBB@`I'&48#J12T4`8J6-Y%'!CS'*PHC`,JLN"-R@C'7U]NM->RO78 MOL?^'9ND!90&8@$YZ@$5N44`8KV^H)"\@DE63/5I<@+Y7IG'WOQJ;27%PUUC MS&@.T`22^8.G/.3_`#JQJ-TUKY`62*(22;6>49`&TGU'I5*'5KB2>-#$BA@N M5[G*YW#G./P]>:+@.^RS"".W-J=K,WF.I7.W>2%Y/>I[RWNY67$C$!),>4QC M^;`VYYY[U5CU&X^1I6A0RI&QD(;8FX,>1N]@.W6F2ZI/(L>9(H3YD>$P0T@+ M=1S]T_0T/L!*;:\1P#]HD@P"56?#%MO7)/3/;-+':7V`9GD9V;:^)3M*^7C@ M9X^;\:L:5>O>))YAC+(1S&..1ZY/]#["K]#!&-86-S`8WV2QMOC#*9 M,X/-;-%%,1#>QM+93QH,N\;*!ZDBLY[2Z2?=^]E0B,-M<(Y`#?*",="0?ZUK MT4AF$;*_.7*L9,<-O&1\C@,Y[U7%EX/[CY@/GY]_;I0!-J(NU>'RYAF9S#A:@-OJ8:8@R-G(^_ MP1N&,?/V7/\`=^O>F6&IS&X6)IHI4>5AN7DGYFZ9;('`Z`UNT`9NEP7:R%[L MRC"84-)D?>;MD\XV]<_6M*BBF(****0PHHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`8\2.Z,P MRT9W*<]#C'\B:?110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%,BB2&)8XQM11@#.<444` 3/HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`__V3\_ ` end GRAPHIC 14 target1_3080x11x1.jpg begin 644 target1_3080x11x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M40"S`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`]`HHK-U75!9%8(4$MW(,JF>%']YCV'\Z`+EU=06<1EN94B0= MV-9+>(A+.8;*SDD?;N#2GRU(Z9&>?TJ@("\WVBZD,]Q_?;HOLH["H[H^3=6M MSSA7\M\?W6XY_'%`%V[U?5+>(2&.S`+JNWYFZG'7CUH37KY/];9P2C_IG*5/ MY$?UJ#6/^/1/^NT?_H0J&@#:M=?LYW6.7?:RG@+,,`GV;H?SK5KCW174JZAE M/4$9%265_<:65"EI[,=8CRT8]5/I[?E0!UE%1P31W$*30N'C<95AT-24`%%% MO12`,[O;!H`UJ* MIMJEFOEYE/[P;AA&.!G!)X^7GCG%1MK%J)_+RY7:3N$;')R!A1CYNO;/2@#0 MHID)86C=#^N:`+=E=A7%[)O[&^S_9+OS?L M^S;]FDZ[<8Z4`=I69+86TEQ(/M;*0QE\M67Y&(P6Z9_/BM.L'4K*XN9R(;1E M"%B02H5\]P>N3TP>*`-.SA2)&F6Y,HD)=WRN&/`SP.P&.*8L-I]BAMQ.#"6` M7YQ^\P.:`-"QLX;:)Q%(75SC.1QCC'%58+&TGVM!?M,]N`B,KHWEX[< M#^=3:='<+9/#<1`!1M1>F>.1D9XSWZU1-G<26QC:"<1QF+:"X60;6Y4%2,@# MIFCJ'0O_`-E0&-D+R'>C(QR,G2%;>WCA5F947:"QR34M5-,6=+-5N`V\$XW,22,\=23^9-6Z`"BBB@#FK MD[M;OR?X3&@^FP'_`-FHHNALUN^!_B\MQ_WSC_V6B@`HHJI=7RQ/Y,2^=.?X M`>GN3VH`JZQ&5GM)EQ\TBQO[C<"/U'ZU;JO';LT@GNG\V;M_=3_=']:L4`%% M%%`!6QX9)_LUUSPL\@'M\V?ZUCUL>&1_Q*R_:2:1A]-Q']*`->N0_>?V%]I^ MU7?G?9O,W?:9/O;S)>"*X+,K$I'B0L,9/.3@MT MQGT'O5_^U;(#?O;)XQY3[B,9SC&<=>>E.EU*SB=A))@Q@Y;8Q'N`<8)]AS1L M#*=],(M2!:=B`4`B28HRY/4+T<'OZ8J"#4KN&**.22(^<6VRNIQ&-^/FYY[> ME:?]HV9193)C[P&Y"&&.O!