N-CSR 1 a_europeequity.htm PUTNAM EUROPE EQUITY FUND a_europeequity.htm


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

FORM N-CSR

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED
MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES




Investment Company Act file number: (811-05693)
Exact name of registrant as specified in charter: Putnam Europe Equity Fund
Address of principal executive offices: One Post Office Square, Boston, Massachusetts 02109
Name and address of agent for service: Robert T. Burns, Vice President
One Post Office Square
Boston, Massachusetts 02109
Copy to:         Bryan Chegwidden, Esq.
Ropes & Gray LLP
1211 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (617) 292-1000
Date of fiscal year end: June 30, 2014
Date of reporting period : July 1, 2013 — June 30, 2014



Item 1. Report to Stockholders:

The following is a copy of the report transmitted to stockholders pursuant to Rule 30e-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940:
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Putnam
Europe Equity
Fund

Annual report
6
| 30 | 14


Message from the Trustees

1

About the fund

2

Performance snapshot

4

Interview with your fund’s portfolio manager

5

Your fund’s performance

12

Your fund’s expenses

14

Terms and definitions

16

Other information for shareholders

17

Important notice regarding Putnam’s privacy policy

18

Trustee approval of management contract

19

Financial statements

24

Federal tax information

47

Shareholder meeting results

48

About the Trustees

49

Officers

51


Consider these risks before investing: International investing involves currency, economic, and political risks. Emerging-market securities carry illiquidity and volatility risks. Investments in small and/or midsize companies increase the risk of greater price fluctuations. Investments in a single region may be affected by common economic forces and other factors. In addition, events in any one country within the region may impact the other countries or the region as a whole. Growth stocks may be more susceptible to earnings disappointments, and value stocks may fail to rebound. Risks associated with derivatives include increased investment exposure (which may be considered leverage) and, in the case of over-the-counter instruments, the potential inability to terminate or sell derivatives positions and the potential failure of the other party to the instrument to meet its obligations. Stock prices may fall or fail to rise over time for several reasons, including general financial market conditions and factors related to a specific issuer or industry. You can lose money by investing in the fund.








Message from the Trustees

Dear Fellow Shareholder:

After pulling back at the start of the year, equity markets resumed their steady advance through the halfway mark of 2014. In June, the S&P 500 Index posted its fifth consecutive month of gains. The bond market has also generated solid positive results across many sectors this year.

Underpinning these stable returns is growing evidence of an economy on the mend, including a strengthening jobs market, and accelerating consumer spending and business investment. Corporations are participating in this improvement, as reflected in stronger-than-expected earnings growth and heightened merger-and-acquisition activity.

One notable characteristic of this market environment is its historically low level of volatility — a relative calm that experience indicates does not last forever. As we move into the second half of the year, we also note that a range of geopolitical uncertainties could push risk levels higher.

Putnam offers a wide range of strategies for all market conditions, including products designed for periods of higher market volatility, and its active approach has had a positive impact on performance. Barron’s has ranked Putnam second among 55 fund families based on total return across asset classes for the five years ending December 2013.

We believe the market advance may offer an opportune moment for you to meet with your financial advisor, review your portfolio, and make informed and objective decisions about your financial goals.

As always, thank you for investing with Putnam.

Respectfully yours,

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Robert L. Reynolds
President and Chief Executive Officer
Putnam Investments

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Jameson A. Baxter
Chair, Board of Trustees

August 7, 2014

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How Barron’s ranked the fund families:

The Barron’s/Lipper Fund Family Ranking published February 8, 2014, ranked Putnam 1 out of 61 for 2009, 14 out of 57 for 2010, 57 out of 58 for 2011, 1 out of 62 for 2012, and 2 out of 64 for 2013 for the 1-year period with funds in five categories: U.S. equity, world equity, mixed asset, taxable bond, and tax-exempt bond. Putnam ranked 43 out of 54 and 46 out of 48 for the 5- and 10-year periods ending 2009, 41 out of 53 and 38 out of 46 for the 5- and 10-year periods ending 2010, 49 out of 53 and 41 out of 45 for the 5- and 10-year periods ending 2011, 27 out of 53 and 36 out of 46 for the 5- and 10-year periods ending 2012, and 2 out of 55 and 32 out of 48 for the 5- and 10-year periods ending 2013, respectively. Only funds with at least one year of performance were included. Returns were calculated minus the effects of sales charges and 12b-1 fees. Rankings were asset weighted, so larger funds had a greater impact on a fund family’s overall ranking, and then weighted by category, with each category assigned a percentage. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Barron’s is a registered trademark of Dow Jones & Company. Lipper ranked Putnam Europe Equity Fund 37% (45/122), 36% (30/83), and 48% (33/68) for the 1-, 5-, and 10-year periods, respectively, as of 6/30/14, in the European Region Funds category. Lipper rankings for class A shares are based on total return without sales charge relative to all share classes of funds with similar objectives as determined by Lipper.








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Performance
snapshot

Annualized total return (%) comparison as of 6/30/14

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Current performance may be lower or higher than the quoted past performance, which cannot guarantee future results. Share price, principal value, and return will fluctuate, and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares. Performance of class A shares assumes reinvestment of distributions and does not account for taxes. Fund returns in the bar chart do not reflect a sales charge of 5.75%; had they, returns would have been lower. See pages 5 and 12–14 for additional performance information. For a portion of the periods, the fund had expense limitations, without which returns would have been lower. To obtain the most recent month-end performance, visit putnam.com.




4     Europe Equity Fund








Interview with your fund’s portfolio manager


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Simon [Sam] Davis


Amid subsiding volatility, Putnam Europe Equity Fund delivered results that trailed those of its benchmark, the MSCI Europe Index. What led to this result?

There were notable pockets of strength in select areas of Europe. For the period overall, the fund achieved particularly strong performance among health-care holdings as well as consumer staples stocks — a sector we underweighted relative to the benchmark. Sector overweights include exposures to consumer cyclical stocks and communication services companies, two areas that had mixed results for the 12-month period and which detracted somewhat from relative returns.

How would you characterize the European investment environment for the year ended June 30, 2014?

In the first half of the period, pending changes in central bank policy caused investors to grow anxious, particularly the announcement by the U.S. Federal Reserve that it would begin tapering its economic stimulus program. Ultimately, though, investors grew more comfortable with the timing and scope of the Fed’s plan, which helped markets — particularly European but also other developed-market stocks — make a strong close in 2013. Another important development centered on China. In December, the Chinese political leadership announced its commitment to a wide-ranging

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Broad market index and fund performance

 

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This comparison shows your fund’s performance in the context of broad market indexes for the 12 months ended 6/30/14. See pages 4 and 12–14 for additional fund performance information. Index descriptions can be found on page 16.




Europe Equity Fund     5








series of domestic reforms, touching on everything from China’s long-held one-child policy to changes in the national banking system. As details about these reforms emerged, they were gradually seen to be positive for the long-term sustainability of China’s economic growth.

The second half of the period saw volatility decline. However, while volatility as measured by the VDAX — Germany’s rough equivalent of the VIX, a commonly watched U.S. volatility index — was generally quite low, investing in Europe through the second quarter felt quite rocky. We attribute this to factors such as Europe’s still-tepid economic recovery, the market’s perception that the Bank of England may raise interest rates in the near future, and continuing uncertainty over the geopolitical situation in Ukraine and the Middle East.

The European Central Bank [ECB] made a number of unconventional monetary policy changes during the period to help stimulate the economy. Could you describe these and assess their potential effectiveness?

The ECB announced a series of actions it would take to stimulate the economy and reduce the risk of deflation. As expected, the ECB cut its key refinancing rate from 0.25% to a new historic low of 0.15%. Also, it took the unprecedented step of instituting a negative deposit rate of -0.10%, which would effectively charge banking institutions a fee to park money at the ECB. By making this move, the ECB hopes to encourage banks to lend more and thereby get more capital working in the economy, but it is an experimental measure, hitherto untested on a large scale.

Another measure that I believe could potentially be quite helpful was the ECB’s implementation of targeted long-term

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Country composition

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Allocations are shown as a percentage of the fund’s net assets as of 6/30/14. Short-term investments and net other assets, if any, represent the market value weights of cash, derivatives, short-term securities, and other unclassified assets in the portfolio. Summary information may differ from the information in the portfolio schedule notes included in the financial statements due to the inclusion of derivative securities, any interest accruals, and the exclusion of as-of trades, if any. Holdings and allocations may vary over time.




6     Europe Equity Fund








The ECB is trying new measures to
stimulate the economy. We consider
these promising but by no means a
guaranteed cure.

Sam Davis


refinancing operations [TLTROs], which are also designed to encourage lending and stimulate growth. We have seen that ECB actions can have a meaningful impact on the share prices of banks as well as the markets in general. In terms of what it means for the fund, we believe additional stimulus would benefit the fund given its pro-cyclical bias (i.e., its overweight to consumer discretionary stocks and eurozone financials).

Please say more about the TLTROs — how, specifically, may they affect the European financial companies in which the fund invests?

The ECB’s introduction of its TLTROs will allow banks to borrow funds from the ECB for four years at a very low cost. This will enable the banks to lend money at relatively low rates to consumers and corporate entities and still make an attractive profit on the spread between those rates and their TLTRO funding cost. Our positions in a number of European banks, particularly in Spain and Italy, helped the fund’s performance — both because of the TLTRO announcement and because government borrowing costs declined during the period, which had a positive effect on the banks.

At a recent financial-market conference that I attended in Madrid, many companies acknowledged that TLTROs could be quite

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Top 10 holdings

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This table shows the fund’s top 10 holdings by percentage of the fund’s net assets as of 6/30/14. Short-term holdings and derivatives, if any, are excluded. Holdings may vary over time.




Europe Equity Fund     7








helpful. But they also suggested there is a credit demand problem in the market — i.e., too few corporations are confident enough in the economic recovery to borrow more at this stage. After all, just because the ECB has announced it is ready to hand out money at low cost doesn’t mean European corporations will start lining up to borrow. Again, the ECB is trying new measures to stimulate the economy. We consider these promising but by no means a guaranteed cure.

In the wake of the financial crisis, the U.K. government issued a confidence-reviving package of policy moves to stimulate credit demand, and it did meet with some success. Hopefully, that kind of precedent will hold for the ECB’s actions. If demand for credit picks up, then we think at some point TLTRO funding could become extremely attractive to lending institutions.

What are your thoughts on U.K. equities today? What makes them attractive, in your view?

We have a benchmark-relative overweight to U.K. stocks for a variety of reasons. Among many U.K. companies, we see strong managements, good business models, and attractively priced stocks. Against the backdrop of a recovering U.K. economy, these stocks, particularly consumer discretionary stocks, appear to have strong upside potential. These stocks were held back late in the period, though, because of the growing expectation that the Bank of England will be one of the first central banks to raise interest rates.

We think the Bank will adopt targeted macro-prudential measures — financial regulations aimed at mitigating risk — before resorting to what we consider to be the blunt instrument of a rate increase. In any case,

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Comparison of top sector shifts

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This chart shows the fund’s largest allocation shifts, by percentage, over the past six months. Allocations are shown as a percentage of the fund’s net assets. Current period summary information may differ from the portfolio schedule included in the financial statements due to the inclusion of derivative securities, any interest accruals, the exclusion of as-of trades, if any, and the use of different classifications of securities for presentation purposes. Holdings and allocations may vary over time.




8     Europe Equity Fund








there is a long way for rates to rise before we arrive at a “normal” rate environment, let alone at a level that we would consider inherently damaging for equity markets. We think the key issue with a rising-rate environment is getting through the initial stages of the increase from our present day historical lows. In our management of the fund, we try to strike a balance between the knowledge that rates will eventually rise in reaction to the economic recovery — and the impact that is likely to have on stocks — and our belief in the attractiveness of the stocks themselves. On a purely fundamental basis, we would say there are few immediate causes for concern, but we did take some profits in the final months of the period on the basis of our macroeconomic view.

Among stocks or strategies that contributed to relative performance, what were some of the standouts?

Shire, a U.K.-listed pharmaceutical company, was the top contributor over the period. At first its performance was driven by strong fundamental growth from its core products, which include the leading ADHD treatment as well as a portfolio of drugs targeting rare diseases. Investors also reacted positively to the acquisition of ViroPharma, which they expect to lead to operating synergies and enhanced margins for Shire. Lastly, Shire itself has become a merger-and-acquisition [M&A] target and its shares have responded favorably to an approach from U.S.-based AbbVie.

French auto-part manufacturer Valeo was the second-largest contributor for the fund’s fiscal year. The company benefited from its strategy of refocusing on a narrower range of higher-value products. Specifically, the company shifted its business toward safety and energy-efficiency products, which typically generate higher profit margins in an industry where vehicles are taking on ever-greater technological sophistication. The market generally overlooked these strengths of Valeo, which was widely, but incorrectly, perceived as a poorly managed, low-margin business that was overexposed to the French car industry. We sold the stock and locked in profits for the fund by the end of the period.

The third-largest contributor was Associated British Foods [ABF], a diversified British conglomerate that includes a sugar business, a grocery chain, and retail fashion under its corporate umbrella. Over the past year or so, the primary growth story for ABF has focused on its affordable teen-fashion retailer, Primark, which we believe has significant potential to expand its market penetration in the United Kingdom as well as continental Europe and the United States.

Which stocks or strategies were among the primary detractors from relative returns?

A growth-oriented information technology company, Telecity, was the largest detractor from the fund’s performance. The stock has been a strong contributor in the past, and we continue to like it for its unique characteristics. This company provides high-connectivity data-center capacity for time-critical applications in industries such as online gaming and high-frequency investment trading. Companies in these industries require energy-intensive server support to minimize data-reaction latency, which is where Telecity has proven to be a valuable partner to a variety of businesses. The stock suffered because there was some excess supply in the market during the period, which caused some investors to doubt the company’s ability to charge a high premium for its services.

Other detractors included Barclays, where we believed the valuation did not adequately reflect the earnings potential of the retail and investment banking franchise. However, we underestimated the mounting wave of litigation facing this company. Finally Banco Espirito Santo hurt performance. While this was a positive contributor in late 2013/early




Europe Equity Fund     9








2014, concerns emerged toward the end of the period relating to corporate governance issues, both at the bank and at family-controlled entities that own a large stake in the bank. This gave rise to fears that the bank would have to launch a further rights issue, which drove down the share price.

What is your outlook for the European equity market for the remainder of 2014?

We have a positive outlook for a variety of areas in Europe, primarily cyclically exposed companies that we believe are undervalued and set to benefit from the improving economic environment we expect in the second half of the year. We also think that the rise of M&A activity is a positive signal for the market. The French telecommunications industry, for example, may be poised to experience significant consolidation, in our view. The pharmaceutical and biotech industries, likewise, have seen a series of proposals for major deals. Whether or not these deals occur, the increasing frequency of M&A announcements has highlighted the attractiveness of European valuations.

