0000908695-13-000262.txt : 20130904 0000908695-13-000262.hdr.sgml : 20130904 20130904150952 ACCESSION NUMBER: 0000908695-13-000262 CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: N-CSRS PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 3 CONFORMED PERIOD OF REPORT: 20130630 FILED AS OF DATE: 20130904 DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20130904 EFFECTIVENESS DATE: 20130904 FILER: COMPANY DATA: COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0000908695 IRS NUMBER: 000000000 STATE OF INCORPORATION: DE FISCAL YEAR END: 0331 FILING VALUES: FORM TYPE: N-CSRS SEC ACT: 1940 Act SEC FILE NUMBER: 811-07852 FILM NUMBER: 131077723 BUSINESS ADDRESS: STREET 1: 9800 FREDERICKSBURG ROAD STREET 2: A-3-W CITY: SAN ANTONIO STATE: TX ZIP: 78288-0227 BUSINESS PHONE: 210-498-0226 MAIL ADDRESS: STREET 1: 9800 FREDERICKSBURG ROAD STREET 2: A-3-W CITY: SAN ANTONIO STATE: TX ZIP: 78288-0227 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: USAA STATE TAX FREE TRUST DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19940325 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: USAA STATE TAX EXEMPT TRUST DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19930707 0000908695 S000012941 Extended Market Index Fund C000034943 Extended Market Index Fund USMIX N-CSRS 1 ncsrsext063013.txt USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND, SEMIANNUAL REPORT, 06/30/2013 UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 FORM N-CSR/S CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES Investment Company Act file number: 811-7852 Exact name of registrant as specified in charter: USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST Address of principal executive offices and zip code: 9800 FREDERICKSBURG ROAD SAN ANTONIO, TX 78288 Name and address of agent for service: JAMES G. WHETZEL USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST 9800 FREDERICKSBURG ROAD SAN ANTONIO, TX 78288 Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (210) 498-0226 Date of fiscal year end: DECEMBER 31 Date of reporting period: JUNE 30, 2013 ITEM 1. SEMIANNUAL REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS. USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST - SEMIANNUAL REPORT FOR PERIOD ENDED JUNE 30, 2013 [LOGO OF USAA] USAA(R) [GRAPHIC OF USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND] =========================================== SEMIANNUAL REPORT USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND JUNE 30, 2013 =========================================== ================================================================================ ================================================================================ PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE "...[W]E BELIEVE THE MARKETS WILL FIND A WAY TO MANAGE WITHOUT THE FED'S [PHOTO OF DANIEL S. McNAMARA] QUANTITATIVE EASING PROGRAMS, AS THEY HAVE FOR MOST OF THE LAST 100 YEARS." -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- JULY 2013 The power of market psychology was on display during the reporting period as investors interpreted and then reinterpreted previously misinterpreted comments by Federal Reserve (the Fed) Chairman Ben Bernanke. At first, stocks and bonds sold off on the realization that the Fed had an optimistic view of future U.S. economic growth and expected it to accelerate during the second half of 2013. In other words, good news was bad news. Meanwhile, inflation pressures, which are very modest at the time of this writing, were expected to increase, setting the stage for the Fed to reduce -- or "taper" -- its quantitative easing measures. From this point of view, higher inflation, usually bad news for central bankers, was considered good news. (The term "quantitative easing" is generally used to reference programs in which the Fed uses newly created money to purchase financial assets.) The markets generally reacted as though tapering was imminent. Bond yields rose (and prices, which move in the opposite direction, dropped) in anticipation of reduced Fed buying. The increase in yields sparked a sell-off across the global financial markets, including stocks, corporate bonds, emerging markets assets and precious metals. With more sellers than buyers, liquidity grew tight and smaller markets, such as emerging markets equities and emerging markets debt, suffered steeper declines than larger markets, such as U.S. equities. The sell-off was remarkable because the Fed has always said it would not start unwinding its stimulus programs until it became clear that economic growth was self-sustaining. In addition, Bernanke said that the Fed could increase quantitative easing if the economy stalled or grew more slowly. Indeed, first-quarter gross domestic product growth was revised downward during the last week of the reporting period from 2.4% to 1.8%, suggesting that the Fed might not be tapering any time soon. Although interest rates did increase during the reporting period, they remain exceptionally low by historical measures. In the years since the ================================================================================ ================================================================================ financial crisis, the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield has been near 2.5% more than once. At those times, if I recall, many observers considered that a low yield. When it reached the same level on June 21, 2013, it was perceived as high. In my opinion, investors have less to fear from rising interest rates than they do from an extended period of low rates, which some believe could result in a Japan-like deflationary economy. That said, higher interest rates do mean that bond investors are likely to see a decrease in their principal value, but they will also -- for the first time in a long time -- see an increase in the income they receive from their fixed-income investments. Meanwhile, the June sell-off should serve as a reminder about the importance of an investment plan and the need to keep emotion out of the investment process. At USAA Asset Management Company, we believe every investor should hold a diversified portfolio that is directly tied to their goals, risk tolerance and time horizon. Diversification is important because different asset classes, such as stocks and bonds, move up and down at different rates and often at different times. If you think you may be over-allocated to fixed-income securities or equities, you may want to reassess your investment risk and rebalance your portfolio. Regular rebalancing can potentially help you protect your gains and prepare for what happens next. I encourage you to contact a USAA advisor with any questions or for assistance in updating your investment plan. Whatever happens in the months ahead, you can be assured that our portfolio management team will continue working on your behalf. "Taper talk" is distracting and market reaction can be extreme but at USAA Asset Management Company, we recognize that the Fed's extraordinary monetary stimulus cannot go on forever. Also, we believe the markets will find a way to manage without the Fed's quantitative easing programs, as they have for most of the last 100 years. From all of us here, thank you for your investment. Sincerely, /S/ DANIEL S. MCNAMARA Daniel S. McNamara President USAA Investment Management Company Past performance is no guarantee of future results. o Diversification is a technique to help reduce risk and does not guarantee a profit or prevent a loss. o Financial Planning Services Insurance Agency, Inc. (known as USAA Financial Insurance Agency in California, License # 0E36312), and USAA Financial Advisors, Inc., a registered broker dealer. ================================================================================ ================================================================================ TABLE OF CONTENTS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FUND OBJECTIVE 1 MANAGER'S COMMENTARY 2 INVESTMENT OVERVIEW 4 FINANCIAL INFORMATION USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND: Financial Statements 8 Financial Highlights 11 Notes to Financial Statements 12 EXPENSE EXAMPLE 17 ADVISORY AGREEMENT(S) 19 MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES: Schedule of Investments 26 Financial Statements 73 Financial Highlights 76 Notes to Financial Statements 77 ADVISORY AGREEMENTS 89
THIS REPORT IS FOR THE INFORMATION OF THE SHAREHOLDERS AND OTHERS WHO HAVE RECEIVED A COPY OF THE CURRENTLY EFFECTIVE PROSPECTUS OF THE FUND, MANAGED BY USAA ASSET MANAGEMENT COMPANY. IT MAY BE USED AS SALES LITERATURE ONLY WHEN PRECEDED OR ACCOMPANIED BY A CURRENT PROSPECTUS, WHICH PROVIDES FURTHER DETAILS ABOUT THE FUND. (C)2013, USAA. All rights reserved. ================================================================================ ================================================================================ FUND OBJECTIVE THE USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND (THE FUND) SEEKS TO MATCH, BEFORE FEES AND EXPENSES, THE PERFORMANCE OF THE U.S. STOCKS NOT INCLUDED IN THE S&P 500 INDEX AS REPRESENTED BY THE DOW JONES U.S. COMPLETION TOTAL STOCK MARKET INDEX(SM). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TYPES OF INVESTMENTS The Fund's principal investment strategy is to invest all of the Fund's investable assets in the Master Extended Market Index Series of the Quantitative Master Series LLC (Extended Market Portfolio), which is a separate fund advised by BlackRock Advisors, LLC and subadvised by BlackRock Investment Management, LLC (BlackRock Advisors, LLC and BlackRock Investment Management, LLC are collectively referred to herein as BlackRock), with a substantially similar investment objective as the Fund. Therefore, your interest in the Extended Market Portfolio's securities is indirect, and the investment characteristics of the Fund will correspond directly to those of the Extended Market Portfolio. This type of arrangement is commonly referred to as a master-feeder structure. The Extended Market Portfolio seeks to track the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index as closely as possible, and normally, at least 80% of its assets will be invested in securities or other financial instruments of companies that are components of or have economic characteristics similar to the securities included in the index. IRA DISTRIBUTION WITHHOLDING DISCLOSURE We generally must withhold federal income tax at a rate of 10% of the taxable portion of your distribution and, if you live in a state that requires state income tax withholding, at your state's set rate. However, you may elect not to have withholding apply or to have income tax withheld at a higher rate. If you wish to make such an election, please call USAA Asset Management Company at (800) 531-USAA (8722). If you must pay estimated taxes, you may be subject to estimated tax penalties if your estimated tax payments are not sufficient and sufficient tax is not withheld from your distribution. For more specific information, please consult your tax adviser. ================================================================================ FUND OBJECTIVE | 1 ================================================================================ MANAGER'S COMMENTARY ON THE FUND -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- As of the end of the reporting period, the USAA Extended Market Index Fund had a total return of 15.30%. U.S. equities, as represented by the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index, advanced 15.68% for the six-month period ended June 30, 2013. Risk markets globally began 2013 with a powerful relief rally after the United States averted the worst of its fiscal cliff situation with a last minute tax deal struck on New Year's Day. The rally stalled in February, however, as economic momentum slowed and investors weighed the global impact of the inevitable U.S. government spending cuts. Later in the first quarter, financial markets were rattled by a stalemate presidential election in Italy and a severe banking crisis in Cyprus, reminding investors that Europe was still quite vulnerable to political instability and its debt and banking problems were far from resolved. U.S. stocks persevered through these flare-ups in the eurozone as investors' risk appetite was largely supported by the continuation of accommodative monetary policy from the U.S. Federal Reserve (the Fed). Equities broadly advanced as increased global liquidity kept interest rates low and investors turned to riskier asset classes in search of yield. As the year progressed, the markets became increasingly dominated by speculation around the future direction of monetary policy. Sluggish global growth, ironically, was conducive to positive equity market performance. Although disappointing economic reports caused financial market volatility to rise, the weak data also afforded investors some comfort that the central bank would continue to maintain their accommodative stance. However, after peaking in late May, U.S. stock markets recoiled in response to comments from the Fed, hinting that a change in its policy stance was on the horizon. Volatility picked up considerably and equities broadly Refer to page 5 for benchmark definitions. ================================================================================ 2 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ declined through the remainder of the period due to concerns about the potential impact tighter monetary policy would have on financial markets and economic growth. While rhetoric from the Fed about tapering its bond-buying stimulus program was the catalyst for the sell-off in equity markets, indicators that global growth was continuing to slow (with the exception of Japan) was another source of investor anxiety. The recovery in the United States showed signs of weakening and European countries already mired in recession saw economic conditions worsen. Slowing growth in emerging markets, particularly China and Brazil, dimmed the outlook for the entire global economy. THIS MATERIAL IS NOT INTENDED TO BE RELIED UPON AS A FORECAST, RESEARCH OR INVESTMENT ADVICE, AND IS NOT A RECOMMENDATION, OFFER OR SOLICITATION TO BUY OR SELL ANY SECURITIES OR TO ADOPT ANY INVESTMENT STRATEGY. THE OPINIONS EXPRESSED ARE AS OF JUNE 30, 2013, AND MAY CHANGE AS SUBSEQUENT CONDITIONS VARY. THE INFORMATION AND OPINIONS CONTAINED IN THIS MATERIAL ARE DERIVED FROM PROPRIETARY AND NON-PROPRIETARY SOURCES DEEMED BY BLACKROCK TO BE RELIABLE, ARE NOT NECESSARILY ALL-INCLUSIVE AND ARE NOT GUARANTEED AS TO ACCURACY. PAST PERFORMANCE IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS NO GUARANTEE THAT ANY FORECASTS MADE WILL COME TO PASS. ANY INVESTMENTS NAMED WITHIN THIS MATERIAL MAY NOT NECESSARILY BE HELD IN ANY ACCOUNTS MANAGED BY BLACKROCK. RELIANCE UPON INFORMATION IN THIS MATERIAL IS AT THE SOLE DISCRETION OF THE READER. INDEX PERFORMANCE IS SHOWN FOR ILLUSTRATIVE PURPOSES ONLY. IT IS NOT POSSIBLE TO INVEST DIRECTLY IN AN INDEX. PREPARED BY BLACKROCK INVESTMENTS, LLC, MEMBER FINRA. (C)2013 BLACKROCK, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ================================================================================ MANAGER'S COMMENTARY ON THE FUND | 3 ================================================================================ INVESTMENT OVERVIEW USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND (THE FUND) (Ticker Symbol: USMIX)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6/30/13 12/31/12 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net Assets $487.1 Million $398.4 Million Net Asset Value Per Share $15.37 $13.33 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS AS OF 6/30/13 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12/31/2012-6/30/2013* 1 Year 5 Years 10 Years 15.30% 24.59% 8.53% 10.16% -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- EXPENSE RATIOS AS OF 12/31/12** -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Before Reimbursement 0.65% After Reimbursement 0.50%
THE PERFORMANCE DATA QUOTED REPRESENTS PAST PERFORMANCE AND IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS. CURRENT PERFORMANCE MAY BE HIGHER OR LOWER THAN THE PERFORMANCE DATA QUOTED. THE RETURN AND PRINCIPAL VALUE OF AN INVESTMENT WILL FLUCTUATE, SO THAT AN INVESTOR'S SHARES, WHEN REDEEMED, MAY BE WORTH MORE OR LESS THAN THEIR ORIGINAL COST. FOR PERFORMANCE DATA CURRENT TO THE MOST RECENT MONTH-END, VISIT USAA.COM. * Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized. This six-month return is cumulative. **The expense ratios represent the total annual operating expenses, before reductions of any expenses paid indirectly and including any acquired fund fees and expenses, as reported in the Fund's prospectus dated May 1, 2013, and are calculated as a percentage of average net assets. USAA Asset Management Company (the Manager) has agreed, through May 1, 2014, to make payments or waive management, administration, and other fees so that the total expenses of the Fund (exclusive of commission recapture, expense offset arrangements, acquired fund fees and expenses, and extraordinary expenses) do not exceed an annual rate of 0.50% of the Fund's average net assets. This reimbursement arrangement may not be changed or terminated during this time period without approval of the Fund's Board of Trustees and may be changed or terminated by the Manager at any time after May 1, 2014. These expense ratios may differ from the expense ratios disclosed in the Financial Highlights, which excludes acquired fund fees and expenses. Total return measures the price change in a share assuming the reinvestment of all net investment income and realized capital gain distributions. The total returns quoted do not reflect adjustments made to the enclosed financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles or the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on distributions or the redemption of shares. ================================================================================ 4 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ o CUMULATIVE PERFORMANCE COMPARISON o [CHART OF CUMULATIVE PERFORMANCE COMPARISON]
DOW JONES U.S. COMPLETION USAA EXTENDED TOTAL STOCK MARKET INDEX MARKET INDEX* FUND 6/30/2003 $10,000.00 $10,000.00 7/31/2003 10,467.13 10,450.00 8/31/2003 10,905.82 10,887.50 9/30/2003 10,770.40 10,737.50 10/31/2003 11,590.71 11,562.50 11/30/2003 11,990.56 11,950.00 12/31/2003 12,240.02 12,192.62 1/31/2004 12,678.61 12,606.99 2/29/2004 12,900.52 12,833.01 3/31/2004 12,955.16 12,895.79 4/30/2004 12,434.53 12,355.85 5/31/2004 12,622.10 12,544.21 6/30/2004 12,969.53 12,883.24 7/31/2004 12,250.57 12,167.50 8/31/2004 12,251.80 12,167.50 9/30/2004 12,722.84 12,644.66 10/31/2004 12,957.93 12,908.35 11/30/2004 13,862.49 13,787.33 12/31/2004 14,454.88 14,377.52 1/31/2005 13,965.29 13,891.88 2/28/2005 14,235.52 14,147.48 3/31/2005 13,962.62 13,917.44 4/30/2005 13,452.39 13,444.58 5/31/2005 14,254.09 14,236.94 6/30/2005 14,719.12 14,684.24 7/31/2005 15,547.73 15,476.60 8/31/2005 15,369.48 15,297.68 9/30/2005 15,485.99 15,387.14 10/31/2005 15,122.40 15,054.86 11/30/2005 15,827.87 15,783.32 12/31/2005 15,904.52 15,831.70 1/31/2006 16,949.02 16,826.08 2/28/2006 16,781.00 16,682.16 3/31/2006 17,420.18 17,310.19 4/30/2006 17,491.87 17,375.61 5/31/2006 16,736.78 16,642.91 6/30/2006 16,784.76 16,669.08 7/31/2006 16,310.80 16,198.05 8/31/2006 16,660.81 16,538.23 9/30/2006 16,813.20 16,721.41 10/31/2006 17,649.70 17,545.71 11/30/2006 18,288.68 18,186.82 12/31/2006 18,335.18 18,255.81 1/31/2007 18,926.56 18,859.30 2/28/2007 18,879.84 18,749.58 3/31/2007 19,084.56 18,941.60 4/30/2007 19,557.47 19,366.79 5/31/2007 20,399.18 20,176.03 6/30/2007 20,099.58 19,915.43 7/31/2007 19,198.11 19,051.33 8/31/2007 19,391.48 19,229.63 9/30/2007 19,979.46 19,833.13 10/31/2007 20,570.29 20,464.06 11/30/2007 19,416.44 19,270.78 12/31/2007 19,324.12 19,115.83 1/31/2008 18,131.14 17,866.62 2/29/2008 17,739.65 17,503.48 3/31/2008 17,425.26 17,154.86 4/30/2008 18,375.51 18,099.03 5/31/2008 19,250.75 18,912.47 6/30/2008 17,807.24 17,488.95 7/31/2008 17,639.47 17,314.64 8/31/2008 17,982.68 17,663.26 9/30/2008 16,028.62 15,760.39 10/31/2008 12,721.20 12,506.63 11/30/2008 11,271.79 11,083.11 12/31/2008 11,781.92 11,594.45 1/31/2009 10,901.70 10,701.38 2/28/2009 9,835.61 9,654.34 3/31/2009 10,683.67 10,485.81 4/30/2009 12,284.99 12,056.38 5/31/2009 12,795.02 12,549.10 6/30/2009 12,902.29 12,641.49 7/31/2009 14,064.20 13,780.92 8/31/2009 14,589.58 14,304.44 9/30/2009 15,436.84 15,120.51 10/31/2009 14,601.43 14,273.64 11/30/2009 15,182.11 14,843.35 12/31/2009 16,191.99 15,811.01 1/31/2010 15,804.24 15,423.87 2/28/2010 16,567.04 16,167.18 3/31/2010 17,781.22 17,344.11 4/30/2010 18,627.72 18,164.85 5/31/2010 17,227.84 16,802.10 6/30/2010 16,034.27 15,640.67 7/31/2010 17,144.13 16,709.19 8/31/2010 16,190.46 15,764.55 9/30/2010 18,032.35 17,560.91 10/31/2010 18,839.45 18,335.20 11/30/2010 19,401.19 18,861.71 12/31/2010 20,825.79 20,255.31 1/31/2011 21,092.16 20,495.87 2/28/2011 22,028.96 21,410.00 3/31/2011 22,473.26 21,843.02 4/30/2011 23,144.10 22,468.48 5/31/2011 22,850.91 22,179.80 6/30/2011 22,317.76 21,650.57 7/31/2011 21,596.11 20,960.96 8/31/2011 19,831.33 19,244.95 9/30/2011 17,692.05 17,176.12 10/31/2011 20,169.07 19,581.73 11/30/2011 20,053.56 19,453.43 12/31/2011 20,043.75 19,438.80 1/31/2012 21,558.83 20,897.97 2/29/2012 22,425.85 21,719.80 3/31/2012 22,938.46 22,206.19 4/30/2012 22,770.04 22,038.47 5/31/2012 21,177.82 20,495.44 6/30/2012 21,846.78 21,132.78 7/31/2012 21,696.98 20,981.83 8/31/2012 22,445.81 21,703.03 9/30/2012 22,995.47 22,222.96 10/31/2012 22,692.01 21,921.07 11/30/2012 23,026.30 22,256.51 12/31/2012 23,629.17 22,834.00 1/31/2013 25,275.42 24,409.94 2/28/2013 25,520.75 24,632.62 3/31/2013 26,716.76 25,780.32 4/30/2013 26,887.62 25,934.49 5/31/2013 27,604.42 26,602.55 6/30/2013 27,333.06 26,328.48
[END CHART] Data from 6/30/03 to 6/30/13. The graph illustrates how a $10,000 hypothetical investment in the USAA Extended Market Index Fund closely tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index, which is a market-capitalization-weighted index of approximately 3,500 U.S. equity securities. It includes all the stocks in the Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Index except for stocks included in the S&P 500 Index. Past performance is no guarantee of future results, and the cumulative performance quoted does not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on distributions or the redemption of shares. Indexes are unmanaged and you cannot invest directly in an index. *The Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index is a subset of the Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Index that excludes components of the S&P 500 Index. The Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Index is an all-inclusive measure composed of all U.S. equity securities with readily available prices. This broad index is divided according to stock-size segment, style, and sector to create distinct sub-indexes that track every major segment of the market. ================================================================================ INVESTMENT OVERVIEW | 5 ================================================================================ Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index is a service mark of Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Dow Jones does not have any relationship to the Fund other than the licensing and sublicensing of the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index and its service marks for use in connection with the Fund. o Dow Jones does not sponsor, endorse, sell, or promote the Fund; recommend that any person invest in the Fund or any other securities; have any responsibility or liability for or make any decisions about the timing, amount, or pricing of the Fund; have any responsibility or liability for the administration, management, or marketing of the Fund; consider the needs of the Fund or the owners of the Fund in determining, composing, or calculating the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index, or have any obligation to do so. Dow Jones will have no liability in connection with the Fund. Specifically, Dow Jones makes no warranty, express or implied, and Dow Jones disclaims any warranty about: the results to be obtained by the Fund, the owner of the Fund, or any other person in connection with the use of the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index and the data included in the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index; the accuracy or completeness of the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index and any related data; the merchantability and the fitness for a particular purpose or use of the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index and/or its related data; Dow Jones will have no liability for any errors, omissions, or interruptions in the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index or related data; under no circumstances will Dow Jones be liable for any lost profits or indirect, punitive, special, or consequential damages or losses, even if Dow Jones knows that they might occur. o The licensing agreement between BlackRock Advisors, LLC (or its predecessor), and Dow Jones, and the sublicensing agreeement between the Fund and BlackRock Advisors, LLC (or its predecessor), are solely for the benefit of the parties to these agreements and not for the benefit of the owners of the USAA Extended Market Index Fund or any other third parties. ================================================================================ 6 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ o TOP 10 HOLDINGS o AS OF 6/30/13 (% of Net Assets)* Liberty Global PLC A ..................................................... 0.7% Las Vegas Sands Corp. .................................................... 0.5% Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc. .............................................. 0.5% Transocean Ltd. .......................................................... 0.5% Delta Air Lines Inc. ..................................................... 0.4% Liberty Media Corp. A .................................................... 0.4% Facebook Inc. A .......................................................... 0.4% Linkedin Corp. A ......................................................... 0.4% Annaly Capital Management ............................................... 0.3% Liberty Interactive Corp. A .............................................. 0.3%
o TOP 10 INDUSTRY SECTORS o AS OF 6/30/13 (% of Net Assets)* Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT) ..................................... 9.6% Banks .................................................................... 4.9% Insurance ................................................................ 4.5% Machinery ................................................................ 3.6% Specialty Retail ......................................................... 3.6% Software ................................................................. 3.5% Diversified Financials ................................................... 3.4% Commercial Services & Supplies ........................................... 3.4% Biotechnology ............................................................ 3.1% Health Care Provider & Services .......................................... 3.0%
*Percentages are of the net assets of the Master Extended Market Index Series (the Series), not the net assets of the Fund. You will find a complete list of securities that the Series owns on pages 26-72. ================================================================================ INVESTMENT OVERVIEW | 7 ================================================================================ STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES June 30, 2013 (unaudited) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ASSETS Investment in Master Extended Market Index Series, at fair value $486,828,702 Receivable for capital shares sold 493,860 ------------ Total assets 487,322,562 ------------ LIABILITIES Payable for capital shares redeemed 162,080 Accrued transfer agency fees 17,106 Other accrued expenses and payables 55,812 ------------ Total liabilities 234,998 ------------ Net assets applicable to capital shares outstanding $487,087,564 ============ NET ASSETS CONSIST OF: Paid-in capital $362,730,855 Accumulated undistributed net investment income 2,424,489 Accumulated net realized loss from investments and futures transactions 6,284,846 Net unrealized appreciation on investments and futures contracts 115,647,374 ------------ Net assets applicable to capital shares outstanding $487,087,564 ============ Capital shares outstanding 31,700,466 ============ Net asset value, redemption price, and offering price per share $ 15.37 ============
See accompanying notes to financial statements and accompanying financial statements of the Master Extended Market Index Series (the Series) attached. ================================================================================ 8 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS Six-month period ended June 30, 2012 (unaudited) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVESTMENT INCOME Allocated from Master Extended Market Index Series: Dividends -- unaffiliated $ 2,740,114 Foreign taxes withheld (3,967) Securities lending -- affiliated 175,828 Dividends -- affiliated 9,737 ----------- Total income 2,921,712 Expenses (Note 4B) (154,462) ----------- Net allocated investment income 2,767,250 ----------- FUND EXPENSES Administration and servicing fees 567,018 Transfer agent's fees 370,687 Custody and accounting fees 3,439 Shareholder reporting fees 19,340 Postage 12,397 Trustees' fees 5,455 Registration fees 19,835 Professional fees 49,490 Other 5,951 ----------- Total Fund expenses before reimbursement 1,053,612 Expenses reimbursed (81,610) ----------- Total Fund expenses after reimbursement 972,002 ----------- NET INVESTMENT INCOME 1,795,248 ----------- NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN ON INVESTMENTS AND FUTURES CONTRACTS ALLOCATED FROM MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES Net realized gain from investment transactions 6,820,495 Net realized gain from futures transactions 2,164,654 Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation on investments and futures contracts 51,150,582 ----------- Net allocated realized and unrealized gain on investments and futures contracts 60,135,731 ----------- Increase in net assets from operations $61,930,979 ===========
See accompanying notes to financial statements and accompanying financial statements of the Series attached. ================================================================================ FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 9 ================================================================================ STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS Six-month period ended June 30, 2013 (unaudited), and year ended December 31, 2012
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6/30/2013 12/31/2012 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FROM OPERATIONS Net investment income $ 1,795,248 $ 5,544,333 Net realized gain from investment transactions 6,820,495 123,756 Net realized gain from futures transactions 2,164,654 742,492 Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation on investments and futures contracts 51,150,582 54,176,593 ----------------------------- Net increase (decrease) in net assets from operations 61,930,979 60,587,174 ----------------------------- DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS Net investment income - (5,499,738) Net realized gains - (2,744,950) ----------------------------- Distributions to shareholders - (8,244,688) ----------------------------- FROM CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS Proceeds from shares sold 66,387,987 54,873,628 Reinvested dividends (2,299) 8,059,603 Cost of shares redeemed (39,623,858) (70,541,299) ----------------------------- Net increase (decrease) in net assets from capital share transactions 26,761,830 (7,608,068) ----------------------------- Capital contribution from USAA Transfer Agency Company - - ----------------------------- Net increase (decrease) in net assets 88,692,809 44,734,418 NET ASSETS Beginning of period 398,394,755 353,660,337 ----------------------------- End of period $487,087,564 $398,394,755 ============================= Accumulated undistributed net investment income End of period $ 2,424,489 $ 629,241 ============================= CHANGE IN SHARES OUTSTANDING Shares sold 4,482,630 4,260,185 Shares issued for reinvested dividends (159) 611,503 Shares redeemed (2,675,946) (5,488,819) ----------------------------- Increase (decrease) in shares outstanding 1,806,525 (617,131) =============================
See accompanying notes to financial statements and accompanying financial statements of the Series attached. ================================================================================ 10 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Contained below are selected ratios and supplemental data for the periods indicated for the USAA Extended Market Index Fund.