&1_P#JH_M*S.6VA2)XU+&,MOR^-P.X8!'/T/7O5NZ0W,EJ\B75N7EV,@G*Y&UC_` MV.H^M:9`(P0"/2B@#`BUF]EF\I(HH]SA5+@-L^;'(#Y)^NWI4@U.^\OS";8C MRWEP(VZ*V,?>ZGU[>AK;``)(`&>M+0`E%+10!A:]$8;VVO!]UQY$GMW4_GD? MC59F5%+,0J@9))X%;][:QWMI);R_:XU[>=KM[?4F#/#C$8&% M<=G]\_I0`Y[J:\.VU)CA[S$23R2?4FI.E%`!1110`4 M444`1W#M'$=@W2-\J*.['@#\ZZNPMA9V,%L.?*0*3ZG')K"T.T-[=K?./]'A M)$.?XVZ%OH.@KI:`"BBB@`JI-I\,Z.KE\/()#@]\`8^F!5NB@#(7P_:K"8U; M:#C.V-!G'3^'KSUZTY]!M'G>4YW.6XD?<3<) MM89&!TY`]3@9^@J)-#MT\O:Q7:^_"(B\\=,#Y>F..U:E%`!1110`4444`%%% M%`!5#5-+BU&-26,4\?,Z5H+3KL/# MR_7^Z/U^E;5GI%E9/YD4.Z7_`)ZR$LWYGI^%7J`&HBQHJ(H55&``,`"G444` M%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4 B444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`'__V3\_ ` end GRAPHIC 15 target1_3080x12x1.jpg begin 644 target1_3080x12x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M:`'B`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`]`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB M@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****` M"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@!K,J*68@*HR2>PJE'K%E*FY M'<_-M"^4VX]>@QDC@_E2VY>674D+!L3!4#\J/W2'&/3)/YFJ%II^I06LL*F& M-)'/R"5CL7))VG;QG('MUH`TXM0M9I5CCEW,XRI"G!XSC.,9QSCK2O?VR3M" M\NUUZY4[1QG&>F<_P"E)_S&QG&WRVW=,_=QGISG%6U970,I M!5AD$=Q65]@O?/\`M6(//^[Y>]MN-N,YQUS[5HVL/V>UA@SN\M`F?7`Q0!-1 M110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%% M%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444 M`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%-9E7.Y@,#/)[4`.HJ-YXHP2\J*!C)9@,9Z53EUO3 M8F"M>P[B2N`V>?PH`?8_\?>H_P#7P/\`T5'5VLS1KE+MKZ>,,%>X&`W4?NHZ MMW[2I8SO#((Y%0L&VYQ@>E##5(T,*DJB%6+8SG//.<<=*=J MES=6SF2"Y!!8J%8*(T.W(!/7).#V%`+4V**YRYU:X@ANX5F<2*H:.6=%4CY< MGC`!YP!QW[BN@C8/&KJP8,`01T-`#Z***`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH M`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BD)QUIIEC4@%U!