While we are looking constantly for opportunities in all sectors, we continue to focus on finding investment opportunities among those stocks that we believe are most exposed to a continued economic recovery, particularly in the eurozone and especially among peripheral European countries. For several quarters now, we have seen interesting opportunities in the financials sector, particularly banks. We expect financials to continue to normalize their earnings in an upward trajectory, and that the recovery in earnings across a number of sectors will help make valuations in Europe increasingly attractive in a global context.

Thank you, Sam, for this update on the fund.

The views expressed in this report are exclusively those of Putnam Management and are subject to change. They are not meant as investment advice.

Please note that the holdings discussed in this report may not have been held by the fund for the entire period. Portfolio composition is subject to review in accordance with the fund’s investment strategy and may vary in the future. Current and future portfolio holdings are subject to risk.

Portfolio Manager Simon Davis is a Co-Head of International Equities at Putnam. He has a B.A. from Oxford University. Simon joined Putnam in 2000 and has been in the investment industry since 1988.




10     Europe Equity Fund








IN THE NEWS

Hoping to bolster economic growth by encouraging lending, the European Central Bank (ECB) launched several unconventional policy changes in June. The ECB’s moves included a negative deposit rate charged to financial institutions and the offering of targeted long-term loans — both of which are designed to prompt banks to lend more money and businesses and consumers to borrow on attractive terms. Although the moves appeared to help push average yields on bonds from Europe’s most-indebted nations to a record low, and some indicators in manufacturing and services improved, key areas of the eurozone economy remained weak. Lending in the region continued to be tepid, while inflation stayed at 0.5% in June and the unemployment rate was unchanged at 11.6%.




Europe Equity Fund     11









Your fund’s performance

This section shows your fund’s performance, price, and distribution information for periods ended June 30, 2014, the end of its most recent fiscal year. In accordance with regulatory requirements for mutual funds, we also include expense information taken from the fund’s current prospectus. Performance should always be considered in light of a fund’s investment strategy. Data represent past performance. Past performance does not guarantee future results. More recent returns may be less or more than those shown. Investment return and principal value will fluctuate, and you may have a gain or a loss when you sell your shares. Performance information does not reflect any deduction for taxes a shareholder may owe on fund distributions or on the redemption of fund shares. For the most recent month-end performance, please visit the Individual Investors section at putnam.com or call Putnam at 1-800-225-1581. Class R and class Y shares are not available to all investors. See the Terms and Definitions section in this report for definitions of the share classes offered by your fund.


Fund performance Total return for periods ended 6/30/14


Class A

Class B

Class C

Class M

Class R

Class Y

(inception dates)

(9/7/90)

(2/1/94)

(7/26/99)

(12/1/94)

(12/1/03)

(10/4/05)

Before sales charge

After sales charge

 Before CDSC 

 After CDSC 

 Before CDSC 

 After CDSC 

Before sales charge

After sales charge

Net
 asset value
 

Net
 asset value
 

Annual average

(life of fund)

8.76% 

8.49% 

8.48% 

8.48% 

7.95% 

7.95% 

8.24% 

8.08% 

8.50% 

8.86% 

10 years

115.74 

103.33 

103.17 

103.17 

100.21 

100.21 

105.23 

98.05 

111.00 

120.54 

Annual average

7.99 

7.35 

7.35 

7.35 

7.19 

7.19 

7.45 

7.07 

7.75 

8.23 

5 years

101.52 

89.93 

94.06 

92.06 

94.14 

94.14 

96.52 

89.64 

99.00 

103.98 

Annual average

15.04 

13.69 

14.18 

13.94 

14.19 

14.19 

14.47 

13.65 

14.75 

15.32 

3 years

38.44 

30.48 

35.37 

32.37 

35.36 

35.36 

36.36 

31.59 

37.37 

39.49 

Annual average

11.45 

9.27 

10.62 

9.80 

10.62 

10.62 

10.89 

9.58 

11.16 

11.73 

1 year

27.93 

20.58 

27.01 

22.01 

27.00 

26.00 

27.32 

22.86 

27.64 

28.28 


Current performance may be lower or higher than the quoted past performance, which cannot guarantee future results. After-sales-charge returns for class A and M shares reflect the deduction of the maximum 5.75% and 3.50% sales charge, respectively, levied at the time of purchase. Class B share returns after contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) reflect the applicable CDSC, which is 5% in the first year, declining over time to 1% in the sixth year, and is eliminated thereafter. Class C share returns after CDSC reflect a 1% CDSC for the first year that is eliminated thereafter. Class R and Y shares have no initial sales charge or CDSC. Performance for class B, C, M, R, and Y shares before their inception is derived from the historical performance of class A shares, adjusted for the applicable sales charge (or CDSC) and the higher operating expenses for such shares, except for class Y shares, for which 12b-1 fees are not applicable.

Recent performance may have benefited from one or more legal settlements.

For a portion of the periods, the fund had expense limitations, without which returns would have been lower.

Class B share performance reflects conversion to class A shares after eight years.




12     Europe Equity Fund








Comparative index returns For periods ended 6/30/14


MSCI Europe Index (ND)

Lipper European Region Funds category average*

Annual average (life of fund)

8.78%    

8.79%    

10 years

106.79    

124.92    

Annual average

7.54    

8.18    

5 years

84.51    

90.74    

Annual average

13.03    

13.63    

3 years

28.34    

30.16    

Annual average

8.67    

9.10    

1 year

29.28    

26.77    


Index and Lipper results should be compared with fund performance before sales charge, before CDSC, or at net asset value.

*Over the 1-year, 3-year, 5-year, 10-year, and life-of-fund periods ended 6/30/14, there were 122, 96, 83, 68, and 8 funds, respectively, in this Lipper category.

Change in the value of a $10,000 investment ($9,425 after sales charge)

Cumulative total return from 6/30/04 to 6/30/14

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Past performance does not indicate future results. At the end of the same time period, a $10,000 investment in the fund’s class B and class C shares would have been valued at $20,317 and $20,021, respectively, and no contingent deferred sales charges would apply. A $10,000 investment in the fund’s class M shares ($9,650 after sales charge) would have been valued at $19,805. A $10,000 investment in the fund’s class R and class Y shares would have been valued at $21,100 and $22,054, respectively.




Europe Equity Fund     13










Fund price and distribution information
For the 12-month period ended 6/30/14


Distributions

Class A

Class B

Class C

Class M

Class R

Class Y

Number

1

1

1

1

1

1

Income

$0.215

$0.046

$0.184

$0.094

$0.189

$0.271

Capital gains

Total

$0.215

$0.046

$0.184

$0.094

$0.189

$0.271

Share value

Before
sales charge

After
sales charge

Net asset
value

Net asset
value

Before
sales charge

After
sales charge

Net asset
value

Net asset
value

6/30/13

$21.73

$23.06

$20.80

$21.28

$21.49

$22.27

$21.46

$21.82

6/30/14

27.57

29.25

26.37

26.83

27.26

28.25

27.19

27.70


The classification of distributions, if any, is an estimate. Before-sales-charge share value and current dividend rate for class A and M shares, if applicable, do not take into account any sales charge levied at the time of purchase. After-sales-charge share value, current dividend rate, and current 30-day SEC yield, if applicable, are calculated assuming that the maximum sales charge (5.75% for class A shares and 3.50% for class M shares) was levied at the time of purchase. Final distribution information will appear on your year-end tax forms.


Your fund’s expenses

As a mutual fund investor, you pay ongoing expenses, such as management fees, distribution fees (12b-1 fees), and other expenses. Using the following information, you can estimate how these expenses affect your investment and compare them with the expenses of other funds. You may also pay one-time transaction expenses, including sales charges (loads) and redemption fees, which are not shown in this section and would have resulted in higher total expenses. For more information, see your fund’s prospectus or talk to your financial representative.


Expense ratios


Class A

Class B

Class C

Class M

Class R

Class Y

Total annual operating expenses for the fiscal year ended 6/30/13

1.48%

2.23%

2.23%

1.98%

1.73%

1.23%

Annualized expense ratio for the six-month period ended 6/30/14*†

1.38%

2.13%

2.13%

1.88%

1.63%

1.13%


Fiscal-year expense information in this table is taken from the most recent prospectus, is subject to change, and may differ from that shown for the annualized expense ratio and in the financial highlights of this report.

Expenses are shown as a percentage of average net assets.

*For the fund’s most recent fiscal half year; may differ from expense ratios based on one-year data in the financial highlights.

†Includes an increase of 0.07% from annualizing the performance fee adjustment for the six months ended 6/30/14.




14     Europe Equity Fund








Expenses per $1,000

The following table shows the expenses you would have paid on a $1,000 investment in the fund from January 1, 2014, to June 30, 2014. It also shows how much a $1,000 investment would be worth at the close of the period, assuming actual returns and expenses.


Class A

Class B

Class C

Class M

Class R

Class Y

Expenses paid per $1,000*†

$6.95

$10.70

$10.70

$9.45

$8.20

$5.69

Ending value (after expenses)

$1,029.90

$1,026.10

$1,026.00

$1,027.10

$1,028.40

$1,031.30


*Expenses for each share class are calculated using the fund’s annualized expense ratio for each class, which represents the ongoing expenses as a percentage of average net assets for the six months ended 6/30/14. The expense ratio may differ for each share class.

†Expenses are calculated by multiplying the expense ratio by the average account value for the period; then multiplying the result by the number of days in the period; and then dividing that result by the number of days in the year.


Estimate the expenses you paid

To estimate the ongoing expenses you paid for the six months ended June 30, 2014, use the following calculation method. To find the value of your investment on January 1, 2014, call Putnam at 1-800-225-1581.

put057_expense.jpg


Compare expenses using the SEC’s method

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has established guidelines to help investors assess fund expenses. Per these guidelines, the following table shows your fund’s expenses based on a $1,000 investment, assuming a hypothetical 5% annualized return. You can use this information to compare the ongoing expenses (but not transaction expenses or total costs) of investing in the fund with those of other funds. All mutual fund shareholder reports will provide this information to help you make this comparison. Please note that you cannot use this information to estimate your actual ending account balance and expenses paid during the period.


Class A

Class B

Class C

Class M

Class R

Class Y

Expenses paid per $1,000*†

$6.90

$10.64

$10.64

$9.39

$8.15

$5.66

Ending value (after expenses)

$1,017.95

$1,014.23

$1,014.23

$1,015.47

$1,016.71

$1,019.19


*Expenses for each share class are calculated using the fund’s annualized expense ratio for each class, which represents the ongoing expenses as a percentage of average net assets for the six months ended 6/30/14. The expense ratio may differ for each share class.

†Expenses are calculated by multiplying the expense ratio by the average account value for the six-month period; then multiplying the result by the number of days in the six-month period; and then dividing that result by the number of days in the year.




Europe Equity Fund     15








Terms and definitions

Important terms

Total return shows how the value of the fund’s shares changed over time, assuming you held the shares through the entire period and reinvested all distributions in the fund.

Before sales charge, or net asset value, is the price, or value, of one share of a mutual fund, without a sales charge. Before-sales-charge figures fluctuate with market conditions, and are calculated by dividing the net assets of each class of shares by the number of outstanding shares in the class.

After sales charge is the price of a mutual fund share plus the maximum sales charge levied at the time of purchase. After-sales-charge performance figures shown here assume the 5.75% maximum sales charge for class A shares and 3.50% for class M shares.

Contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) is generally a charge applied at the time of the redemption of class B or C shares and assumes redemption at the end of the period. Your fund’s class B CDSC declines over time from a 5% maximum during the first year to 1% during the sixth year. After the sixth year, the CDSC no longer applies. The CDSC for class C shares is 1% for one year after purchase.

Share classes

Class A shares are generally subject to an initial sales charge and no CDSC (except on certain redemptions of shares bought without an initial sales charge).

Class B shares are not subject to an initial sales charge. They may be subject to a CDSC.

Class C shares are not subject to an initial sales charge and are subject to a CDSC only if the shares are redeemed during the first year.

Class M shares have a lower initial sales charge and a higher 12b-1 fee than class A shares and no CDSC (except on certain redemptions of shares bought without an initial sales charge).

Class R shares are not subject to an initial sales charge or CDSC and are available only to certain employer-sponsored plans.

Class Y shares are not subject to an initial sales charge or CDSC, and carry no 12b-1 fee. They are generally only available to corporate and institutional clients and clients in other approved programs.

Comparative indexes

Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index is an unmanaged index of U.S. investment-grade fixed-income securities.

BofA Merrill Lynch U.S. 3-Month Treasury Bill Index is an unmanaged index that seeks to measure the performance of U.S. Treasury bills available in the marketplace.

MSCI Europe Index (ND) is an unmanaged index of Western European equity securities.

S&P 500 Index is an unmanaged index of common stock performance.

Indexes assume reinvestment of all distributions and do not account for fees. Securities and performance of a fund and an index will differ. You cannot invest directly in an index.

Lipper is a third-party industry-ranking entity that ranks mutual funds. Its rankings do not reflect sales charges. Lipper rankings are based on total return at net asset value relative to other funds that have similar current investment styles or objectives as determined by Lipper. Lipper may change a fund’s category assignment at its discretion. Lipper category averages reflect performance trends for funds within a category.




16     Europe Equity Fund








Other information for shareholders

Proxy voting

Putnam is committed to managing our mutual funds in the best interests of our shareholders. The Putnam funds’ proxy voting guidelines and procedures, as well as information regarding how your fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the 12-month period ended June 30, 2014, are available in the Individual Investors section of putnam.com, and on the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) website, www.sec.gov. If you have questions about finding forms on the SEC’s website, you may call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330. You may also obtain the Putnam funds’ proxy voting guidelines and procedures at no charge by calling Putnam’s Shareholder Services at 1-800-225-1581.

Fund portfolio holdings

The fund will file a complete schedule of its portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. Shareholders may obtain the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. In addition, the fund’s Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. You may call the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330 for information about the SEC’s website or the operation of the Public Reference Room.

Trustee and employee fund ownership

Putnam employees and members of the Board of Trustees place their faith, confidence, and, most importantly, investment dollars in Putnam mutual funds. As of June 30, 2014, Putnam employees had approximately $476,000,000 and the Trustees had approximately $115,000,000 invested in Putnam mutual funds. These amounts include investments by the Trustees’ and employees’ immediate family members as well as investments through retirement and deferred compensation plans.




Europe Equity Fund     17








Important notice regarding Putnam’s privacy policy

In order to conduct business with our shareholders, we must obtain certain personal information such as account holders’ names, addresses, Social Security numbers, and dates of birth. Using this information, we are able to maintain accurate records of accounts and transactions.

It is our policy to protect the confidentiality of our shareholder information, whether or not a shareholder currently owns shares of our funds. In particular, it is our policy not to sell information about you or your accounts to outside marketing firms. We have safeguards in place designed to prevent unauthorized access to our computer systems and procedures to protect personal information from unauthorized use.