SIX-MONTH PERIOD ENDED JUNE 30, YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, ------------------------------------------------------------ 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 ------------------------------------------------------------ Net asset value at beginning of period $ 13.33 $ 11.59 $ 12.63 $ 10.21 $ 7.53 ----------------------------------------------------------- Income (loss) from investment operations: Net investment income .06 .19 .11 .09 .07 Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments and futures transactions 1.98 1.83 (.63)(b) 2.78 2.67 ----------------------------------------------------------- Total from investment operations 2.04 2.02 (.52) 2.87 2.74 ----------------------------------------------------------- Less distributions: From net investment income - (.19) (.09) (.11) (.06) From realized capital gains - (.09) (.43) (.34) - ----------------------------------------------------------- Total distributions - (.28) (.52) (.45) (.06) ----------------------------------------------------------- Net asset value at end of period $ 15.37 $ 13.33 $ 11.59 $ 12.63 $ 10.21 =========================================================== Total return (%)* 15.30 17.47 (4.03) 28.11 36.37 Net assets at end of period (000) $487,088 $398,395 $353,660 $362,835 $276,245 Ratios to average net assets: ** Expenses, including expenses of the Master Extended Market Index Series (%)(a) .50(c) .50 .50 .50 .50 Expenses before reimbursements, including expenses of the Master Extended Market Index Series (%)(a) .53(c) .65 .75 .81 .96 Net investment income (%) .79(c) 1.45 .87 .86 .86 Portfolio turnover (%)*** 6 12 12 15 20
* Assumes reinvestment of all net investment income and realized capital gain distributions, if any, during the period. Includes adjustments in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles and could differ from the Lipper reported return. ** For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, average net assets were $457,370,100. *** Represents the portfolio turnover of the Master Extended Market Index Series. (a) Reflects total operating expenses of the Fund before reductions of any expenses paid indirectly. The Fund's expenses paid indirectly decreased the expense ratios by less than 0.01%. (b) Reflected a net realized and unrealized loss per share, whereas the statement of operations reflected a net realized and unrealized gain for the period. The difference in realized and unrealized gains and losses was due to the timing of sales and repurchases of shares in relation to fluctuating market values for the portfolio. (c) Annualized. The ratio is not necessarily indicative of 12 months of operations. See accompanying notes to financial statements and accompanying financial statements of the Series attached. ================================================================================ FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS | 11 ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS June 30, 2013 (unaudited) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (1) SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST (the Trust), registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the 1940 Act), as amended, is an open-end management investment company organized as a Delaware statutory trust consisting of 50 separate funds. The information presented in this semiannual report pertains only to the USAA Extended Market Index Fund (the Fund), which is classified as diversified under the 1940 Act. The Fund's primary investment objective is to seek to match, before fees and expenses, the performance of the U.S. stocks not included in the S&P 500 Index as represented by the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index. USAA Asset Management Company (the Manager), an affiliate of the Fund, attempts to achieve this objective by investing all of the Fund's investable assets in the Master Extended Market Index Series of the Quantitative Master Series LLC (the Series), which is a separate open-end investment management company advised by BlackRock Advisors, LLC (BlackRock), with a substantially similar investment objective. At June 30, 2013, the Fund's investment was 100.00% of the Series. The financial statements of the Series, including the Schedule of Investments, are contained elsewhere in this report and should be read in conjunction with the Fund's financial statements. A. VALUATION OF INVESTMENTS -- The Fund records its investment in the Series at fair value, which reflects its proportionate interest in the net assets of the Series. Valuation of the securities held by the Series is discussed in Note 1 of the Series' financial statements included elsewhere in this report. B. FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS -- Refer to the Schedule of Investments of the Series for a discussion of fair value measurements and a summary of the inputs used to value the Series' assets. ================================================================================ 12 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ C. DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS -- Refer to note 2 in the Series' Notes to Financial Statements for a discussion of derivative financial instruments and how they are accounted for in the Series' financial statements. D. INVESTMENT INCOME AND EXPENSES -- The Fund records daily its pro rata share of the Series' income, expenses, and realized and unrealized gains and losses. In addition, the Fund accrues its own expenses. E. FEDERAL TAXES -- The Fund's policy is to comply with the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment companies and to distribute substantially all of its income to its shareholders. Therefore, no federal income tax provision is required. F. EXPENSES PAID INDIRECTLY -- Through arrangements with banks utilized by the Fund for cash management purposes, realized credits, if any, generated from cash balances in the Fund's bank accounts are used to reduce the Fund's expenses. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the fund did not incur any expenses paid indirectly. G. INDEMNIFICATIONS -- Under the Trust's organizational documents, its officers and trustees are indemnified against certain liabilities arising out of the performance of their duties to the Trust. In addition, in the normal course of business, the Trust enters into contracts that contain a variety of representations and warranties that provide general indemnifications. The Trust's maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown, as this would involve future claims that may be made against the Trust that have not yet occurred. However, the Trust expects the risk of loss to be remote. H. USE OF ESTIMATES -- The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that may affect the reported amounts in the financial statements. (2) LINE OF CREDIT The Fund participates in a joint, short-term, revolving, committed loan agreement of $500 million with USAA Capital Corporation (CAPCO), an affiliate of the Manager. The purpose of the agreement is to meet temporary or emergency cash needs, including redemption requests ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 13 ================================================================================ that might otherwise require the untimely disposition of securities. Subject to availability, the Fund may borrow from CAPCO an amount up to 5% of the Fund's total assets at a rate per annum equal to the rate at which CAPCO obtains funding in the capital markets, with no markup. The USAA Funds that are party to the loan agreement are assessed facility fees by CAPCO in the amount of 7.0 basis points of the amount of the committed loan agreement. Prior to September 30, 2012, the Funds were assessed facility fees by CAPCO in the amount of 7.5 basis points of the amount of the committed loan agreement. The facility fees are allocated among the Funds based on their respective average net assets for the period. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the Fund paid CAPCO facility fees of $1,354, which represents 0.8% of the total fees paid to CAPCO by the USAA Funds. The Fund had no borrowings under this agreement during the six-month period ended June 30, 2013. (3) DISTRIBUTIONS The tax basis of distributions and accumulated undistributed net investment income will be determined based upon the Fund's tax year-end of December 31, 2013, in accordance with applicable tax law. Distributions of net investment income and the Fund's pro rata share of the Series' realized gains from security transactions not offset by capital losses are made annually in the succeeding fiscal year or as otherwise required to avoid the payment of federal taxes. Under the Regulated Investment Company Modernization Act of 2010 (the Act) a fund is permitted to carry forward net capital losses indefinitely. Additionally, such capital losses that are carried forward will retain their character as short-term and or long-term capital losses. Post-enactment capital loss carryforwards must be used before pre-enactment capital loss carryforwards. As a result, pre-enactment capital loss carryforwards may be more likely to expire unused. At December 31, 2012, the Fund had no pre-enactment capital loss carryforwards and post-enactment capital loss carryforwards of $612,396, for federal income tax purposes. It is unlikely that the Trust's Board of Trustees (the Board) will authorize a distribution of capital ================================================================================ 14 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ gains realized in the future until the capital loss carryforwards have been used or expire. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the Fund did not incur any income tax, interest, or penalties, and has recorded no liability for net unrecognized tax benefits relating to uncertain income tax positions. On an ongoing basis the Manager will monitor its tax positions to determine if adustments to this conclusion are necessary. The statute of limitations on the Fund's tax return filings generally remain open for the three preceeding fiscal reporting year ends and remain subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service and state taxing authorities. (4) TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGER A. ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICING FEES -- The Manager provides administration and shareholder servicing functions for the Fund. For such services, the Manager receives a fee accrued daily and paid monthly at an annualized rate of 0.25% of the Fund's average net assets for the fiscal year. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the Fund incurred administration and servicing fees, paid or payable to the Manager, of $567,018. In addition to the services provided under its Administration and Servicing Agreement with the Fund, the Manager also provides certain compliance and legal services for the benefit of the Fund. The Board has approved the reimbursement of a portion of these expenses incurred by the Manager. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the Fund reimbursed the Manager $6,569 for these compliance and legal services. These expenses are included in the professional fees on the Fund's statement of operations. Out of the administration and servicing fees received from the Fund, the Manager pays BlackRock up to 0.10% for subadministration services provided on the Manager's behalf. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the Manager incurred subadministration fees, paid or payable to BlackRock, of $9,623. B. EXPENSE LIMITATION -- The Manager has agreed, through May 1, 2013, to limit the total annual operating expenses of the Fund to 0.50% of the Fund's average net assets, excluding extraordinary expenses and ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 15 ================================================================================ before reductions of any expenses paid indirectly, and will reimburse the Fund for all expenses in excess of that amount. This expense limitation arrangement may not be changed or terminated through May 1, 2013, without approval of the Board, and may be changed or terminated by the Manager at any time after that date. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the Fund incurred reimbursable expenses of $81,610. Additionally, the expenses allocated to the Fund from the Series included fees waived by BlackRock Advisors, LLC of $7,057 (See Master Feeder Notes to Financials). Refer to Note 5 in the Series' Notes to Financial Statements. C. TRANSFER AGENT'S FEES -- USAA Transfer Agency Company, d/b/a USAA Shareholder Account Services (SAS), an affiliate of the Manager, provides transfer agency services to the Fund based on an annual charge of $23 per shareholder account, plus out-of-pocket expenses. The Fund also pays SAS fees that are related to the administration and servicing of accounts that are traded on an omnibus basis. For the six-month period ended June 30, 2013, the Fund incurred transfer agent's fees paid or payable to SAS, of $370,687. D. UNDERWRITING AGREEMENT -- The Manager provides exclusive underwriting and distribution of the Fund's shares on a continuing best-efforts basis. The Manager receives no commissions or fees for this service. E. MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT -- The Manager serves as investment adviser to the Fund pursuant to a Management Agreement and is responsible for monitoring the services provided to the Series by BlackRock. While the Fund maintains its investment in the Series, the Manager receives no fee from the Fund for the monitoring service performed on its behalf. (5) TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES Certain trustees and officers of the Fund are also directors, officers, and/or employees of the Manager. None of the affiliated trustees or Fund officers received any compensation from the Fund. ================================================================================ 16 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ EXPENSE EXAMPLE June 30, 2013 (unaudited) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: direct costs, such as wire fees, redemption fees, and low balance fees; and indirect costs, including administration fees, transfer agency fees, expenses allocated to the Fund by the Master Extended Market Index Series, and other Fund operating expenses. This example is intended to help you understand your indirect costs, also referred to as "ongoing costs" (in dollars), of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds. The example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire six-month period of January 1, 2013, through June 30, 2013. ACTUAL EXPENSES The first line of the table on the next page provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this line, together with the amount you invested at the beginning of the period, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number in the first line under the heading "Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period. HYPOTHETICAL EXAMPLE FOR COMPARISON PURPOSES The second line of the table provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on the Fund's actual expense ratio and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year before expenses, which is not the Fund's actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending ================================================================================ EXPENSE EXAMPLE | 17 ================================================================================ account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of other funds. Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any direct costs, such as wire fees, redemption fees, or low balance fees. Therefore, the second line of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. In addition, if these direct costs were included, your costs would have been higher.
EXPENSES PAID BEGINNING ENDING DURING PERIOD* ACCOUNT VALUE ACCOUNT VALUE JANUARY 1, 2013 - JANUARY 1, 2013 JUNE 30, 2013 JUNE 30, 2013 ------------------------------------------------------ Actual $1,000.00 $1,153.00 $2.67 Hypothetical (5% return before expenses) 1,000.00 1,022.32 2.51
* Expenses are equal to the Fund's annualized expense ratio of 0.50%, which includes expenses of the Master Extended Market Index Series, and is net of any reimbursements and expenses paid indirectly, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 181 days/365 days (to reflect the one-half-year period). The Fund's ending account value on the first line in the table is based on its actual total return of 15.30% for the six-month period of January 1, 2013, through June 30, 2013. ================================================================================ 18 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENT(S) June 30, 2013 (unaudited) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- At a meeting of the Board of Trustees (the Board) held on April 30, 2013, the Board, including the Trustees who are not "interested persons" of the Trust (the Independent Trustees), approved for an annual period the continuance of the Management Agreement between the Trust and the Manager with respect to the Fund. In advance of the meeting, the Trustees received and considered a variety of information relating to the Management Agreement and the Manager and were given the opportunity to ask questions and request additional information from management. The information provided to the Board included, among other things: (i) a separate report prepared by an independent third party, which provided a statistical analysis comparing the Fund's investment performance, expenses, and fees to comparable investment companies; (ii) information concerning the services rendered to the Fund, as well as information regarding the Manager's revenues and costs of providing services to the Fund and compensation paid to affiliates of the Manager; and (iii) information about the Manager's operations and personnel. Prior to voting, the Independent Trustees reviewed the proposed continuance of the Management Agreement with management and with experienced independent counsel and received materials from such counsel discussing the legal standards for their consideration of the proposed continuation of the Management Agreement with respect to the Fund. The Independent Trustees also reviewed the proposed continuation of the Management Agreement with respect to the Fund in private sessions with their counsel at which no representatives of management were present. At each regularly scheduled meeting of the Board and its committees, the Board receives and reviews, among other things, information concerning the Fund's performance and services provided by the Manager. At the meeting at which renewal of the Management Agreement is considered, particular focus is given to ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENT(S) | 19 ================================================================================ information concerning Fund performance, comparability of fees and total expenses, and profitability. However, the Board noted that the evaluation process with respect to the Manager is an ongoing one. In this regard, the Board's and its committees' consideration of the Management Agreement included certain information previously received at such meetings. MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT After full consideration of a variety of factors, the Board, including the Independent Trustees, voted to approve the Management Agreement. In approving the Management Agreement, the Trustees did not identify any single factor as controlling, and each Trustee may have attributed different weights to various factors. Throughout their deliberations, the Independent Trustees were represented and assisted by independent counsel. The Trustees took into account the fact that the Fund operates in a master-feeder structure through which the Fund invests all of its investable assets in the Extended Market Index Series (the Master Fund), a separate registered investment company advised by BlackRock Advisors, LLC (the Adviser). NATURE, EXTENT AND QUALITY OF THE SERVICES -- In considering the nature, extent, and quality of the services provided by the Manager under the Management Agreement, the Board reviewed information provided by the Manager relating to its operations and personnel. The Board also took into account its knowledge of the Manager's management and the quality of the performance of the Manager's duties through Board meetings, discussions, and reports during the preceding year. The Board considered the services provided to the Fund by the Manager under the Management Agreement, as well as other services provided by the Manager and its affiliates under other agreements, and the personnel who provide these services. The Board noted that the Manager receives no investment advisory fee for serving as the investment adviser to the Fund so long as the Fund operates in a master-feeder structure. In addition to the investment advisory services provided to the Fund, the Manager and its ================================================================================ 20 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ affiliates provide administrative services, stockholder services, oversight of fund accounting, marketing services, assistance in meeting legal and regulatory requirements, and other services necessary for the operation of the Fund and the Trust. The Board considered the level and depth of knowledge of the Manager, including the professional experience and qualifications of senior personnel, as well as current staffing levels. The Board discussed the Manager's effectiveness in monitoring the performance of the Adviser to the Master Fund. The Manager's role in coordinating the activities of the Fund's other service providers was also considered. The Board also considered the Manager's risk management processes. The Board considered the Manager's financial condition and that it had the financial wherewithal to continue to provide the same scope and high quality of services under the Management Agreement. In reviewing the Management Agreement, the Board focused on the experience, resources, and strengths of the Manager and its affiliates in managing the Fund, as well as the other funds in the Trust. The Board also reviewed the compliance and administrative services provided to the Fund by the Manager, including oversight of the Master Fund's operations and of the Fund's day-to-day operations and oversight of Fund accounting. The Trustees, guided also by information obtained from their experiences as trustees of the Trust, also focused on the quality of the Manager's compliance and administrative staff. EXPENSES AND PERFORMANCE -- In connection with its consideration of the Management Agreement, the Board evaluated the Fund's advisory fees and total expense ratio as compared to other open-end investment companies deemed to be comparable to the Fund as determined by the independent third party in its report. The Fund's expenses were compared to a group of investment companies chosen