+;>3WZX M^M`#Z*8LL;8VR(*`%HHHH`****`"BBB@`HICR)&NZ1 MU0>K'%5#JUGDB*4SMZ0(9/\`T$&@"]15!M2<$#^S[GYONY:)<_@7!J$ZU\F] M;&VUCF@#5HK(;5;PY$>GKD$#YYL=>_W3TIIN]1D8`F&!22"43> M0/7)(_E0!LTR21(UW2.J#U8XK(VJZ[KB2_F;86VF4(,_W?D(&?T]Z3[/;*^8 MK*W0@C#N@=B.X.>GYF@#0&J:>6*B^M21V$R_XU+]JM]I;SXMHZG>,"LJ5X@I M,TN5CSG@#=>_M48JTZ;@VT@1I`1D1\'N"`OI[TTWL'D^:K,ZD[<(A8Y],`9I7EG*H8+?=N& M3YC;=OUX)H`&@G?J:`(UTVR4Y^RQ,?5EW'\S4CR6]HFY MVCA4\HI M%L;165A;0[E7:&*`G&,8S]*L44`0I:V\<+11P1)$V=R*@`/U%2TM%`!1110` M45')/%$0))40DX`9@,FJK:OIRR&,WT&X9R-XXQ0!>HK('B73)$9H)))MHSA( MFR?89`I/^$BMPA9[2^7#8`,!&1Z^G]:`-BBL<^)]+55,LS1EL_*R$D8]0,T- MXDLB`84N)R4#`11%OP^M`&Q16,VNN9"L.FW3@,/F8!1CN>?Y5`-7U5G.=,VH M,[3YBDMZ9^88_P`]*`.@HKG!JVLB!P=/#2A<(=R@$^I^;]*=_:VL.GRZ-6,S.\Z,K$'R_-8`8Z=%S_`(]Z9'!JBAMU[O).X%F^Z<8R,`?X M4`=/17+K:WRQ>6THD&",F=U.#C(R!TXI6MKMD"D#`&.+N4$_4]3^-`'3TQY$ MC!+LJ@`GD]AU-HW8R*SUT]5S_I%P>X;ZW#_RS0!;.JW!B5TL'R<@HTB@@]O;%-EO]0*CR;># M)49\R0_*>_059;AG)9F.<^P''ZTCQZB&"B.S=&4*V$(P/3KR!6E10!G[M1\\J;: M$@L',@<@9`X/KV`Z4ZWU+4"[(BQ[DW$K+(XZGKRF2!VP:O4CJKJ5=0RD8((R M#0`S[;JA0`QVL;8`+*3(2>Y`.W'YU+'%'.P%QJ-P[%MH4-Y()QGC;@G\S5;[ M-Y,.RS*P_-NP067Z8SP/I0UTL+1IAX;@QH$NB&7JQ M0'=^%3T4`0O]I$B[#$R<;MV0??%"PR>>9'G=EYQ'@!0/YG\ZFHH`CA@AMUVP MQ)&#UVC&:DHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@"31_OW__`%\#_P!%1UI5 MFZ/]^_\`^O@?^BHZTJ`"BBB@`HHHH`****`,F_LK66[:22VA>0@99HP2?QJ) M;>!/NPQK]%`JY>?Z\_05!0`4444`!`/49HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`" MBBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`&>3%YHE\I/,'1 MMHS^=,AM8(&9HHE5FZD#FIJ*`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BB MB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@"31_OW_P#U\#_T5'6E6;H_W[__`*^!_P"BHZTJ`"BB MB@`HHHH`****`,B]NXQ=R1JD[M'A6\N!W`.`<9`(Z$?G4/VM?^>%W_X"2_\` MQ-;,<21O(R+AI6W.<]3@#^0%24`87VM?^>%W_P"`DO\`\31]K7_GA=_^`DO_ M`,35S4Y+I&06ADWD$X$>Y3CU..O8TSV41N0WG8^;QL6"Q71*'#`6LG!QG!^7T(_.G?:U_YX7?_`("2_P#Q-;,<21O(R+AI M6W.<]3@#^0%24`87VM?^>%W_`.`DO_Q-'VM?^>%W_P"`DO\`\35S4Y+I&06A MDWD$X$>Y3CU..O8%W_X M"2__`!-'VM?^>%W_`.