Under certain circumstances, we must share account information with outside vendors who provide services to us, such as mailings and proxy solicitations. In these cases, the service providers enter into confidentiality agreements with us, and we provide only the information necessary to process transactions and perform other services related to your account. Finally, it is our policy to share account information with your financial representative, if you’ve listed one on your Putnam account.




18     Europe Equity Fund








Trustee approval of management contract

General conclusions

The Board of Trustees of the Putnam funds oversees the management of each fund and, as required by law, determines annually whether to approve the continuance of your fund’s management contract with Putnam Investment Management, LLC (“Putnam Management”), the sub-management contract with respect to your fund between Putnam Management and its affiliate, Putnam Investments Limited (“PIL”), and the sub-advisory contract among Putnam Management, PIL, and another affiliate, The Putnam Advisory Company (“PAC”). The Board of Trustees, with the assistance of its Contract Committee, requests and evaluates all information it deems reasonably necessary under the circumstances in connection with its annual contract review. The Contract Committee consists solely of Trustees who are not “interested persons” (as this term is defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”)) of the Putnam funds (“Independent Trustees”).

At the outset of the review process, members of the Board’s independent staff and independent legal counsel met with representatives of Putnam Management to review the annual contract review materials furnished to the Contract Committee during the course of the previous year’s review and to discuss possible changes in these materials that might be necessary or desirable for the coming year. Following these discussions and in consultation with the Contract Committee, the Independent Trustees’ independent legal counsel requested that Putnam Management furnish specified information, together with any additional information that Putnam Management considered relevant, to the Contract Committee. Over the course of several months ending in June 2014, the Contract Committee met on a number of occasions with representatives of Putnam Management, and separately in executive session, to consider the information that Putnam Management provided, as well as supplemental information provided in response to additional requests made by the Contract Committee. Throughout this process, the Contract Committee was assisted by the members of the Board’s independent staff and by independent legal counsel for the Putnam funds and the Independent Trustees.

In May 2014, the Contract Committee met in executive session to discuss and consider its preliminary recommendations with respect to the continuance of the contracts. At the Trustees’ June 20, 2014 meeting, the Contract Committee met in executive session with the other Independent Trustees to review a summary of the key financial, performance and other data that the Contract Committee considered in the course of its review. The Contract Committee then presented its written report, which summarized the key factors that the Committee had considered and set forth its final recommendations. The Contract Committee then recommended, and the Independent Trustees approved, the continuance of your fund’s management, sub-management and sub-advisory contracts, effective July 1, 2014. (Because PIL and PAC are affiliates of Putnam Management and Putnam Management remains fully responsible for all services provided by PIL and PAC, the Trustees have not attempted to evaluate PIL or PAC as separate entities, and all subsequent references to Putnam Management below should be deemed to include reference to PIL and PAC as necessary or appropriate in the context.)

The Independent Trustees’ approval was based on the following conclusions:

That the fee schedule in effect for your fund represented reasonable compensation in light of the nature and quality of the services being




Europe Equity Fund     19








provided to the fund, the fees paid by competitive funds, and the costs incurred by Putnam Management in providing services to the fund; and

That the fee schedule in effect for your fund represented an appropriate sharing between fund shareholders and Putnam Management of such economies of scale as may exist in the management of the fund at current asset levels.

These conclusions were based on a comprehensive consideration of all information provided to the Trustees and were not the result of any single factor. Some of the factors that figured particularly in the Trustees’ deliberations and how the Trustees considered these factors are described below, although individual Trustees may have evaluated the information presented differently, giving different weights to various factors. It is also important to recognize that the management arrangements for your fund and the other Putnam funds are the result of many years of review and discussion between the Independent Trustees and Putnam Management, that some aspects of the arrangements may receive greater scrutiny in some years than others, and that the Trustees’ conclusions may be based, in part, on their consideration of fee arrangements in previous years. For example, with some minor exceptions, the current fee arrangements under the management contracts for the Putnam funds were implemented at the beginning of 2010 following extensive review by the Contract Committee and discussions with representatives of Putnam Management, as well as approval by shareholders. Shareholders also voted overwhelmingly to approve these fee arrangements again in early 2014, when they were asked to approve new management contracts (with the same fees and substantially identical other provisions) following the possible termination of the previous management contracts as a result of the death of the Honorable Paul G. Desmarais. (Mr. Desmarais, both directly and through holding companies, controlled a majority of the voting shares of Power Corporation of Canada, which (directly and indirectly) is the majority owner of Putnam Management. Mr. Desmarais’ voting control of shares of Power Corporation of Canada was transferred to The Desmarais Family Residuary Trust upon his death and this transfer, as a technical matter, may have constituted an “assignment” within the meaning of the 1940 Act, causing the Putnam funds’ management contracts to terminate automatically.)

Management fee schedules and total expenses

The Trustees reviewed the management fee schedules in effect for all Putnam funds, including fee levels and breakpoints. The Trustees also reviewed the total expenses of each Putnam fund, recognizing that in most cases management fees represented the major, but not the sole, determinant of total costs to shareholders.

In reviewing fees and expenses, the Trustees generally focus their attention on material changes in circumstances — for example, changes in assets under management, changes in a fund’s investment style, changes in Putnam Management’s operating costs or profitability, or changes in competitive practices in the mutual fund industry — that suggest that consideration of fee changes might be warranted. The Trustees concluded that the circumstances did not warrant changes to the management fee structure of your fund.

Under its management contract, your fund has the benefit of breakpoints in its management fee schedule that provide shareholders with economies of scale in the form of reduced fee levels as assets under management in the Putnam family of funds increase. The Trustees concluded that the fee schedule in effect for your fund represented an appropriate sharing of economies of scale between fund shareholders and Putnam Management.




20     Europe Equity Fund








In addition, your fund’s management contract provides that its management fees will be adjusted up or down depending upon whether your fund’s performance is better or worse than the performance of an appropriate index of securities prices specified in the management contract. In the course of reviewing investment performance, the Trustees examined the operation of your fund’s performance fees and concluded that these fees were operating effectively to align further Putnam Management’s economic interests with those of the fund’s shareholders.

As in the past, the Trustees also focused on the competitiveness of each fund’s total expense ratio. In order to ensure that expenses of the Putnam funds continue to meet competitive standards, the Trustees and Putnam Management have implemented certain expense limitations. These expense limitations were: (i) a contractual expense limitation applicable to all retail open-end funds of 32 basis points on investor servicing fees and expenses and (ii) a contractual expense limitation applicable to all open-end funds of 20 basis points on so-called “other expenses” (i.e., all expenses exclusive of management fees, investor servicing fees, distribution fees, investment-related expenses, interest, taxes, brokerage commissions, extraordinary expenses and acquired fund fees and expenses). These expense limitations serve in particular to maintain competitive expense levels for funds with large numbers of small shareholder accounts and funds with relatively small net assets. Most funds had sufficiently low expenses that these expense limitations did not apply. However, in the case of your fund, the first of the expense limitations applied during its fiscal year ending in 2013. Putnam Management’s support for these expense limitation arrangements was an important factor in the Trustees’ decision to approve the continuance of your fund’s management, sub-management and sub-advisory contracts.

The Trustees reviewed comparative fee and expense information for a custom group of competitive funds selected by Lipper Inc. (“Lipper”). This comparative information included your fund’s percentile ranking for effective management fees and total expenses (excluding any applicable 12b-1 fee), which provides a general indication of your fund’s relative standing. In the custom peer group, your fund ranked in the first quintile in effective management fees (determined for your fund and the other funds in the custom peer group based on fund asset size and the applicable contractual management fee schedule) and in the fourth quintile in total expenses (excluding any applicable 12b-1 fees) as of December 31, 2013 (the first quintile representing the least expensive funds and the fifth quintile the most expensive funds). The fee and expense data reported by Lipper as of December 31, 2013 reflected the most recent fiscal year-end data available in Lipper’s database at that time.

In connection with their review of the management fees and total expenses of the Putnam funds, the Trustees also reviewed the costs of the services provided and the profits realized by Putnam Management and its affiliates from their contractual relationships with the funds. This information included trends in revenues, expenses and profitability of Putnam Management and its affiliates relating to the investment management, investor servicing and distribution services provided to the funds. In this regard, the Trustees also reviewed an analysis of Putnam Management’s revenues, expenses and profitability, allocated on a fund-by-fund basis, with respect to the funds’ management, distribution, and investor servicing contracts. For each fund, the analysis presented information about revenues, expenses and profitability for each of the agreements separately and for the agreements taken together on a combined basis. The Trustees concluded that, at current asset levels, the fee schedules in place represented reasonable




Europe Equity Fund     21








compensation for the services being provided and represented an appropriate sharing of such economies of scale as may exist in the management of the Putnam funds at that time.

The information examined by the Trustees as part of their annual contract review for the Putnam funds has included for many years information regarding fees charged by Putnam Management and its affiliates to institutional clients such as defined benefit pension plans, college endowments, and the like. This information included comparisons of those fees with fees charged to the Putnam funds, as well as an assessment of the differences in the services provided to these different types of clients. The Trustees observed that the differences in fee rates between institutional clients and mutual funds are by no means uniform when examined by individual asset sectors, suggesting that differences in the pricing of investment management services to these types of clients may reflect historical competitive forces operating in separate markets. The Trustees considered the fact that in many cases fee rates across different asset classes are higher on average for mutual funds than for institutional clients, as well as the differences between the services that Putnam Management provides to the Putnam funds and those that it provides to its institutional clients. The Trustees did not rely on these comparisons to any significant extent in concluding that the management fees paid by your fund are reasonable.

Investment performance

The quality of the investment process provided by Putnam Management represented a major factor in the Trustees’ evaluation of the quality of services provided by Putnam Management under your fund’s management contract. The Trustees were assisted in their review of the Putnam funds’ investment process and performance by the work of the investment oversight committees of the Trustees, which meet on a regular basis with the funds’ portfolio teams and with the Chief Investment Officer and other senior members of Putnam Management’s Investment Division throughout the year. The Trustees concluded that Putnam Management generally provides a high-quality investment process — based on the experience and skills of the individuals assigned to the management of fund portfolios, the resources made available to them, and in general Putnam Management’s ability to attract and retain high-quality personnel — but also recognized that this does not guarantee favorable investment results for every fund in every time period.

The Trustees considered that 2013 was a year of strong competitive performance for many of the Putnam funds, with only a relatively small number of exceptions. They noted that this strong performance was exemplified by the fact that the Putnam funds were recognized by Barron’s as the second-best performing mutual fund complex for both 2013 and the five-year period ended December 31, 2013. They also noted, however, the disappointing investment performance of some funds for periods ended December 31, 2013 and considered information provided by Putnam Management regarding the factors contributing to the underperformance and actions being taken to improve the performance of these particular funds. The Trustees indicated their intention to continue to monitor performance trends to assess the effectiveness of these efforts and to evaluate whether additional actions to address areas of underperformance are warranted.

For purposes of evaluating investment performance, the Trustees generally focus on competitive industry rankings for the one-year, three-year and five-year periods. For a number of Putnam funds with relatively unique investment mandates for which meaningful competitive performance rankings are not considered available, the Trustees evaluated performance based on comparisons of their returns with the returns of selected investment




22     Europe Equity Fund








benchmarks. In the case of your fund, the Trustees considered that its class A share cumulative total return performance at net asset value was in the following quartiles of its Lipper peer group (Lipper European Region Funds) for the one-year, three-year and five-year periods ended December 31, 2013 (the first quartile representing the best-performing funds and the fourth quartile the worst-performing funds):


One-year period

1st

Three-year period

1st

Five-year period

2nd


Over the one-year, three-year and five-year periods ended December 31, 2013, there were 119, 100 and 87 funds, respectively, in your fund’s Lipper peer group. (When considering performance information, shareholders should be mindful that past performance is not a guarantee of future results.)

Brokerage and soft-dollar allocations; investor servicing

The Trustees considered various potential benefits that Putnam Management may receive in connection with the services it provides under the management contract with your fund. These include benefits related to brokerage allocation and the use of soft dollars, whereby a portion of the commissions paid by a fund for brokerage may be used to acquire research services that are expected to be useful to Putnam Management in managing the assets of the fund and of other clients. Subject to policies established by the Trustees, soft dollars generated by these means are used primarily to acquire brokerage and research services that enhance Putnam Management’s investment capabilities and supplement Putnam Management’s internal research efforts. However, the Trustees noted that a portion of available soft dollars continues to be used to pay fund expenses. The Trustees indicated their continued intent to monitor regulatory and industry developments in this area with the assistance of their Brokerage Committee and also indicated their continued intent to monitor the allocation of the Putnam funds’ brokerage in order to ensure that the principle of seeking best price and execution remains paramount in the portfolio trading process.

Putnam Management may also receive benefits from payments that the funds make to Putnam Management’s affiliates for investor or distribution services. In conjunction with the annual review of your fund’s management, sub-management and sub-advisory contracts, the Trustees reviewed your fund’s investor servicing agreement with Putnam Investor Services, Inc. (“PSERV”) and its distributor’s contracts and distribution plans with Putnam Retail Management Limited Partnership (“PRM”), both of which are affiliates of Putnam Management. The Trustees concluded that the fees payable by the funds to PSERV and PRM, as applicable, for such services are reasonable in relation to the nature and quality of such services, the fees paid by competitive funds, and the costs incurred by PSERV and PRM, as applicable, in providing such services.




Europe Equity Fund     23








Financial statements

A note about your fund’s auditors

During your fund’s fiscal year, between July 18, 2013, and December 16, 2013, a non-U.S. member firm in PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP’s (“PwC”) global network of firms had an investment in certain non-U.S. funds that became affiliated with Putnam Investments as a result of the acquisition of the funds’ advisor by Putnam’s parent company, Great-West Lifeco Inc. The investment consisted of pension plan assets for the benefit of the member firm’s personnel. This investment is inconsistent with the SEC’s independence rules applicable to auditors. Although upon the disposition of the investment by the member firm on December 16, 2013, PwC and its affiliates took all necessary steps to eliminate this issue, the requirements of the SEC’s independence rules were not met for your fund’s fiscal year because the SEC’s rules require an audit firm to be independent for the entire fiscal year under audit. Based on its knowledge of the facts and its experience with PwC, the Audit and Compliance Committee of your fund’s Board of Trustees concluded that the investment by the PwC member firm would not affect PwC’s ability to render an objective audit opinion to your fund. Based on this conclusion and consideration of the potential risks that the disruption of a change of auditor could present, the Audit and Compliance Committee determined that PwC should continue to act as auditor for your fund.

These sections of the report, as well as the accompanying Notes, preceded by the Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, constitute the fund’s financial statements.

The fund’s portfolio lists all the fund’s investments and their values as of the last day of the reporting period. Holdings are organized by asset type and industry sector, country, or state to show areas of concentration and diversification.