by the independent third party to be comparable to the Fund based upon certain factors, including fund type, comparability of investment objective and classification, sales load type (in this case, pure-index retail investment companies with frontend loads and no sales loads), asset size, and expense components (the "expense group") and (ii) a larger group of investment companies that includes all front-end load and no-load retail open-end investment ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENT(S) | 21 ================================================================================ companies in the same investment classification/objective as the Fund regardless of asset size, excluding outliers (the "expense universe"). Among other data, the Board noted that the Fund's management fee rate -- which reflects the advisory fee paid by the Master Fund to the Adviser as well as administrative services provided to the Fund by the Manager and its affiliates and the effects of any reimbursements -- was below the median of its expense group and its expense universe. The data indicated that the Fund's total expenses, after reimbursements, were below the median of its expense group and above the median of its expense universe. The Board noted that the Manager does not currently receive an advisory fee from the Fund for the services that it provides under the Management Agreement. The Trustees took into account that the management fee and total expenses reflected both the expenses of the Fund as well as those of the Master Fund. The Trustees also took into account the Manager's current undertakings to maintain expense limitations for the Fund. The Board also took into account the various services provided to the Fund by the Manager and its affiliates. The Trustees also noted the high level of correlation between the Fund and its corresponding index and the relatively low tracking error between the two, and noted that it reviews such information on a quarterly basis. In considering the Fund's performance, the Board noted that it reviews at its regularly scheduled meetings detailed information about the Fund's and the Master Fund's performance results. The Trustees also reviewed various comparative data provided to them in connection with their consideration of the renewal of the Management Agreement, including, among other information, a comparison of the Fund's average annual total return with its Lipper index and with that of other mutual funds deemed to be in its peer group by the independent third party in its report (the "performance universe"). The Fund's performance universe consisted of the Fund and all retail and institutional open-end investment companies with the same classification/objective as the Fund regardless of asset size or primary channel of distribution. This comparison indicated that, among other data, the Fund's performance was above the average of its performance universe and its Lipper Index for the one-, three-, and five-year periods ended December 31, 2012. The Board also noted that ================================================================================ 22 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ the Fund's percentile performance ranking was in the top 35% of its performance universe for the one- and five-year periods ended December 31, 2012 and was in the top 20% of its performance universe for the three-year period ended December 31, 2012. The Board took into account management's discussion of the Fund's performance, including the Fund's high level of correlation between the Fund's performance and its corresponding index. The Trustees also noted management's discussion of the Fund's peer group. COMPENSATION AND PROFITABILITY -- The Board noted that the Manager does not currently receive an advisory fee from the Fund under the Management Agreement. The information considered by the Board included operating profit margin information for the Manager's business as a whole. The Board also received and considered profitability information related to the revenues from the Fund. This information included a review of the methodology used in the allocation of certain costs to the Fund. The Trustees reviewed the profitability of the Manager's relationship with the Fund before tax expenses. In considering the profitability data with respect to the Fund, the Trustees noted that the Manager had agreed to maintain expense limitations for the Fund and had reimbursed the Fund for expenses. In reviewing the overall profitability of the Fund to the Manager, the Board also considered the fact that affiliates provide shareholder servicing and administrative services to the Fund for which they receive compensation. The Board also considered the possible direct and indirect benefits to the Manager from its relationship with the Trust, including that the Manager may derive reputational and other benefits from its association with the Fund. The Trustees recognized that the Manager should be able to earn a reasonable level of profits in exchange for the level of services it provides to the Fund and the entrepreneurial risk that it assumes as Manager. ECONOMIES OF SCALE -- With respect to the consideration of any economies of scale to be realized by the Fund, the Board took into account that the Manager does not receive any advisory fees under the Management Agreement and that the management fee reflects the advisory fee paid at the Master Fund level to the Master Fund's Adviser. The Board took into account Management's discussion of the Fund's current advisory fee ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENT | 23 ================================================================================ structure. The Board also considered the effects of the Fund's growth and size on the Fund's performance and fees, noting that if the Fund's assets increase over time, the Fund may realize other economies of scale if assets increase proportionally more than some expenses. The Board determined that the current fee structure was reasonable. CONCLUSIONS -- The Board reached the following conclusions regarding the Fund's Management Agreement with the Manager, among others: (i) the Manager has demonstrated that it possesses the capability and resources to perform the duties required of it under the Management Agreement; (ii) the Manager maintains an appropriate compliance program; (iii) the performance of the Fund is reasonable in relation to the performance of funds with similar investment objectives and to relevant indices; (iv) the Fund's advisory expenses are reasonable in relation to those of similar funds and to the services to be provided by the Manager; and (v) the Manager and its affiliates' level of profitability, if any, from their relationship with the Fund is reasonable. Based on its conclusions, the Board determined that continuation of the Management Agreement would be in the best interests of the Fund and its shareholders. ================================================================================ 24 | USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND ================================================================================ Semiannual report of the MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES in which the USAA EXTENDED MARKET INDEX FUND invests ================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS June 30, 2013 (unaudited)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- COMMON STOCKS AEROSPACE& DEFENSE - 1.5% 5,457 AAR Corp. $ 119,945 2,943 AeroVironment, Inc.(a) 59,390 4,347 Alliant Techsystems, Inc. 357,889 2,867 Arotech Corp.(a) 4,301 1,694 Astronics Corp.(a) 69,234 3,505 Astrotech Corp.(a) 2,454 14,467 BE Aerospace, Inc.(a) 912,578 1,655 CPI Aerostructures, Inc.(a) 17,957 2,754 Cubic Corp. 132,468 6,323 Curtiss-Wright Corp. 234,330 1,595 Ducommun, Inc.(a) 33,910 4,304 Esterline Technologies Corp.(a) 311,136 25,599 Exelis, Inc. 353,010 8,839 GenCorp, Inc.(a) 143,722 129 Heico Corp. 6,498 6,141 Heico Corp., Class A 226,664 13,864 Hexcel Corp.(a) 472,069 6,911 Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc. 390,333 2,908 Innovative Solutions & Support, Inc. 18,611 7,919 Kratos Defense & Security Solutions, Inc.(a) 51,315 1,760 LMI Aerospace, Inc.(a) 32,982 2,953 Mantech International Corp., Class A 77,132 6,236 Moog, Inc., Class A(a) 321,341 8,424 Orbital Sciences Corp.(a) 146,325 3,242 RBC Bearings, Inc.(a) 168,422 9,625 Smith & Wesson Holding Corp.(a) 96,058 15,146 Spirit AeroSystems Holdings, Inc., Class A(a) 325,336 2,796 Sturm Ruger & Co., Inc. 134,320 7,804 Taser International, Inc.(a) 66,490 5,157 Teledyne Technologies, Inc.(a) 398,894 6,340 TransDigm Group, Inc. 993,922 7,188 Triumph Group, Inc. 568,930 644 VSE Corp. 26,449 ------------ 7,274,415 ------------ ALTERNATIVE ENERGY - 0.1% 8,257 Amyris, Inc.(a) 23,863 4,569 Ascent Solar Technologies, Inc.(a),(b) 3,564 568 BioFuel Energy Corp.(a),(b) 1,897 23,883 FuelCell Energy, Inc.(a) 30,331 16,845 GT Advanced Technologies, Inc.(a) 69,907 3,197 Green Plains Renewable Energy, Inc.(a) 42,584 4,878 GreenHunter Energy, Inc.(a),(b) 3,902 2,543 KiOR, Inc., Class A(a) 14,521 1,816 Ocean Power Technologies, Inc.(a) 2,942 2,106 Pacific Ethanol, Inc.(a),(b) 8,382 5,885 Plug Power, Inc.(a),(b) 2,236 820 Rex American Resources Corp.(a) 23,591 6,861 STR Holdings, Inc.(a) 15,574 6,046 Solazyme, Inc.(a),(b) 70,859 4,501 SunPower Corp.(a) 93,171 4,249 Verenium Corp.(a) 9,518 ------------ 416,842 ------------ AUTOMOBILES & PARTS - 1.8% 4,401 Allison Transmission Holdings, Inc. 101,575 9,525 American Axle & Manufacturing Holdings, Inc.(a) 177,451 13,062 Autoliv, Inc. 1,010,868
================================================================================ 26 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8,670 Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. $ 287,584 20,092 Dana Holding Corp. 386,972 3,786 Dorman Products, Inc. 172,755 2,419 Federal-Mogul Corp., Class A(a) 24,698 2,169 Fuel Systems Solutions, Inc.(a) 38,803 19,685 Gentex Corp. 453,739 4,901 Gentherm, Inc.(a) 91,012 41,097 LKQ Corp.(a) 1,058,248 12,620 Lear Corp. 763,005 3,917 LoJack Corp.(a) 12,338 6,486 Modine Manufacturing Co.(a) 70,568 2,822 Motorcar Parts of America, Inc.(a) 25,878 2,934 Quantum Fuel Systems Technologies Worldwide, Inc.(a) 1,614 848 Shiloh Industries, Inc. 8,853 2,753 Standard Motor Products, Inc. 94,538 3,773 Stoneridge, Inc.(a) 43,918 500 Strattec Security Corp. 18,680 3,069 Superior Industries International, Inc. 52,817 14,855 TRW Automotive Holdings Corp.(a) 986,966 8,425 Tenneco, Inc.(a) 381,484 10,054 Tesla Motors, Inc.(a),(b) 1,080,101 7,502 Titan International, Inc. 126,559 7,139 U.S.Auto Parts Network, Inc.(a) 8,210 6,898 Visteon Corp.(a) 435,402 8,622 WABCO Holdings, Inc.(a) 643,977 ------------ 8,558,613 ------------ BANKS - 5.0% 774 1st Source Corp. 18,390 5,499 1st United Bancorp, Inc. 36,953 864 Ameriana Bancorp 8,666 1,414 American National Bank Shares, Inc. 32,861 3,662 Ameris Bancorp(a) 61,705 1,492 Ames National Corp. 33,958 2,008 Arrow Financial Corp. 49,698 22,297 Associated Banc-Corp. 346,718 11,110 Astoria Financial Corp. 119,766 2,435 BCB Bancorp, Inc. 25,933 3,409 BOK Financial Corp. 218,346 770 Bancfirst Corp. 35,843 1,300 Bancorp of New Jersey, Inc. 18,824 5,262 The Bancorp, Inc.(a) 78,877 11,532 BancorpSouth, Inc. 204,116 6,240 Bank Mutual Corp. 35,194 6,025 Bank of Hawaii Corp. 303,178 1,025 Bank of Kentucky Financial Corp. 29,151 894 Bank of Marin Bancorp 35,760 4,166 Bank of the Ozarks, Inc. 180,513 3,481 BankFinancial Corp. 29,588 6,896 BankUnited, Inc. 179,365 2,488 Banner Corp. 84,070 965 Bar Harbor Bankshares 35,271 4,923 Beneficial Mutual Bancorp, Inc.(a) 41,353 1,442 Berkshire Bancorp, Inc. 11,464 3,574 Berkshire Hills Bancorp, Inc. 99,214 1,829 BofI Holding, Inc.(a) 83,805 11,287 Boston Private Financial Holdings, Inc. 120,094 1,651 Bridge Bancorp, Inc. 37,147 1,807 Bridge Capital Holdings(a) 28,659 10,126 Brookline Bancorp, Inc. 87,894 1,850 Bryn Mawr Bank Corp. 44,270 1,832 CFS Bancorp, Inc. 19,639 2,254 CNB Financial Corp. 38,183 11,902 CVB Financial Corp. 139,968 611 California First National Bancorp 10,082 2,821 Camco Financial Corp.(a) 9,253 1,176 Camden National Corp. 41,713 3,166 Cape Bancorp, Inc. 30,077 1,923 Capital City Bank Group, Inc.(a) 22,172 26,774 CapitalSource, Inc. 251,140
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 27 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 18,512 Capitol Federal Financial, Inc. $ 224,736 4,490 Cardinal Financial Corp. 65,734 1,327 Cascade Bancorp(a) 8,241 10,115 Cathay General Bancorp 205,840 2,591 Center Bancorp, Inc. 32,880 4,441 Centerstate Banks, Inc. 38,548 4,174 Central Pacific Financial Corp.(a) 75,132 731 Century Bancorp, Inc., Class A 25,585 3,807 Chemical Financial Corp. 98,944 1,566 Chicopee Bancorp, Inc. 26,465 1,985 Citizens & Northern Corp. 38,350 2,249 City Holding Co. 87,599 6,510 City National Corp. 412,539 1,775 Clifton Savings Bancorp, Inc. 21,034 5,027 CoBiz Financial, Inc. 41,724 750 Colony Bankcorp, Inc.(a) 5,160 7,050 Columbia Banking System, Inc. 167,860 10,470 Commerce Bancshares, Inc. 456,073 5,483 Community Bank System, Inc. 169,151 2,061 Community Trust Bancorp, Inc. 73,413 1,696 CommunityOne Bancorp(a) 13,755 8,194 Cullen/Frost Bankers, Inc. 547,113 4,444 Dime Community Bancshares, Inc. 68,082 20,342 Doral Financial Corp.(a) 16,884 2,374 ESB Financial Corp. 28,797 2,145 ESSA Bancorp, Inc. 23,509 3,247 Eagle Bancorp, Inc.(a) 72,672 18,655 East-West Bancorp, Inc. 513,012 2,546 Eastern Virginia Bankshares, Inc.(a) 12,730 1,140 Enterprise Bancorp, Inc. 21,079 2,647 Enterprise Financial Services Corp. 42,246 19,655 FNB Corp. 237,432 1,302 Farmers Capital Bank Corp.(a) 28,240 1,875 Fidelity Southern Corp.(a) 23,194 1,950 Financial Institutions, Inc. 35,899 1,663 First Bancorp, Inc. 29,069 2,188 First Bancorp, North Carolina 30,851 9,648 First Bancorp, Puerto Rico(a) 68,308 10,122 First Busey Corp. 45,549 1,258 First Citizens Banc Corp. 8,881 667 First Citizens BancShares, Inc., Class A 128,097 13,545 First Commonwealth Financial Corp. 99,827 2,285 First Community Bancshares, Inc. 35,829 3,270 First Connecticut Bancorp, Inc. 45,518 1,426 First Defiance Financial Corp. 32,156 1,590 First Federal Bancshares of Arkansas, Inc.(a) 12,561 8,056 First Financial Bancorp 120,034 4,126 First Financial Bankshares, Inc. 229,653 1,608 First Financial Corp. 49,832 2,423 First Financial Holdings, Inc. 51,392 2,613 First Financial Northwest, Inc. 26,940 358 First Financial Service Corp.(a) 1,264 33,591 First Horizon National Corp. 376,219 2,703 First Interstate Bancsystem, Inc. 56,033
================================================================================ 28 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1,514 First M&F Corp. $ 23,936 4,045 First Merchants Corp. 69,372 10,479 First Midwest Bancorp, Inc. 143,772 48,624 First Niagara Financial Group, Inc. 489,644 1,390 The First of Long Island Corp. 46,134 2,030 First Pactrust Bancorp, Inc. 27,567 9,545 First Republic Bank 367,292 108 First Security Entitlement 145 2,291 First Security Group, Inc.(a),(b) 4,971 1,978 First South Bancorp, Inc.(a) 12,560 1,435 First United Corp.(a) 10,705 22,508 FirstMerit Corp. 450,835 2,769 Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.(a) 38,655 4,169 Flushing Financial Corp. 68,580 2,078 Fox Chase Bancorp, Inc. 35,326 2,505 Franklin Financial Corp. 45,115 25,997 Fulton Financial Corp. 298,446 1,987 German American Bancorp, Inc. 44,747 9,913 Glacier Bancorp, Inc. 219,969 1,408 Great Southern Bancorp, Inc. 37,960 3,393 Guaranty Bancorp 38,511 1,094 HMN Financial, Inc.(a) 7,778 6,003 Hampton Roads Bankshares, Inc.(a) 7,744 11,382 Hancock Holding Co. 342,257 4,695 Hanmi Financial Corp.(a) 82,961 1,195 Hawthorn Bancshares, Inc. 14,220 2,155 Heartland Financial USA, Inc. 59,241 3,604 Heritage Commerce Corp.(a) 25,228 2,255 Heritage Financial Corp. 33,036 1,539 Home Bancorp, Inc.(a) 28,471 6,446 Home Bancshares, Inc. 167,403 2,462 Home Federal Bancorp, Inc. 31,366 3,179 HomeTrust Bancshares, Inc.(a) 53,916 1,182 Horizon Bancorp 24,125 2,243 Hudson Valley Holding Corp. 38,086 3,981 IBERIABANK Corp. 213,421 3,109 Independent Bank Corp. 107,260 1,901 Independent Bank Corp./MI(a) 11,957 7,211 International Bancshares Corp. 162,824 2,799 Intervest Bancshares Corp.(a) 18,697 6,844 Investors Bancorp, Inc. 144,272 2,925 Kearny Financial Corp.(a) 30,683 4,827 Lakeland Bancorp, Inc. 50,346 2,321 Lakeland Financial Corp. 64,408 7,326 MB Financial, Inc. 196,337 4,034 Macatawa Bank Corp.(a) 20,331 2,922 MainSource Financial Group, Inc. 39,242 1,247 Mercantile Bank Corp. 22,409 955 Merchants Bancshares, Inc. 28,239 2,069 Metro Bancorp, Inc.(a) 41,442 1,426 Midsouth Bancorp, Inc. 22,146 1,321 MidwestOne Financial Group, Inc. 31,783 1,313 MutualFirst Financial, Inc. 18,513 717 NASB Financial, Inc.(a) 18,764 5,949 NBT Bancorp, Inc. 125,940 1,269 National Bankshares, Inc. 45,088 16,038 National Penn Bancshares, Inc. 162,946 60,329 New York Community Bancorp, Inc. 844,606 4,068 Newbridge Bancorp(a) 24,367 1,321 North Valley Bancorp(a) 21,863 3,265 Northfield Bancorp, Inc. 38,266 1,133 Northrim BanCorp, Inc. 27,407 12,760 Northwest Bancshares, Inc. 172,388
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 29 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 859 Norwood Financial Corp. $ 24,911 6,419 OFG Bancorp 116,248 2,845 OceanFirst Financial Corp. 44,240 934 Ohio Valley Banc Corp. 20,156 13,732 Old National Bancorp 189,914 2,542 Old Second Bancorp, Inc.(a) 14,032 2,074 OmniAmerican Bancorp, Inc.(a) 45,690 5,892 Oritani Financial Corp. 92,387 1,792 Orrstown Financial Service, Inc.(a) 22,723 4,727 PVF Capital Corp.(a) 18,908 2,847 Pacific Continental Corp. 33,595 5,451 PacWest Bancorp 167,073 1,722 Park National Corp. 118,456 8,006 Park Sterling Corp.(a) 47,315 1,408 Peapack-Gladstone Financial Corp. 24,640 966 Penns Woods Bancorp, Inc. 40,437 1,155 Peoples Bancorp of North Carolina, Inc. 14,472 1,544 Peoples Bancorp, Inc. 32,548 1,245 Peoples Financial Corp. 16,098 4,638 Pinnacle Financial Partners, Inc.(a) 119,243 14,001 Popular, Inc.(a) 424,650 1,044 Porter Bancorp, Inc.(a) 887 2,017 Preferred Bank(a) 33,240 8,797 PrivateBancorp, Inc. 186,584 6,275 Prosperity Bancshares, Inc. 324,982 1,564 Provident Financial Holdings, Inc. 24,836 7,278 Provident Financial Services, Inc. 114,847 5,827 Provident New York Bancorp 54,424 2,347 Pulaski Financial Corp. 22,414 3,535 Renasant Corp. 86,042 1,556 Republic Bancorp, Inc., Class A 34,108 4,534 Republic First Bancorp, Inc.(a) 12,922 5,241 Riverview Bancorp, Inc.(a) 13,155 4,307 Rockville Financial, Inc. 56,336 1,676 Roma Financial Corp. 30,436 1,265 Royal Bancshares of Pennsylvania, Class A(a) 1,796 3,973 S&T Bancorp, Inc. 77,871 2,359 SCBT Financial Corp. 118,870 6,234 SVB Financial Group(a) 519,417 2,038 SY Bancorp, Inc. 49,992 3,692 Sandy Spring Bancorp, Inc. 79,821 13,010 Seacoast Banking Corp.of Florida(a) 28,622 1,363 Shore Bancshares, Inc.(a) 10,032 1,748 Sierra Bancorp 25,870 6,633 Signature Bank(a),(b) 550,672 2,274 Simmons First National Corp., Class A 59,329 2,491 Southside Bancshares, Inc. 59,485 2,919 Southwest Bancorp, Inc.(a) 38,531 5,211 State Bank Financial Corp. 78,321 3,117 StellarOne Corp. 61,249 4,510 Sterling Bancorp 52,406 3,863 Sterling Financial Corp. 91,862 1,913 Suffolk Bancorp(a) 31,258 785 Summit Financial Group, Inc.(a) 6,311 7,290 Sun Bancorp, Inc.(a) 24,713 24,908 Susquehanna Bancshares, Inc. 320,068 107,161 Synovus Financial Corp. 312,910 22,400 TCF Financial Corp. 317,632 11,430 TFS Financial Corp.(a) 128,016 2,289 Taylor Capital Group, Inc.(a) 38,661 2,324 Territorial Bancorp, Inc. 52,546 5,729 Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc.(a) 254,138
================================================================================ 30 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1,650 Tompkins Trustco, Inc. $ 74,563 4,373 Towne Bank 64,371 1,982 Trico Bancshares 42,276 12,856 TrustCo Bank Corp.NY 69,937 8,834 Trustmark Corp. 217,140 4,249 UMB Financial Corp. 236,542 15,067 Umpqua Holdings Corp. 226,156 2,830 Union First Market Bankshares Corp. 58,270 1,857 United Bancorp, Inc. 13,185 5,963 United Bankshares, Inc. 157,721 6,607 United Community Banks, Inc.(a) 82,059 5,534 United Community Financial Corp.(a) 25,733 2,897 United Financial Bancorp, Inc. 43,890 3,600 United Security Bancshares(a) 15,264 2,482 Univest Corp.of Pennsylvania 47,332 26,753 Valley National Bancorp 253,351 5,555 ViewPoint Financial Group, Inc. 115,600 4,176 Virginia Commerce Bancorp, Inc.(a) 58,297 1,149 WSFS Financial Corp. 60,196 2,825 Washington Banking Co. 40,115 13,728 Washington Federal, Inc. 259,185 2,042 Washington Trust Bancorp, Inc. 58,238 1,813 Waterstone Financial, Inc.(a) 18,420 12,344 Webster Financial Corp. 316,994 3,742 WesBanco, Inc. 98,901 2,837 West Bancorp., Inc. 33,335 3,644 Westamerica Bancorp 166,494 10,473 Western Alliance Bancorp(a) 165,788 4,229 Westfield Financial, Inc. 29,603 9,383 Wilshire Bancorp, Inc. 62,115 5,035 Wintrust Financial Corp. 192,740 2,300 Yadkin Financial Corp.(a) 32,292 ------------ 24,172,006 ------------ BEVERAGES - 0.1% 1,146 The Boston Beer Co., Inc., Class A(a) 195,553 705 Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Consolidated 43,111 1,511 Craft Brew Alliance, Inc.(a) 12,451 2,541 Jamba, Inc.(a) 37,937 1,965 National Beverage Corp. 34,329 5,693 Primo Water Corp.(a) 10,361 971 Willamette Valley Vineyards, Inc.(a) 4,340 ------------ 338,082 ------------ CHEMICALS - 2.4% 3,979 A.Schulman, Inc. 106,717 3,697 Aceto Corp. 51,499 11,999 Albemarle Corp. 747,418 3,434 American Vanguard Corp. 80,459 10,081 Ashland, Inc. 841,763 9,657 Axiall Corp. 411,195 4,238 Balchem Corp. 189,650 8,045 Cabot Corp. 301,044 7,694 Calgon Carbon Corp.(a) 128,336 4,691 Cambrex Corp.(a) 65,533 21,841 Celanese Corp., Series A 978,477 1,295 Chase Corp. 28,956 13,452 Chemtura Corp.(a) 273,076 4,978 Codexis, Inc.(a) 11,001 5,750 Cytec Industries, Inc. 421,187 12,030 Ferro Corp.(a) 83,609 2,495 FutureFuel Corp. 35,354 6,784 H.B.Fuller Co. 256,503 1,371 Hawkins, Inc. 54,004 26,395 Huntsman Corp. 437,101 2,976 Innophos Holdings, Inc. 140,378 7,289 Intrepid Potash, Inc. 138,855 1,340 KMG Chemicals, Inc. 28,274 2,838 Koppers Holdings, Inc. 108,355 4,660 Kraton Performance Polymers, Inc.(a) 98,792 2,763 Kronos Worldwide, Inc. 44,871