`DO_Q-:UG(\ELK2JRLO7H/Y"IZ`,!;V-BP6*Z M)0X8"UDX.,X/R^A'YT[[6O\`SPN__`27_P")K9CB2-Y&1<-*VYSGJ<`?R`J2 M@#"^UK_SPN__``$E_P#B:/M:_P#/"[_\!)?_`(FKFIR72,@M#)O()P(]RG'J M<=>PY%4)+K5@'\H3OC_5[H<;AALD_+P0<8'?T-`#_M:_\\+O_P`!)?\`XFC[ M6O\`SPN__`27_P")K4L'E>U5I@^_+??&"1DX[#M["K-`&`M[&Q8+%=$H<,!: MR<'&<'Y?0C\Z=]K7_GA=_P#@)+_\36S'$D;R,BX:5MSG/4X`_D!4E`&%]K7_ M`)X7?_@)+_\`$T?:U_YX7?\`X"2__$U#Y`!9<-DGY>#D#`_G0`W[6O\`SPN__`27_P")H^UK_P`\+O\` M\!)?_B:UK/SOLD9N&+2D9;(`QGMQZ=*GH`P%O8V+!8KHE#A@+63@XS@_+Z$? MG3OM:_\`/"[_`/`27_XFMF.)(WD9%PTK;G.>IP!_("I*`,+[6O\`SPN__`27 M_P")H^UK_P`\+O\`\!)?_B:N:G)=(R"T,F\@G`CW*<>IQU[#D50>ZU0;]GVA M@/N$P1D7#2MNN!WQWH` MC^UK_P`\+O\`\!)?_B:/M:_\\+O_`,!)?_B:U;%I7ME,V[=N;EEVDC)P2.W& M*L4`8"WL;%@L5T2APP%K)P<9P?E]"/SIWVM?^>%W_P"`DO\`\36S'$D;R,BX M:5MSG/4X`_D!4E`&%]K7_GA=_P#@)+_\31]K7_GA=_\`@)+_`/$UR2+NDE\M@X!>(*>V">.#U_*BX%;[6O_`#PN M_P#P$E_^)H^UK_SPN_\`P$E_^)K6LFE:R@:?/FF-2^1@YQSQ4]`&`M[&Q8+% M=$H<,!:R<'&<'Y?0C\Z=]K7_`)X7?_@)+_\`$ULQQ)&\C(N&E;%W_X"2__`!-7-0DNDF06IDSL9MOEY0X! MQDXZDX[BH$FO=NYY+CR]LG/D#><8P<8Z]0!B@"+[6O\`SPN__`27_P")H^UK M_P`\+O\`\!)?_B:UK(RFTC,Y)D(RIP!_("I*`,Q-1DDU%H08UC67RL-&^6.W/#?=SGM3+ MK5)K9YI-D;01NT>W!W$B/?G.>G;&/QJW+I]O)(\F'21LG?][S-C;<;F1FH/[+M/+V>6V,YW>8V[IC[V<].,9JVJJB!5`"J,`#L*`'4 M444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!11 M10`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%% H`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`'__V3\_ ` end GRAPHIC 16 target1_3080x13x1.jpg begin 644 target1_3080x13x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M9`'?`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`[/\`M?3/^@C:?]_U_P`:/[7TS_H(VG_?]?\`&KM%`&%J6I6L MDL?V?4(<*"6*7:KG_9QN'OS["J<-\P>/.I6X59$9]UZIW`'H.3VZ],X[UU-% M`%+^U],_Z"-I_P!_U_QH_M?3/^@C:?\`?]?\:NT4`4O[7TS_`*"-I_W_`%_Q MH_M?3/\`H(VG_?\`7_&KM%`%+^U],_Z"-I_W_7_&L2YOU=Y6AU"-0S-M'VU, M`9'/WNXSCTR.G6NHHH`P=-U.WCFE^T:A;^6W*[[E6(Z8'WSV]A^-:/\`:^F? M]!&T_P"_Z_XU=HH`I?VOIG_01M/^_P"O^-']KZ9_T$;3_O\`K_C5VB@"E_:^ MF?\`01M/^_Z_XU!