Statement of assets and liabilities shows how the fund’s net assets and share price are determined. All investment and non-investment assets are added together. Any unpaid expenses and other liabilities are subtracted from this total. The result is divided by the number of shares to determine the net asset value per share, which is calculated separately for each class of shares. (For funds with preferred shares, the amount subtracted from total assets includes the liquidation preference of preferred shares.)

Statement of operations shows the fund’s net investment gain or loss. This is done by first adding up all the fund’s earnings — from dividends and interest income — and subtracting its operating expenses to determine net investment income (or loss). Then, any net gain or loss the fund realized on the sales of its holdings — as well as any unrealized gains or losses over the period — is added to or subtracted from the net investment result to determine the fund’s net gain or loss for the fiscal year.

Statement of changes in net assets shows how the fund’s net assets were affected by the fund’s net investment gain or loss, by distributions to shareholders, and by changes in the number of the fund’s shares. It lists distributions and their sources (net investment income or realized capital gains) over the current reporting period and the most recent fiscal year-end. The distributions listed here may not match the sources listed in the Statement of operations because the distributions are determined on a tax basis and may be paid in a different period from the one in which they were earned.

Financial highlights provide an overview of the fund’s investment results, per-share distributions, expense ratios, net investment income ratios, and portfolio turnover in one summary table, reflecting the five most recent reporting periods. In a semiannual report, the highlights table also includes the current reporting period.




24     Europe Equity Fund








Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Trustees and Shareholders of
Putnam Europe Equity Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the portfolio, 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 Putnam Europe Equity Fund (the “fund”) at June 30, 2014, and the results of its operations, the changes in its net assets and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as “financial statements”) are the responsibility of the 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 investments owned at June 30, 2014 by correspondence with the custodian, brokers, and transfer agent, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
August 7, 2014




Europe Equity Fund     25








The fund’s portfolio 6/30/14


COMMON STOCKS (97.7%)*

Shares

Value

Austria (1.5%)

voestalpine AG S

99,458

$4,733,209

4,733,209

Belgium (4.1%)

Anheuser-Busch InBev NV

78,021

8,963,388

Solvay SA

22,531

3,878,059

12,841,447

Czech Republic (0.8%)

Erste Group Bank AG

76,694

2,480,504

2,480,504

France (15.4%)

Airbus Group NV

80,548

5,397,808

Alcatel-Lucent † S

571,651

2,041,443

Alstom SA

53,885

1,964,519

BNP Paribas SA

56,646

3,842,977

Eurazeo SA

21,081

1,753,623

Faurecia

61,796

2,332,052

Gaztransport Et Technigaz SA

41,480

2,704,180

Iliad SA

10,815

3,269,083

Natixis

788,745

5,056,695

Numericable Group SA † S

54,320

3,235,547

Renault SA

32,247

2,915,609

Sanofi

97,299

10,336,104

Veolia Environnement SA

185,538

3,535,206

48,384,846

Germany (12.3%)

BASF SE

27,970

3,256,592

Biotest AG-Vorzugsaktien (Preference) S

17,609

2,281,719

Daimler AG (Registered Shares)

62,861

5,887,570

Deutsche Post AG

180,900

6,541,927

HeidelbergCement AG

28,927

2,468,876

Henkel AG & Co. KGaA (Preference)

58,508

6,764,111

Siemens AG

66,258

8,750,629

Wacker Chemie AG

20,402

2,355,882

Zalando AG (acquired 9/30/13, cost $313,871) (Private) † ΔΔ F

14

312,980

38,620,286

Ireland (3.2%)

Bank of Ireland †

8,072,578

2,730,285

Hibernia REIT PLC † R

1,585,480

2,409,808

Kerry Group PLC Class A

65,032

4,884,301

10,024,394

Italy (5.4%)

Banca Popolare di Milano Scarl †

3,188,109

2,859,388

Beni Stabili SpA R

2,335,115

2,142,307

Luxottica Group SpA

45,974

2,660,990

Mediaset SpA †

527,088

2,569,401

Telecom Italia SpA RSP

2,493,377

2,463,332

UniCredit SpA

503,252

4,213,866

16,909,284





26     Europe Equity Fund









COMMON STOCKS (97.7%)* cont.

Shares

Value

Netherlands (2.4%)

ING Groep NV GDR †

527,444

$7,410,072

7,410,072

Norway (1.9%)

DNB ASA

332,467

6,081,466

6,081,466

Portugal (0.7%)

Banco Espirito Santo SA † S

2,683,940

2,212,422

2,212,422

Spain (2.9%)

Atresmedia Corporacion de Medios de Comunicacion SA S

186,982

2,678,121

Banco de Sabadell SA

1,058,341

3,611,373

International Consolidated Airlines Group SA †

472,839

2,998,147

9,287,641

Sweden (2.5%)

Assa Abloy AB Class B

61,762

3,142,846

Com Hem Holding AB †

175,605

1,655,771

Intrum Justita AB

98,537

2,940,677

7,739,294

Switzerland (4.9%)

Barry Callebaut AG

1,970

2,676,872

Compagnie Financiere Richemont SA

45,603

4,785,024

Nestle SA

64,701

5,012,358

Partners Group Holding AG

10,339

2,826,087

15,300,341

United Kingdom (38.5%)

Admiral Group PLC

93,841

2,487,686

Associated British Foods PLC

97,400

5,082,384

AstraZeneca PLC

119,434

8,871,953

Barclays PLC

578,663

2,107,409

BG Group PLC

258,582

5,465,334

BHP Billiton PLC

181,935

5,883,214

Britvic PLC

280,452

3,491,749

BT Group PLC

753,843

4,965,698

Compass Group PLC

276,137

4,806,147

Experian PLC

130,336

2,203,803

Genel Energy PLC †

174,196

3,025,908

HSBC Holdings PLC

149,157

1,513,480

Kingfisher PLC

700,953

4,306,603

Liberty Global PLC Ser. C

53,600

2,267,816

Metro Bank PLC (acquired 1/15/14, cost $611,361) (Private) † ΔΔ F

28,721

613,556

Persimmon PLC †

203,957

4,443,432

Prudential PLC

297,138

6,819,279

Regus PLC

748,260

2,326,799

Royal Dutch Shell PLC Class A

383,157

15,858,947

Serco Group PLC

44,363

277,498

Shire PLC

89,501

6,999,960

St James’s Place PLC

165,500

2,158,263

Telecity Group PLC

330,003

4,258,344

Thomas Cook Group PLC †

1,002,793

2,291,100

TSB Banking Group PLC 144A †

650,382

3,133,274

TUI Travel PLC

591,252

4,027,237





Europe Equity Fund     27









COMMON STOCKS (97.7%)* cont.

Shares

Value

United Kingdom cont.

Vodafone Group PLC

1,379,541

$4,603,845

WPP PLC

300,091

6,542,954

120,833,672

United States (1.2%)

Google, Inc. Class C †

3,214

1,848,950

Monsanto Co.

16,400

2,045,736

3,894,686

Total common stocks (cost $266,323,547)


$306,753,564



SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS (5.8%)*

Shares

Value

Putnam Cash Collateral Pool, LLC 0.18% d

9,689,036

$9,689,036

Putnam Short Term Investment Fund 0.07% L

8,379,233

8,379,233

Total short-term investments (cost $18,068,269)


$18,068,269



TOTAL INVESTMENTS

Total investments (cost $284,391,816)

$324,821,833




Key to holding’s abbreviations

GDR

Global Depository Receipts: represents ownership of foreign securities on deposit with a custodian bank



Notes to the fund’s portfolio

Unless noted otherwise, the notes to the fund’s portfolio are for the close of the fund’s reporting period, which ran from July 1, 2013 through June 30, 2014 (the reporting period). Within the following notes to the portfolio, references to “ASC 820” represent Accounting Standards Codification 820 Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures and references to “OTC”, if any, represent over-the-counter.

*

Percentages indicated are based on net assets of $313,958,378.

Non-income-producing security.

ΔΔ

Security is restricted with regard to public resale. The total fair value of this security and any other restricted securities (excluding 144A securities), if any, held at the close of the reporting period was $926,536 or 0.3% of net assets.

 d

Affiliated company. See Note 1 to the financial statements regarding securities lending. The rate quoted in the security description is the annualized 7-day yield of the fund at the close of the reporting period.

 F

Security is valued at fair value following procedures approved by the Trustees. Securities may be classified as Level 2 or Level 3 for ASC 820 based on the securities’ valuation inputs.

 L

Affiliated company (Note 5). The rate quoted in the security description is the annualized 7-day yield of the fund at the close of the reporting period.

 R

Real Estate Investment Trust.

 S

Security on loan, in part or in entirety, at the close of the reporting period (Note 1).

144A after the name of an issuer represents securities exempt from registration under Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers.

The fund had the following sector concentrations greater than 10% at the close of the reporting period (as a percentage of net assets):

Financials

21.8%

Consumer discretionary

17.9

Consumer staples

11.7

Industrials

11.6





28     Europe Equity Fund









ASC 820 establishes a three-level hierarchy for disclosure of fair value measurements. The valuation hierarchy is based upon the transparency of inputs to the valuation of the fund’s investments. The three levels are defined as follows:

Level 1: Valuations based on quoted prices for identical securities in active markets.

Level 2: Valuations based on quoted prices in markets that are not active or for which all significant inputs are observable, either directly or indirectly.

Level 3: Valuations based on inputs that are unobservable and significant to the fair value measurement.

The following is a summary of the inputs used to value the fund’s net assets as of the close of the reporting period:



Valuation inputs

Investments in securities:

Level 1 

Level 2 

Level 3 

Common stocks:

Austria

$4,733,209 

$— 

$— 

Belgium

12,841,447 

— 

— 

Czech Republic

2,480,504 

— 

— 

France

48,384,846 

— 

— 

Germany

38,307,306 

— 

312,980 

Ireland

10,024,394 

— 

— 

Italy

16,909,284 

— 

— 

Netherlands

7,410,072 

— 

— 

Norway

6,081,466 

— 

— 

Portugal

2,212,422 

— 

— 

Spain

9,287,641 

— 

— 

Sweden

7,739,294 

— 

— 

Switzerland

15,300,341 

— 

— 

United Kingdom

120,220,116 

— 

613,556 

United States

3,894,686 

— 

— 

Total common stocks

305,827,028 

— 

926,536 

Short-term investments

8,379,233 

9,689,036 

— 

Totals by level

$314,206,261 

$9,689,036 

$926,536 

At the start and close of the reporting period, Level 3 investments in securities were not considered a significant portion of the fund’s portfolio.


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




Europe Equity Fund     29









Statement of assets and liabilities 6/30/14

ASSETS

Investment in securities, at value, including $9,123,963 of securities on loan (Note 1):

Unaffiliated issuers (identified cost $266,323,547)

$306,753,564 

Affiliated issuers (identified cost $18,068,269) (Notes 1 and 5)

18,068,269 

Foreign currency (cost $112,661) (Note 1)

112,661 

Dividends, interest and other receivables

552,112 

Foreign tax reclaim

98,346 

Receivable for shares of the fund sold

1,164,612 

Receivable for investments sold

4,035,278 

Prepaid assets

40,228 

Total assets

330,825,070 

LIABILITIES

Payable for investments purchased

6,062,838 

Payable for shares of the fund repurchased

298,572 

Payable for compensation of Manager (Note 2)

188,434 

Payable for custodian fees (Note 2)

11,339 

Payable for investor servicing fees (Note 2)

103,693 

Payable for Trustee compensation and expenses (Note 2)

185,485 

Payable for administrative services (Note 2)

497 

Payable for distribution fees (Note 2)

157,831 

Collateral on securities loaned, at value (Note 1)

9,689,036 

Other accrued expenses

168,967 

Total liabilities

16,866,692 

Net assets

$313,958,378 

REPRESENTED BY

Paid-in capital (Unlimited shares authorized) (Notes 1 and 4)

$331,204,414 

Undistributed net investment income (Note 1)

1,676,995 

Accumulated net realized loss on investments and foreign currency transactions (Note 1)

(59,369,113)

Net unrealized appreciation of investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

40,446,082 

Total — Representing net assets applicable to capital shares outstanding

$313,958,378 

(Continued on next page)


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




30     Europe Equity Fund









Statement of assets and liabilities (Continued)

COMPUTATION OF NET ASSET VALUE AND OFFERING PRICE

Net asset value and redemption price per class A share ($226,015,982 divided by 8,197,528 shares)

$27.57 

Offering price per class A share (100/94.25 of $27.57)*

$29.25 

Net asset value and offering price per class B share ($4,357,682 divided by 165,262 shares)**

$26.37 

Net asset value and offering price per class C share ($19,165,468 divided by 714,303 shares)**

$26.83 

Net asset value and redemption price per class M share ($3,293,941 divided by 120,814 shares)

$27.26 

Offering price per class M share (100/96.50 of $27.26)*

$28.25 

Net asset value, offering price and redemption price per class R share ($545,884 divided by 20,073 shares)

$27.19 

Net asset value, offering price and redemption price per class Y share ($60,579,421 divided by 2,186,915 shares)

$27.70 

*

 On single retail sales of less than $50,000. On sales of $50,000 or more the offering price is reduced.