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 31 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2,711 LSB Industries, Inc.(a) $ 82,442 4,583 Metabolix, Inc.(a) 6,508 4,784 Minerals Technologies, Inc. 197,771 962 NL Industries, Inc. 10,871 1,468 NewMarket Corp. 385,438 4,425 OM Group, Inc.(a) 136,821 6,833 Omnova Solutions, Inc.(a) 54,732 10,945 Olin Corp. 261,804 2,070 Penford Corp.(a) 27,717 13,631 PolyOne Corp. 337,776 6,511 Polypore International, Inc.(a) 262,393 1,833 Quaker Chemical Corp. 113,664 18,084 RPM International, Inc. 577,603 30,656 Rentech, Inc. 64,378 10,713 Rockwood Holdings, Inc. 685,953 7,787 Senomyx, Inc.(a) 16,976 6,869 Sensient Technologies Corp. 277,988 2,393 Stepan Co. 133,075 651 TOR Minerals International, Inc.(a) 7,168 3,356 Tredegar Corp. 86,249 2,912 Tronox Ltd., Class A 58,677 2,609 Valhi, Inc. 35,848 11,182 The Valspar Corp. 723,140 9,830 W.R.Grace & Co.(a) 826,113 2,765 Westlake Chemical Corp. 266,574 3,931 Zagg, Inc.(a) 21,031 3,240 Zep, Inc. 51,289 4,026 Zoltek Cos., Inc.(a) 51,976 ------------ 11,824,382 ------------ CONSTRUCTION & MATERIALS - 2.5% 10,599 A.O.Smith Corp. 384,532 2,619 Aaon, Inc. 86,636 14,135 AECOM Technology Corp.(a) 449,352 5,858 Acuity Brands, Inc. 442,396 5,508 Aegion Corp.(a) 123,985 2,678 Ameresco, Inc., Class A(a) 24,129 7,238 American DG Energy, Inc.(a) 9,482 1,517 American Woodmark Corp.(a) 52,640 3,942 Apogee Enterprises, Inc. 94,608 1,576 Argan, Inc. 24,586 2,857 Armstrong World Industries, Inc.(a) 136,536 102 Baran Group Ltd.(a) 408 6,331 BlueLinx Holdings, Inc.(a) 13,612 8,159 Builders FirstSource, Inc.(a) 48,791 14,724 Chicago Bridge & Iron Co.NV 878,434 9,063 EMCOR Group, Inc. 368,411 6,533 Eagle Materials, Inc. 432,942 22,877 Fortune Brands Home & Security, Inc. 886,255 13,696 Foster Wheeler AG(a) 297,340 7,242 Generac Holdings, Inc. 268,026 4,188 Gibraltar Industries, Inc.(a) 60,977 4,840 Granite Construction, Inc. 144,038 7,794 Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corp. 60,949 6,030 Griffon Corp. 67,837 10,938 Headwaters, Inc.(a) 96,692 3,739 Hill International, Inc.(a) 10,245 2,430 Insteel Industries, Inc. 42,574 2,175 Integrated Electrical Services, Inc.(a) 9,679 20,208 KBR, Inc. 656,760 1,447 L.B.Foster Co., Class A 62,467 2,780 Layne Christensen Co.(a) 54,238 6,241 Lennox International, Inc. 402,794 19,354 Louisiana-Pacific Corp.(a) 286,246 25,727 MDU Resources Group, Inc. 666,587 2,944 MYR Group, Inc.(a) 57,261 6,317 Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. 621,719 8,026 Mastec, Inc.(a),(b) 264,055 21,903 Mueller Water Products, Inc., Series A 151,350
================================================================================ 32 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3,145 NCI Building Systems, Inc.(a) $ 48,087 2,331 Nortek, Inc.(a) 150,186 1,512 Northwest Pipe Co.(a) 42,185 642 Omega Flex, Inc. 9,546 4,065 Orion Marine Group, Inc.(a) 49,146 16,343 Owens Corning, Inc.(a) 638,684 4,952 PGT, Inc.(a) 42,934 4,270 Pike Electric Corp. 52,521 4,266 Primoris Services Corp. 84,125 5,035 Quanex Building Products Corp. 84,789 5,491 Simpson Manufacturing Co., Inc. 161,545 2,322 Sterling Construction Co., Inc.(a) 21,037 2,546 TRC Cos., Inc.(a) 17,822 2,962 Texas Industries, Inc.(a) 192,945 2,677 Thermon Group Holdings, Inc.(a) 54,611 2,178 Trex Co., Inc.(a) 103,433 4,955 Tutor Perini Corp.(a) 89,636 12,215 USG Corp.(a) 281,556 2,703 Universal Forest Products, Inc. 107,904 3,243 Valmont Industries, Inc. 464,041 4,066 Watsco, Inc. 341,381 3,790 Watts Water Technologies, Inc., Class A 171,839 ------------ 11,949,522 ------------ ELECTRICITY - 1.7% 4,870 Allete, Inc. 242,769 15,118 Alliant Energy Corp. 762,250 6,145 Black Hills Corp. 299,569 52,699 Calpine Corp.(a) 1,118,800 8,193 Cleco Corp. 380,401 17,895 Covanta Holding Corp. 358,258 13,662 Dynegy, Inc.(a) 308,078 5,609 El Paso Electric Co. 198,054 5,991 The Empire District Electric Co. 133,659 21,034 Great Plains Energy, Inc. 474,106 13,334 Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. 337,484 6,741 IDACORP, Inc. 321,950 7,277 ITC Holdings Corp. 664,390 3,179 MGE Energy, Inc. 174,082 32,493 NV Energy, Inc. 762,286 5,203 NorthWestern Corp. 207,600 2,618 Ormat Technologies, Inc. 61,575 10,229 Portland General Electric Co. 312,905 23,727 U.S.Geothermal, Inc.(a) 8,304 7,063 UIL Holdings Corp. 270,160 5,726 UNS Energy Corp. 256,124 2,404 Unitil Corp. 69,427 17,382 Westar Energy, Inc. 555,529 ------------ 8,277,760 ------------ ELECTRONIC & ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT - 3.0% 33,393 AMETEK, Inc. 1,412,524 6,910 API Technologies Corp.(a) 19,348 6,028 AVX Corp. 70,829 3,560 AZZ, Inc. 137,274 3,371 Active Power, Inc.(a) 14,091 2,758 Adept Technology, Inc.(a) 10,729 3,277 Aeroflex Holding Corp.(a) 25,856 1,204 Allied Motion Technologies, Inc. 8,127 2,353 Altair Nanotechnologies, Inc.(a) 5,224 1,163 American Science & Engineering, Inc. 65,128 7,093 American Superconductor Corp.(a) 18,726 1,930 Anaren, Inc.(a) 44,274 3,685 Anixter International, Inc.(a) 279,360 14,246 Arrow Electronics, Inc.(a),(b) 567,703 18,633 Avnet, Inc.(a) 626,069 2,072 Badger Meter, Inc. 92,308 2,537 Ballantyne Strong, Inc.(a) 10,706 1,916 Bel Fuse, Inc. 25,770 6,128 Belden, Inc. 305,971
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 33 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7,550 Benchmark Electronics, Inc.(a) $ 151,755 6,198 Brady Corp. 190,465 4,722 CTS Corp. 64,408 46,415 Capstone Turbine Corp.(a) 54,306 5,924 Checkpoint Systems, Inc.(a) 84,062 5,572 Cognex Corp. 251,966 3,415 Coherent, Inc. 188,064 1,384 Coleman Cable, Inc. 24,995 1,821 Cyberoptics Corp.(a) 10,580 5,380 Daktronics, Inc. 55,199 3,667 ESCO Technologies, Inc. 118,737 6,355 Echelon Corp.(a) 13,409 2,868 Electro Rent Corp. 48,154 4,035 Electro Scientific Industries, Inc. 43,417 2,613 Encore Wire Corp. 89,103 3,773 eMagin Corp. 13,432 3,738 EnerNOC, Inc.(a) 49,566 6,610 EnerSys 324,154 2,448 Faro Technologies, Inc.(a) 82,791 5,376 FEI Co. 392,394 4,090 Fabrinet(a) 57,260 6,757 General Cable Corp. 207,778 17,195 GrafTech International Ltd.(a) 125,180 3,390 Greatbatch, Inc.(a),(b) 111,158 2,488 Houston Wire & Cable Co. 34,434 7,264 Hubbell, Inc., Class B 719,136 7,544 II-VI, Inc.(a) 122,665 4,052 IPG Photonics Corp. 246,078 4,370 Intevac, Inc.(a) 24,734 1,324 IntriCon Corp.(a) 4,647 5,466 Itron, Inc.(a),(b) 231,922 6,464 Kemet Corp.(a) 26,567 3,032 LSI Industries, Inc. 24,529 1,485 Landauer, Inc. 71,740 3,924 Lightpath Technologies, Inc., Class A(a) 4,866 3,916 Lime Energy Co.(a) 2,585 3,064 Littelfuse, Inc. 228,605 2,263 MTS Systems Corp. 128,086 661 Magnetek, Inc.(a) 11,918 4,773 Maxwell Technologies, Inc.(a) 34,127 2,224 Measurement Specialties, Inc.(a) 103,483 5,028 Methode Electronics, Inc. 85,526 4,185 Mettler-Toledo International, Inc.(a) 842,022 4,267 Microvision, Inc.(a) 10,753 1,332 Multi-Fineline Electronix, Inc.(a) 19,727 3,170 Napco Security Technologies, Inc.(a) 15,153 900 NVE Corp.(a) 42,138 13,095 National Instruments Corp. 365,874 5,780 Newport Corp.(a) 80,515 2,640 OSI Systems, Inc.(a) 170,069 2,807 Orion Energy Systems, Inc.(a) 6,961 1,036 Parametric Sound Corp.(a) 16,835 2,847 Park Electrochemical Corp. 68,356 5,103 Planar Systems, Inc.(a) 8,318 4,768 Plexus Corp.(a) 142,516 1,300 Powell Industries, Inc.(a) 67,145 17,303 Power-One, Inc.(a) 109,355 1,702 Pulse Electronics Corp.(a) 4,459 6,153 Regal-Beloit Corp. 398,960 4,006 Research Frontiers, Inc.(a) 15,944 1,792 Richardson Electronics Ltd. 21,038 4,010 Rofin-Sinar Technologies, Inc.(a) 100,009 2,417 Rogers Corp.(a),(b) 114,372 2,823 Rubicon Technology, Inc.(a),(b) 22,612 750 SL Industries, Inc. 18,810 11,440 Sanmina Corp.(a) 164,164 17,666 Sensata Technologies Holding NV(a) 616,543
================================================================================ 34 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 400 Servotronics, Inc. $ 3,120 1,200 Sigmatron International, Inc.(a) 5,088 1,261 Superconductor Technologies, Inc.(a),(b) 3,972 7,050 Synthesis Energy Systems, Inc.(a) 5,478 7,681 TTM Technologies, Inc.(a) 64,520 35,322 Trimble Navigation Ltd.(a) 918,725 8,673 UQM Technologies, Inc.(a) 10,408 2,116 Ultralife Batteries, Inc.(a) 7,533 5,774 Universal Display Corp.(a) 162,307 5,451 Veeco Instruments, Inc.(a) 193,074 729 Viasystems Group, Inc.(a) 8,405 3,482 Vicor Corp.(a) 23,852 18,252 Vishay Intertechnology, Inc.(a) 253,520 2,195 Vishay Precision Group, Inc.(a) 33,232 6,099 WESCO International, Inc.(a) 414,488 7,066 Zebra Technologies Corp., Class A(a) 306,947 2,895 Zygo Corp.(a) 45,770 ------------ 14,501,085 ------------ FINANCIAL SERVICES - 3.0% 7,286 Affiliated Managers Group, Inc.(a) 1,194,467 2,025 Altisource Portfolio Solutions SA(a) 190,512 1,806 Asta Funding, Inc. 15,622 1,465 Atlanticus Holdings Corp.(a) 5,245 11,221 BBCN Bancorp, Inc. 159,563 15,699 BGC Partners, Inc. 92,467 12,150 CBOE Holdings, Inc. 566,676 949 CIFC Corp.(a) 7,165 27,641 CIT Group, Inc.(a) 1,288,900 2,844 Calamos Asset Management, Inc., Class A 29,862 3,956 Cash America International, Inc. 179,840 2,560 Cohen & Steers, Inc. 86,989 12,323 Cowen Group, Inc., Class A(a) 35,737 1,586 Credit Acceptance Corp.(a) 166,609 6,027 DFC Global Corp.(a) 83,233 461 Diamond Hill Investments Group, Inc. 39,208 16,817 Eaton Vance Corp. 632,151 3,295 Encore Capital Group, Inc.(a) 109,097 4,130 Evercore Partners, Inc., Class A 162,226 6,622 Ezcorp, Inc.(a) 111,779 1,539 FBR & Co.(a) 38,875 4,289 FXCM, Inc. 70,382 1,639 Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corp., Class B 47,334 13,134 Federated Investors, Inc., Class B 360,003 29,500 Fidelity National Financial, Inc., Class A 702,395 6,021 Financial Engines, Inc. 274,497 3,808 First Cash Financial Services, Inc.(a) 187,392 12,084 The First Marblehead Corp.(a) 14,259 597 GAMCO Investors, Inc., Class A 33,080 9,674 GFI Group, Inc. 37,825 832 Gleacher & Co., Inc.(a) 11,548 3,156 Green Dot Corp., Class A(a) 62,962 3,730 Greenhill & Co., Inc. 170,610 8,838 ING US, Inc.(a) 239,156 2,189 International FCStone, Inc.(a),(b) 38,198 3,012 Imperial Holdings, Inc.(a) 20,632 1,108 Institutional Financial Market, Inc. 2,836 5,243 Interactive Brokers Group, Inc., Class A 83,731 1,474 Intersections, Inc. 12,927
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 35 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5,421 Investment Technology Group, Inc.(a) $ 75,786 3,059 JMP Group, Inc. 20,312 26,252 Janus Capital Group, Inc. 223,405 40,948 Knight Capital Group, Inc., Class A(a) 147,003 5,012 LPL Financial Holdings Inc. 189,253 17,312 Ladenburg Thalmann Financial Services, Inc.(a) 28,565 47,396 MGIC Investment Corp.(a),(b) 287,694 16,695 MSCI, Inc.(a) 555,443 5,259 MarketAxess Holdings, Inc. 245,858 1,403 Marlin Business Services, Inc. 31,960 3,050 Medallion Financial Corp. 42,426 1,948 MicroFinancial, Inc. 15,292 3,239 MoneyGram International, Inc.(a) 73,363 5,649 National Financial Partners Corp.(a) 142,976 3,485 Nelnet, Inc., Class A 125,774 4,713 Netspend Holdings, Inc.(a) 75,267 2,808 NewStar Financial, Inc.(a) 37,403 16,204 Ocwen Financial Corp.(a) 667,929 1,335 Oppenheimer Holdings, Inc. 25,418 3,596 Pico Holdings, Inc.(a) 75,372 2,363 Piper Jaffray Cos.(a) 74,694 2,357 Portfolio Recovery Associates, Inc.(a) 362,106 3,410 Pzena Investment Management, Inc., Class A 22,233 24,218 Radian Group, Inc. 281,413 15,457 Raymond James Financial, Inc. 664,342 2,541 Resource America, Inc., Class A 21,599 18,467 SEI Investments Co. 525,017 4,290 SWS Group, Inc.(a) 23,381 3,377 Safeguard Scientifics, Inc.(a) 54,201 2,984 Stewart Information Services Corp. 78,151 8,175 Stifel Financial Corp.(a) 291,602 31,531 TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. 765,888 1,018 Tree.com, Inc. 17,449 3,252 U.S.Global Investors, Inc. 6,862 832 Virtus Investment Partners, Inc.(a) 146,657 11,899 Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc., Class A 517,606 2,828 Walker & Dunlop, Inc.(a) 49,490 1,172 Westwood Holdings Group, Inc. 50,302 8,986 WisdomTree Investments, Inc.(a) 103,968 1,761 World Acceptance Corp.(a) 153,101 ------------ 14,862,551 ------------ FIXED LINE TELECOMMUNICATIONS - 0.4% 10,044 8x8, Inc.(a) 82,763 7,188 Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 12,076 1,672 Alteva 16,519 4,242 Cbeyond, Inc.(a) 33,257 30,310 Cincinnati Bell, Inc.(a) 92,749 5,116 Consolidated Communications Holdings, Inc. 89,070 3,983 Fairpoint Communications, Inc.(a) 33,258 4,596 General Communication, Inc., Class A(a) 35,987 971 Hawaiian Telcom HoldCo, Inc.(a) 24,430 1,959 HickoryTech Corp. 20,824 2,232 IDT Corp., Class B 41,716 7,427 inContact, Inc.(a) 61,050 22,607 Level 3 Communications, Inc.(a) 476,555
================================================================================ 36 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2,429 Lumos Networks Corp. $ 41,536 2,076 Primus Telecommunications Group, Inc.(a) 24,787 20,677 TW Telecom, Inc.(a) 581,851 19,630 Vonage Holdings Corp.(a) 55,553 ------------ 1,723,981 ------------ FOOD & DRUG RETAILERS - 0.7% 261 Arden Group, Inc., Class A 28,812 5,289 Casey's General Stores, Inc. 318,186 2,062 The Chefs'Warehouse, Inc.(a) 35,466 1,563 Core-Mark Holdings Co., Inc. 99,251 5,830 The Fresh Market, Inc.(a) 289,868 10,089 GNC Holdings, Inc., Class A 446,035 6,799 Harris Teeter Supermarkets 318,601 1,922 Ingles Markets, Inc., Class A 48,531 1,895 Nash Finch Co. 41,709 14,262 Omnicare, Inc. 680,440 3,370 The Pantry, Inc.(a) 41,047 3,197 PetMed Express, Inc. 40,282 99,529 Rite Aid Corp.(a) 284,653 28,165 SUPERVALU, Inc. 175,186 2,921 Spartan Stores, Inc. 53,863 6,859 United Natural Foods, Inc.(a) 370,317 938 Village Super Market, Inc., Class A 31,038 4,238 Vitamin Shoppe, Inc.(a),(b) 190,032 1,453 Weis Markets, Inc. 65,487 ------------ 3,558,804 ------------ FOOD PRODUCERS - 1.4% 20,357 Dean Foods Co.(a) 203,977 4,100 HQ Sustainable Maritime Industries, Inc.(a),(b) - 567 Alico, Inc. 22,742 2,352 The Andersons, Inc. 125,103 7,455 B&G Foods, Inc., Class A 253,843 8,862 Boulder Brands, Inc.(a) 106,787 19,939 Bunge Ltd. 1,411,083 1,965 Cal-Maine Foods, Inc. 91,392 1,988 Calavo Growers, Inc. 54,054 6,819 Chiquita Brands International, Inc.(a) 74,464 1,919 Coffee Holding Co., Inc.(b) 11,533 16,561 Darling International, Inc.(a) 309,028 5,759 Dean Foods Co.(a) 57,705 3,242 Diamond Foods, Inc.(a),(b) 67,272 5,182 Dole Food Co., Inc.(a) 66,071 1,455 Farmer Bros.Co.(a) 20,457 23,897 Flowers Foods, Inc. 526,918 4,938 Fresh Del Monte Produce, Inc. 137,671 941 Golden Enterprises, Inc. 3,294 685 Griffin Land & Nurseries, Inc. 19,536 1,316 Harbinger Group, Inc.(a) 9,923 14,213 Herbalife Ltd.(b) 641,575 16,982 Hillshire Brands Co. 561,765 2,103 J&J Snack Foods Corp. 163,613 1,452 John B.Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. 29,272 2,660 Lancaster Colony Corp. 207,453 1,580 Lifeway Foods, Inc. 27,429 1,842 Limoneira Co. 38,185 1,343 MGP Ingredients, Inc. 8,004 675 Mannatech, Inc.(a) 7,418 2,006 Medifast, Inc.(a) 51,675 1,344 Natures Sunshine Products, Inc. 21,974 1,621 Nutraceutical International Corp. 33,133 4,283 NutriSystem, Inc. 50,454 3,272 Omega Protein Corp.(a) 29,383 3,077 Overhill Farms, Inc.(a) 15,231 8,213 Pilgrims Pride Corp.(a) 122,702 1,819 Reliv International, Inc. 2,328 1,746 Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, Inc. 21,109
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 37 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 40 Seaboard Corp. $ 108,320 1,208 Seneca Foods Corp.(a) 37,061 17,269 Smithfield Foods, Inc.(a) 565,560 6,766 Snyders-Lance, Inc. 192,222 2,931 Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc. 93,147 5,081 TreeHouse Foods, Inc.(a) 333,009 955 USANA Health Sciences, Inc.(a) 69,123 ------------ 7,003,998 ------------ FOOD PRODUCTS - 0.7% 17,105 Green Mountain Coffee Roasters, Inc.(a) 1,283,901 6,569 The Hain Celestial Group, Inc.(a) 426,788 10,659 Ingredion, Inc. 699,444 4,622 Pinnacle Foods, Inc. 111,621 4,693 Post Holdings, Inc.(a) 204,896 2,835 Sanderson Farms, Inc. 188,301 19,576 WhiteWave Foods Co.(a) 318,110 ------------ 3,233,061 ------------ FORESTRY & PAPER - 0.3% 12,631 Boise, Inc. 107,869 5,397 Buckeye Technologies, Inc. 199,905 3,178 Clearwater Paper Corp.(a) 149,557 1,630 Deltic Timber Corp. 94,247 4,598 Domtar Corp. 305,767 5,513 Kapstone Paper and Packaging Corp. 221,512 2,269 Neenah Paper, Inc. 72,086 5,923 P.H.Glatfelter Co. 148,667 12,754 Resolute Forest Products(a) 167,970 3,704 Verso Paper Corp.(a) 4,260 6,786 Wausau Paper Corp. 77,360 ------------ 1,549,200 ------------ GAS, WATER & MULTI-UTILITIES - 1.5% 2,791 American States Water Co. 149,793 24,137 American Water Works Co., Inc. 995,169 19,411 Aqua America, Inc. 607,370 1,718 Artesian Resources Corp., Class A 38,277 12,271 Atmos Energy Corp. 503,847 8,115 Avista Corp. 219,267 3,265 Cadiz, Inc.(a) 15,019 6,793 California Water Service Group 132,531 1,478 Chesapeake Utilities Corp. 76,102 1,876 Connecticut Water Service, Inc. 53,841 1,407 Delta Natural Gas Co., Inc. 29,899 3,190 Gas Natural, Inc. 32,857 2,609 Genie Energy Ltd. 23,872 4,306 The Laclede Group, Inc. 196,612 2,648 Middlesex Water Co. 52,748 11,470 National Fuel Gas Co. 664,687 5,556 New Jersey Resources Corp. 230,741 3,615 Northwest Natural Gas Co. 153,565 10,683 PNM Resources, Inc. 237,056 10,108 Piedmont Natural Gas Co. 341,044 24,047 Questar Corp. 573,521 1,691 RGC Resources, Inc. 34,260 2,035 SJW Corp. 53,317 4,412 South Jersey Industries, Inc. 253,293 6,136 Southwest Gas Corp. 287,104 15,584 UGI Corp. 609,490 11,283 Vectren Corp. 381,704 6,828 WGL Holdings, Inc. 295,106 ------------ 7,242,092 ------------ GENERAL INDUSTRIALS - 1.3% 653 AEP Industries, Inc.(a) 48,577 10,098 Actuant Corp., Class A 332,931 9,018 AptarGroup, Inc. 497,884 8,078 Berry Plastics Group, Inc.(a) 178,282 8,677 Carlisle Cos., Inc. 540,664 19,902 Crown Holdings, Inc.(a) 818,569
================================================================================ 38 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 26,053 Graphic Packaging Holding Co.(a) $ 201,650 4,118 Greif, Inc. 216,895 11,012 Harsco Corp. 255,368 3,788 Landec Corp.(a) 50,040 1,894 Multi-Color Corp. 57,464 4,177 Myers Industries, Inc. 62,697 4,933 Otter Tail Corp. 140,097 13,568 Packaging Corp.of America 664,289 5,087 Raven Industries, Inc. 152,508 3,697 Rexnord Corp.(a) 62,294 9,913 Rock-Tenn Co., Class A 990,110 6,216 Silgan Holdings, Inc. 291,903 13,815 Sonoco Products Co. 477,585 4,599 Trimas Corp.(a) 171,451 1,156 UFP Technologies, Inc.(a) 22,635 ------------ 6,233,893 ------------ GENERAL RETAILERS - 4.8% 4,231 1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc., Class A(a) 26,190 974 Amerco, Inc. 157,691 6,623 ANN, Inc.(a) 219,884 9,646 Aaron's, Inc. 270,184 10,095 Advance Auto Parts, Inc.(c) 819,411 1,187 America's Car-Mart, Inc.(a) 51,326 24,255 American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. 442,896 2,678 American Public Education, Inc.(a) 99,514 13,752 Apollo Group, Inc., Class A (a) 243,685 4,324 Asbury Automotive Group, Inc.(a) 173,392 17,476 Ascena Retail Group, Inc.(a) 304,956 2,429 Autobytel, Inc.(a) 11,586 11,021 Aeropostale, Inc.(a) 152,090 5,274 Barnes & Noble, Inc.(a) 84,173 6,797 Beacon Roofing Supply, Inc.(a),(b) 257,470 4,568 bebe Stores, Inc. 25,626 2,515 Big 5 Sporting Goods Corp. 55,204 8,061 Big Lots, Inc.(a),(c) 254,163 1,835 Blue Nile, Inc.(a) 69,326 2,281 Body Central Corp.(a) 30,383 1,646 The Bon-Ton Stores, Inc. 29,710 1,081 Books-A-Million, Inc.(a) 2,832 2,682 Bridgepoint Education, Inc.(a) 32,667 2,664 Bright Horizons Family Solutions, Inc.(a) 92,467 5,601 Brown Shoe Co., Inc. 120,590 3,732 The Buckle, Inc. 194,139 2,088 Build-A-Bear Workshop, Inc.(a) 12,674 8,296 CST Brands, Inc.(a) 255,600 6,399 Cabela's, Inc., Class A(a) 414,399 2,506 Cache, Inc.(a) 11,152 2,677 Cambium Learning Group, Inc.(a) 3,319 1,617 Capella Education Co.(a) 67,348 6,705 Career Education Corp.(a) 19,444 2,363 Carriage Services, Inc. 40,053 3,747 The Cato Corp., Class A 93,525 2,612 Chemed Corp. 189,187 22,231 Chico's FAS, Inc. 379,261 3,109 The Children's Place Retail Stores, Inc.(a) 170,373 5,655 Christopher & Banks Corp.(a) 38,115 2,119 Citi Trends, Inc.(a) 30,789 10,199 Clean Energy Fuels Corp.(a),(b) 134,627 3,383 Coldwater Creek, Inc.(a) 8,457 1,348 Collectors Universe, Inc. 17,861 3,228 Conn's, Inc.(a) 167,081 14,844 Copart, Inc.(a) 457,195 10,420 Corinthian Colleges, Inc.(a) 23,341 4,455 DSW, Inc., Class A 327,309 5,289 dELiA*s, Inc.(a) 5,236 1,709 Destination Maternity Corp. 42,041
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 39 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6,123 Destination XL Group, Inc.(a) $ 38,820 13,778 Dick's Sporting Goods, Inc. 689,727 4,280 Dillard's, Inc., Class A 350,832 2,632 Education Management Corp.(a) 14,792 11,870 Express, Inc.(a) 248,914 6,737 The Finish Line, Inc., Class A 147,271 20,602 Foot Locker, Inc. 723,748 6,242 Francesca's Holdings Corp.(a) 173,465 4,500 Fred's, Inc., Class A 69,705 2,206 Gaiam, Inc.(a) 9,839 1,139 Geeknet, Inc.(a) 15,787 3,315 Genesco, Inc.(a) 222,072 6,073 Grand Canyon Education, Inc.(a) 195,733 2,990 Group 1 Automotive, Inc. 192,347 8,306 Guess?, Inc. 257,735 4,872 HSN, Inc. 261,724 2,852 Haverty Furniture Cos., Inc. 65,625 2,116 hhgregg, Inc.(a) 33,793 3,663 Hibbett Sports, Inc.(a) 203,296 8,609 Hillenbrand, Inc. 204,119 12,102 ITT Corp. 355,920 2,289 ITT Educational Services, Inc.(a) 55,852 3,909 Jos.A.Bank Clothiers, Inc.(a) 161,520 10,354 KAR Auction Services, Inc. 236,796 5,274 K12, Inc.(a) 138,548 2,288 Kirkland's, Inc.(a) 39,468 1,011 Learning Tree International, Inc.(a) 3,084 3,521 Liquidity Services, Inc.(a),(b) 122,073 2,929 Lithia Motors, Inc., Class A 156,145 3,867 Lumber Liquidators Holdings, Inc.(a) 301,123 1,649 Mac-Gray Corp. 23,416 3,501 MarineMax, Inc.(a) 39,666 3,837 Matthews International Corp., Class A 144,655 6,438 The Men's Wearhouse, Inc. 243,678 4,104 Monro Muffler Brake, Inc. 197,197 5,821 Navarre Corp.(a) 16,066 4,425 New York & Co.(a) 28,099 39,733 Office Depot, Inc.(a),(b) 153,767 11,905 OfficeMax, Inc. 121,788 3,370 OpenTable, Inc.(a) 215,511 2,157 Overstock.com, Inc.(a) 60,827 1,212 PC Mall, Inc.(a) 11,635 7,031 Pacific Sunwear of California, Inc.(a) 25,663 5,685 Penske Automotive Group, Inc. 173,620 7,518 The Pep Boys - Manny, Moe & Jack(a) 87,058 978 Perfumania Holdings, Inc.(a) 5,086 14,391 Pier 1 Imports, Inc. 338,045 2,564 PriceSmart, Inc. 224,683 1,862 The Providence Service Corp.(a) 54,166 14,242 RadioShack Corp. 45,005 5,272 RealNetworks, Inc.(a) 39,856 7,707 Regis Corp. 126,549 7,730 Rent-A-Center, Inc. 290,261 2,035 Restoration Hardware Holdings, Inc.(a) 152,625 9,140 Rollins, Inc. 236,726 2,218 Rue21, Inc.(a) 92,291 4,796 Rush Enterprises, Inc., Class A(a) 118,701 14,214 Saks, Inc.(a) 193,879 21,223 Sally Beauty Holdings, Inc.(a) 660,035 5,009 Sears Holdings Corp.(a),(b) 210,779 28,711 Service Corp. International 517,659 1,951 Shoe Carnival, Inc. 46,844 4,725 Shutterfly, Inc.(a) 263,608 10,989 Signet Jewelers Ltd. 740,988