>ZM8&TD$5_;-)CY0MRJG/UR*U**`.3EO3AA'J:$[<*QO4 M^]NX/WO[O'U_.MBRU:Q6U43ZA:AP3G-PI.,G'\1[>YK4HH`I?VOIG_01M/\` MO^O^-']KZ9_T$;3_`+_K_C5VB@"E_:^F?]!&T_[_`*_XT?VOIG_01M/^_P"O M^-7:*`,+4M2M9)8_L^H0X4$L4NU7/^SC_6NFHH`I?VOIG_01M/^_Z_P"-']KZ9_T$;3_O^O\`C5VB@"E_:^F? M]!&T_P"_Z_XT?VOIG_01M/\`O^O^-7:*`*7]KZ9_T$;3_O\`K_C6)ZM8&TD$5_;-)CY0MRJG/UR*U**`.4>]Y*K MJ:XVX#?;$SG=UQN_N\?7\ZU;#5;)+55N-1M?,W-]ZX4G&3C^(]L=S6M10!2_ MM?3/^@C:?]_U_P`:/[7TS_H(VG_?]?\`&KM%`%+^U],_Z"-I_P!_U_QH_M?3 M/^@C:?\`?]?\:NT4`86I:E:R2Q_9]0APH)8I=JN?]G&X>_/L*KB_C!C/]I1' ME2?],7@^_P`W(]>N?>NEHH`I?VOIG_01M/\`O^O^-']KZ9_T$;3_`+_K_C5V MB@"E_:^F?]!&T_[_`*_XT?VOIG_01M/^_P"O^-7:*`*7]KZ9_P!!&T_[_K_C M60;^%KMF&HQI&TAP/MBX49'/WNXS@=N*Z2B@#'L=2LXSF;4KX';MW#.?3Z\'\J`.?BOH5;+ZDC!3WO$RXP_P#M M>Z_C^=:-EJM@EI&LVHVWF8RVZX4D'TSDUJ5!]K@\WRMYW[_+QM/WL9_E0!#_ M`&OIG_01M/\`O^O^-']KZ9_T$;3_`+_K_C4GV^W\_P`G>PDSMP4;KQWQ[C\Z MLT`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!15- M]3LXW9'FPRD@C:>OY5C$V_DRQ^;%\TH=2=WR\=?N=?U]Z`.EHK'TR\MK2S6& M6X0D'^%#CI_NC^5:`O;=E!$G!&1P:`+%%8$=LJ1",F(XF6126/R@;<_PCGC] M>M7M/>&UMS&61?F)"H"0!Z=!_*@#1HIJ.LBAE.0>].H`****`"BBB@`HHHH` M****`"BBB@`HHHH`**2L4V^HF!U_?!_-W*?,[8Q_>]?_`-5`&W15>RCDCM\2 MEMY9FPS;B`3P,^PQ4IEC!(,B`C_:%`#Z*PHQ=A%5I9#B0'/G`'&%Y/S'CAN/ M?I6C9,([?$LHWEF;#2;B`3P,Y[#%`%RBD5@PRI!'J*6@`HHHH`****`"JM[? M166SS5<[\XV@=O\`]=6JQ?$7_+O_`,"_I0`R34;5YFD`E!+*WW!V_&HI+NUD MN5N'>?>LHD`"+C@`8Z^Q_,UG44`=+#JD$REE60`''('^-,:6W:0O^]#%]_&. M#MV_RK,L/]2?][^@JS0!*RVC3+*WFEED,F2%Y/'?J.@Z5HP3K/NV@C'K635W M3O\`EI^']:`+M4(]2,D!E$/254(W$$`D#/(]_P#Z]9MUJ=Y'=3(DV%5V`&T= M,_2JRWLZ9V^6N3N.(EY/7/2@#HK"Z^V6PEV[">J\\<9[@>M6*Y>+4;J%-D3J MB_W5C4#^5:45[<-$A,G)4$\"A@31ZFTMNDRP##2*C#<1MSC'5??Z>]6[68SP M[V38VYE*YSC!(Z_A66-JXQ%$,'(Q$O!]>E2K2<#@57>[:'3C<,-Y';.,\XK,N=76Y@:)[;Y3C^('H<]U(H`UIK^W@? M9*SJV-W^K8\?E5BN:>]C>-D,4F&14)\P?=&<#[OO^E7X=;\V4)]GQGOO_P#K M4`:P12F)V,D#.ZKE`!15*YO'AOHH`H M6-D8F1P<9[#/3L<_A5?3M3ENKMH9/+(`;!0=<'&?O'C_`#F@#5HHJC<7SPWX MA\LF+R6HK*T_4;BXN(HYDC7=&68*,$$'W.@H`Z*H7N8 MHW=68@HF]OE)`'/?\#52UU59U9GB*`'`PV?\*9.;:>?SF\T-MV<*O3GU'N>. ME`%Y+F)Y5C!8.RE@"C#@8]1[BIJS+4VMJV4$I^7:,@8'))P![G]!5Z"=9]VT M$8]:`.7O?