**

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


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




Europe Equity Fund     31









Statement of operations Year ended 6/30/14

INVESTMENT INCOME

Dividends (net of foreign tax of $528,175)

$6,119,815 

Interest (including interest income of $4,036 from investments in affiliated issuers) (Note 5)

4,082 

Securities lending (Note 1)

203,899 

Total investment income

6,327,796 

EXPENSES

Compensation of Manager (Note 2)

1,813,437 

Investor servicing fees (Note 2)

520,759 

Custodian fees (Note 2)

47,926 

Trustee compensation and expenses (Note 2)

15,366 

Distribution fees (Note 2)

635,797 

Administrative services (Note 2)

6,117 

Other

317,741 

Total expenses

3,357,143 

Expense reduction (Note 2)

(917)

Net expenses

3,356,226 

Net investment income

2,971,570 

Net realized gain on investments (Notes 1 and 3)

23,093,051 

Net realized gain on swap contracts (Note 1)

829,215 

Net realized gain on foreign currency transactions (Note 1)

6,150 

Net unrealized appreciation of assets and liabilities in foreign currencies during the year

26,625 

Net unrealized appreciation of investments and when-issued securities during the year

22,312,979 

Net gain on investments

46,268,020 

Net increase in net assets resulting from operations

$49,239,590 


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




32     Europe Equity Fund









Statement of changes in net assets

INCREASE IN NET ASSETS

Year ended 6/30/14 

Year ended 6/30/13 

Operations:

Net investment income

$2,971,570 

$2,237,479 

Net realized gain on investments and foreign currency transactions

23,928,416 

18,439,271 

Net unrealized appreciation of investments and assets and liabilities in foreign currencies

22,339,604 

15,290,410 

Net increase in net assets resulting from operations

49,239,590 

35,967,160 

Distributions to shareholders (Note 1):

From ordinary income

Net investment income

Class A

(1,479,046)

(2,081,310)

Class B

(6,573)

(24,925)

Class C

(81,048)

(14,521)

Class M

(11,855)

(29,115)

Class R

(2,492)

(1,914)

Class Y

(271,466)

(148,088)

Increase in capital from settlement payments

56,290 

Redemption fees (Note 1)

1,786 

Increase (decrease) from capital share transactions (Note 4)

105,090,212 

(17,515,780)

Total increase in net assets

152,533,612 

16,153,293 

NET ASSETS

Beginning of year

161,424,766 

145,271,473 

End of year (including undistributed net investment income of $1,676,995 and distributions in excess of net investment income of $2,690, respectively)

$313,958,378 

$161,424,766 


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




Europe Equity Fund     33








Financial highlights (For a common share outstanding throughout the period)


INVESTMENT OPERATIONS:

LESS DISTRIBUTIONS:

RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:

Period ended

Net asset value, beginning of period

Net investment income (loss)a

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments

Total from investment operations

From
net investment income

From
return of capital

Total
distributions

Redemption
fees

Non-recurring reimbursements

Net asset value, end of period

Total return at net asset value (%)b

Net assets, end of period (in thousands)

Ratio of expenses to average net assets (%)c

Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets (%)

Portfolio turnover (%)

Class A

June 30, 2014

$21.73    

.31    

5.74    

6.05    

(.22)  

—    

(.22)  

—    

.01e  

$27.57    

27.93    

$226,016    

1.41    

1.20    

64    

June 30, 2013

17.45    

.29    

4.30    

4.59    

(.31)  

—    

(.31)  

d  

—    

21.73    

26.39    

143,122    

1.48    

1.43    

66    

June 30, 2012

21.50    

.32    

(3.94)  

(3.62)  

(.84)  

(.03)  

(.87)  

.01    

.43f,g,h

17.45    

(14.38)f,h

130,428    

1.47    

1.78    

62    

June 30, 2011

15.83    

.31    

5.72    

6.03    

(.37)  

—    

(.37)  

d  

.01i,j

21.50    

38.36    

177,369    

1.43    

1.54    

70    

June 30, 2010

15.12    

.23    

.49    

.72    

(.09)  

—    

(.09)  

d  

.08k  

15.83    

5.20    

151,329    

1.52l  

1.25l  

113    

Class B

June 30, 2014

$20.80    

.09    

5.52    

5.61    

(.05)  

—    

(.05)  

—    

.01e  

$26.37    

27.01    

$4,358    

2.16    

.38    

64    

June 30, 2013

16.72    

.12    

4.11    

4.23    

(.15)  

—    

(.15)  

d  

—    

20.80    

25.36    

2,907    

2.23    

.60    

66    

June 30, 2012

20.55    

.16    

(3.72)  

(3.56)  

(.66)  

(.03)  

(.69)  

.01    

.41f,g,h

16.72    

(14.98)f,h

3,126    

2.22    

.92    

62    

June 30, 2011

15.12    

.12    

5.49    

5.61    

(.19)  

—    

(.19)  

d  

.01i,j

20.55    

37.29    

5,580    

2.18    

.65    

70    

June 30, 2010

14.48    

.06    

.50    

.56    

—    

—    

—    

d  

.08k  

15.12    

4.42    

6,671    

2.27l  

.37l  

113    

Class C

June 30, 2014

$21.28    

.22    

5.50    

5.72    

(.18)  

—    

(.18)  

—    

.01e  

$26.83    

27.00    

$19,165    

2.16    

.85    

64    

June 30, 2013

17.11    

.18    

4.16    

4.34    

(.17)  

—    

(.17)  

d  

—    

21.28    

25.41    

2,679    

2.23    

.90    

66    

June 30, 2012

21.05    

.18    

(3.84)  

(3.66)  

(.68)  

(.03)  

(.71)  

.01    

.42f,g,h

17.11    

(15.01)f,h

1,502    

2.22    

1.01    

62    

June 30, 2011

15.50    

.15    

5.60    

5.75    

(.21)  

—    

(.21)  

d  

.01i,j

21.05    

37.32    

2,217    

2.18    

.80    

70    

June 30, 2010

14.84    

.09    

.49    

.58    

—    

—    

—    

d  

.08k  

15.50    

4.45    

1,859    

2.27l  

.48l  

113    

Class M

June 30, 2014

$21.49    

.15    

5.70    

5.85    

(.09)  

—    

(.09)  

—    

.01e  

$27.26    

27.32    

$3,294    

1.91    

.59    

64    

June 30, 2013

17.27    

.18    

4.25    

4.43    

(.21)  

—    

(.21)  

d  

—    

21.49    

25.71    

2,795    

1.98    

.92    

66    

June 30, 2012

21.26    

.22    

(3.87)  

(3.65)  

(.74)  

(.03)  

(.77)  

.01    

.42f,g,h

17.27    

(14.80)f,h

2,565    

1.97    

1.24    

62    

June 30, 2011

15.65    

.21    

5.66    

5.87    

(.27)  

—    

(.27)  

d  

.01i,j

21.26    

37.72    

3,751    

1.93    

1.06    

70    

June 30, 2010

14.96    

.13    

.49    

.62    

(.01)  

—    

(.01)  

d  

.08k  

15.65    

4.64    

3,250    

2.02l  

.75l  

113    

Class R

June 30, 2014

$21.46    

.32    

5.59    

5.91    

(.19)  

—    

(.19)  

—    

.01e  

$27.19    

27.64    

$546    

1.66    

1.22    

64    

June 30, 2013

17.23    

.25    

4.22    

4.47    

(.24)  

—    

(.24)  

d  

—    

21.46    

26.02    

206    

1.73    

1.27    

66    

June 30, 2012

21.25    

.27    

(3.89)  

(3.62)  

(.81)  

(.03)  

(.84)  

.01    

.43f,g,h

17.23    

(14.60)f,h

168    

1.72    

1.51    

62    

June 30, 2011

15.66    

.29    

5.62    

5.91    

(.33)  

—    

(.33)  

d  

.01i,j

21.25    

38.00    

219    

1.68    

1.49    

70    

June 30, 2010

14.97    

.21    

.46    

.67    

(.06)  

—    

(.06)  

d  

.08k  

15.66    

4.97    

133    

1.77l  

1.20l  

113    

Class Y

June 30, 2014

$21.82    

.53    

5.61    

6.14    

(.27)  

—    

(.27)  

—    

.01e  

$27.70    

28.28    

$60,579    

1.16    

1.96    

64    

June 30, 2013

17.53    

.36    

4.29    

4.65    

(.36)  

—    

(.36)  

d  

—    

21.82    

26.63    

9,714    

1.23    

1.77    

66    

June 30, 2012

21.60    

.37    

(3.95)  

(3.58)  

(.90)  

(.03)  

(.93)  

.01    

.43f,g,h 

17.53    

(14.13)f,h

7,484    

1.22    

2.04    

62    

June 30, 2011

15.90    

.37    

5.74    

6.11    

(.42)  

—    

(.42)  

d  

.01i,j

21.60    

38.73    

9,947    

1.18    

1.84    

70    

June 30, 2010

15.19    

.27    

.49    

.76    

(.13)  

—    

(.13)  

d  

.08k  

15.90    

5.41    

8,356    

1.27l  

1.52l  

113    


See notes to financial highlights at the end of this section.

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


34

Europe Equity Fund

Europe Equity Fund

35








Financial highlights (Continued)

aPer share net investment income (loss) has been determined on the basis of the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the period.

bTotal return assumes dividend reinvestment and does not reflect the effect of sales charges.

cIncludes amounts paid through expense offset and brokerage/service arrangements (Note 2). Also excludes acquired fund fees and expenses, if any.

dAmount represents less than $0.01 per share.

eReflects a non-recurring reimbursement pursuant to a settlement between the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) and Morgan Stanley & Co. which amounted to $0.01 per share outstanding on November 27, 2013.

fReflects a non-recurring reimbursement pursuant to a settlement between the SEC and Bank of America which amounted to the following amounts per share outstanding on December 15, 2011:


Per share

Class A

$0.15 

Class B

0.14 

Class C

0.15 

Class M

0.15 

Class R

0.15 

Class Y

0.15 


This payment resulted in an increase to total returns of 0.73% for the period ended June 30, 2012.

gReflects a non-recurring reimbursement pursuant to a settlement between the SEC and Canadian Imperial Holdings, Inc. and CIBC World Markets Corp. which amounted to the following amounts per share outstanding on November 29, 2011:


Per share

Class A

$0.08 

Class B

0.07 

Class C

0.08 

Class M

0.08 

Class R

0.08 

Class Y

0.08 


hReflects a non-recurring reimbursement related to restitution amounts in connection with a distribution plan approved by the SEC, which amounted to the following amounts per share outstanding on July 21, 2011:


Per share

Class A

$0.20 

Class B

0.19 

Class C

0.20 

Class M

0.20 

Class R

0.20 

Class Y

0.20 


This payment resulted in an increase to total returns of 0.98% for the period ended June 30, 2012.

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




36     Europe Equity Fund








Financial highlights (Continued)

Reflects a non-recurring reimbursement related to short-term trading related lawsuits, which amounted to $0.01 per share outstanding on May 11, 2011.

Reflects a non-recurring reimbursement pursuant to a settlement between the SEC and Zurich Capital Markets, Inc., which amounted to less than $0.01 per share outstanding on December 21, 2010.

Reflects a non-recurring reimbursement pursuant to a settlement between the SEC and Prudential Securities, Inc., which amounted to $0.08 per share outstanding as of March 30, 2010.

Reflects an involuntary contractual expense limitation in effect during the period. As a result of such limitation, the expenses of each class reflect a reduction of 0.02% of average net assets as of June 30, 2010.

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




Europe Equity Fund     37








Notes to financial statements 6/30/14

Within the following Notes to financial statements, references to “State Street” represent State Street Bank and Trust Company, references to “the SEC” represent the Securities and Exchange Commission, references to “Putnam Management” represent Putnam Investment Management, LLC, the fund’s manager, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Putnam Investments, LLC and references to “OTC”, if any, represent over-the-counter. Unless otherwise noted, the “reporting period” represents the period from July 1, 2013 through June 30, 2014.

Putnam Europe Equity Fund (the fund) is a Massachusetts business trust, which is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as a diversified open-end management investment company. The investment objective of the fund is to seek capital appreciation by investing mainly in common stocks (growth or value stocks or both) of large and midsize European companies that Putnam Management believes have favorable investment potential. Putnam Management also considers other factors that it believes will cause the stock price to rise. The fund invests mainly in developed countries, but may invest in emerging markets, such as those in Eastern Europe.

The fund offers class A, class B, class C, class M, class R and class Y shares. Class A and class M shares are sold with a maximum front-end sales charge of 5.75% and 3.50%, respectively, and generally do not pay a contingent deferred sales charge. Class B shares, which convert to class A shares after approximately eight years, do not pay a front-end sales charge and are subject to a contingent deferred sales charge if those shares are redeemed within six years of purchase. Class C shares have a one-year 1.00% contingent deferred sales charge and do not convert to class A shares. Class R shares, which are not available to all investors, are sold at net asset value. The expenses for class A, class B, class C, class M and class R shares may differ based on the distribution fee of each class, which is identified in Note 2. Class Y shares, which are sold at net asset value, are generally subject to the same expenses as class A, class B, class C, class M and class R shares, but do not bear a distribution fee. Class Y shares are not available to all investors.

In the normal course of business, the fund enters into contracts that may include agreements to indemnify another party under given circumstances. The fund’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may be, but have not yet been, made against the fund. However, the fund’s management team expects the risk of material loss to be remote.

Note 1: Significant accounting policies

The following is a summary of significant accounting policies consistently followed by the fund in the preparation of its financial statements. The preparation of financial statements is in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities in the financial statements and the reported amounts of increases and decreases in net assets from operations. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Subsequent events after the Statement of assets and liabilities date through the date that the financial statements were issued have been evaluated in the preparation of the financial statements.

A short-term trading fee of 1.00% may have applied to redemptions (including exchanges into another fund) of shares purchased before January 2, 2013 and held for 90 days or less. The short-term trading fee was accounted for as an addition to paid-in-capital. No short-term trading fee applies to shares purchased on or after January 2, 2013.

Investment income, realized and unrealized gains and losses and expenses of the fund are borne pro-rata based on the relative net assets of each class to the total net assets of the fund, except that each class bears expenses unique to that class (including the distribution fees applicable to such classes). Each class votes as a class only with respect to its own distribution plan or other matters on which a class vote is required by law or determined by the Trustees. If the fund were liquidated, shares of each class would receive their pro-rata share of the net assets of the fund. In addition, the Trustees declare separate dividends on each class of shares.

Security valuation Investments for which market quotations are readily available are valued at the last reported sales price on their principal exchange, or official closing price for certain markets, and are classified as Level 1 securities under Accounting Standards Codification 820 Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures (ASC 820). If no sales are reported, as in the case of some securities that are traded OTC, a security is valued at its last reported bid price and is generally categorized as a Level 2 security.

Investments in open-end investment companies (excluding exchange traded funds), if any, which can be classified as Level 1 or Level 2 securities, are valued based on their net asset value. The net asset value of such




38     Europe Equity Fund








investment companies equals the total value of their assets less their liabilities and divided by the number of their outstanding shares.

Many securities markets and exchanges outside the U.S. close prior to the close of the New York Stock Exchange and therefore the closing prices for securities in such markets or on such exchanges may not fully reflect events that occur after such close but before the close of the New York Stock Exchange. Accordingly, on certain days, the fund will fair value foreign equity securities taking into account multiple factors including movements in the U.S. securities markets, currency valuations and comparisons to the valuation of American Depository Receipts, exchange-traded funds and futures contracts. These securities, which would generally be classified as Level 1 securities, will be transferred to Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy when they are valued at fair value. The number of days on which fair value prices will be used will depend on market activity and it is possible that fair value prices will be used by the fund to a significant extent. Securities quoted in foreign currencies, if any, are translated into U.S. dollars at the current exchange rate. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of 60 days or less may be valued at amortized cost, which approximates fair value and are classified as Level 2 securities.

To the extent a pricing service or dealer is unable to value a security or provides a valuation that Putnam Management does not believe accurately reflects the security’s fair value, the security will be valued at fair value by Putnam Management in accordance with policies and procedures approved by the Trustees. Certain investments, including certain restricted and illiquid securities and derivatives, are also valued at fair value following procedures approved by the Trustees. These valuations consider such factors as significant market or specific security events such as interest rate or credit quality changes, various relationships with other securities, discount rates, U.S. Treasury, U.S. swap and credit yields, index levels, convexity exposures and recovery rates. These securities are classified as Level 2 or as Level 3 depending on the priority of the significant inputs.