================================================================================ 40 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4,764 Sonic Automotive, Inc. $ 100,711 9,455 Sotheby's 358,439 4,499 Stage Stores, Inc. 105,726 2,297 Stamps.com, Inc.(a) 90,479 2,556 Standard Parking Corp.(a) 54,852 3,792 Stein Mart, Inc. 51,761 10,107 Stewart Enterprises, Inc., Class A 132,301 1,574 Strayer Education, Inc. 76,858 2,626 Susser Holdings Corp.(a),(b) 125,733 2,436 Titan Machinery, Inc.(a) 47,819 9,580 Tractor Supply Co. 1,126,704 1,782 Trans World Entertainment Corp. 8,661 6,273 Tuesday Morning Corp.(a) 65,051 8,160 Ulta Salon Cosmetics & Fragrance, Inc.(a) 817,306 12,091 VCA Antech, Inc.(a) 315,454 5,788 ValueVision Media, Inc., Class A(a) 29,577 3,793 Weight Watchers International, Inc. 174,478 2,389 West Marine, Inc.(a) 26,279 12,939 The Wet Seal, Inc., Class A(a) 60,943 11,838 Williams-Sonoma, Inc. 661,626 462 Winmark Corp. 29,970 4,077 Zale Corp.(a) 37,101 3,016 Zumiez, Inc.(a) 86,710 ------------ 23,304,786 ------------ HEALTH CARE EQUIPMENT & SERVICES - 4.9% 5,121 Abiomed, Inc.(a) 110,409 3,020 Abaxis, Inc. 143,480 5,039 Acadia Healthcare Co., Inc.(a) 166,640 7,882 Accretive Health, Inc.(a) 85,204 9,352 Accuray, Inc.(a) 53,680 1,036 Addus HomeCare Corp.(a) 20,451 4,895 Air Methods Corp. 165,843 10,750 Alere, Inc.(a) 263,375 9,958 Align Technology, Inc.(a),(b) 368,844 1,936 Alliance HealthCare Services, Inc.(a) 30,279 1,318 Almost Family, Inc. 25,042 11,402 Alphatec Holdings, Inc.(a) 23,374 4,487 Amedisys, Inc.(a) 52,139 2,753 American Caresource Holdings, Inc.(a) 4,900 4,434 Amsurg Corp.(a) 155,633 1,635 Analogic Corp. 119,077 4,830 AngioDynamics, Inc.(a) 54,482 2,052 Anika Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 34,884 18,027 Antares Pharma, Inc.(a) 74,992 3,979 ArthroCare Corp.(a) 137,395 2,779 Assisted Living Concepts, Inc.Class A(a) 33,237 2,717 AtriCure, Inc.(a) 25,812 236 Atrion Corp. 51,616 6,219 BSD Medical Corp.(a) 8,209 4,594 Baxano Surgical, Inc.(a) 11,026 2,780 Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc., Class A(a) 311,916 3,472 Bio-Reference Labs, Inc.(a),(b) 99,820 4,700 Biolase Inc.(a) 16,827 7,778 Bioscript, Inc.(a) 128,337 3,326 Bovie Medical Corp.(a) 9,812 13,577 Brookdale Senior Living, Inc.(a) 358,976 12,866 Bruker BioSciences Corp.(a) 207,786 3,863 CONMED Corp. 120,680 3,124 Cantel Medical Corp. 105,810 3,996 Capital Senior Living Corp.(a) 95,504 8,577 Cardica, Inc.(a) 9,520 4,383 CardioNet, Inc.(a) 25,860 3,321 Cardiovascular Systems, Inc.(a) 70,405 10,595 Celsion Corp.(a),(b) 10,807 7,510 Centene Corp.(a),(b) 393,975 9,367 Cepheid, Inc.(a),(b) 322,412 1,763 Chindex International, Inc.(a) 28,596
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 41 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1,314 CollabRx, Inc.(a) $ 4,481 12,973 Community Health Systems, Inc. 608,174 6,691 The Cooper Cos., Inc. 796,564 1,946 Corvel Corp.(a) 56,959 7,711 Covance, Inc.(a),(b) 587,116 4,128 CryoLife, Inc. 25,841 2,304 Cutera, Inc.(a) 20,275 3,374 Cyberonics, Inc.(a) 175,313 2,956 Cynosure, Inc., Class A(a) 76,806 12,121 Delcath Systems, Inc.(a) 4,485 10,059 DexCom, Inc.(a),(b) 225,825 2,662 Echo Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 6,628 5,635 Emeritus Corp.(a) 130,619 8,354 Endologix, Inc.(a),(b) 110,941 2,525 The Ensign Group, Inc. 88,931 1,399 Escalon Medical Corp.(a) 1,693 1,507 Exactech, Inc.(a) 29,763 6,433 Five Star Quality Care, Inc.(a) 36,089 3,517 Fluidigm Corp.(a) 61,407 1,545 Fonar Corp.(a) 10,135 4,683 GenMark Diagnostics, Inc.(a) 48,422 4,383 Gentiva Health Services, Inc.(a) 43,655 33,631 HCA Holdings, Inc. 1,212,734 12,290 HMS Holdings Corp.(a),(b) 286,357 7,110 Haemonetics Corp.(a) 293,999 4,846 Hanger, Inc.(a) 153,279 9,386 Hansen Medical, Inc.(a) 13,516 35,799 Health Management Associates, Inc., Class A(a) 562,760 10,693 Health Net, Inc.(a) 340,251 9,758 Healthcare Services Group, Inc. 239,266 12,178 HealthSouth Corp.(a) 350,726 3,013 HealthStream, Inc.(a) 76,289 4,781 Healthways, Inc.(a) 83,094 1,961 Heartware International, Inc.(a) 186,511 11,917 Henry Schein, Inc.(a),(b) 1,141,053 8,082 Hill-Rom Holdings, Inc. 272,202 37,217 Hologic, Inc.(a) 718,288 9,589 Hooper Holmes, Inc.(a) 3,452 1,822 ICU Medical, Inc.(a),(b) 131,293 7,468 Idexx Laboratories, Inc.(a),(b) 670,477 2,413 IPC The Hospitalist Co., Inc.(a),(b) 123,932 7,596 Insulet Corp.(a) 238,590 2,791 Integra LifeSciences Holdings Corp.(a) 102,234 4,029 Invacare Corp. 57,856 7,217 Kindred Healthcare, Inc.(a) 94,759 3,380 LCA-Vision, Inc.(a) 10,208 2,223 LHC Group, Inc.(a) 43,526 6,353 LifePoint Hospitals, Inc.(a) 310,281 6,212 MAKO Surgical Corp.(a) 74,855 6,893 MEDNAX, Inc.(a) 631,261 7,818 MELA Sciences, Inc.(a) 7,271 3,639 Magellan Health Services, Inc.(a) 204,075 7,150 Masimo Corp. 151,580 2,313 Medical Action Industries, Inc.(a) 17,810 5,976 Meridian Bioscience, Inc. 128,484 5,748 Merit Medical Systems, Inc.(a) 64,090 4,044 Molina Healthcare, Inc.(a) 150,356 6,499 Nanosphere, Inc.(a) 19,952 1,049 National Healthcare Corp. 50,142 4,492 Natus Medical, Inc.(a) 61,316 19,869 Navidea Biopharmaceuticals, Inc.(a),(b) 53,050 3,340 Neogen Corp.(a) 185,570 109 NeuroMetrix, Inc.(a) 218 6,270 NuVasive, Inc.(a) 155,433 7,744 NxStage Medical, Inc.(a) 110,584 5,063 Omnicell, Inc.(a) 104,045 9,173 OraSure Technologies, Inc.(a) 35,591 2,685 Orthofix International NV(a) 72,227 8,318 Owens & Minor, Inc. 281,398 7,871 Parexel International Corp.(a) 361,594 4,070 PharMerica Corp.(a) 56,410
================================================================================ 42 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1,584 Psychemedics Corp. $ 17,012 4,179 Quidel Corp.(a) 106,690 7,930 RTI Surgical, Inc.(a) 29,817 4,638 RadNet, Inc.(a) 12,291 19,646 ResMed, Inc. 886,624 1,898 Retractable Technologies, Inc.(a) 2,714 1,820 Rochester Medical Corp.(a) 26,809 5,959 Rockwell Medical, Inc.(a) 21,512 7,959 Steris Corp. 341,282 4,887 Select Medical Holdings Corp. 40,073 7,584 Sirona Dental Systems, Inc.(a) 499,634 3,199 Skilled Healthcare Group, Inc., Class A(a) 21,369 9,582 Solta Medical, Inc.(a) 21,847 5,964 Spectranetic Corp.(a) 111,408 3,976 Staar Surgical Co.(a) 40,356 2,320 Stereotaxis, Inc.(a) 3,619 1,915 SurModics, Inc.(a) 38,319 5,245 Symmetry Medical, Inc.(a) 44,163 3,470 Synergetics USA, Inc.(a) 13,672 9,618 Team Health Holdings, Inc.(a) 395,011 5,584 Teleflex, Inc. 432,704 5,558 Theragenics Corp.(a) 11,505 5,823 ThermoGenesis Corp.(a) 7,686 7,880 Thoratec Corp.(a) 246,723 2,941 Triple-S Management Corp.(a) 63,143 1,742 US Physical Therapy, Inc. 48,149 12,363 Unilife Corp.(a) 39,191 3,768 Universal American Corp. 33,498 12,213 Universal Health Services, Inc., Class B 817,783 4,824 Uroplasty, Inc.(a) 9,986 671 Utah Medical Products, Inc. 36,435 4,548 Vanguard Health Systems, Inc.(a) 94,326 2,626 Vascular Solutions, Inc.(a) 38,628 7,929 Vision-Sciences, Inc.(a) 8,088 7,831 Volcano Corp.(a),(b) 141,976 5,933 WellCare Health Plans, Inc.(a) 329,578 4,651 West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc. 326,779 6,451 Wright Medical Group, Inc.(a) 169,081 ------------ 23,910,914 ------------ HOUSEHOLD GOODS & HOME CONSTRUCTION - 2.2% 15,731 ACCO Brands Corp.(a) 100,049 1,676 AT Cross Co., Class A(a) 28,408 4,439 American Greetings Corp., Class A 80,879 1,804 Bassett Furniture Industries, Inc. 28,016 3,640 Beazer Homes USA, Inc.(a) 63,773 7,224 Blount International, Inc.(a) 85,388 1,482 Blyth, Inc. 20,689 6,588 Briggs & Stratton Corp. 130,442 1,043 Cavco Industries, Inc.(a) 52,619 6,069 Central Garden & Pet Co., Class A(a) 41,876 18,857 Church & Dwight Co., Inc. 1,163,666 1,337 Compx International, Inc. 18,665 3,135 Comstock Homebuilding Cos., Inc., Class A(a) 8,684 2,113 Dixie Group, Inc.(a) 17,538 8,566 Energizer Holdings, Inc. 860,969 3,724 Ethan Allen Interiors, Inc. 107,251 965 Flexsteel Industries, Inc. 23,527 2,823 Forward Industries, Inc.(a) 5,223 1,363 Furniture Brands International, Inc.(a) 5,452 6,259 HNI Corp. 225,762 8,203 Herman Miller, Inc. 222,055 1,876 Hooker Furniture Corp. 30,504 13,795 Hovnanian Enterprises, Inc., Class A(a) 77,390 8,187 Interface, Inc. 138,933 3,829 iRobot Corp.(a),(b) 152,279 13,975 Jarden Corp.(a) 611,406 11,464 KB Home 225,038
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 43 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2,042 Kid Brands, Inc.(a) $ 3,145 6,686 Knoll, Inc. 95,008 939 L.S. Starrett Co., Class A 9,597 7,409 La-Z-Boy, Inc. 150,180 3,113 Libbey, Inc.(a) 74,619 1,440 Lifetime Brands, Inc. 19,555 3,557 M/I Homes, Inc.(a) 81,669 5,400 MDC Holdings, Inc. 175,554 4,439 Meritage Homes Corp.(a) 192,475 2,601 Middleby Corp.(a) 442,404 8,411 Mohawk Industries, Inc.(a) 946,153 649 NVR, Inc.(a) 598,378 708 National Presto Industries, Inc. 50,997 858 Oil-Dri Corp.of America 23,569 6,503 Ryland Group, Inc. 260,770 5,310 The Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. 256,526 7,771 Select Comfort Corp.(a) 194,741 880 Skyline Corp.(a) 3,458 3,072 Spectrum Brands Holdings, Inc. 174,705 20,349 Standard-Pacific Corp.(a) 169,507 3,010 Stanley Furniture Co., Inc.(a) 12,040 10,838 Steelcase, Inc., Class A 158,018 2,685 Summer Infant, Inc.(a) 8,216 3,946 Taylor Morrison Home Corp.(a) 96,204 8,434 Tempur-Pedic International, Inc.(a) 370,253 20,878 Toll Brothers, Inc.(a) 681,249 6,570 Tumi Holdings, Inc.(a) 157,680 7,283 Tupperware Corp. 565,816 2,505 Virco Manufacturing Corp.(a) 5,862 2,017 WD-40 Co. 109,886 ------------ 10,614,715 ------------ INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING - 3.0% 13,322 AGCO Corp. 668,631 7,096 Accuride Corp.(a) 35,906 1,236 Alamo Group, Inc. 50,454 3,972 Albany International Corp., Class A 130,997 3,766 Altra Holdings, Inc. 103,113 1,329 American Railcar Industries, Inc. 44,535 2,786 Astec Industries, Inc. 95,532 15,526 The Babcock & Wilcox Co. 466,246 2,362 Broadwind Energy, Inc.(a) 11,290 2,498 CIRCOR International, Inc. 127,048 6,672 Clarcor, Inc. 348,345 1,735 Ceco Environmental Corp. 21,340 494 Chicago Rivet & Machine Co. 13,333 11,678 Colfax Corp.(a) 608,541 2,917 Columbus McKinnon Corp.(a) 62,190 3,771 Commercial Vehicle Group, Inc.(a) 28,132 6,664 Crane Co. 399,307 18,478 Donaldson Co., Inc. 658,925 3,444 Douglas Dynamics, Inc. 44,703 2,036 Dynamic Materials Corp. 33,614 1,114 The Eastern Co. 17,824 6,949 Energy Recovery, Inc.(a) 28,699 2,971 EnPro Industries, Inc.(a) 150,808 8,916 Federal Signal Corp.(a) 78,015 7,491 Flow International Corp.(a) 27,642 5,221 Franklin Electric Co., Inc. 175,687 1,593 Freightcar America, Inc. 27,065 6,256 GATX Corp. 296,722 6,857 Gardner Denver, Inc. 515,509 2,066 The Gorman-Rupp Co. 65,781 8,475 Graco, Inc. 535,705 1,690 Graham Corp. 50,751 3,496 Greenbrier Cos., Inc.(a) 85,197 4,266 H&E Equipment Services, Inc. 89,885 1,772 Hardinge, Inc. 26,190 1,036 Hurco Cos., Inc. 29,806 844 Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc. 52,995 11,254 IDEX Corp. 605,578
================================================================================ 44 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4,040 John Bean Technologies Corp. $ 84,880 1,632 Kadant, Inc. 49,237 4,722 Kaydon Corp. 130,091 10,779 Kennametal, Inc. 418,549 998 Key Technology, Inc.(a) 14,301 4,154 Kimball International, Inc., Class B 40,335 11,310 Lincoln Electric Holdings, Inc. 647,724 1,881 Lindsay Corp. 141,037 2,657 Lydall, Inc.(a) 38,792 1,929 Manitex International, Inc.(a) 21,123 18,626 Manitowoc Co. 333,592 2,916 Materion Corp. 78,994 13,772 Meritor, Inc.(a) 97,093 2,279 Met-Pro Corp. 30,630 1,090 MFRI, Inc.(a) 12,393 1,717 Miller Industries, Inc. 26,407 4,209 Mine Safety Appliances Co. 195,929 3,884 Mueller Industries, Inc. 195,870 900 NACCO Industries, Inc., Class A 51,552 2,599 NN, Inc. 29,655 11,143 Navistar International Corp.(a) 309,330 7,760 Nordson Corp. 537,846 12,141 Oshkosh Corp.(a) 460,994 2,383 PMFG, Inc.(a) 16,490 6,418 SPX Corp. 461,968 4,359 Spartan Motors, Inc. 26,677 1,782 Standex International Corp. 94,000 3,688 Sun Hydraulics, Inc. 115,361 2,319 Sypris Solutions, Inc. 7,444 2,544 Tecumseh Products Co., Class A(a) 27,806 2,518 Tennant Co. 121,544 15,442 Terex Corp.(a) 406,125 10,905 Timken Co. 613,733 7,973 Toro Co. 362,054 10,870 Trinity Industries, Inc. 417,843 1,243 Twin Disc, Inc. 29,459 9,772 Wabash National Corp.(a) 99,479 13,264 Westinghouse Air Brake Technologies Corp. 708,695 8,140 Woodward, Inc. 325,600 ------------ 14,592,673 ------------ INDUSTRIAL METALS & MINING - 0.6% 20,187 AK Steel Holding Corp.(b) 61,368 1,402 Ampco-Pittsburgh Corp. 26,316 6,184 Carpenter Technology Corp. 278,713 7,401 Century Aluminum Co.(a) 68,681 15,878 Commercial Metals Co. 234,518 1,844 Friedman Industries, Inc. 18,163 9,185 Globe Specialty Metals, Inc. 99,841 989 Handy & Harman Ltd.(a) 17,683 1,762 Haynes International, Inc. 84,347 6,625 Horsehead Holding Corp.(a) 84,866 2,253 Kaiser Aluminum Corp. 139,551 40,374 McEwen Mining, Inc.(a) 67,828 9,320 Noranda Aluminum Holding Corp. 30,104 1,366 Olympic Steel, Inc. 33,467 4,445 RTI International Metals, Inc.(a) 123,171 10,505 Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co. 688,708 30,261 Steel Dynamics, Inc. 451,191 1,242 Synalloy Corp. 19,288 2,071 TMS International Corp., Class A 30,713 16,407 USEC, Inc.(a) 4,811 1,208 Universal Stainless & Alloy Products, Inc.(a) 35,612 13,847 Uranium Energy Corp.(a) 24,786 7,377 Worthington Industries, Inc. 233,925 ------------ 2,857,651 ------------ INDUSTRIAL TRANSPORTATION - 1.4% 10,457 Air Lease Corp 288,509 7,359 Air Transport Services Group, Inc.(a) 48,643
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 45 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7,657 Aircastle Ltd. $ 122,435 3,168 Arkansas Best Corp. 72,706 3,521 Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings, Inc.(a) 154,079 3,881 Baltic Trading Ltd. 14,398 2,143 CAI International, Inc.(a) 50,510 3,250 Celadon Group, Inc. 59,312 7,619 Con-way, Inc. 296,836 1,373 Covenant Transport Group, Inc., Class A(a) 8,568 2,951 Eagle Bulk Shipping, Inc.(a) 10,771 2,294 Echo Global Logistics, Inc.(a) 44,710 4,021 Forward Air Corp. 153,924 2,545 Frozen Food Express Industries, Inc.(a) 4,097 5,201 Genco Shipping & Trading Ltd.(a),(b) 8,478 6,826 Genesee & Wyoming, Inc., Class A(a),(b) 579,118 6,117 Heartland Express, Inc. 84,843 4,803 HUB Group, Inc., Class A(a),(b) 174,925 723 International Shipholding Corp. 16,868 12,342 J.B.Hunt Transport Services, Inc. 891,586 7,841 Kirby Corp.(a) 623,673 7,842 Knight Transportation, Inc. 131,902 6,391 Landstar System, Inc. 329,136 3,054 Marten Transport Ltd. 47,856 5,647 Matson, Inc. 141,175 9,675 Old Dominion Freight Line, Inc.(a) 402,673 568 P.A.M.Transportation Services, Inc. 5,777 8,021 PHH Corp.(a) 163,468 4,839 Pacer International, Inc.(a) 30,534 914 Patriot Transportation Holding, Inc.(a) 27,457 3,529 Quality Distribution, Inc.(a) 31,196 3,143 Rand Logistics, Inc.(a) 16,124 2,284 Roadrunner Transportation Systems, Inc.(a) 63,587 3,364 Saia, Inc.(a) 100,804 11,789 Swift Transportation Co.(a) 194,990 4,753 TAL International Group, Inc. 207,088 5,217 Teekay Corp. 211,967 2,350 Textainer Group Holdings Ltd. 90,334 1,407 USA Truck, Inc.(a) 9,061 14,176 UTI Worldwide, Inc. 233,479 800 Universal Truckload Services, Inc.(a) 19,288 5,682 Werner Enterprises, Inc. 137,334 5,750 Wesco Aircraft Holdings, Inc.(a) 106,777 1,115 Willis Lease Finance Corp.(a) 15,064 10,205 World Fuel Services Corp. 407,996 2,953 XPO Logistics, Inc.(a),(b) 53,420 1,401 YRC Worldwide, Inc.(a) 40,279 ------------ 6,927,755 ------------ LEISURE GOODS - 0.8% 58,192 Activision Blizzard, Inc. 829,818 1,884 Arctic Cat, Inc. 84,742 3,283 Black Diamond, Inc.(a) 30,860 12,480 Brunswick Corp. 398,736 9,783 Callaway Golf Co. 64,372 2,742 DTS, Inc.(a) 56,430 2,640 Drew Industries, Inc. 103,805 3,000 Emerson Radio Corp.(a) 4,950 1,740 Escalade, Inc. 10,771 8,589 Glu Mobile, Inc.(a),(b) 18,896 2,692 Jakks Pacific, Inc. 30,285 1,133 Koss Corp. 5,495 7,039 Leapfrog Enterprises, Inc.(a) 69,264 6,877 Majesco Entertainment Co.(a) 3,920 1,997 Marine Products Corp. 16,016 433 Meade Instruments Corp.(a) 1,611 4,085 Nautilus, Inc.(a) 35,499 8,781 Polaris Industries, Inc. 834,195
================================================================================ 46 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6,293 Pool Corp. $ 329,816 6,336 RealD, Inc.(a) 88,070 2,357 Skullcandy, Inc.(a) 12,869 966 Steinway Musical Instruments, Inc.(a) 29,395 13,021 Take-Two Interactive Software, Inc.(a) 194,924 6,030 Thor Industries, Inc. 296,556 17,917 TiVo, Inc.(a) 197,983 2,265 Universal Electronics, Inc.(a) 63,715 4,067 Winnebago Industries, Inc.(a) 85,366 ------------ 3,898,359 ------------ LIFE INSURANCE - 0.4% 2,824 Amerisafe, Inc. 91,469 8,633 American Equity Investment Life Holding Co. 135,538 2,385 Atlantic American Corp. 9,087 30,140 CNO Financial Group, Inc. 390,614 7,030 Citizens, Inc.(a) 42,039 2,846 eHealth, Inc.(a) 64,661 4,300 Employers Holdings, Inc. 105,135 1,496 FBL Financial Group, Inc., Class A 65,091 1,624 Independence Holding Co. 19,196 413 Kansas City Life Insurance Co. 15,806 301 National Western Life Insurance Co., Class A 57,145 801 The Phoenix Cos., Inc.(a) 34,443 6,370 Primerica, Inc. 238,493 10,592 Protective Life Corp. 406,839 5,888 Stancorp Financial Group, Inc. 290,926 9,760 Symetra Financial Corp. 156,062 ------------ 2,122,544 ------------ MEDIA - 4.2% 3,195 AH Belo Corp. 21,918 8,090 AMC Networks, Inc., Class A(a) 529,167 10,241 Acxiom Corp.(a) 232,266 5,099 Angie's List, Inc.(a) 135,378 3,743 Arbitron, Inc. 173,862 1,803 Ascent Capital Group, Inc., Class A(a) 140,760 4,258 Avid Technology, Inc.(a) 25,037 6,104 Bankrate, Inc.(a) 87,653 771 Beasley Broadcasting Group, Inc., Class A 6,461 13,102 Belo Corp., Class A 182,773 1,288 CSS Industries, Inc. 32,110 50 CTN Media Group, Inc.(a) - 9,031 Charter Communications, Inc., Class A(a) 1,118,489 5,342 Clear Channel Outdoor Holdings, Inc., Class A(a) 39,851 5,064 ComScore, Inc.(a) 123,511 4,444 Constant Contact, Inc.(a) 71,415 1,599 Courier Corp. 22,834 7,078 Crown Media Holdings, Inc., Class A(a) 17,483 10,654 Cumulus Media, Inc., Class A(a) 36,117 28,077 DISH Network Corp., Class A 1,193,834 6,769 Demand Media, Inc.(a) 40,614 4,169 Digital Generation, Inc.(a) 30,726 6,680 Dolby Laboratories, Inc., Class A 223,446 9,748 DreamWorks Animation SKG, Inc.(a) 250,134 4,195 EW Scripps Co.(a) 65,358 6,140 Emmis Communications Corp., Class A(a) 13,140 2,909 Entercom Communications Corp.(a) 27,461 9,776 Entravision Communications Corp., Class A 60,122 5,573 FactSet Research Systems, Inc. 568,112 1,099 Fisher Communications, Inc. 45,147 7,124 Gray Television, Inc.(a) 51,293
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 47 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 38,243 Groupon, Inc.(a) $ 325,066 6,049 Harte-Hanks, Inc. 52,021 10,217 Hollywood Media Corp.(a) 13,691 6,901 IHS, Inc., Class A(a) 720,326 6,248 John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Class A 250,482 5,439 Journal Communications, Inc., Class A(a) 40,738 4,536 Lin TV Corp., Class A(a) 69,401 7,684 Lamar Advertising Co., Class A(a) 333,486 49,031 Liberty Global Plc A(a) 3,632,216 69,420 Liberty Interactive Corp., Class A(a) 1,597,354 15,340 Liberty Media Corp.(a) 1,944,498 5,249 Liberty Ventures(a) 446,217 19,889 Live Nation Entertainment, Inc.(a) 308,280 6,769 Local Corp.(a) 11,372 3,405 Marchex, Inc., Class B 20,498 5,097 Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc., Class A(a) 12,284 10,065 McClatchy Co., Class A(a) 22,948 3,204 Media General, Inc., Class A(a) 35,340 1,442 Mediabistro, Inc.(a) 2,264 4,957 Meredith Corp. 236,449 3,124 Morningstar, Inc. 242,360 8,250 National CineMedia, Inc. 139,343 17,417 The New York Times Co., Class A(a) 192,632 4,289 Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc., Class A 152,088 28,553 Nielsen Holdings NV 959,095 1,936 PDI, Inc.(a) 9,099 14,112 Pandora Media, Inc.(a) 259,661 4,978 QuinStreet, Inc.(a) 42,960 4,466 Radio One, Inc., Class D(a) 10,361 3,165 SPAR Group, Inc.(a) 8,672 800 Saga Communications, Inc. 36,728 1,460 Salem Communications Corp., Class A 10,935 1,909 Schawk, Inc. 25,065 3,534 Scholastic Corp. 103,511 9,773 Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., Class A 287,131 429,495 Sirius XM Radio, Inc. 1,438,808 1,491 Spanish Broadcasting System, Inc.(a) 5,054 15,478 Starz Liberty Capital(a) 342,064 3,625 TechTarget, Inc.(a) 16,204 9,587 TheStreet.com, Inc. 17,832 5,495 Valassis Communications, Inc. 135,122 1,380 Value Line, Inc. 11,730 10,323 ValueClick, Inc.(a) 254,772 7,116 WebMD Health Corp.(a) 208,997 4,595 XO Group, Inc.(a) 51,464 ------------ 20,603,091 ------------ MINING - 0.5% 3,537 AMCOL International Corp. 112,087 14,396 Allied Nevada Gold Corp.(a) 93,286 30,925 Alpha Natural Resources, Inc.(a)(c) 162,047 29,912 Arch Coal, Inc. 113,067 8,698 Cloud Peak Energy, Inc.(a),(b) 143,343 14,789 Coeur Mining, Inc.(a) 196,694 4,654 Compass Minerals International, Inc. 393,403 10,440 General Moly, Inc.(a) 19,523 9,302 Golden Minerals Co.(a),(b) 12,651 50,098 Hecla Mining Co. 149,292 5,927 James River Coal Co.(a) 10,787 19,167 Molycorp, Inc.(a),(b) 118,835 9,312 Royal Gold Inc. 391,849 10,459 Solitario Exploration & Royalty Corp.(a) 9,413 16,751 Stillwater Mining Co.(a) 179,906 10,146 SunCoke Energy, Inc.(a) 142,247 15,011 Timberline Resources Corp.(a),(b) 2,552 8,846 Walter Energy, Inc. 91,998 2,916 Westmoreland Coal Co.(a) 32,747 ------------ 2,375,727 ------------
================================================================================ 48 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MOBILE TELECOMMUNICATIONS - 0.6% 1,327 Atlantic Tele-Network, Inc. $ 65,899 8,865 Iridium Communications, Inc.(a) 68,792 7,910 Leap Wireless International, Inc.(a) 53,234 23,820 NII Holdings, Inc.(a),(b) 158,880 2,325 NTELOS Holdings Corp. 38,270 6,188 ORBCOMM, Inc.(a) 27,784 17,726 SBA Communications Corp., Class A(a),(b) 1,313,851 3,273 Shenandoah Telecom Co. 54,594 22,951 T-Mobile US, Inc. 569,414 13,263 Telephone & Data Systems, Inc. 326,933 3,353 USA Mobility, Inc. 45,500 1,391 U.S.Cellular Corp. 51,036 ------------ 2,774,187 ------------ NONLIFE INSURANCE - 3.7% 2,335 Alleghany Corp.(a) 895,029 4,663 Allied World Assurance Co.Holdings AG 426,711 6,499 Ambac Financial Group, Inc.(a) 154,871 10,209 American Financial Group, Inc. 499,322 848 American National Insurance Co. 84,351 1,491 American Safety Insurance Holdings Ltd.(a) 43,164 3,745 AmTrust Financial Services, Inc. 133,697 18,194 Arch Capital Group Ltd.(a) 935,354 3,724 Argo Group International Holdings Ltd.(b) 157,860 17,361 Arthur J Gallagher & Co. 758,502 9,254 Aspen Insurance Holdings Ltd. 343,231 26,658 Assured Guaranty Ltd. 588,075 15,059 Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. 689,401 1,436 Baldwin & Lyons, Inc., Class B 34,866 16,191 Brown & Brown, Inc. 521,998 3,210 CNA Financial Corp. 104,710 1,498 Donegal Group, Inc., Class A 20,927 901 EMC Insurance Group, Inc. 23,660 1,572 Eastern Insurance Holdings, Inc. 29,475 5,872 Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.(b) 302,114 1,154 Enstar Group Ltd.(a) 153,459 3,487 Erie Indemnity Co., Class A 277,879 6,750 Everest Re Group Ltd. 865,755 1,617 Federated National Holding Co. 15,766 1,327 First Acceptance Corp.(a) 2,176 14,863 First American Financial Corp. 327,581 1,654 Global Indemnity Plc(a) 38,952 4,332 Greenlight Capital Re Ltd.(a) 106,264 13,815 HCC Insurance Holdings, Inc. 595,565 5,981 The Hanover Insurance Group, Inc. 292,650 6,206 Hilltop Holdings, Inc.(a) 101,778 5,415 Horace Mann Educators Corp. 132,018 1,661 Infinity Property & Casualty Corp. 99,261 7,262 Kemper Corp. 248,724 2,288 Life Partners Holdings, Inc. 7,024 19,618 MBIA, Inc.(a) 261,116 7,487 Maiden Holdings Ltd. 84,004 1,796 Markel Corp.(a),(b) 946,402 6,607 Meadowbrook Insurance Group, Inc. 53,054 3,553 Mercury General Corp. 156,190 7,436 Montpelier Re Holdings Ltd. 185,974