^/VX_ZZ-_.H:FO?^/VX_P"NC?SJ&@`K5A_U,?\`NC^595:L/^IC M_P!T?RH`?1110!J6?_'JGX_SJ>H+/_CU3\?YT^:9((S)(2%'HI)_(4`2455E MU"VB8*[L"5W#Y&.1USTJS0`M%0W5PMK`TS(S*O4+C/ZD5!<:G%;2F.1''3G* M@_H M*LU6L/\`4G_>_H*LT`%7=._Y:?A_6J57=._Y:?A_6@#`O?\`C]N/^NC?SJ&I MKW_C]N/^NC?SJ&@`K5A_U,?^Z/Y5E5JP_P"IC_W1_*@!]%%%`$]W_P`@)_P_ M]"K`K?N_^0$_X?\`H58%`!4UI_Q\I^/\JAJ:T_X^4_'^5`&E1110`^#_`%\? M^\/YTNNS2Q>1Y4CIG=G:Q&>E)!_KX_\`>'\Z;XB_Y=_^!?TH`S/MEU_S\S?] M]FC[9=?\_,W_`'V:AHH`T[*XG:$EII"=W=C5CSI?^>C_`/?1JG8?ZD_[W]!5 MF@!_G2_\]'_[Z-7+!V?S-S%L8ZG/K5"KNG?\M/P_K0!@7O\`Q^W'_71OYU#4 MU[_Q^W'_`%T;^=0T`%:L/^IC_P!T?RK*K5A_U,?^Z/Y4`/HHHH`U+/\`X]4_ M'^=3U!9_\>J?C_.IZ`"BBB@`HHHH`*Q?$7_+O_P+^E;58OB+_EW_`.!?TH`Q MJ***`+]A_J3_`+W]!5FJUA_J3_O?T%6:`"KNG?\`+3\/ZU2J[IW_`"T_#^M` M&!>_\?MQ_P!=&_G4-37O_'[%HC`5##!(<=/Q4U:N_^0$_X?\` MH58%`%R6\BESNBESM"Y\P9``88^[Z,:T(=;\R14^SXSWW_\`UJPZFM/^/E/Q M_E3$;DUTD\1CDB)1NH$A&?RJ*1K>0,'MR=QR3YISTQ_(FHJ*0R_'?;W5?+QD M@?>JCXB_Y=_^!?TIT'^OC_WA_.F^(O\`EW_X%_2@#&HHHH`OV'^I/^]_059J MM8?ZD_[W]!5F@`J[IW_+3\/ZU2J[IW_+3\/ZT`57\/QR.SO?799B23^[Z_\` M?%-_X1R'_G]N_P#R'_\`$5M44`8O_".0_P#/[=_^0_\`XBIET7:H`U"[P!@< M1_\`Q%:E%`&7_8Y_Z"-W^47_`,11_8Y_Z"-W^47_`,16I10!FOI3O`8&U&[, M9[8B]<_W*K_\(Y#_`,_MW_Y#_P#B*VJ*`,7_`(1R'_G]N_\`R'_\13D\/QHP M9;Z[!'_7/_XBMBB@#+_L<_\`01N_RB_^(H_L<_\`01N_RB_^(K4HH`S%TAE8 M,-1N\@Y'$7_Q%%QHYNMOGZC=MMSCB(8_)*TZ*`,7_A'(?^?V[_\`(?\`\11_ MPCD/_/[=_P#D/_XBMJB@#)CT-8UPE_=@9STC_P#B*=_8Y_Z"-W^47_Q%:E%` M&7_8Y_Z"-W^47_Q%21Z9)%G9J5V,]?EB_P#B*T**`,=_#\ORQ?_$5H44`8[^'XY'9WOKLLQ))_=]?^^*;_`,(Y M#_S^W?\`Y#_^(K:HH`Q?^$ORQ?\`Q%:%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1 M110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110!%,8S\SJ/Z5L44`>OYU(B)&@2-511T"C` M%`%)K$(I9IL`#).WI^M47FMTMX)BTN)@Q5=@R``2<\\=/UK8EMX9QB:&.3C' MSJ#47]G6FU%\D#824()!7/7![4`06<"3)'<1R';G(!`['V/M6C3(HDAC$<8( M4>I)_4T^@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`****`"BBB@`HH MHH`****`"BBB@`HHHH`I?8KC_H*7?_?,7_Q%'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!] MBN/^@I=_]\Q?