Such valuations and procedures are reviewed periodically by the Trustees. The fair value of securities is generally determined as the amount that the fund could reasonably expect to realize from an orderly disposition of such securities over a reasonable period of time. By its nature, a fair value price is a good faith estimate of the value of a security in a current sale and does not reflect an actual market price, which may be different by a material amount.

Security transactions and related investment income Security transactions are recorded on the trade date (the date the order to buy or sell is executed). Gains or losses on securities sold are determined on the identified cost basis.

Interest income, net of any applicable withholding taxes, is recorded on the accrual basis. Dividend income, net of any applicable withholding taxes, is recognized on the ex-dividend date except that certain dividends from foreign securities, if any, are recognized as soon as the fund is informed of the ex-dividend date. Non-cash dividends, if any, are recorded at the fair value of the securities received. Dividends representing a return of capital or capital gains, if any, are reflected as a reduction of cost and/or as a realized gain.

All premiums/discounts are amortized/accreted on a yield-to-maturity basis.

Securities purchased or sold on a when-issued basis may be settled at a future date beyond customary settlement time; interest income is accrued based on the terms of the securities. Losses may arise due to changes in the fair value of the underlying securities or if the counterparty does not perform under the contract.

Foreign currency translation The accounting records of the fund are maintained in U.S. dollars. The fair value of foreign securities, currency holdings, and other assets and liabilities is recorded in the books and records of the fund after translation to U.S. dollars based on the exchange rates on that day. The cost of each security is determined using historical exchange rates. Income and withholding taxes are translated at prevailing exchange rates when earned or incurred. The fund does not isolate that portion of realized or unrealized gains or losses resulting from changes in the foreign exchange rate on investments from fluctuations arising from changes in the market prices of the securities. Such gains and losses are included with the net realized and unrealized gain or loss on investments. Net realized gains and losses on foreign currency transactions represent net realized exchange gains or losses on closed forward currency contracts, disposition of foreign currencies, currency gains and losses realized between the trade and settlement dates on securities transactions and the difference between the amount of investment income and foreign withholding taxes recorded on the fund’s books and the U.S. dollar equivalent amounts actually received or paid. Net unrealized appreciation and depreciation of assets and liabilities in foreign currencies arise from changes in the value of open forward currency contracts and assets and liabilities other than investments at the period end, resulting from changes in the exchange rate.

Total return swap contracts The fund entered into OTC total return swap contracts, which are arrangements to exchange a market linked return for a periodic payment, both based on a notional principal amount, to manage exposure to specific securities.




Europe Equity Fund     39








To the extent that the total return of the security, index or other financial measure underlying the transaction exceeds or falls short of the offsetting interest rate obligation, the fund will receive a payment from or make a payment to the counterparty. OTC total return swap contracts are marked to market daily based upon quotations from an independent pricing service or market makers and the change, if any, is recorded as an unrealized gain or loss. Payments received or made are recorded as realized gains or losses. Certain OTC total return swap contracts may include extended effective dates. Payments related to these swap contracts are accrued based on the terms of the contract. The fund could be exposed to credit or market risk due to unfavorable changes in the fluctuation of interest rates or in the price of the underlying security or index, the possibility that there is no liquid market for these agreements or that the counterparty may default on its obligation to perform. The fund’s maximum risk of loss from counterparty risk is the fair value of the contract. This risk may be mitigated by having a master netting arrangement between the fund and the counterparty. Risk of loss may exceed amounts recognized on the Statement of assets and liabilities.

OTC total return swap contracts outstanding, including their respective notional amounts at period end, if any, are listed after the fund’s portfolio.

Master agreements The fund is a party to ISDA (International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc.) Master Agreements (Master Agreements) with certain counterparties that govern OTC derivative and foreign exchange contracts entered into from time to time. The Master Agreements may contain provisions regarding, among other things, the parties’ general obligations, representations, agreements, collateral requirements, events of default and early termination. With respect to certain counterparties, in accordance with the terms of the Master Agreements, collateral posted to the fund is held in a segregated account by the fund’s custodian and with respect to those amounts which can be sold or repledged, is presented in the fund’s portfolio.

Collateral pledged by the fund is segregated by the fund’s custodian and identified in the fund’s portfolio. Collateral can be in the form of cash or debt securities issued by the U.S. Government or related agencies or other securities as agreed to by the fund and the applicable counterparty. Collateral requirements are determined based on the fund’s net position with each counterparty.

Termination events applicable to the fund may occur upon a decline in the fund’s net assets below a specified threshold over a certain period of time. Termination events applicable to counterparties may occur upon a decline in the counterparty’s long-term and short-term credit ratings below a specified level. In each case, upon occurrence, the other party may elect to terminate early and cause settlement of all derivative and foreign exchange contracts outstanding, including the payment of any losses and costs resulting from such early termination, as reasonably determined by the terminating party. Any decision by one or more of the fund’s counterparties to elect early termination could impact the fund’s future derivative activity.

At the close of the reporting period, the fund did not have a net liability position on open derivative contracts subject to the Master Agreements.

Securities lending The fund may lend securities, through its agent, to qualified borrowers in order to earn additional income. The loans are collateralized by cash in an amount at least equal to the fair value of the securities loaned. The fair value of securities loaned is determined daily and any additional required collateral is allocated to the fund on the next business day. The risk of borrower default will be borne by the fund’s agent; the fund will bear the risk of loss with respect to the investment of the cash collateral. Income from securities lending is included in investment income on the Statement of operations. Cash collateral is invested in Putnam Cash Collateral Pool, LLC, a limited liability company managed by an affiliate of Putnam Management. Investments in Putnam Cash Collateral Pool, LLC are valued at its closing net asset value each business day. There are no management fees charged to Putnam Cash Collateral Pool, LLC. At the close of the reporting period, the fund received cash collateral of $9,689,036 and the value of securities loaned amounted to $9,123,963.

Interfund lending The fund, along with other Putnam funds, may participate in an interfund lending program pursuant to an exemptive order issued by the SEC. This program allows the fund to borrow from or lend to other Putnam funds that permit such transactions. Interfund lending transactions are subject to each fund’s investment policies and borrowing and lending limits. Interest earned or paid on the interfund lending transaction will be based on the average of certain current market rates. During the reporting period, the fund did not utilize the program.




40     Europe Equity Fund








Lines of credit The fund participates, along with other Putnam funds, in a $392.5 million ($315 million prior to June 27, 2014) unsecured committed line of credit and a $235.5 million ($185 million prior to June 27, 2014) unsecured uncommitted line of credit, both provided by State Street. Borrowings may be made for temporary or emergency purposes, including the funding of shareholder redemption requests and trade settlements. Interest is charged to the fund based on the fund’s borrowing at a rate equal to the Federal Funds rate plus 1.25% for the committed line of credit and the Federal Funds rate plus 1.30% for the uncommitted line of credit. A closing fee equal to 0.04% (0.02% prior to June 27, 2014) of the committed line of credit and 0.04% ($50,000 prior to June 27, 2014) of the uncommitted line of credit has been paid by the participating funds. In addition, a commitment fee of 0.11% per annum on any unutilized portion of the committed line of credit is allocated to the participating funds based on their relative net assets and paid quarterly. During the reporting period, the fund had no borrowings against these arrangements.

Federal taxes It is the policy of the fund to distribute all of its taxable income within the prescribed time period and otherwise comply with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), applicable to regulated investment companies. It is also the intention of the fund to distribute an amount sufficient to avoid imposition of any excise tax under Section 4982 of the Code.

The fund is subject to the provisions of Accounting Standards Codification 740 Income Taxes (ASC 740). ASC 740 sets forth a minimum threshold for financial statement recognition of the benefit of a tax position taken or expected to be taken in a tax return. The fund did not have a liability to record for any unrecognized tax benefits in the accompanying financial statements. No provision has been made for federal taxes on income, capital gains or unrealized appreciation on securities held nor for excise tax on income and capital gains. Each of the fund’s federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remains subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service.

The fund may also be subject to taxes imposed by governments of countries in which it invests. Such taxes are generally based on either income or gains earned or repatriated. The fund accrues and applies such taxes to net investment income, net realized gains and net unrealized gains as income and/or capital gains are earned. In some cases, the fund may be entitled to reclaim all or a portion of such taxes, and such reclaim amounts, if any, are reflected as an asset on the fund’s books. In many cases, however, the fund may not receive such amounts for an extended period of time, depending on the country of investment.

At June 30, 2014, the fund had a capital loss carryover of $59,168,743 available to the extent allowed by the Code to offset future net capital gain, if any. The amounts of the carryovers and the expiration dates are:


Loss carryover

Short-term

Long-term

Total

Expiration

$795,075

N/A

$795,075

June 30, 2017

58,373,668

N/A

58,373,668

June 30, 2018


Under the Regulated Investment Company Modernization Act of 2010, the fund will be permitted to carry forward capital losses incurred in taxable years beginning after December 22, 2010 for an unlimited period. However, any losses incurred will be required to be utilized prior to the losses incurred in pre-enactment tax years. As a result of this ordering rule, pre-enactment capital loss carryforwards may be more likely to expire unused. Additionally, post-enactment capital losses that are carried forward will retain their character as either short-term or long-term capital losses rather than being considered all short-term as under previous law.

Distributions to shareholders Distributions to shareholders from net investment income are recorded by the fund on the ex-dividend date. Distributions from capital gains, if any, are recorded on the ex-dividend date and paid at least annually. The amount and character of income and gains to be distributed are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from generally accepted accounting principles. These differences include temporary and/or permanent differences from losses on wash sale transactions and from income on swap contracts. Reclassifications are made to the fund’s capital accounts to reflect income and gains available for distribution (or available capital loss carryovers) under income tax regulations. At the close of the reporting period, the fund reclassified $560,595 to increase undistributed net investment income, $56,307 to decrease paid-in-capital and $504,288 to increase accumulated net realized loss.




Europe Equity Fund     41








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


Unrealized appreciation

$47,825,425

Unrealized depreciation

(7,595,778)

Net unrealized appreciation

40,229,647

Undistributed ordinary income

1,688,023

Capital loss carryforward

(59,168,743)

Cost for federal income tax purposes

$284,592,186


Note 2: Management fee, administrative services and other transactions

The fund pays Putnam Management a management fee (base fee) (based on the fund’s average net assets and computed and paid monthly) at annual rates that may vary based on the average of the aggregate net assets of most open-end funds, as defined in the fund’s management contract, sponsored by Putnam Management. Such annual rates may vary as follows:


0.850%

of the first $5 billion,

0.800%

of the next $5 billion,

0.750%

of the next $10 billion,

0.700%

of the next $10 billion,

0.650%

of the next $50 billion,

0.630%

of the next $50 billion,

0.620%

of the next $100 billion and

0.615%

of any excess thereafter.


The fund’s shareholders approved the fund’s current management contract with Putnam Management effective February 27, 2014. Shareholders were asked to approve the fund’s management contract following the death on October 8, 2013 of The Honourable Paul G. Desmarais, who had controlled directly and indirectly a majority of the voting shares of Power Corporation of Canada, the ultimate parent company of Putnam Management. The substantive terms of the management contract, including terms relating to fees, are identical to the terms of the fund’s previous management contract and reflect the rates provided in the table above.

In addition, beginning with January 2011, the monthly management fee consists of the monthly base fee plus or minus a performance adjustment for the month. The performance adjustment is determined based on performance over the thirty-six month period then ended. Each month, the performance adjustment is calculated by multiplying the performance adjustment rate and the fund’s average net assets over the performance period and the result is divided by twelve. The resulting dollar amount is added to, or subtracted from the base fee for that month. The performance adjustment rate is equal to 0.03 multiplied by the difference between the fund’s annualized performance (measured by the fund’s class A shares) and the annualized performance of the MSCI Europe Index (Net Dividends), each measured over the performance period. The maximum annualized performance adjustment rates are +/–0.15%. The monthly base fee is determined based on the fund’s average net assets for the month, while the performance adjustment is determined based on the fund’s average net assets over the performance period of up to thirty-six months. This means it is possible that, if the fund underperforms significantly over the performance period, and the fund’s assets have declined significantly over that period, the negative performance adjustment may exceed the base fee. In this event, Putnam Management would make a payment to the fund.

Because the performance adjustment is based on the fund’s performance relative to its applicable benchmark index, and not its absolute performance, the performance adjustment could increase Putnam Management’s fee even if the fund’s shares lose value during the performance period provided that the fund outperformed its benchmark index, and could decrease Putnam Management’s fee even if the fund’s shares increase in value during the performance period provided that the fund underperformed its benchmark index.

For the reporting period, the base fee represented an effective rate (excluding the impact from any expense waivers in effect) of 0.695% of the fund’s average net assets before an increase of $181,426 (0.077% of the fund’s average net assets) based on performance.

Putnam Management has contractually agreed, through June 30, 2015, to waive fees or reimburse the fund’s expenses to the extent necessary to limit the cumulative expenses of the fund, exclusive of brokerage, interest, taxes, investment-related expenses, extraordinary expenses, acquired fund fees and expenses and payments under the fund’s investor servicing contract, investment management contract and distribution plans, on a fiscal year-to-date basis to an annual rate of 0.20% of the fund’s average net assets over such fiscal year-to-date period. During the reporting period, the fund’s expenses were not reduced as a result of this limit.




42     Europe Equity Fund








Putnam Investments Limited (PIL), an affiliate of Putnam Management, is authorized by the Trustees to manage a separate portion of the assets of the fund as determined by Putnam Management from time to time. Putnam Management pays a quarterly sub-management fee to PIL for its services at an annual rate of 0.35% of the average net assets of the portion of the fund managed by PIL.

The Putnam Advisory Company, LLC (PAC), an affiliate of Putnam Management, is authorized by the Trustees to manage a separate portion of the assets of the fund, as designated from time to time by Putnam Management or PIL. Putnam Management or PIL, as applicable, pays a quarterly sub-advisory fee to PAC for its services at the annual rate of 0.35% of the average net assets of the portion of the fund’s assets for which PAC is engaged as sub-adviser.

The fund reimburses Putnam Management an allocated amount for the compensation and related expenses of certain officers of the fund and their staff who provide administrative services to the fund. The aggregate amount of all such reimbursements is determined annually by the Trustees.

Custodial functions for the fund’s assets are provided by State Street. Custody fees are based on the fund’s asset level, the number of its security holdings and transaction volumes.

Putnam Investor Services, Inc., an affiliate of Putnam Management, provides investor servicing agent functions to the fund. Putnam Investor Services, Inc. received fees for investor servicing based on the fund’s retail asset level, the number of shareholder accounts in the fund and the level of defined contribution plan assets in the fund. Investor servicing fees will not exceed an annual rate of 0.32% of the fund’s average net assets. During the reporting period, the expenses for each class of shares related to investor servicing fees were as follows:


Class A

$413,395

Class B

7,974

Class C

23,746

Class M

7,172

Class R

785

Class Y

67,687

Total

$520,759


The fund has entered into expense offset arrangements with Putnam Investor Services, Inc. and State Street whereby Putnam Investor Services, Inc.’s and State Street’s fees are reduced by credits allowed on cash balances. For the reporting period, the fund’s expenses were reduced by $917 under the expense offset arrangements.