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 49 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2,572 National Interstate Corp. $ 75,231 1,553 Navigators Group, Inc.(a) 88,583 33,469 Old Republic International Corp. 430,746 2,936 OneBeacon Insurance Group Ltd. 42,513 7,935 PartnerRe Ltd. 718,594 4,365 Platinum Underwriters Holdings Ltd. 249,765 8,440 ProAssurance Corp. 440,230 2,426 RLI Corp. 185,371 9,789 Reinsurance Group of America, Inc. 676,518 6,069 RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd. 526,729 1,921 Safety Insurance Group, Inc. 93,188 7,645 Selective Insurance Group, Inc. 175,988 2,216 State Auto Financial Corp. 40,265 5,546 Tower Group International Ltd. 113,748 3,110 United Fire Group, Inc. 77,221 4,795 Universal Insurance Holdings, Inc. 33,949 13,487 Validus Holdings Ltd. 487,150 15,095 W.R.Berkley Corp. 616,782 705 White Mountains Insurance Group, Inc. 405,333 23,631 Willis Group Holdings Plc 963,672 ------------ 18,140,486 ------------ OIL & GAS PRODUCERS - 2.9% 15,266 Abraxas Petroleum Corp.(a) 32,059 399 Adams Resources & Energy, Inc. 27,487 2,116 Alon USA Energy, Inc. 30,597 2,407 Apco Oil and Gas International, Inc.(a) 27,753 4,861 Approach Resources, Inc.(a) 119,435 15,164 BPZ Resources, Inc.(a) 27,144 1,930 Barnwell Industries, Inc.(a) 6,080 6,456 Berry Petroleum Co., Class A 273,218 6,866 Bill Barrett Corp.(a) 138,831 3,397 Bonanza Creek Energy, Inc.(a) 120,458 5,673 Brenham Oil+Gas Corp.(a) 238 2,141 CVR Energy, Inc. 101,483 7,061 Callon Petroleum Co.(a) 23,796 5,323 Carrizo Oil & Gas, Inc.(a) 150,801 33,499 Cheniere Energy, Inc.(a) 929,932 11,884 Cimarex Energy Co. 772,341 921 Clayton Williams Energy, Inc.(a) 40,064 38,226 Cobalt International Energy, Inc.(a) 1,015,665 6,615 Comstock Resources, Inc. 104,054 14,325 Concho Resources, Inc.(a) 1,199,289 1,782 Contango Oil & Gas Co. 60,142 7,874 Continental Resources, Inc.(a) 677,636 5,049 Delek US Holdings, Inc. 145,310 4,788 Diamondback Energy, Inc.(a) 159,536 2,652 Double Eagle Pete & Mining Co.(a) 10,396 4,973 EPL Oil & Gas, Inc.(a) 146,007 20,555 EXCO Resources, Inc. 157,040 6,155 Emerald Oil, Inc.(a) 42,223 7,465 Endeavour International Corp.(a),(b) 28,666 9,877 Energen Corp. 516,172 10,919 Energy XXI Bermuda Ltd. 242,183 3,828 Evolution Petroleum Corp.(a) 41,763 8,102 FX Energy, Inc.(a) 26,007 17,520 Forest Oil Corp.(a),(b) 71,657 9,280 Gastar Exploration Ltd.(a) 24,778 9,626 GeoPetro Resources Co.(a) 674
================================================================================ 50 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4,141 Goodrich Petroleum Corp.(a) $ 53,005 9,551 Gulfport Energy Corp.(a) 449,566 15,324 Halcon Resources Corp.(a),(b) 86,887 6,009 Harvest Natural Resources, Inc.(a) 18,628 28,214 HollyFrontier Corp. 1,206,995 5,104 Houston American Energy Corp.(a) 1,378 19,302 Hyperdynamics Corp.(a) 9,168 255 Isramco, Inc.(a) 23,761 37,208 Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp.(a) 330,779 3,538 Laredo Petroleum Holdings, Inc.(a) 72,741 8,484 Magellan Petroleum Corp.(a) 8,739 23,760 Magnum Hunter Resources Corp.(a) 86,724 5,310 Miller Energy Resources, Inc.(a) 21,240 8,607 Northern Oil and Gas,Inc.(a) 114,817 10,013 Oasis Petroleum, Inc.(a) 389,205 5,429 PBF Energy, Inc. 140,611 4,268 PDC Energy, Inc.(a) 219,717 1,368 Panhandle Oil & Gas, Inc. 38,988 7,967 Penn Virginia Corp. 37,445 8,775 Petroquest Energy, Inc.(a) 34,749 8,817 Pioneer Energy Services Corp.(a) 58,369 4,012 PostRock Energy Corp.(a) 6,138 19,715 Quicksilver Resources, Inc.(a),(b) 33,121 9,159 Resolute Energy Corp.(a) 73,089 6,077 Rex Energy Corp.(a) 106,834 8,509 Rosetta Resources, Inc.(a) 361,803 9,232 SM Energy Co. 553,735 48,966 SandRidge Energy, Inc.(a) 233,078 7,084 Stone Energy Corp.(a) 156,061 6,273 Swift Energy Co.(a) 75,213 1,697 Syntroleum Corp.(a) 11,709 4,055 Targa Resources, Inc. 260,858 4,911 US Energy Corp.-Wyoming(a) 10,166 21,440 Ultra Petroleum Corp.(a) 424,941 2,756 Uranium Resources, Inc.(a) 7,248 8,520 Vaalco Energy, Inc.(a) 48,734 4,881 W&T Offshore, Inc. 69,749 11,196 Warren Resources, Inc.(a) 28,550 8,075 Western Refining, Inc. 226,665 16,496 Whiting Petroleum Corp.(a) 760,301 7,132 ZaZa Energy Corp.(a) 8,558 7,265 Zion Oil & Gas, Inc.(a),(b) 16,274 ------------ 14,367,252 ------------ OIL EQUIPMENT, SERVICES & DISTRIBUTION - 3.3% 7,963 Atwood Oceanics, Inc.(a),(b) 414,474 4,124 Basic Energy Services, Inc.(a) 49,859 1,869 Bolt Technology Corp. 31,923 4,889 Bristow Group, Inc. 319,349 6,542 C&J Energy Services, Inc.(a) 126,719 2,738 CARBO Ceramics, Inc. 184,623 14,342 Cal Dive International, Inc.(a) 26,963 4,189 Chart Industries, Inc.(a) 394,143 6,315 Core Laboratories N.V. 957,733 6,152 Crosstex Energy, Inc. 121,564 1,787 DHT Holdings, Inc. 8,006 1,228 Dawson Geophysical Co.(a) 45,264 10,552 Dresser-Rand Group, Inc.(a) 632,909 5,069 Dril-Quip, Inc.(a) 457,680 2,769 Era Group, Inc.(a) 72,409 9,196 Exterran Holdings, Inc.(a) 258,592 6,449 Flotek Industries, Inc.(a) 115,695 2,153 Forbes Energy Services Ltd.(a) 8,655 1,866 Geospace Technologies Corp.(a),(b) 128,903 3,728 Global Geophysical Services, Inc.(a) 17,596 1,954 Gulf Island Fabrication, Inc. 37,419
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 51 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3,373 Gulfmark Offshore, Inc., Class A $ 152,089 13,663 Helix Energy Solutions Group, Inc.(a) 314,795 22,598 Hercules Offshore, Inc.(a) 159,090 4,537 Hornbeck Offshore Services, Inc.(a) 242,729 17,365 ION Geophysical Corp.(a) 104,537 21,212 Key Energy Services, Inc.(a) 126,211 4,694 Lufkin Industries, Inc. 415,278 14,173 MRC Global, Inc.(a) 391,458 3,702 Matrix Service Co.(a) 57,677 32,340 McDermott International, Inc.(a) 264,541 1,937 Mitcham Industries, Inc.(a) 32,503 1,996 Natural Gas Services Group, Inc.(a) 46,886 12,244 Newpark Resources, Inc.(a) 134,562 13,639 OGE Energy Corp. 930,180 14,883 Oceaneering International, Inc. 1,074,553 7,630 Oil States International, Inc.(a) 706,843 1,880 PHI, Inc.(a) 64,484 16,854 Parker Drilling Co.(a) 83,933 20,055 Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc. 388,165 9,269 RPC, Inc. 128,005 2,624 SEACOR Holdings, Inc. 217,923 6,120 SemGroup Corp., Class A 329,623 22,071 Superior Energy Services, Inc.(a) 572,522 11,088 Tetra Technologies, Inc.(a) 113,763 2,623 TGC Industries, Inc. 21,561 4,610 Tesco Corp.(a) 61,082 6,849 Tidewater, Inc. 390,188 49,399 Transocean Ltd. 2,368,682 5,970 Unit Corp.(a) 254,203 105,124 Weatherford International Ltd.(a),(b) 1,440,199 6,936 Willbros Group, Inc.(a) 42,587 ------------ 16,041,330 ------------ PERSONAL GOODS - 1.5% 8,268 American Apparel, Inc.(a) 15,874 7,061 Carter's, Inc. 523,008 3,457 Charles & Colvard Ltd.(a) 14,105 1,737 Cherokee, Inc. 22,199 1,524 Columbia Sportswear Co. 95,479 7,890 Coty, Inc.Class A(a) 135,550 12,218 Crocs, Inc.(a) 201,597 1,368 Culp, Inc. 23,789 4,791 Deckers Outdoor Corp.(a) 241,993 1,207 Delta Apparel, Inc.(a) 17,019 3,510 Elizabeth Arden, Inc.(a) 158,196 3,770 Female Health Co. 37,172 16,682 Fifth & Pacific Cos., Inc.(a),(b) 372,676 2,358 G-III Apparel Group Ltd.(a) 113,467 13,579 Hanesbrands, Inc. 698,232 4,353 Helen of Troy Ltd.(a) 167,025 7,865 Iconix Brand Group, Inc.(a) 231,310 2,179 Inter Parfums, Inc. 62,145 9,399 Joe's Jeans, Inc.(a) 15,414 10,460 The Jones Group, Inc. 143,825 913 Lakeland Industries, Inc.(a) 4,309 3,390 Maidenform Brands, Inc.(a) 58,749 24,308 Michael Kors Holdings Ltd.(a) 1,507,582 2,424 Movado Group, Inc. 82,004 7,278 Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc., Class A 444,831 1,288 Orchids Paper Products Co. 33,810 1,972 Oxford Industries, Inc. 123,053 1,655 Perry Ellis International, Inc. 33,613 17,784 Quiksilver, Inc.(a),(b) 114,529 1,650 R.G.Barry Corp. 26,796 1,680 Revlon, Inc., Class A(a) 37,061 1,306 Rocky Brands, Inc. 19,747 5,376 Skechers U.S.A., Inc., Class A(a) 129,078 5,691 Steven Madden Ltd.(a) 275,331 1,296 Superior Uniform Group, Inc. 13,984
================================================================================ 52 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1,401 Tandy Brands Accessories, Inc.(a) $ 866 3,384 True Religion Apparel, Inc. 107,137 10,780 Under Armour, Inc., Class A(a) 643,674 2,185 Unifi, Inc.(a) 45,164 3,222 Vera Bradley, Inc.(a),(b) 69,788 1,049 Weyco Group, Inc. 26,435 6,891 Wolverine World Wide, Inc. 376,317 ------------ 7,463,933 ------------ PHARMACEUTICALS & BIOTECHNOLOGY - 4.8% 10,308 Acadia Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 187,090 3,154 AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 70,176 2,942 ARCA Biopharma, Inc.(a) 3,795 22,238 Avanir Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 102,295 8,202 AVEO Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 20,505 10,040 Aastrom Biosciences, Inc.(a) 4,028 11,235 Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 91,902 5,935 Acorda Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 195,796 3,065 Acura Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 5,762 2,273 Aegerion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 143,972 11,538 Affymetrix, Inc.(a) 51,229 5,451 Agenus, Inc.(a) 20,659 10,095 Akorn, Inc.(a) 136,484 3,909 Albany Molecular Research, Inc.(a) 46,400 3,779 Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 16,401 18,571 Alkermes Plc(a) 532,616 7,090 Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 219,861 7,044 Amicus Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 16,413 4,379 Ampio Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a),(b) 25,267 5,321 Anacor Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 29,744 9,930 Anthera Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 4,599 7,309 Apricus Biosciences, Inc.(a),(b) 17,176 31,395 Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a),(b) 241,741 26,062 ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a),(b) 455,824 10,724 ArQule, Inc.(a) 24,880 17,941 Array Biopharma, Inc.(a) 81,452 13,557 Astex Pharmaceuticals(a) 55,719 7,135 Auxilium Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 118,655 8,239 BioCryst Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a),(b) 12,770 2,370 Biodel, Inc.(a) 9,907 5,856 BioDelivery Sciences International, Inc.(a) 23,775 19,306 BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Inc.(a) 1,077,082 8,984 Biosante Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a),(b) 8,984 5,533 Biota Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 19,089 6,420 BioTime, Inc.(a) 25,423 8,871 Cadence Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 60,500 23,000 CEL-SCI Corp.(a) 4,901 13,729 Cell Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 14,415 11,639 Celldex Therapeutics, Inc.(a),(b) 181,685 10,782 Cerus Corp.(a) 47,656 7,013 Charles River Laboratories International, Inc.(a) 287,743 9,668 Chelsea Therapeutics International, Inc.(a) 22,236
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 53 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11,110 Cleveland BioLabs, Inc.(a) $ 17,554 2,272 Clovis Oncology, Inc.(a) 152,179 12,022 Columbia Laboratories, Inc.(a) 7,770 12,935 Corcept Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 22,378 3,724 Coronado Biosciences, Inc.(a) 32,026 9,144 Cubist Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 441,655 2,790 Cumberland Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 14,257 13,420 Curis, Inc.(a) 42,810 3,817 Cytokinetics, Inc.(a) 44,163 11,609 Cytori Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 26,701 5,159 CytRx Corp.(a) 10,318 23,295 Dendreon Corp.(a),(b) 95,975 8,854 Depomed, Inc.(a) 49,671 11,814 Discovery Laboratories, Inc.(a),(b) 17,957 15,409 Durect Corp.(a) 16,179 16,749 Dyax Corp.(a) 57,952 30,799 Dynavax Technologies Corp.(a) 33,879 4,209 Emergent Biosolutions, Inc.(a) 60,694 15,629 Endo Health Solutions, Inc.(a) 574,991 4,717 Endocyte, Inc.(a) 61,934 5,780 Entremed, Inc.(a) 11,676 8,028 Enzo Biochem, Inc.(a) 16,698 10,923 Enzon Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 21,846 9,521 Exact Sciences Corp.(a),(b) 132,437 26,738 Exelixis, Inc.(a) 121,391 1,224 Furiex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 41,702 4,451 GTx, Inc.(a) 29,377 15,693 Galena Biopharma, Inc.(a),(b) 34,838 2,916 Genomic Health, Inc.(a) 92,466 3,691 GenVec, Inc.(a) 1,366 22,762 Geron Corp.(a) 34,143 13,153 Halozyme Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 104,435 4,947 Harvard Bioscience,Inc.(a) 23,399 9,683 Hemispherx Biopharma, Inc.(a) 2,155 1,806 Hi-Tech Pharmacal Co., Inc. 59,959 14,423 Idenix Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 52,067 6,210 Idera Pharmaceuticals,Inc.(a) 4,068 17,153 Illumina, Inc.(a) 1,283,731 12,509 ImmunoGen, Inc.(a) 207,524 12,026 Immunomedics, Inc.(a) 65,421 9,177 Impax Laboratories, Inc.(a) 183,081 19,037 Incyte Corp.(a) 418,814 6,392 Infinity Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 103,870 16,169 Inovio Pharmaceuticals,Inc.(a) 12,872 4,928 Insmed, Inc.(a) 58,939 11,871 InterMune, Inc.(a) 114,199 13,390 Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 133,230 15,718 Isis Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 422,343 7,073 Jazz Pharmaceuticals Plc(a) 486,127 12,202 Keryx Biopharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 91,149 73,027 Lexicon Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 158,469 3,101 Ligand Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 116,039 5,683 Luminex Corp.(a) 117,127 8,070 Mallinckrodt Plc(a) 366,620 22,769 MannKind Corp.(a) 147,998 8,041 Maxygen, Inc. 19,942 7,933 The Medicines Co.(a) 244,019 10,533 Medivation, Inc.(a),(b) 518,224 6,981 Momenta Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 105,134 11,246 Myriad Genetics, Inc.(a) 302,180
================================================================================ 54 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13,393 NPS Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) $ 202,234 16,720 Nektar Therapeutics(a) 193,116 14,538 Neuralstem, Inc.(a),(b) 21,662 9,163 Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc.(a) 122,601 22,933 Novavax, Inc.(a) 47,013 932 OXiGENE, Inc.(a) 2,554 2,824 OncoGenex Pharmaceutical, Inc.(a) 27,675 10,788 Oncothyreon, Inc.(a) 16,829 10,170 Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 1,224,050 22,838 Opko Health, Inc.(a),(b) 162,150 7,213 Optimer Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 104,372 12,774 Orexigen Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 74,728 2,774 Osiris Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 27,934 20,740 PDL BioPharma, Inc. 160,113 6,221 Pacific Biosciences of California, Inc.(a) 15,677 6,775 Pain Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 14,973 9,887 Palatin Technologies, Inc.(a) 5,932 23,198 Peregrine Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a),(b) 29,925 2,820 Pernix Therapeutics Holdings, Inc.(a) 10,180 7,320 Pharmacyclics, Inc.(a) 581,720 5,365 Pozen, Inc.(a) 26,879 7,384 Prestige Brands Holdings, Inc.(a) 215,170 7,562 Progenics Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 33,727 8,150 Questcor Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 370,499 3,331 Quintiles Transnational Holdings, Inc.(a) 141,767 8,793 Raptor Pharmaceutical Corp.(a) 82,215 5,174 Repligen Corp.(a) 42,634 2,855 Repros Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 52,675 17,083 Rexahn Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a),(b) 7,585 12,898 Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 43,079 7,535 SIGA Technologies, Inc.(a) 21,399 2,057 Sagent Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 43,156 7,312 Salix Pharmaceuticals Ltd.(a) 483,689 8,148 Sangamo Biosciences, Inc.(a) 63,636 8,681 Santarus, Inc.(a) 182,735 4,398 Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc.(a) 167,344 12,887 Savient Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a),(b) 7,217 8,453 Sciclone Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 41,927 14,781 Seattle Genetics, Inc.(a) 465,010 17,251 Sequenom, Inc.(a),(b) 72,627 8,012 Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 59,770 10,321 StemCells, Inc.(a) 17,030 4,728 Strategic Diagnostics,Inc.(a) 4,259 6,342 Sucampo Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Class A(a) 41,730 1,605 Synageva BioPharma Corp.(a) 67,410 7,276 Synta Pharmaceuticals Corp.(a) 36,307 4,538 Targacept, Inc.(a) 19,377 4,949 Techne Corp. 341,877 3,273 Telik, Inc.(a) 4,419 9,747 Theravance, Inc.(a) 375,552 6,916 Threshold Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 36,378 3,283 Transcept Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 9,915 3,113 Trubion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. - 6,543 United Therapeutics Corp.(a) 430,660
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 55 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4,525 Vanda Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) $ 36,562 6,479 Venaxis, Inc.(a) 7,775 6,225 Ventrus Biosciences, Inc.(a) 14,940 30,539 Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.(a) 2,439,150 11,769 Vical, Inc.(a) 36,837 9,260 ViroPharma, Inc.(a),(b) 265,299 14,209 Vivus, Inc.(a) 178,749 24,226 Warner Chilcott Plc, Class A 481,613 13,411 XOMA Corp.(a) 48,682 7,420 Xenoport, Inc.(a) 36,729 14,510 ZIOPHARM Oncology, Inc.(a),(b) 30,471 11,758 Zalicus, Inc.(a),(b) 6,633 ------------ 23,597,257 ------------ REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT & SERVICES - 0.8% 1,823 AV Homes, Inc.(a) 32,322 6,214 Alexander & Baldwin, Inc.(a) 247,006 900 American Realty Investors, Inc.(a) 4,482 1,241 BBX Capital Corp.(a) 16,021 927 Consolidated-Tomoka Land Co. 35,374 20,516 Forest City Enterprises, Inc., Class A(a) 367,442 4,954 Forestar Group, Inc.(a) 99,377 4,735 HFF, Inc., Class A 84,141 7,787 Home Loan Servicing Solutions Ltd. 186,654 4,056 The Howard Hughes Corp.(a) 454,637 6,148 Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc. 560,329 6,998 Kennedy-Wilson Holdings, Inc. 116,447 4,115 Market Leader, Inc.(a) 44,031 3,389 Maui Land & Pineapple Co., Inc.(a) 13,759 6,508 Move, Inc.(a) 83,433 2,611 Nationstar Mortgage Holdings, Inc.(a) 97,756 16,464 Realogy Holdings Corp.(a) 790,931 1,655 Reis, Inc.(a) 30,601 12,521 The St.Joe Co.(a) 263,567 2,270 Tejon Ranch Co.(a) 64,672 4,684 Thomas Properties Group, Inc. 24,825 393 Transcontinental Realty Investors, Inc.(a) 3,458 2,183 Zillow, Inc.(a) 122,903 3,206 ZipRealty, Inc.(a) 10,035 ------------ 3,754,203 ------------ REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS (REITs) - 8.9% 53,415 ARMOUR Residential REIT, Inc. 251,585 7,777 Acadia Realty Trust(b) 192,014 2,204 Agree Realty Corp. 65,062 306 Alexander's, Inc. 89,875 9,667 Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. 635,315 5,090 American Assets Trust, Inc. 157,077 14,506 American Campus Communities, Inc. 589,814 54,348 American Capital Agency Corp. 1,249,461 8,388 American Capital Mortgage Investment Corp. 150,732 23,079 American Realty Capital Properties, Inc. 352,186 128,541 Annaly Capital Management, Inc. 1,615,760 19,755 Anworth Mortgage Asset Corp. 110,628 6,184 Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance, Inc. 98,202 4,553 Apollo Residential Mortgage, Inc. 75,033 5,043 Arbor Realty Trust, Inc. 31,670 1,883 Arlington Asset Investment Corp. 50,351
================================================================================ 56 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8,928 Ashford Hospitality Trust, Inc. $ 102,226 7,540 Associated Estates Realty Corp. 121,243 2,321 Aviv REIT, Inc. 58,698 10,672 BRE Properties 533,813 2,288 BRT Realty Trust(a) 16,016 25,712 BioMed Realty Trust, Inc. 520,154 3,675 Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A 90,772 21,467 Brandywine Realty Trust(b) 290,234 22,503 CBL & Associates Properties, Inc.(b) 482,014 24,856 CYS Investments, Inc. 228,924 11,568 Camden Property Trust(b) 799,812 9,354 Campus Crest Communities, Inc. 107,945 13,106 CapLease, Inc. 110,615 13,114 Capstead Mortgage Corp. 158,679 8,184 Cedar Realty Trust, Inc. 42,393 3,721 Chatham Lodging Trust 63,927 7,423 Chesapeake Lodging Trust 154,324 143,894 Chimera Investment Corp. 431,682 11,328 Colonial Properties Trust 273,231 9,988 Colony Financial, Inc. 198,661 16,507 CommonWealth REIT 381,642 3,139 Coresite Realty Corp. 99,852 11,862 Corporate Office Properties Trust 302,481 14,770 Cousins Properties, Inc. 149,177 17,013 CubeSmart 271,868 2,762 CyrusOne, Inc. 57,284 40,467 DCT Industrial Trust, Inc. 289,339 34,117 DDR Corp. 568,048 26,374 DiamondRock Hospitality Co.(b) 245,806 17,703 Digital Realty Trust, Inc. 1,079,883 18,359 Douglas Emmett, Inc.(b) 458,057 44,361 Duke Realty Corp.(b) 691,588 9,148 DuPont Fabros Technology, Inc. 220,924 6,591 EPR Properties(b) 331,330 4,283 Eastgroup Properties, Inc. 241,004 16,049 Education Realty Trust, Inc. 164,181 5,416 Equity Lifestyle Properties, Inc. 425,643 8,259 Equity One, Inc.(b) 186,901 5,236 Essex Property Trust, Inc.(b) 832,105 7,675 Excel Trust, Inc. 98,317 14,385 Extra Space Storage, Inc. 603,163 8,972 Federal Realty Investment Trust 930,217 16,736 FelCor Lodging Trust, Inc.(a) 98,910 13,876 First Industrial Realty Trust, Inc. 210,499 8,664 First Potomac Realty Trust 113,152 12,131 Franklin Street Properties Corp. 160,129 61,788 General Growth Properties, Inc. 1,227,728 4,166 Getty Realty Corp. 86,028 2,892 Gladstone Commercial Corp. 53,907 20,177 Glimcher Realty Trust 220,333 8,160 Government Properties Income Trust(b) 205,795 7,168 Gramercy Property Trust, Inc.(a) 32,256 13,403 Hatteras Financial Corp. 330,250 12,400 Healthcare Realty Trust, Inc. 316,200 7,578 Healthcare Trust of America, Inc. 85,101 24,760 Hersha Hospitality Trust 139,646 11,308 Highwoods Properties, Inc.(b) 402,678 7,146 Home Properties, Inc.(b) 467,134 19,222 Hospitality Properties Trust 505,154
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 57 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6,696 Hudson Pacific Properties, Inc. $ 142,491 12,531 Inland Real Estate Corp. 128,067 18,894 InvesCo. Mortgage Capital, Inc. 312,885 14,691 Investors Real Estate Trust 126,343 10,788 iStar Financial, Inc.(a) 121,797 10,488 Kilroy Realty Corp. 555,969 12,503 Kite Realty Group Trust 75,393 4,945 LTC Properties, Inc. 193,102 13,054 LaSalle Hotel Properties 322,434 25,384 Lexington Realty Trust(b) 296,485 16,526 Liberty Property Trust(b) 610,801 48,548 MFA Financial, Inc. 410,231 10,275 MPG Office Trust, Inc.(a) 32,264 11,274 Mack-Cali Realty Corp.(b) 276,100 20,917 Medical Properties Trust, Inc. 299,531 5,900 Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc.(b) 399,843 456 Mission West Properties, Inc. - 7,237 Monmouth Real Estate Investment Corp., Class A 71,429 3,452 National Health Investors, Inc.(b) 206,637 16,437 National Retail Properties, Inc. 565,433 11,088 New York Mortgage Trust, Inc.(b) 75,066 28,460 NorthStar Realty Finance Corp. 258,986 16,143 Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc. 500,756 1,966 One Liberty Properties, Inc. 43,173 2,432 PMC Commercial Trust 19,991 2,512 PS Business Parks, Inc. 181,291 6,144 Parkway Properties, Inc. 102,973 8,823 Pebblebrook Hotel Trust 228,075 8,996 Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust 169,844 5,478 PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust(d) 115,312 23,141 Piedmont Office Realty Trust, Inc. 413,761 7,503 Post Properties, Inc.(b) 371,323 5,699 Potlatch Corp. 230,468 9,338 RAIT Financial Trust 70,222 16,877 RLJ Lodging Trust 379,564 8,422 Ramco-Gershenson Properties Trust 130,794 17,326 Rayonier, Inc.(b) 959,687 26,755 Realty Income Corp. 1,121,570 11,558 Redwood Trust, Inc. 196,486 12,604 Regency Centers Corp.(b) 640,409 18,779 Resource Capital Corp.(b) 115,491 8,411 Retail Opportunity Investments Corp. 116,913 3,548 Rouse Properties, Inc. 69,612 12,554 SL Green Realty Corp.(b) 1,107,137 6,621 STAG Industrial, Inc. 132,089 5,520 Sabra Healthcare REIT,Inc. 144,127 2,110 Saul Centers, Inc. 93,811 26,058 Senior Housing Properties Trust 675,684 4,967 Silver Bay Realty Trust Corp. 82,254 4,351 Sovran Self Storage, Inc. 281,901 22,608 Starwood Property Trust, Inc. 559,548 25,179 Strategic Hotel Capital, Inc.(a) 223,086 4,792 Sun Communities, Inc. 238,450 22,904 Sunstone Hotel Investors, Inc.(a) 276,680 7,885 Supertel Hospitality, Inc.(a) 7,083 13,160 Tanger Factory Outlet Centers, Inc. 440,334 8,368 Taubman Centers, Inc. 628,855 3,739 Terreno Realty Corp. 69,284 51,210 Two Harbors Investment Corp. 524,902 34,428 UDR, Inc.(b) 877,570 4,403 UMH Properties, Inc. 45,219 1,725 Universal Health Realty Income Trust 74,399