_$4?8KC_`*"EW_WS%_\`$444`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\` MH*7?_?,7_P`1110`?8KC_H*7?_?,7_Q%'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!]BN/^ M@I=_]\Q?_$4?8KC_`*"EW_WS%_\`$444`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\`H*7? M_?,7_P`1110`?8KC_H*7?_?,7_Q%'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!]BN/^@I=_ M]\Q?_$4?8KC_`*"EW_WS%_\`$444`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\`H*7?_?,7 M_P`1110`?8KC_H*7?_?,7_Q%'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!]BN/^@I=_]\Q? M_$4?8KC_`*"EW_WS%_\`$444`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`1 M110`?8KC_H*7?_?,7_Q%'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!]BN/^@I=_]\Q?_$4? M8KC_`*"EW_WS%_\`$444`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`1110` M?8KC_H*7?_?,7_Q%'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!]BN/^@I=_]\Q?_$4?8KC_ M`*"EW_WS%_\`$444`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`1110`?8KC M_H*7?_?,7_Q%'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!]BN/^@I=_]\Q?_$4?8KC_`*"E MW_WS%_\`$444`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`1110`?8KC_H*7 M?_?,7_Q%'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!]BN/^@I=_]\Q?_$4?8KC_`*"EW_WS M%_\`$444`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`1110`?8KC_H*7?_?, M7_Q%'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!]BN/^@I=_]\Q?_$4?8KC_`*"EW_WS%_\` M$444`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`1110`?8KC_H*7?_?,7_Q% M'V*X_P"@I=_]\Q?_`!%%%`!]BN/^@I=_]\Q?_$4?8KC_`*"EW_WS%_\`$444 @`'V*X_Z"EW_WS%_\11]BN/\`H*7?_?,7_P`1110!_]D_ ` end GRAPHIC 17 target1_3080x1x1.jpg begin 644 target1_3080x1x1.jpg M_]C_X``02D9)1@`!`0'_____``#_[@`.061O8F4`9``````!_]L`0P`0"PP. M#`H0#@T.$A$0$Q@H&A@6%A@Q(R4=*#HS/3PY,S@W0$A<3D!$5T4W.%!M45=? M8F=H9SY-<7EP9'A<96=C_]L`0P$1$A(8%1@O&AHO8T(X0F-C8V-C8V-C8V-C M8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C8V-C_\``$0@` M/@#'`P$B``(1`0,1`?_$`!\```$%`0$!`0$!```````````!`@,$!08'"`D* M"__$`+40``(!`P,"!