Each independent Trustee of the fund receives an annual Trustee fee, of which $168, as a quarterly retainer, has been allocated to the fund, and an additional fee for each Trustees meeting attended. Trustees also are reimbursed for expenses they incur relating to their services as Trustees.

The fund has adopted a Trustee Fee Deferral Plan (the Deferral Plan) which allows the Trustees to defer the receipt of all or a portion of Trustees fees payable on or after July 1, 1995. The deferred fees remain invested in certain Putnam funds until distribution in accordance with the Deferral Plan.

The fund has adopted an unfunded noncontributory defined benefit pension plan (the Pension Plan) covering all Trustees of the fund who have served as a Trustee for at least five years and were first elected prior to 2004. Benefits under the Pension Plan are equal to 50% of the Trustee’s average annual attendance and retainer fees for the three years ended December 31, 2005. The retirement benefit is payable during a Trustee’s lifetime, beginning the year following retirement, for the number of years of service through December 31, 2006. Pension expense for the fund is included in Trustee compensation and expenses in the Statement of operations. Accrued pension liability is included in Payable for Trustee compensation and expenses in the Statement of assets and liabilities. The Trustees have terminated the Pension Plan with respect to any Trustee first elected after 2003.

The fund has adopted distribution plans (the Plans) with respect to its class A, class B, class C, class M and class R shares pursuant to Rule 12b–1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940. The purpose of the Plans is to compensate Putnam Retail Management Limited Partnership, an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Putnam Investments, LLC, for services provided and expenses incurred in distributing shares of the fund. The Plans provide for payments by the fund to Putnam Retail Management Limited Partnership at an annual rate of up to 0.35%, 1.00%, 1.00%, 1.00% and 1.00% of the average net assets attributable to class A, class B, class C, class M and class R shares, respectively. The Trustees have approved payment by the fund at an annual rate of 0.25%, 1.00%, 1.00%, 0.75% and




Europe Equity Fund     43








0.50% of the average net assets attributable to class A, class B, class C, class M and class R shares, respectively. During the reporting period, the class specific expenses related to distribution fees were as follows:


Class A

$464,778

Class B

35,808

Class C

109,336

Class M

24,092

Class R

1,783

Total

$635,797


For the reporting period, Putnam Retail Management Limited Partnership, acting as underwriter, received net commissions of $63,236 and $68 from the sale of class A and class M shares, respectively, and received $1,649 and $1,228 in contingent deferred sales charges from redemptions of class B and class C shares, respectively.

A deferred sales charge of up to 1.00% and 0.65% is assessed on certain redemptions of class A and class M shares, respectively. For the reporting period, Putnam Retail Management Limited Partnership, acting as underwriter, received no monies on class A and class M redemptions.

Note 3: Purchases and sales of securities

During the reporting period, cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investment securities other than short-term investments aggregated $250,747,754 and $146,978,419, respectively. There were no purchases or proceeds from sales of long-term U.S. government securities.

Note 4: Capital shares

At the close of the reporting period, there was an unlimited number of shares of beneficial interest authorized. Transactions in capital shares were as follows:


Year ended 6/30/14 

Year ended 6/30/13 

Class A

Shares

Amount

Shares

Amount

Shares sold

2,724,826 

$72,375,021 

282,501 

$6,002,923 

Shares issued in connection with reinvestment of distributions

53,617 

1,384,383 

94,381 

1,932,922 

2,778,443 

73,759,404 

376,882 

7,935,845 

Shares repurchased

(1,168,095)

(30,599,359)

(1,262,088)

(25,424,919)

Net increase (decrease)

1,610,348 

$43,160,045 

(885,206)

$(17,489,074)



Year ended 6/30/14 

Year ended 6/30/13 

Class B

Shares

Amount

Shares

Amount

Shares sold

67,034 

$1,694,423 

11,423 

$224,554 

Shares issued in connection with reinvestment of distributions

256 

6,337 

1,232 

24,244 

67,290 

1,700,760 

12,655 

248,798 

Shares repurchased

(41,763)

(1,028,572)

(59,893)

(1,163,837)

Net increase (decrease)

25,527 

$672,188 

(47,238)

$(915,039)



Year ended 6/30/14 

Year ended 6/30/13 

Class C

Shares

Amount

Shares

Amount

Shares sold

652,371 

$16,634,655 

45,764 

$981,129 

Shares issued in connection with reinvestment of distributions

2,859 

72,132 

618 

12,447 

655,230 

16,706,787 

46,382 

993,576 

Shares repurchased

(66,831)

(1,726,857)

(8,232)

(165,162)

Net increase

588,399 

$14,979,930 

38,150 

$828,414 





44     Europe Equity Fund









Year ended 6/30/14 

Year ended 6/30/13 

Class M

Shares

Amount

Shares

Amount

Shares sold

3,777 

$102,291 

391 

$7,885 

Shares issued in connection with reinvestment of distributions

312 

7,987 

976 

19,824 

4,089 

110,278 

1,367 

27,709 

Shares repurchased

(13,316)

(343,992)

(19,788)

(396,307)

Net decrease

(9,227)

$(233,714)

(18,421)

$(368,598)



Year ended 6/30/14 

Year ended 6/30/13 

Class R

Shares

Amount

Shares

Amount

Shares sold

15,444 

$402,732 

3,417 

$70,723 

Shares issued in connection with reinvestment of distributions

98 

2,492 

94 

1,914 

15,542 

405,224 

3,511 

72,637 

Shares repurchased

(5,084)

(130,715)

(3,625)

(70,697)

Net increase (decrease)

10,458 

$274,509 

(114)

$1,940 



Year ended 6/30/14 

Year ended 6/30/13 

Class Y

Shares

Amount

Shares

Amount

Shares sold

2,039,574 

$54,286,368 

77,133 

$1,607,845 

Shares issued in connection with reinvestment of distributions

9,705 

251,463 

7,083 

145,475 

2,049,279 

54,537,831 

84,216 

1,753,320 

Shares repurchased

(307,556)

(8,300,577)

(65,992)

(1,326,743)

Net increase

1,741,723 

$46,237,254 

18,224 

$426,577 


Note 5: Affiliated transactions

Transactions during the reporting period with Putnam Short Term Investment Fund, which is under common ownership and control, were as follows:


Name of affiliate

Fair value at the beginning of the reporting period

Purchase cost

Sale proceeds

Investment income

Fair value at the end of the reporting period

Putnam Short Term Investment Fund*

$5,124,974

$107,603,160

$104,348,901

$4,036

$8,379,233


*Management fees charged to Putnam Short Term Investment Fund have been waived by Putnam Management.

Note 6: Market, credit and other risks

In the normal course of business, the fund trades financial instruments and enters into financial transactions where risk of potential loss exists due to changes in the market (market risk) or failure of the contracting party to the transaction to perform (credit risk). The fund may be exposed to additional credit risk that an institution or other entity with which the fund has unsettled or open transactions will default. Investments in foreign securities involve certain risks, including those related to economic instability, unfavorable political developments, and currency fluctuations.




Europe Equity Fund     45








Note 7: Summary of derivative activity

The volume of activity for the reporting period for any derivative type that was held during the period is listed below and was as follows based on an average of the holdings at the end of each fiscal quarter:


OTC total return swap contracts (notional)

$—*


*For the reporting period, the transactions were minimal.

As of the close of the reporting period, the fund did not hold any derivative instruments.

The following is a summary of realized gains or losses of derivative instruments on the Statement of operations for the reporting period (see Note 1) (there were no unrealized gains or losses on derivative instruments):

Amount of realized gain or (loss) on derivatives recognized in net gain or (loss) on investments


Derivatives not accounted for as hedging instruments under ASC 815

Swaps

Total

Equity contracts

$829,215 

$829,215 

Total

$829,215 

$829,215 





46     Europe Equity Fund








Federal tax information (Unaudited)

For the reporting period, interest and dividends from foreign countries were $6,493,197 or $0.57 per share (for all classes of shares). Taxes paid to foreign countries were $528,175 or $0.05 per share (for all classes of shares).

The fund designated 0.71% of ordinary income distributions as qualifying for the dividends received deduction for corporations.

For the reporting period, the fund hereby designates 100.00%, or the maximum amount allowable, of its taxable ordinary income distributions as qualified dividends taxed at the individual net capital gain rates.

For the reporting period, pursuant to §871(k) of the Internal Revenue Code, the fund hereby designates $370 of distributions paid as qualifying to be taxed as interest-related dividends, and no monies to be taxed as short-term capital gain dividends for nonresident alien shareholders.

The Form 1099 that will be mailed to you in January 2015 will show the tax status of all distributions paid to your account in calendar 2014.




Europe Equity Fund     47








Shareholder meeting results (Unaudited)

February 27, 2014 special meeting

At the meeting, each of the nominees for Trustees was elected, as follows:


Votes for

Votes withheld

Liaquat Ahamed

5,441,240

273,478

Ravi Akhoury

5,448,782

265,935

Barbara M. Baumann

5,479,886

234,831

Jameson A. Baxter

5,441,445

273,273

Charles B. Curtis

5,463,281

251,436

Robert J. Darretta

5,461,583

253,134

Katinka Domotorffy

5,455,580

259,137

John A. Hill

5,432,141

282,576

Paul L. Joskow

5,480,222

234,496

Kenneth R. Leibler

5,467,751

246,966

Robert E. Patterson

5,452,831

261,887

George Putnam, III

5,488,247

226,470

Robert L. Reynolds

5,486,569

228,148

W. Thomas Stephens

5,469,284

245,434


A proposal to approve a new management contract between the fund and Putnam Management was approved, as follows:


Votes
for

Votes
against


Abstentions

Broker
non-votes

4,253,900

177,864

231,789

1,051,165


March 7, 2014 special meeting

A proposal to adopt an Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust, with respect to which the February 27, 2014 meeting had been adjourned, was approved, as follows:


Votes
for

Votes
against


Abstentions

Broker
non-votes

4,268,286

254,134

282,682

1,007,585


All tabulations are rounded to the nearest whole number.




48     Europe Equity Fund








About the Trustees




Independent Trustees



put057_trusteepic01.jpg

Liaquat Ahamed

Born 1952, Trustee since 2012

Principal occupations during past five years: Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World, whose articles on economics have appeared in such publications as the New York Times, Foreign Affairs, and the Financial Times. Director of Aspen Insurance Co., a New York Stock Exchange company, and Chair of the Aspen Board’s Investment Committee. Trustee of the Brookings Institution and Chair of its Investment Committee.

Other directorships: The Rohatyn Group, an emerging-market fund complex that manages money for institutions



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Ravi Akhoury

Born 1947, Trustee since 2009

Principal occupations during past five years: Trustee of American India Foundation and of the Rubin Museum. From 1992 to 2007, was Chairman and CEO of MacKay Shields, a multi-product investment management firm.

Other directorships: RAGE Frameworks, Inc., a private software company; English Helper, Inc., a private software company



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Barbara M. Baumann

Born 1955, Trustee since 2010

Principal occupations during past five years: President and Owner of Cross Creek Energy Corporation, a strategic consultant to domestic energy firms and direct investor in energy projects. Current Board member of The Denver Foundation. Former Chair and current Board member of Girls Incorporated of Metro Denver. Member of the Finance Committee, the Children’s Hospital of Colorado.

Other directorships: Devon Energy Corporation, a leading independent natural gas and oil exploration and production company; UNS Energy Corporation, an Arizona utility; Cody Resources Management, a private company in the energy and ranching businesses



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Jameson A. Baxter

Born 1943, Trustee since 1994, Vice Chair from 2005 to 2011, and Chair since 2011

Principal occupations during past five years: President of Baxter Associates, Inc., a private investment firm. Chair of Mutual Fund Directors Forum. Chair Emeritus of the Board of Trustees of Mount Holyoke College. Director of the Adirondack Land Trust and Trustee of the Nature Conservancy’s Adirondack Chapter.



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Charles B. Curtis

Born 1940, Trustee since 2001

Principal occupations during past five years: Senior Advisor to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. President Emeritus and former President and Chief Operating Officer of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a private foundation dealing with national security issues. Member of the Council on Foreign Relations and U.S. State Department International Security Advisory Board.



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Robert J. Darretta

Born 1946, Trustee since 2007

Principal occupations during past five years: From 2009 until 2012, served as Health Care Industry Advisor to Permira, a global private equity firm. Until April 2007, was Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors of Johnson & Johnson. Served as Johnson & Johnson’s Chief Financial Officer for a decade.

Other directorships: UnitedHealth Group, a diversified health-care company



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Katinka Domotorffy

Born 1975, Trustee since 2012

Principal occupations during past five years: Voting member of the Investment Committees of the Anne Ray Charitable Trust and Margaret A. Cargill Foundation, part of the Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies. Until 2011, Partner, Chief Investment Officer, and Global Head of Quantitative Investment Strategies at Goldman Sachs Asset Management.

Other directorships: Reach Out and Read of Greater New York, an organization dedicated to promoting childhood literacy



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John A. Hill

Born 1942, Trustee since 1985 and Chairman from 2000 to 2011

Principal occupations during past five years: Founder and Vice-Chairman of First Reserve Corporation, the leading private equity buyout firm focused on the worldwide energy industry. Trustee and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Sarah Lawrence College. Member of the Advisory Board of the Millstein Center for Global Markets and Corporate Ownership at The Columbia University Law School.

Other directorships: Devon Energy Corporation, a leading independent natural gas and oil exploration and production company




Europe Equity Fund     49










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Paul L. Joskow

Born 1947, Trustee since 1997

Principal occupations during past five years: Economist and President of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, a philanthropic institution focused primarily on research and education on issues related to science, technology, and economic performance. Elizabeth and James Killian Professor of Economics, Emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Prior to 2007, served as the Director of the Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research at MIT.

Other directorships: Yale University; Exelon Corporation, an energy company focused on power services; Boston Symphony Orchestra; Prior to April 2013, served as Director of TransCanada Corporation and TransCanada Pipelines Ltd., energy companies focused on natural gas transmission, oil pipelines and power services



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Kenneth R. Leibler

Born 1949, Trustee since 2006

Principal occupations during past five years: Founder and former Chairman of Boston Options Exchange, an electronic marketplace for the trading of derivative securities. Serves on the Board of Trustees of Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts. Director of Beth Israel Deaconess Care Organization. Until November 2010, director of Ruder Finn Group, a global communications and advertising firm.