================================================================================ 58 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3,383 Urstadt Biddle Properties, Inc., Class A $ 68,235 7,902 WP Carey, Inc. 522,875 4,961 Walter Investment Management Corp.(a) 167,731 9,108 Washington Real Estate Investment Trust 245,096 15,433 Weingarten Realty Investors 474,873 5,028 Winthrop Realty Trust 60,487 ------------ 43,464,550 ------------ SOFTWARE & COMPUTER SERVICES - 6.0% 5,613 ACI Worldwide, Inc.(a),(b) 260,892 12,854 Ansys, Inc.(a) 939,627 11,019 AOL, Inc.(a) 401,973 8,591 Accelrys, Inc.(a) 72,164 3,089 Acorn Energy, Inc.(b) 26,071 5,680 The Active Network, Inc.(a) 42,998 7,378 Actuate Corp.(a) 48,990 4,549 Advent Software, Inc.(a) 159,488 6,801 Alliance Data Systems Corp.(a) 1,231,185 24,687 Allscripts Healthcare Solutions, Inc.(a) 319,450 22,117 Amdocs Ltd. 820,320 3,879 American Software, Inc., Class A 33,708 952 Analysts International Corp.(a) 3,637 13,130 Aspen Technology, Inc.(a) 378,013 5,093 athenahealth, Inc.(a) 431,479 6,322 Authentidate Holding Corp.(a) 5,500 6,364 Blackbaud, Inc. 207,275 6,376 Blucora, Inc.(a) 118,211 5,251 Bottomline Technologies, Inc.(a) 132,798 3,996 BroadSoft, Inc.(a) 110,290 3,375 BSQUARE Corp.(a) 9,281 3,187 CACI International, Inc., Class A(a) 202,343 9,585 Ciber, Inc.(a) 32,014 4,787 CSG Systems International, Inc.(b) 103,878 39,335 Cadence Design Systems, Inc.(a),(b) 569,571 4,955 Calix, Inc.(a) 50,045 6,124 Callidus Software, Inc.(a) 40,357 61,961 Clearwire Corp., Class A(a) 308,566 6,572 Cogent Communications Group, Inc. 185,002 6,024 CommVault Systems, Inc.(a) 457,161 1,608 Computer Programs & Systems, Inc. 79,017 2,265 Computer Task Group, Inc. 52,027 29,289 Compuware Corp.(c) 303,141 3,243 Comverse, Inc.(a) 96,512 6,405 Concur Technologies, Inc.(a) 521,239 4,883 Cornerstone OnDemand, Inc.(a),(b) 211,385 2,713 Crexendo, Inc. 7,325 4,070 DST Systems, Inc. 265,893 2,530 Datalink Corp.(a) 26,919 6,143 DealerTrack Technologies, Inc.(a),(b) 217,646 7,736 DeVry, Inc. 239,971 1,309 Digimarc Corp. 27,188 5,623 Digital River, Inc.(a) 105,544 2,140 Dynamics Research Corp.(a) 11,920 4,650 EPIQ Systems, Inc. 62,635 15,841 EarthLink, Inc. 98,373 4,598 Ebix, Inc. 42,577 3,681 Envestnet, Inc.(a) 90,553 6,803 Equinix, Inc.(a),(b) 1,256,650 1,901 Evolving Systems, Inc. 12,604 3,833 ExactTarget, Inc.(a) 129,249 76,737 Facebook, Inc.(a) 1,907,682 5,000 Fair Isaac Corp. 229,150 6,457 FalconStor Software, Inc.(a) 8,846 1,873 Forrester Research, Inc. 68,720 18,938 Fortinet, Inc.(a) 331,415 4,471 GSE Systems, Inc.(a) 6,751
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 59 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12,956 Gartner, Inc.(a) $ 738,362 2,702 Guidance Software, Inc.(a) 23,615 4,230 Guidewire Software, Inc.(a) 177,871 4,068 The Hackett Group, Inc. 21,113 10,874 IAC/InterActiveCorp. 517,167 5,977 ICG Group, Inc.(a) 68,138 4,441 iGate Corp.(a) 72,921 4,213 Immersion Corp.(a) 55,822 5,693 Infoblox, Inc.(a) 166,577 14,963 Informatica Corp.(a) 523,406 3,774 Innodata Corp.(a) 12,077 2,239 Interactive Intelligence Group, Inc.(a) 115,532 7,670 Internap Network Services Corp.(a) 63,431 1,714 Internet Patents Corp.(a) 6,050 6,452 IntraLinks Holdings, Inc.(a) 46,842 9,522 Inuvo, Inc.(a) 7,618 10,039 Ipass, Inc.(a) 18,974 6,383 j2 Global, Inc. 271,341 4,371 The KEYW Holding Corp.(a) 57,916 2,408 Keynote Systems, Inc. 47,582 11,095 Limelight Networks, Inc.(a) 24,964 7,668 LivePerson, Inc.(a) 68,667 3,298 LogMeIn, Inc.(a) 80,669 9,057 LookSmart Ltd.(a) 6,340 2,778 Manhattan Associates, Inc.(a) 214,350 688 Mastech Holdings, Inc. 5,263 7,596 MedAssets, Inc.(a) 134,753 3,269 Medidata Solutions, Inc.(a),(b) 253,184 13,100 Mentor Graphics Corp. 256,105 10,446 Merge Healthcare, Inc.(a) 37,606 3,244 Meru Networks, Inc.(a) 13,073 1,309 MicroStrategy, Inc., Class A(a) 113,831 3,977 Mitek Systems, Inc.(a) 22,987 5,459 Monotype Imaging Holdings, Inc. 138,713 3,161 Multiband Corp.(a) 10,020 2,004 NCI, Inc., Class A(a) 8,297 9,052 NIC, Inc. 149,630 5,026 NetScout Systems, Inc.(a) 117,307 4,047 NetSuite, Inc.(a),(b) 371,272 35,054 Nuance Communications, Inc.(a) 644,292 3,124 PC-Tel, Inc. 26,492 3,817 PDF Solutions, Inc.(a) 70,347 2,938 PROS Holdings, Inc.(a) 87,993 16,535 PTC, Inc.(a) 405,604 4,823 Palo Alto Networks, Inc.(a) 203,338 2,534 Pegasystems, Inc. 83,926 5,628 Perficient, Inc.(a) 75,077 6,468 Premiere Global Services, Inc.(a) 78,069 7,765 Progress Software Corp.(a) 178,673 671 QAD, Inc., Class A 7,703 1,021 QAD, Inc., Class B 10,639 10,488 QLIK Technologies, Inc.(a) 296,496 5,658 Quality Systems, Inc. 105,861 15,420 Rackspace Hosting, Inc.(a) 584,264 5,505 RealPage, Inc.(a) 100,962 1,771 RigNet, Inc.(a) 45,125 2,013 Rosetta Stone, Inc.(a) 29,672 14,299 Rovi Corp.(a) 326,589 8,017 SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc.(a) 263,759 15,629 Sapient Corp.(a) 204,115 2,655 SciQuest, Inc.(a) 66,508 1,394 Selectica, Inc.(a) 12,421 2,057 ServiceNow, Inc.(a) 83,082 7,292 Smith Micro Software, Inc.(a) 7,730 114 SoftBrands, Inc.(a) - 8,616 SolarWinds, Inc.(a) 334,387 9,539 Solera Holdings, Inc. 530,845 4,420 Sourcefire, Inc.(a),(b) 245,531 4,036 Splunk, Inc.(a) 187,109 8,513 Support.com, Inc.(a) 38,904 3,937 Synchronoss Technologies, Inc.(a) 121,535 21,196 Synopsys, Inc.(a) 757,757 2,238 Syntel, Inc. 140,703 21,614 TIBCO Software, Inc.(a) 462,540
================================================================================ 60 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4,749 Tangoe, Inc.(a) $ 73,277 7,111 TeleCommunication Systems, Inc., Class A(a) 16,569 3,039 TeleNav, Inc.(a) 15,894 3,866 Tyler Technologies, Inc.(a) 265,014 3,994 Ultimate Software Group, Inc.(a),(b) 468,456 6,285 Unisys Corp.(a) 138,710 14,269 United Online, Inc. 108,159 10,970 Unwired Planet, Inc.(a) 21,391 4,809 VASCO Data Security International, Inc.(a) 39,963 11,807 VMware, Inc., Class A(a) 790,951 12,557 Vantiv, Inc.Class A(a) 346,573 7,402 Verint Systems, Inc.(a) 262,549 5,989 VirnetX Holding Corp.(a),(b) 119,720 2,960 Virtusa Corp.(a) 65,594 3,191 Vocus, Inc.(a) 33,569 600 Voltari Corp.(a) 2,142 15,303 Wave Systems Corp., Class A(a) 4,591 4,705 Web.com Group, Inc.(a) 120,448 3,534 Workday, Inc., Class A(a) 226,494 9,594 Zix Corp.(a) 40,583 69,187 Zynga, Inc.Class A(a),(b) 192,340 ------------ 29,323,640 ------------ SUPPORT SERVICES - 4.5% 2,658 A.M.Castle & Co.(a) 41,890 6,822 ABM Industries, Inc. 167,207 1,470 ADA-ES, Inc.(a) 61,916 6,605 AMN Healthcare Services, Inc.(a) 94,584 600 AMREP Corp.(a) 5,550 6,202 ARC Document Solutions, Inc.(a) 24,808 6,989 Acacia Research Corp. 156,204 4,935 The Advisory Board Co.(a),(b) 269,698 5,717 Applied Industrial Technologies, Inc. 276,303 6,363 Barnes Group, Inc. 190,826 1,011 Barrett Business Services, Inc. 52,784 2,301 Black Box Corp. 58,261 5,067 Booz Allen Hamilton Holding Corp. 88,065 6,523 The Brink's Co. 166,402 16,618 Broadridge Financial Solutions LLC 441,706 7,327 CBIZ, Inc.(a) 49,164 2,126 CDI Corp. 30,104 1,531 CRA International, Inc.(a) 28,278 6,332 Cardtronics, Inc.(a) 174,763 6,367 Casella Waste Systems, Inc.(a) 27,442 1,332 Cass Information Systems, Inc. 61,405 11,249 Cenveo, Inc.(a) 23,960 7,485 Clean Harbors, Inc.(a) 378,217 5,075 Comfort Systems USA, Inc. 75,719 1,238 Consolidated Graphics,Inc.(a) 58,198 14,068 Convergys Corp. 245,205 13,098 CoreLogic, Inc.(a) 303,481 4,690 The Corporate Executive Board Co. 296,502 15,913 Corrections Corp.of America 538,973 3,775 CoStar Group, Inc.(a) 487,239 3,730 Crawford & Co., Class B 20,963 4,872 Cross Country Healthcare, Inc.(a) 25,140 1,402 DXP Enterprises, Inc.(a) 93,373 7,053 Deluxe Corp. 244,387 7,329 Dice Holdings, Inc.(a) 67,500 10,513 DigitalGlobe, Inc.(a) 326,008 4,370 Document Security Systems, Inc.(a),(b) 10,051 5,424 The Dolan Co.(a) 8,841 3,131 ENGlobal Corp.(a) 2,974 3,913 EVERTEC, Inc.(a) 85,969 3,676 Ennis, Inc. 63,558 6,543 Euronet Worldwide, Inc.(a) 208,460 3,877 ExamWorks Group, Inc.(a) 82,309 3,734 ExlService Holdings, Inc.(a) 110,377 1,920 Exponent, Inc. 113,491 5,569 FTI Consulting, Inc.(a) 183,164
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 61 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9,173 FleetCor Technologies, Inc.(a) $ 745,765 2,789 Franklin Covey Co.(a) 37,540 300 Frontline Capital Group - 2,618 Fuel Tech, Inc.(a) 10,027 5,698 Furmanite Corp.(a) 38,120 2,761 G&K Services, Inc., Class A 131,424 2,943 GP Strategies Corp.(a) 70,102 18,523 Genpact Ltd. 356,383 9,900 The Geo Group, Inc. 336,105 9,555 Global Cash Access, Inc.(a) 59,814 10,816 Global Payments, Inc. 500,997 2,352 Global Power Equipment Group, Inc. 37,914 7,323 Harris Interactive, Inc.(a) 13,255 5,076 Heartland Payment Systems, Inc. 189,081 2,399 Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc. 40,111 1,384 Heritage-Crystal Clean, Inc.(a) 20,220 4,996 Higher One Holdings, Inc.(a) 58,153 4,534 Hudson Global, Inc.(a) 11,244 3,276 Huron Consulting Group, Inc.(a) 151,482 2,842 ICF International, Inc.(a) 89,551 4,517 Innerworkings, Inc.(a) 49,010 3,058 Insperity, Inc. 92,657 11,818 Jack Henry & Associates, Inc. 556,982 3,701 Kaman Corp., Class A 127,907 3,691 Kelly Services, Inc., Class A 64,482 4,137 Kforce, Inc. 60,400 6,869 Korn/Ferry International(a) 128,725 634 Lawson Products, Inc. 8,141 11,714 Lender Processing Services, Inc. 378,948 3,155 Lincoln Educational Services Corp. 16,627 9,644 LinkedIn Corp.(a) 1,719,525 9,164 Lionbridge Technologies, Inc.(a) 26,576 4,748 MAXIMUS, Inc. 353,631 6,435 MSC Industrial Direct Co., Class A 498,455 1,735 MWI Veterinary Supply, Inc.(a) 213,821 2,116 Management Network Group, Inc.(a) 6,433 10,543 Manpower, Inc. 577,756 3,220 McGrath RentCorp 109,995 7,655 Metalico, Inc.(a) 9,186 1,284 Michael Baker Corp. 34,809 2,355 Mistras Group, Inc.(a) 41,401 5,345 Mobile Mini, Inc.(a) 177,187 6,550 Moduslink Global Solutions, Inc.(a) 20,829 16,353 Monster Worldwide, Inc.(a) 80,293 7,098 Navigant Consulting, Inc.(a) 85,176 9,025 NeuStar, Inc., Class A(a) 439,337 12,531 Odyssey Marine Exploration, Inc.(a) 37,092 3,057 Official Payments Holdings, Inc.(a) 20,940 6,288 On Assignment, Inc.(a) 168,015 3,944 Outerwall, Inc.(a) 231,395 3,750 PRGX Global, Inc.(a) 20,588 1,366 Park-Ohio Holdings Corp.(a) 45,051 8,189 Perma-Fix Environmental Services, Inc.(a) 2,948 2,629 PowerSecure International, Inc.(a) 39,514 3,498 Quad/Graphics, Inc. 84,302 25,030 R.R.Donnelley & Sons Co. 350,670 3,484 RPX Corp.(a) 58,531 2,007 Rentrak Corp.(a) 40,281 5,593 Resources Connection, Inc. 64,879 3,079 Schnitzer Steel Industries, Inc., Class A 71,987
================================================================================ 62 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7,443 ServiceSource International, Inc.(a) $ 69,369 3,560 Sharps Compliance Corp.(a) 9,327 1,933 Startek, Inc.(a) 9,143 16,316 Swisher Hygiene, Inc.(a) 14,030 5,423 SYKES Enterprises, Inc.(a) 85,467 910 The The Standard Register Co.(a) 2,621 2,779 Team, Inc.(a) 105,185 3,076 TeleTech Holdings, Inc.(a) 72,071 8,863 Tetra Tech, Inc.(a),(b) 208,369 7,781 Towers Watson & Co., Class A 637,575 5,783 TrueBlue, Inc.(a) 121,732 10,306 URS Corp. 486,649 2,489 US Ecology, Inc. 68,298 2,103 Unifirst Corp. 191,899 13,103 United Rentals, Inc.(a) 653,971 5,474 United Stationers, Inc. 183,653 3,265 Universal Technical Institute, Inc. 33,727 20,283 Verisk Analytics, Inc.(a) 1,210,895 2,777 Viad Corp. 68,092 5,354 WEX, Inc.(a) 410,652 16,879 Waste Connections, Inc. 694,402 ------------ 21,870,316 ------------ TECHNOLOGY HARDWARE & EQUIPMENT - 4.6% 12,876 3D Systems Corp.(a),(b) 565,256 8,230 Adtran, Inc. 202,540 12,187 Anadigics, Inc.(a) 26,811 15,962 ARRIS Group, Inc.(a) 229,055 4,491 ATMI, Inc.(a) 106,212 5,453 AXT, Inc.(a) 14,723 5,195 Advanced Energy Industries, Inc.(a) 90,445 2,279 Agilysys, Inc.(a) 25,730 1,164 Alliance Fiber Optic Products, Inc. 23,292 9,534 Amkor Technology, Inc.(a) 40,138 2,148 Amtech Systems, Inc.(a) 13,661 9,668 Applied Micro Circuits Corp.(a) 85,078 15,255 Aruba Networks, Inc.(a) 234,317 59,145 Atmel Corp.(a) 434,716 29,628 Avago Technologies Ltd. 1,107,495 9,111 Aviat Networks, Inc.(a) 23,871 2,015 Aware, Inc. 10,478 16,588 Axcelis Technologies, Inc.(a) 30,190 62,618 Brocade Communications Systems, Inc.(a) 360,680 8,894 Brooks Automation, Inc. 86,539 1,397 CVD Equipment Corp.(a),(b) 11,637 3,193 Cabot Microelectronics Corp.(a) 105,401 5,028 CalAmp Corp.(a) 73,409 7,236 Cavium, Inc.(a),(b) 255,937 3,559 Ceva, Inc.(a) 68,902 14,377 Ciena Corp.(a),(b) 279,201 8,862 Cirrus Logic, Inc.(a) 153,844 2,144 Clearfield, Inc.(a) 20,196 3,077 Cohu, Inc. 38,462 2,357 Comtech Telecommunications Corp. 63,380 1,957 Concurrent Computer Corp. 14,971 5,314 Cray, Inc.(a),(b) 104,367 16,249 Cree, Inc.(a),(b) 1,037,661 18,773 Cypress Semiconductor Corp. 201,434 3,429 DSP Group, Inc.(a) 28,495 368 Dataram Corp.(a) 1,373 8,741 Diebold, Inc. 294,484 3,951 Digi International, Inc.(a) 37,021 4,959 Diodes, Inc.(a) 128,785 9,114 Dot Hill Systems Corp.(a) 19,960 4,659 Dycom Industries, Inc.(a) 107,809 5,443 EchoStar Corp.Class A(a) 212,876 6,580 Electronics for Imaging, Inc.(a) 186,148 3,572 Emcore Corp.(a) 12,859 13,108 Emulex Corp.(a) 85,464 19,448 Entegris, Inc.(a) 182,617 13,357 Entropic Communications, Inc.(a) 57,034
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 63 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6,920 Exar Corp.(a) $ 74,528 14,326 Extreme Networks, Inc.(a) 49,425 17,522 Fairchild Semiconductor International, Inc.(a) 241,804 13,082 Finisar Corp.(a) 221,740 7,444 Formfactor, Inc.(a) 50,247 10,122 Fusion-io, Inc.(a) 144,137 3,827 GSI Technology, Inc.(a) 24,187 3,694 Globecomm Systems, Inc.(a) 46,692 16,504 Harmonic, Inc.(a) 104,800 3,796 Hittite Microwave Corp.(a) 220,168 4,488 Hutchinson Technology, Inc.(a) 21,228 2,125 ID Systems, Inc.(a) 10,689 3,474 IXYS Corp. 38,422 7,272 Identive Group, Inc.(a) 5,258 682 iGO, Inc.(a) 1,589 11,101 Ikanos Communications, Inc.(a) 16,540 4,885 Imation Corp.(a) 20,664 16,318 Infinera Corp.(a) 174,113 3,600 Infosonics Corp.(a) 1,620 20,738 Ingram Micro, Inc., Class A(a) 393,815 2,958 Inphi Corp.(a) 32,538 5,871 Insight Enterprises, Inc.(a) 104,152 20,554 Integrated Device Technology, Inc.(a) 163,199 4,066 Integrated Silicon Solutions, Inc.(a) 44,563 4,710 Inteliquent, Inc. 27,083 5,852 InterDigital, Inc. 261,292 8,474 Intermec, Inc.(a) 83,299 9,675 International Rectifier Corp.(a) 202,594 17,151 Intersil Corp., Class A 134,121 7,818 Ixia(a) 143,851 2,575 KVH Industries, Inc.(a) 34,273 10,311 Kopin Corp.(a) 38,254 10,550 Kulicke & Soffa Industries, Inc.(a) 116,683 8,678 LRAD Corp.(a) 9,806 7,225 LTX-Credence Corp.(a) 43,278 3,162 Lantronix, Inc.(a) 4,996 16,665 Lattice Semiconductor Corp.(a) 84,492 8,746 Lexmark International, Inc., Class A 267,365 1,796 Loral Space & Communications Ltd. 107,724 10,922 Micros Systems, Inc.(a) 471,284 7,265 MKS Instruments, Inc. 192,813 58,998 Marvell Technology Group Ltd. 690,867 9,962 Mattson Technology, Inc.(a) 21,717 39,746 Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. 1,104,144 4,409 MaxLinear, Inc., Class A(a) 30,863 4,615 Mercury Systems, Inc.(a) 42,550 6,410 Micrel, Inc. 63,331 12,826 Microsemi Corp.(a) 291,791 6,749 Mindspeed Technologies, Inc.(a) 21,867 4,630 Monolithic Power Systems, Inc. 111,629 7,187 MoSys, Inc.(a) 28,892 22,754 NCR Corp.(a) 750,654 5,386 NETGEAR, Inc.(a) 164,488 3,310 Nanometrics, Inc.(a) 48,558 3,604 NeoPhotonics Corp.(a) 31,319 4,429 NetList, Inc.(a) 3,898 5,803 Novatel Wireless, Inc.(a) 22,922 12,046 OCZ Technology Group, Inc.(a),(b) 17,467 62,321 ON Semiconductor Corp.(a) 503,554 14,879 Oclaro, Inc.(a),(b) 17,557 7,549 Omnivision Technologies, Inc.(a) 140,789 3,034 Oplink Communications, Inc.(a) 52,701 1,750 Optical Cable Corp. 7,753 7,736 Overland Storage, Inc.(a) 8,819
================================================================================ 64 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1,934 PAR Technology Corp.(a) $ 7,794 2,231 PC Connection, Inc. 34,469 6,522 PLX Technology, Inc.(a) 31,045 28,533 PMC-Sierra, Inc.(a) 181,185 13,688 ParkerVision, Inc.(a) 62,280 25,345 Pendrell Corp.(a) 66,404 1,109 Performance Technologies, Inc.(a) 1,309 3,101 Pericom Semiconductor Corp.(a) 22,079 8,475 Photronics, Inc.(a) 68,308 3,290 Pixelworks, Inc.(a) 11,252 5,972 Plantronics, Inc. 262,290 23,951 Polycom, Inc.(a) 252,444 4,085 Power Integrations, Inc. 165,688 358 Preformed Line Products Co. 23,739 3,127 Procera Networks, Inc.(a) 42,934 12,436 QLogic Corp.(a) 118,888 35,782 Quantum Corp.(a) 49,021 9,239 QuickLogic Corp.(a) 20,418 39,280 RF Micro Devices, Inc.(a) 210,148 3,847 Radisys Corp.(a) 18,504 15,720 Rambus, Inc.(a) 135,035 2,148 Rimage Corp. 18,022 22,945 Riverbed Technology, Inc.(a) 357,024 5,008 Rudolph Technologies, Inc.(a) 56,090 5,841 STEC, Inc.(a) 39,252 3,544 SYNNEX Corp.(a),(b) 149,840 3,883 ScanSource, Inc.(a) 124,256 3,948 SeaChange International, Inc.(a) 46,231 9,354 Semtech Corp.(a) 327,671 9,231 Shoretel, Inc.(a) 37,201 5,242 Sigma Designs, Inc.(a) 26,472 5,106 Silicon Graphics International Corp.(a) 68,318 11,660 Silicon Image, Inc.(a) 68,211 5,383 Silicon Laboratories, Inc.(a) 222,910 26,344 Skyworks Solutions, Inc.(a) 576,670 1,158 Sonic Foundry, Inc.(a) 12,275 40,110 Sonus Networks, Inc.(a) 120,731 6,542 Spansion, Inc., Class A(a) 81,906 32,404 SunEdison, Inc.(a),(b) 264,741 3,733 Super Micro Computer, Inc.(a) 39,719 1,639 Supertex, Inc. 39,188 6,740 Symmetricom, Inc.(a) 30,263 4,656 Synaptics, Inc.(a) 179,535 905 Systemax, Inc. 8,516 5,046 Tech Data Corp.(a) 237,616 44,910 Tellabs, Inc. 88,922 7,247 Tessera Technologies, Inc. 150,738 1,900 Transact Technologies, Inc. 15,523 5,338 Transwitch Corp.(a) 1,922 22,844 TriQuint Semiconductor, Inc.(a) 158,309 6,360 USA Technologies, Inc.(a) 11,066 4,606 Ultra Clean Holdings, Inc.(a) 27,866 3,994 Ultratech, Inc.(a),(b) 146,660 2,922 VOXX International Corp.(a) 35,853 15,196 VeriFone Systems, Inc.(a),(b) 255,445 5,675 Viasat, Inc.(a) 405,535 7,535 Vitesse Semiconductor Corp.(a) 19,817 3,634 Volterra Semiconductor Corp.(a) 51,312 3,339 West Corp. 73,925 9,091 Westell Technologies, Inc., Class A(a) 21,727 5,499 Zhone Technologies, Inc.(a) 4,399 ------------ 22,489,321 ------------ TOBACCO - 0.1% 11,097 Alliance One International, Inc.(a) 42,169 4,365 Schweitzer-Mauduit International, Inc. 217,726
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 65 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22,783 Star Scientific, Inc.(a),(b) $ 31,668 3,084 Universal Corp. 178,409 8,426 Vector Group Ltd. 136,670 ------------ 606,642 ------------ TRAVEL & LEISURE - 4.7% 3,511 AFC Enterprises, Inc.(a) 126,185 9,619 Alaska Air Group, Inc.(a) 500,188 2,048 Allegiant Travel Co. 217,067 3,946 Ambassadors Group, Inc. 14,008 4,978 Ameristar Casinos, Inc. 130,872 14,900 Avis Budget Group, Inc.(a) 428,375 3,557 BJ's Restaurants, Inc.(a) 131,965 5,398 Bally Technologies, Inc.(a) 304,555 189 Biglari Holdings, Inc.(a) 77,566 6,212 Bloomin'Brands, Inc.(a) 154,555 3,769 Bob Evans Farms, Inc. 177,068 8,230 Boyd Gaming Corp.(a) 92,999 2,896 Bravo Brio Restaurant Group, Inc.(a) 51,607 9,831 Brinker International, Inc. 387,636 2,679 Buffalo Wild Wings, Inc.(a) 262,971 8,926 Burger King Worldwide, Inc. 174,146 2,384 CEC Entertainment, Inc. 97,839 2,607 Carmike Cinemas, Inc.(a) 50,471 3,017 Carrols Restaurant Group, Inc.(a) 19,490 4,783 Century Casinos, Inc.(a) 16,549 6,775 The Cheesecake Factory, Inc. 283,805 4,072 Choice Hotels International, Inc. 161,618 1,739 Churchill Downs, Inc. 137,120 13,752 Cinemark Holdings, Inc. 383,956 3,314 Cosi, Inc.(a) 7,291 3,261 Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc. 308,686 116,394 Delta Air Lines, Inc.(a) 2,177,732 14,117 Denny's Corp.(a) 79,338 2,308 DineEquity, Inc. 158,952 7,863 Domino's Pizza, Inc. 457,233 3,295 Dover Downs Gaming & Entertainment, Inc. 5,107 4,712 Dover Motorsports, Inc. 10,178 10,378 Dunkin'Brands Group, Inc. 444,386 1,490 Einstein Noah Restaurant Group, Inc. 21,158 3,211 Empire Resorts, Inc.(a) 9,376 3,165 Entertainment Gaming Asia, Inc.(a) 5,824 1,603 Famous Dave's of America, Inc.(a) 24,991 2,879 Fiesta Restaurant Group, Inc.(a) 99,009 3,528 Full House Resorts, Inc.(a) 9,526 1,026 Gaming Partners International Corp. 8,105 7,344 Hawaiian Holdings, Inc.(a) 44,872 55,234 Hertz Global Holdings, Inc.(a),(b) 1,369,803 5,022 HomeAway, Inc.(a) 162,411 7,615 Hyatt Hotels Corp.(a) 307,341 3,105 International Speedway Corp., Class A 97,714 5,356 Interval Leisure Group, Inc. 106,691 3,562 Isle of Capri Casinos, Inc.(a) 26,715 6,213 Jack in the Box, Inc.(a) 244,109 30,570 JetBlue Airways Corp.(a) 192,591 9,422 Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Inc.(a) 164,414 48,792 Las Vegas Sands Corp. 2,582,561 5,424 Life Time Fitness, Inc.(a) 271,797 3,348 Luby's, Inc.(a) 28,291 51,576 MGM Resorts International(a) 762,293 3,170 MTR Gaming Group, Inc.(a) 10,619 8,548 Madison Square Garden, Inc.(a) 506,469 2,990 Marcus Corp. 38,033
================================================================================ 66 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES HELD INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4,340 Marriott Vacations Worldwide Corp.(a) $ 187,662 1,701 Monarch Casino & Resort, Inc.(a) 28,679 5,742 Morgans Hotel Group Co.(a) 46,281 4,132 Multimedia Games Holding Co., Inc.(a) 107,721 3,361 Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings, Ltd.(a) 101,872 3,851 Orbitz Worldwide, Inc.(a) 30,924 12,672 Orient Express Hotels Ltd., Class A(a) 154,091 3,900 Panera Bread Co., Class A(a),(b) 725,166 2,345 Papa John's International, Inc.(a) 153,293 9,426 Penn National Gaming, Inc.(a) 498,258 8,495 Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc.(a) 167,097 8,491 Premier Exhibitions, Inc.(a) 14,774 3,535 Reading International, Inc., Class A(a) 22,483 3,935 Red Lion Hotels Corp.(a) 24,043 1,878 Red Robin Gourmet Burgers, Inc.(a) 103,628 11,088 Regal Entertainment Group, Series A 198,475 5,460 Republic Airways Holdings, Inc.(a) 61,862 1,858 Rick's Cabaret International, Inc.(a) 16,035 19,652 Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. 655,198 8,054 Ruby Tuesday, Inc.(a) 74,338 5,434 Ruth's Hospitality Group, Inc. 65,588 7,218 Ryman Hospitality Properties 281,574 7,864 SHFL Entertainment, Inc.(a) 139,271 7,400 Scientific Games Corp., Class A(a) 83,250 3,718 SeaWorld Entertainment, Inc. 130,502 13,132 Six Flags Entertainment Corp. 461,721 6,485 SkyWest, Inc. 87,807 7,843 Sonic Corp.(a) 114,194 1,229 Speedway Motorsports, Inc. 21,385 6,494 Spirit Airlines, Inc.(a) 206,314 1,878 Steiner Leisure Ltd.(a) 99,271 8,009 Texas Roadhouse, Inc., Class A 200,385 3,399 Town Sports International Holdings, Inc. 36,607 1,453 Travelzoo, Inc.(a),(b) 39,609 22,740 US Airways Group, Inc.(a) 373,391 45,974 United Continental Holdings, Inc.(a) 1,438,526 4,918 Vail Resorts, Inc. 302,555 7,610 WMS Industries, Inc.(a) 194,131 38,661 The Wendy's Co. 225,394 4,291 World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. 44,240 ------------ 23,043,822 ------------ Total Common Stocks - 96.6% 470,865,441 ------------ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BENEFICIAL INTEREST (000) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER INTERESTS(e) FIXED LINE TELECOMMUNICATIONS - 0.0% $ 29 Primus Telecommunications Group, Inc. 1 ------------ PHARMACEUTICALS & BIOTECHNOLOGY - 0.0% 3 Merck Contingent Value - ------------ REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS (REITs) - 0.0% 4 AmeriVest Properties, Inc.(a) - ------------