`,%!00$```!?0$"`P`$$042(3%!!A-180'EZ@X2%AH>(B8J2DY25EI>8F9JBHZ2EIJ>H MJ:JRL[2UMK>XN;K"P\3%QL?(R;GZ.GJ\?+S]/7V M]_CY^O_$`!\!``,!`0$!`0$!`0$````````!`@,$!08'"`D*"__$`+41``(! M`@0$`P0'!00$``$"=P`!`@,1!`4A,08205$'87$3(C*!"!1"D:&QP0DC,U+P M%6)RT0H6)#3A)?$7&!D:)BH*#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6V MM[BYNL+#Q,7&Q\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN+CY.7FY^CIZO+S]/7V]_CY^O_:``P# M`0`"$0,1`#\`]`HHHH`*@O+N"QMGN+EPD:=345[JEE8.J7=PD3,I8`]P*X_Q M+J(NX$>5R)9.885;(BC_`+S8XW'ICL*`.PL-3L]13=:SJYQDKT8?4=:N5P>E MR2B.>*YTXWXCDWM+`Q$D98=L<]0>G?-7?^$D:QXCEFF7_GC>*$D'_`QU_$?C M0!U]%X23Y2 M%2,ON##*]!W%`'*>()#/XEG+PR+Y6T!3)ACT`(/;.=5&P+,KDKN5MSL>20#[?3I0 M!O1W&MZ3V.M6+Z[U&XTNY-Q?Q`(O[R`/L<'I@ MJ8P2,GUP:GTRXCENY;K6KY1((_*\AMI#J>>JC##/89Q65XC,@@B1. M;_6@=_<+GH#S^5`!HEO-];>C:VMOMBG++; M'IN.3!VZ]TSQGJIX-?)+:O&?LZQ?=ES@JN[DY`&[&X].>N>*Z&_@\NY9 M;R/$A!:0QCB3UEC]P/O+W%`'7@Y&1TI:Y?3]2DT:2.TOFWV<@S!<+RN/KZ>W M;W'3IP0P!!!!Y!%`"T444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`!1110`4444`%%%%`% M>_5GT^Y5/O&)@,>N#7'ZC.D5G=?99)`T]M;NX4`J%"D8)_A[>YS7:2QM(,+- M)'QCY,?U!KS;7('TZ\ETU"WE`@KQRXZ@DCKU(_\`U4`48HP]G*RY+(RDJ`>G M/.>G4@?C0D:PW:Q2?.N1DQX;(//&?8U:TZ1[:-XI?M$<;R*SB.,9.W..3_M8 MI-,7[/K5M,5<0I,I)V-PN>_'^2*`+$^DW-MBY@M;J.V7!#RJ$8?[V#P/>LV] MAF@N&2X7]YG);.[.1UST->F'6=-8;3,;3SG\/8UYYJ\:R:C,;1'-L7S' MM4XP?0>E`&FL.K_V*D4MH&L0`RR2`9C![C'S8_"M^P6*;3'T_4[A&:W572X5 MP`4(^5U;VY&?;WJI)XHM].TJTM[93+,L"`[U("X`'X_AQ[URJNMY<,\KDX/R M01J?F)/11C`&?\F@#<@U*WA:YTR8)J%J>4,>0-_;;Z9/8=#TX/'2^';*YL=- M6*ZD+$G*QDY\M?[N>]5/#GA\6"BZNE4W3"`#AL=.??BHO$UI]JT>0@9>']X M/PZ_IFN7MKV2XTA-)3.^2X`'^Z>?Y\U+=F=L(1J4TTMGJ=9HES//ID<][(ID ME)8.W^/XUHD@#)(QZUQ>K2:7-,\5O'N:=7G]CI\=SHU[=,[AX""B@\>^: MF$]XWA8!'B[00/IDFBX/"J]E+K8[CS8_[Z_G0)$)P'4GZUYY7]/_U5>>VBM/%T4$";(UECPN2<9`/4^YHN#PR[]^G8[;>N M[;N&?3-#.J_>8#ZFN.D"KXVX``\X'_QVH]9N-.O9[B2VCN;BX(SO'"*`.H'7 M`Q3N2L/=K7=7.V)"C)(`]33?,3CYUY.!SU-<983/-X6U"*1BXB*E-W.W)'3\ MJ;H]FJZ5<:IYCB6V8^6HQ@'`Y/Y_I2N/ZM:]WL['6:G<-;V%Q)%(JRQH7`.# MT]JRM'U>[N].N9YF3?&ZJ#MX`/4UAV&GQWNEW]]/([31#*_-WQG)]