Other directorships: Northeast Utilities, which operates New England’s largest energy delivery system



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Robert E. Patterson

Born 1945, Trustee since 1984

Principal occupations during past five years: Co-Chairman of Cabot Properties, Inc., a private equity firm investing in commercial real estate, and Chairman of its Investment Committee. Past Chairman and Trustee of the Joslin Diabetes Center.



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George Putnam, III

Born 1951, Trustee since 1984

Principal occupations during past five years: Chairman of New Generation Research, Inc., a publisher of financial advisory and other research services. Founder and President of New Generation Advisors, LLC, a registered investment advisor to private funds. Director of The Boston Family Office, LLC, a registered investment advisor.



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W. Thomas Stephens

Born 1942, Trustee from 1997 to 2008 and since 2009

Principal occupations during past five years: Retired as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Boise Cascade, LLC, a paper, forest products, and timberland assets company, in December 2008. Prior to 2010, Director of Boise Inc., a manufacturer of paper and packaging products.

Other directorships: TransCanada Pipelines Ltd., an energy infrastructure company




Interested Trustee



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Robert L. Reynolds*

Born 1952, Trustee since 2008 and President of the Putnam Funds since 2009

Principal occupations during past five years: President and Chief Executive Officer of Putnam Investments since 2008 and, since 2014, President and Chief Executive Officer of Great-West Financial, a financial services company that provides retirement savings plans, life insurance, and annuity and executive benefits products, and of Great-West Lifeco U.S. Inc., a holding company that owns Putnam Investments and Great-West Financial. Prior to joining Putnam Investments, served as Vice Chairman and Chief Operating Officer of Fidelity Investments from 2000 to 2007.

*Mr. Reynolds is an “interested person” (as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940) of the fund and Putnam Investments. He is President and Chief Executive Officer of Putnam Investments, as well as the President of your fund and each of the other Putnam funds.



The address of each Trustee is One Post Office Square, Boston, MA 02109.

As of June 30, 2014, there were 116 Putnam funds. All Trustees serve as Trustees of all Putnam funds.

Each Trustee serves for an indefinite term, until his or her resignation, retirement at age 75, removal, or death.




50     Europe Equity Fund








Officers

In addition to Robert L. Reynolds, the other officers of the fund are shown below:

Jonathan S. Horwitz (Born 1955)

Executive Vice President, Principal Executive Officer, and Compliance Liaison
Since 2004

Steven D. Krichmar (Born 1958)

Vice President and Principal Financial Officer
Since 2002

Chief of Operations, Putnam Investments and Putnam Management

Robert T. Burns (Born 1961)

Vice President and Chief Legal Officer
Since 2011

General Counsel, Putnam Investments, Putnam Management, and Putnam Retail Management

Robert R. Leveille (Born 1969)

Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer
Since 2007

Chief Compliance Officer, Putnam Investments, Putnam Management, and Putnam Retail Management

Michael J. Higgins (Born 1976)

Vice President, Treasurer, and Clerk
Since 2010

Manager of Finance, Dunkin’ Brands (2008–2010); Senior Financial Analyst, Old Mutual Asset Management (2007–2008); Senior Financial Analyst, Putnam Investments (1999–2007)

Janet C. Smith (Born 1965)

Vice President, Principal Accounting Officer, and Assistant Treasurer
Since 2007

Director of Fund Administration Services, Putnam Investments and Putnam Management

Susan G. Malloy (Born 1957)

Vice President and Assistant Treasurer
Since 2007

Director of Accounting & Control Services, Putnam Investments and Putnam Management

James P. Pappas (Born 1953)

Vice President
Since 2004

Director of Trustee Relations, Putnam Investments and Putnam Management

Mark C. Trenchard (Born 1962)

Vice President and BSA Compliance Officer
Since 2002

Director of Operational Compliance, Putnam Investments and Putnam Retail Management

Nancy E. Florek (Born 1957)

Vice President, Director of Proxy Voting and Corporate Governance, Assistant Clerk, and Associate Treasurer
Since 2000



The principal occupations of the officers for the past five years have been with the employers as shown above, although in some cases they have held different positions with such employers. The address of each Officer is One Post Office Square, Boston, MA 02109.




Europe Equity Fund     51








Services for shareholders

Investor services

Systematic investment plan Tell us how much you wish to invest regularly — weekly, semimonthly, or monthly — and the amount you choose will be transferred automatically from your checking or savings account. There’s no additional fee for this service, and you can suspend it at any time. This plan may be a great way to save for college expenses or to plan for your retirement.

Please note that regular investing does not guarantee a profit or protect against loss in a declining market. Before arranging a systematic investment plan, consider your financial ability to continue making purchases in periods when prices are low.

Systematic exchange You can make regular transfers from one Putnam fund to another Putnam fund. There are no additional fees for this service, and you can cancel or change your options at any time.

Dividends PLUS You can choose to have the dividend distributions from one of your Putnam funds automatically reinvested in another Putnam fund at no additional charge.

Free exchange privilege You can exchange money between Putnam funds free of charge, as long as they are the same class of shares. A signature guarantee is required if you are exchanging more than $500,000. The fund reserves the right to revise or terminate the exchange privilege.

Reinstatement privilege If you’ve sold Putnam shares or received a check for a dividend or capital gain, you may reinvest the proceeds with Putnam within 90 days of the transaction and they will be reinvested at the fund’s current net asset value — with no sales charge. However, reinstatement of class B shares may have special tax consequences. Ask your financial or tax representative for details.

Check-writing service You have ready access to many Putnam accounts. It’s as simple as writing a check, and there are no special fees or service charges. For more information about the check-writing service, call Putnam or visit our website.

Dollar cost averaging When you’re investing for long-term goals, it’s time, not timing, that counts. Investing on a systematic basis is a better strategy than trying to figure out when the markets will go up or down. This means investing the same amount of money regularly over a long period. This method of investing is called dollar cost averaging. When a fund’s share price declines, your investment dollars buy more shares at lower prices. When it increases, they buy fewer shares. Over time, you will pay a lower average price per share.

For more information

Visit the Individual Investors section at putnam.com A secure section of our website contains complete information on your account, including balances and transactions, updated daily. You may also conduct transactions, such as exchanges, additional investments, and address changes. Log on today to get your password.

Call us toll free at 1-800-225-1581 Ask a helpful Putnam representative or your financial advisor for details about any of these or other services, or see your prospectus.




Europe Equity Fund     52








Fund information

Founded over 75 years ago, Putnam Investments was built around the concept that a balance between risk and reward is the hallmark of a well-rounded financial program. We manage over 100 funds across income, value, blend, growth, asset allocation, absolute return, and global sector categories.

Investment Manager

Putnam Investment
Management, LLC
One Post Office Square
Boston, MA 02109

Investment Sub-Manager

Putnam Investments Limited
57–59 St James’s Street
London, England SW1A 1LD

Investment Sub-Advisor

The Putnam Advisory Company, LLC
One Post Office Square
Boston, MA 02109

Marketing Services

Putnam Retail Management
One Post Office Square
Boston, MA 02109

Custodian

State Street Bank
and Trust Company

Legal Counsel

Ropes & Gray LLP

Auditor

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Trustees

Jameson A. Baxter, Chair
Liaquat Ahamed
Ravi Akhoury
Barbara M. Baumann
Charles B. Curtis
Robert J. Darretta
Katinka Domotorffy
John A. Hill
Paul L. Joskow
Kenneth R. Leibler
Robert E. Patterson
George Putnam, III
Robert L. Reynolds
W. Thomas Stephens

Officers

Robert L. Reynolds
President

Jonathan S. Horwitz
Executive Vice President,
Principal Executive Officer, and
Compliance Liaison

Steven D. Krichmar
Vice President and
Principal Financial Officer

Robert T. Burns
Vice President and
Chief Legal Officer

Robert R. Leveille
Vice President and
Chief Compliance Officer

Michael J. Higgins
Vice President, Treasurer,
and Clerk

Janet C. Smith
Vice President,
Principal Accounting Officer,
and Assistant Treasurer

Susan G. Malloy
Vice President and
Assistant Treasurer

James P. Pappas
Vice President

Mark C. Trenchard
Vice President and
BSA Compliance Officer

Nancy E. Florek
Vice President, Director of
Proxy Voting and Corporate
Governance, Assistant Clerk,
and Associate Treasurer

This report is for the information of shareholders of Putnam Europe Equity Fund. It may also be used as sales literature when preceded or accompanied by the current prospectus, the most recent copy of Putnam’s Quarterly Performance Summary, and Putnam’s Quarterly Ranking Summary. For more recent performance, please visit putnam.com. Investors should carefully consider the investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses of a fund, which are described in its prospectus. For this and other information or to request a prospectus or summary prospectus, call 1-800-225-1581 toll free. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing. The fund’s Statement of Additional Information contains additional information about the fund’s Trustees and is available without charge upon request by calling 1-800-225-1581.








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Item 2. Code of Ethics:
(a) The fund’s principal executive, financial and accounting officers are employees of Putnam Investment Management, LLC, the Fund’s investment manager. As such they are subject to a comprehensive Code of Ethics adopted and administered by Putnam Investments which is designed to protect the interests of the firm and its clients. The Fund has adopted a Code of Ethics which incorporates the Code of Ethics of Putnam Investments with respect to all of its officers and Trustees who are employees of Putnam Investment Management, LLC. For this reason, the Fund has not adopted a separate code of ethics governing its principal executive, financial and accounting officers.

(c) In July 2013, the Code of Ethics of Putnam Investment Management, LLC was amended. The changes to the Code of Ethics were as follows: (i) eliminating the requirement for employees to hold their shares of Putnam mutual funds for specified periods of time, (ii) removing the requirement to preclear transactions in certain kinds of exchange-traded funds and exchange-traded notes, although reporting of all such instruments remains required; (iii) eliminating the excessive trading rule related to employee transactions in securities requiring preclearance under the Code; (iv) adding provisions related to monitoring of employee trading; (v) changing from a set number of shares to a set dollar value of stock of mid- and large-cap companies on the Restricted List that can be purchased or sold; (vi) adding a requirement starting in March 2014 for employees to generally use certain approved brokers that provide Putnam with an electronic feed of transactions and statements for their personal brokerage accounts; and (vii) certain other changes.

Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert:
The Funds’ Audit and Compliance Committee is comprised solely of Trustees who are “independent” (as such term has been defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) in regulations implementing Section 407 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (the “Regulations”)). The Trustees believe that each of the members of the Audit and Compliance Committee also possess a combination of knowledge and experience with respect to financial accounting matters, as well as other attributes, that qualify them for service on the Committee. In addition, the Trustees have determined that each of Mr. Leibler, Mr. Hill, Mr. Darretta, and Ms. Baumann qualifies as an “audit committee financial expert” (as such term has been defined by the Regulations) based on their review of his or her pertinent experience and education. The SEC has stated, and the funds’ amended and restated agreement and Declaration of Trust provides, that the designation or identification of a person as an audit committee financial expert pursuant to this Item 3 of Form N-CSR does not impose on such person any duties, obligations or liability that are greater than the duties, obligations and liability imposed on such person as a member of the Audit and Compliance Committee and the Board of Trustees in the absence of such designation or identification.

Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services:
The following table presents fees billed in each of the last two fiscal years for services rendered to the fund by the fund’s independent auditor:


Fiscal year ended Audit Fees Audit-Related Fees Tax Fees All Other Fees

June 30, 2014 $64,377 $ — $8,594 $ —
June 30, 2013 $62,142 $ — $8,593 $ —

For the fiscal years ended June 30, 2014 and June 30, 2013, the fund’s independent auditor billed aggregate non-audit fees in the amounts of $508,594 and $156,093 respectively, to the fund, Putnam Management and any entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with Putnam Management that provides ongoing services to the fund.

Audit Fees represent fees billed for the fund’s last two fiscal years relating to the audit and review of the financial statements included in annual reports and registration statements, and other services that are normally provided in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements.

Audit-Related Fees represent fees billed in the fund’s last two fiscal years for services traditionally performed by the fund’s auditor, including accounting consultation for proposed transactions or concerning financial accounting and reporting standards and other audit or attest services not required by statute or regulation.

Tax Fees represent fees billed in the fund’s last two fiscal years for tax compliance, tax planning and tax advice services. Tax planning and tax advice services include assistance with tax audits, employee benefit plans and requests for rulings or technical advice from taxing authorities.

Pre-Approval Policies of the Audit and Compliance Committee. The Audit and Compliance Committee of the Putnam funds has determined that, as a matter of policy, all work performed for the funds by the funds’ independent auditors will be pre-approved by the Committee itself and thus will generally not be subject to pre-approval procedures.

The Audit and Compliance Committee also has adopted a policy to pre-approve the engagement by Putnam Management and certain of its affiliates of the funds’ independent auditors, even in circumstances where pre-approval is not required by applicable law. Any such requests by Putnam Management or certain of its affiliates are typically submitted in writing to the Committee and explain, among other things, the nature of the proposed engagement, the estimated fees, and why this work should be performed by that particular audit firm as opposed to another one. In reviewing such requests, the Committee considers, among other things, whether the provision of such services by the audit firm are compatible with the independence of the audit firm.

The following table presents fees billed by the fund’s independent auditor for services required to be approved pursuant to paragraph (c)(7)(ii) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.


Fiscal year ended Audit-Related Fees Tax Fees All Other Fees Total Non-Audit Fees

June 30, 2014 $ — $500,000 $ — $ —
June 30, 2013 $ — $147,500 $ — $ —

Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants
Not applicable
Item 6. Schedule of Investments:
The registrant’s schedule of investments in unaffiliated issuers is included in the report to shareholders in Item 1 above.

Item 7. Disclosure of Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures For Closed-End Management Investment Companies:

Not applicable
Item 8. Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Investment Companies
Not Applicable
Item 9. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Companies and Affiliated Purchasers:

Not applicable
Item 10. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders:
Not applicable
Item 11. Controls and Procedures:
(a) The registrant’s principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded, based on their evaluation of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report, that the design and operation of such procedures are generally effective to provide reasonable assurance that information required to be disclosed by the registrant in this report is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Commission’s rules and forms.

(b) Changes in internal control over financial reporting: Not applicable
Item 12. Exhibits:
(a)(1) The Code of Ethics of The Putnam Funds, which incorporates the Code of Ethics of Putnam Investments, is filed herewith.

(a)(2) Separate certifications for the principal executive officer and principal financial officer of the registrant as required by Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, are filed herewith.

(b) The certifications required by Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, are filed herewith.

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

Putnam Europe Equity Fund
By (Signature and Title):
/s/Janet C. Smith
Janet C. Smith
Principal Accounting Officer

Date: August 27, 2014
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

By (Signature and Title):
/s/Jonathan S. Horwitz
Jonathan S. Horwitz
Principal Executive Officer

Date: August 27, 2014
By (Signature and Title):
/s/Steven D. Krichmar
Steven D. Krichmar
Principal Financial Officer

Date: August 27, 2014