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 67 ================================================================================
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BENEFICIAL INTEREST (000) INDUSTRY/ISSUE VALUE --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TECHNOLOGY HARDWARE & EQUIPMENT - 0.0% $ 4 Gerber Scientific, Inc. - ------------ TRAVEL & LEISURE - 0.0% 13 FRD Acquisition Co. - ------------ Total Other Interests - 0.0% 1 ------------ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PAR (000) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- RIGHTS AUTOMOBILES & PARTS - 0.0% 2,419 Federal-Mogul Corp. (Expires 12/27/14)(a) 411 ------------ Total Rights - 0.0% 411 ------------ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WARRANTS(f) AUTOMOBILES & PARTS - 0.0% 249 Federal-Mogul Corp., Class A (Issued 12/27/07, 1 Share for 1 Warrant, Expires 12/27/14, Strike Price $45.82) (Expires 12/27/14)(a) 2 ------------ OIL & GAS PRODUCERS - 0.0% 1,481 Magnum Hunter Resources Corp. (Issued 8/31/12, 1 Share for 1 Warrant, Expires 10/14/13, Strike Price $10.50) (Expires 10/14/13)(a) - ------------ Total Warrants - 0.0% 2 ------------ Total Long-Term Investments (cost:$309,010,940) - 96.6% 470,865,855 ------------ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BENEFICIAL INTEREST (000) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHORT-TERM SECURITIES $32,268 BlackRock Liquidity Series LLC, Money Market Series, 0.21%(d),(g),(h) $ 32,267,758 ------------ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SHARES --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16,487,365 BlackRock Liquidity Funds, TempCash, Institutional Class, 0.06%(d),(g) 16,487,365 ------------ Total Short-Term Securities (cost: $48,755,123) - 10.0% 48,755,123 ------------ TOTAL INVESTMENTS (cost: $357,766,063*) - 106.6% 519,620,978 ------------ LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS - (6.6)% (32,116,529) ------------ NET ASSETS - 100.0% $487,504,449 ============
================================================================================ 68 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ * As of June 30, 2013, gross unrealized appreciation and gross unrealized depreciation based on cost for federal income tax purposes were as follows: Tax cost $360,836,100 ============ Gross unrealized appreciation $181,873,981 Gross unrealized depreciation (23,089,103) ------------ Net unrealized appreciation $158,784,878 ============
(a) Non-income producing security. (b) Security, or a portion of security, is on loan. (c) All or a portion of security has been pledged in connection with open financial futures contracts. (d) Investments in issuers considered to be an affiliate of the Series during the six months ended June 30, 2013, for purposes of Section 2(a)(3) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, were as follows:
SHARES/ SHARES/ BENEFICIAL SHARES/ BENEFICIAL INTEREST HELD AT BENEFICIAL SHARES/ INTEREST HELD AT VALUE AT DECEMBER 31, INTEREST BENEFICIAL JUNE 30, JUNE 30, AFFILIATE 2012 PURCHASED INTEREST SOLD 2013 2013 INCOME ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ BlackRock Liquidity Funds, TempCash, Institutional Class 11,170,008 5,317,357(1) - 16,487,365 $16,487,365 $ 8,646 BlackRock Liquidity Series LLC, Money Market Series $14,273,670 $17,994,088(1) - $32,267,758 $32,267,758 $175,830 PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust 5,478 - - 5,478 $ 115,312 $ 6,245
(1) Represents net shares/beneficial interest purchased. (e) Other interests represent beneficial interests in liquidation trusts and other reorganization or private entities. (f) Warrants entitle the Series to purchase a predetermined number of shares of common stock and are non-income producing. The purchase price and number of shares are subject to adjustment under certain conditions until the expiration date of the warrants, if any. (g) Represents the current yield as of report date. (h) Security was purchased with the cash collateral from loaned securities. The Series may withdraw up to 25% of its investment daily, although the manager of the BlackRock Liquidity Series LLC, Money Market Series, in its sole discretion, may permit an investor to withdraw more than 25% on any one day. o For Series compliance purposes, the Series' industry classifications refer to any one or more of the industry sub-classifications used by one or more widely recognized market indexes or rating group indexes, and/or as defined by Series' management. These definitions may not apply for purposes of this report, which may combine such industry sub-classifications for reporting ease. o Financial futures contracts as of June 30, 2013 were as follows:
UNREALIZED CONTRACTS NOTIONAL APPRECIATION PURCHASED ISSUE EXCHANGE EXPIRATION VALUE (DEPRECIATION) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 79 Russell ICE 2000 Futures Mini US September Index Indices 2013 $7,700,130 $ 52,637 76 MidCap 400 Chicago September E-Mini Mercantile 2013 $8,800,040 (36,912) -------- TOTAL $ 15,725 ========
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 69 ================================================================================ o Fair Value Measurements - Various inputs are used in determining the fair value of investments and derivative financial instruments. These inputs to valuation techniques are categorized into a disclosure hierarchy consisting of three broad levels for financial statement purposes as follows: o Level 1 -- unadjusted price quotations in active markets/exchanges for identical assets or liabilities that the Series has the ability to access o Level 2 -- other observable inputs (including, but not limited to, quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in markets that are active, quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not active, inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the assets or liabilities (such as interest rates, yield curves, volatilities, prepayment speeds, loss severities, credit risks and default rates) or other market-corroborated inputs) o Level 3 -- unobservable inputs based on the best information available in the circumstances, to the extent observable inputs are not available (including the Series' own assumptions used in determining the fair value of investments and derivative financial instruments) The hierarchy gives the highest priority to unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1 measurements) and the lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3 measurements). Accordingly, the degree of judgment exercised in determining fair value is greatest for instruments categorized in Level 3. The inputs used to measure fair value may fall into different levels of the fair value hierarchy. In such cases, for disclosure purposes, the fair value hierarchy classification is determined based on the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement in its entirety. Changes in valuation techniques may result in transfers into or out of an assigned level within the disclosure hierarchy. In accordance with the Series' policy, transfers between different levels of the fair value disclosure hierarchy are deemed to have occurred as of the beginning of the reporting period. The categorization of a value determined for investments and derivative financial instruments is based on the pricing transparency of the investment and derivative financial instrument and is not necessarily an indication of the risks associated with investing in those securities. For information about the Series' policy regarding valuation of investments and derivative financial instruments, please refer to Note 2 of the Notes to Financial Statements. ================================================================================ 70 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ The following tables summarize the Series' investments and derivative financial instruments categorized in the disclosure hierarchy as of June 30, 2013:
LEVEL 1 LEVEL 2 LEVEL 3 TOTAL ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ASSETS: Investments: Common Stocks: Aerospace & Defense $ 7,274,415 $ - $ - $ 7,274,415 Alternative Energy 416,842 - - 416,842 Automobiles & Parts 8,558,613 - - 8,558,613 Banks 24,172,006 - - 24,172,006 Beverages 338,082 - - 338,082 Chemicals 11,824,382 - - 11,824,382 Construction & Materials 11,949,522 - - 11,949,522 Electricity 8,277,760 - - 8,277,760 Electronic & Electrical Equipment 14,501,085 - - 14,501,085 Financial Services 14,862,551 - - 14,862,551 Fixed Line Telecommunications 1,723,981 - - 1,723,981 Food & Drug Retailers 3,558,804 - - 3,558,804 Food Producers 7,003,998 - - 7,003,998 Food Products 3,233,061 - - 3,233,061 Forestry & Paper 1,549,200 - - 1,549,200 Gas, Water & Multi-Utilities 7,242,092 - - 7,242,092 General Industrials 6,233,893 - - 6,233,893 General Retailers 23,304,786 - - 23,304,786 Health Care Equipment & Services 23,910,914 - - 23,910,914 Household Goods & Home Construction 10,614,715 - - 10,614,715 Industrial Engineering 14,592,673 - - 14,592,673 Industrial Metals & Mining 2,857,651 - - 2,857,651 Industrial Transportation 6,927,755 - - 6,927,755 Leisure Goods 3,898,359 - - 3,898,359 Life Insurance 2,122,544 - - 2,122,544 Media 20,603,091 - - 20,603,091 Mining 2,375,727 - - 2,375,727 Mobile Telecommunications 2,774,187 - - 2,774,187 Nonlife Insurance 18,140,486 - - 18,140,486 Oil & Gas Producers 14,367,252 - - 14,367,252 Oil Equipment, Services & Distribution 16,041,330 - - 16,041,330 Personal Goods 7,463,933 - - 7,463,933 Pharmaceuticals & Biotechnology 22,373,207 1,224,050 - 23,597,257 Real Estate Investment & Services 3,754,203 - - 3,754,203 Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) 43,464,550 - - 43,464,550 Software & Computer Services 29,323,640 - - 29,323,640 Support Services 21,870,316 - - 21,870,316 Technology Hardware & Equipment 22,489,321 - - 22,489,321 Tobacco 606,642 - - 606,642 Travel & Leisure 23,043,822 - - 23,043,822 Other Interests: Fixed Line Telecommunications 1 - - 1 Rights: Automobiles & Parts 411 - - 411 Warrants: Automobiles & Parts 2 - - 2 Short-Term Securities 16,487,365 32,267,758 - 48,755,123 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total $486,129,170 $33,491,808 $ - $519,620,978 =======================================================================================================
================================================================================ SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS | 71 ================================================================================
DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS(1) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEVEL 1 LEVEL 2 LEVEL 3 TOTAL -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ASSETS: Equity contracts $ 52,637 - - $ 52,637 LIABILITIES: Equity contracts (36,912) - - (36,912) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL $ 15,725 - - $ 15,725 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Derivative financial instruments are financial futures contracts, which are valued at the unrealized appreciation/depreciation on the instrument. Certain of the Series' assets and liabilities are held at carrying amount, which approximates fair value for financial statement purposes. As of June 30, 2013, such assets and liabilities are categorized within the disclosure hierarchy as follows:
LEVEL 1 LEVEL 2 LEVEL 3 TOTAL -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ASSETS: Cash $27,818 - - $ 27,818 LIABILITIES: Collateral on securities loaned at value - $(32,267,758) - $(32,267,758) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL $27,818 $(32,267,758) - $(32,239,940) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There were no transfers between levels during the six months ended June 30, 2013. ================================================================================ 72 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES June 30, 2013 (unaudited) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ASSETS Investments at value -- unaffiliated (including securities loaned at value of $31,141,579) (cost -- $308,902,848) $470,750,543 Investments at value - affiliated (cost -- $48,863,215) 48,870,435 Cash 27,818 Dividends receivable 570,876 Contributions receivable from investors 336,389 Investments sold receivable 200,340 Securities lending income receivable -- affiliated 20,695 Prepaid expenses 1,493 ------------ Total assets 520,778,589 ------------ LIABILITIES Collateral on securities loaned at value 32,267,758 Investments purchased payable 847,417 Variation margin payable 36,626 Other affiliates payable 3,536 Investment advisory fees payable 2,642 Directors' fees payable 2,243 Other accrued expenses payable 113,918 ------------ Total liabilities 33,274,140 ------------ NET ASSETS $487,504,449 ============ NET ASSETS CONSIST OF: Investors' capital $325,633,808 Net unrealized appreciation/depreciation 161,870,641 ------------ Net assets $487,504,449 ============
See notes to financial statements. ================================================================================ FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 73 ================================================================================ STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS Six-month period ended June 30, 2013 (unaudited) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVESTMENT INCOME Dividends -- unaffiliated $ 2,734,976 Foreign taxes withheld (3,967) Securities lending -- affiliated - net 175,830 Dividends -- affiliated 14,891 ----------- Total income 2,921,730 ----------- EXPENSES Investment advisory 22,667 Accounting services 62,684 Professional 31,494 Custodian 18,319 Printing 13,512 Directors 9,551 Miscellaneous 3,292 ----------- Total expenses 161,519 Less fees waived and/or reimbursed by Manager (7,057) ----------- Total expenses after fees waived and/or reimbursed 154,462 ----------- NET INVESTMENT INCOME 2,767,268 ----------- REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) Net realized gain from: Investments 6,623,863 Financial futures contracts 2,161,337 ----------- 8,785,200 ----------- Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation on: Investments 51,840,179 Financial futures contracts (149,102) ----------- 51,691,077 ----------- Total realized and unrealized gain 60,476,277 ----------- Net increase in net assets resulting from operations $63,243,545 ===========
See notes to financial statements. ================================================================================ 74 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS Six-month period ended June 30, 2013 (unaudited), and year ended December 31, 2012 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS: 6/30/2013 12/31/2012 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OPERATIONS Net investment income $ 2,767,268 $ 7,371,799 Net realized gain 8,785,200 271,624 Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation 51,691,077 66,917,117 ------------------------------ Net increase in net assets resulting from operations 63,243,545 74,560,540 ------------------------------ CAPITAL TRANSACTIONS Proceeds from contributions 66,762,923 68,284,242 Value of withdrawals (40,806,576) (184,292,124) ------------------------------ Net increase (decrease) in net assets derived from capital transactions 25,956,347 (116,007,882) ------------------------------ NET ASSETS Total increase (decrease) in net assets 89,199,892 (41,447,342) Beginning of period 398,304,557 439,751,899 ------------------------------ End of period $ 487,504,449 $ 398,304,557 ==============================
See notes to financial statements. ================================================================================ FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 75 ================================================================================ FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Per share operating performance for a share outstanding throughout each period is as follows:
SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, (UNAUDITED) YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL INVESTMENT RETURN: Total investment return 15.58%(1) 18.04% (3.55)% 28.65% 37.08% (39.13)% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- RATIOS TO AVERAGE: NET ASSETS Total expenses 0.07%(2) 0.10% 0.08% 0.08% 0.11% 0.11% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Total expenses after fees waived and/or reimbursed 0.07%(2) 0.09% 0.08% 0.08% 0.10% 0.11% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Net investment income 1.22%(2) 1.83% 1.29% 1.30% 1.26% 1.47% ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SUPPLEMENTAL DATA: Net assets, end of period (000) 487,504 $398,305 $439,752 $437,426 $286,216 $199,403 ====================================================================== Portfolio turnover 6% 12% 12% 15% 20% 33% ----------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Aggregate total investment return. (2) Annualized. See notes to financial statements. ================================================================================ 76 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS June 30, 2013 (unaudited) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (1) ORGANIZATION Master Extended Market Index Series (the "Series"), a diversified, open-end management investment company, is a series of Quantitative Master Series LLC (the "Master LLC"). The Master LLC is registered as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"), and is organized as a Delaware limited liability company. The Master LLC's Limited Liability Company Agreement permits the Board of Directors of the Master LLC (the "Board") to issue non-transferable interests in the Master LLC, subject to certain limitations. (2) SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES The Series' financial statements are prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America ("US GAAP"), which may require 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 during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The following is a summary of the significant accounting policies followed by the Series: VALUATION -- US GAAP defines fair value as the price the Series would receive to sell an asset or pay to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. The Series determines the fair value of its financial instruments at market value using independent dealers or pricing services under policies approved by the Board. The BlackRock Global Valuation Methodologies Committee (the "Global Valuation Committee") is the committee formed by management to develop global pricing policies and procedures and to provide oversight of the pricing function for the Series for all financial instruments. ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 77 ================================================================================ Equity investments traded on a recognized securities exchange or the NASDAQ Global Market System ("NASDAQ") are valued at the last reported sale price that day or the NASDAQ official closing price, if applicable. For equity investments traded on more than one exchange, the last reported sale price on the exchange where the stock is primarily traded is used. Equity investments traded on a recognized exchange for which there were no sales on that day are valued at the last available bid (long positions) or ask (short positions) price. If no bid or ask price is available, the prior day's price will be used, unless it is determined that such prior day's price no longer reflects the fair value of the security. Financial futures contracts traded on exchanges are valued at their last sale price. Short-term securities with remaining maturities of 60 days or less may be valued at amortized cost, which approximates fair value. The Series value its investments in BlackRock Liquidity Series, LLC Money Market Series (the "Money Market Series") at fair value, which is ordinarily based upon its pro rata ownership in the underlying fund's net assets. The Money Market Series seeks current income consistent with maintaining liquidity and preserving capital. Although the Money Market Series is not registered under the 1940 Act, its investments will follow the parameters of investments by a money market fund that is subject to Rule 2a-7 under the 1940 Act. The Series may withdraw up to 25% of its investment daily, although the manager of the Money Market Series, in its sole discretion, may permit an investor to withdraw more than 25% on any one day. In the event that application of these methods of valuation results in a price for an investment that is deemed not to be representative of the market value of such investment, or if a price is not available, the investment will be valued by the Global Valuation Committee or its delegate, in accordance with a policy approved by the Board as reflecting fair value ("Fair Value Assets"). When determining the price for Fair Value Assets, the Global Valuation Committee, or its delegate, seeks to determine the price that the Series might reasonably expect to receive from the current sale of that asset in an arm's-length transaction. Fair value determinations shall be based upon all available factors that the Global Valuation Committee or its delegate, deem relevant consistent with the principals of fair value measurement which include the market approach, income approach and/or ================================================================================ 78 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ in the case of recent investments, the cost approach, as appropriate. The market approach generally consists of using comparable market transactions. The income approach generally is used to discount future cash flows to present value and adjusted for liquidity as appropriate. These factors include but are not limited to: (i) attributes specific to the investment or asset; (ii) the principal market for the investment or asset; (iii) the customary participants in the principal market for the investment or asset; (iv) data assumptions by market participants for the investment or asset, if reasonably available; (v) quoted prices for similar investments or assets in active markets; and (vi) other factors, such as future cash flows, interest rates, yield curves, volatilities, prepayment speeds, loss severities, credit risks, recovery rates, liquidation amounts and/or default rates. Due to the inherent uncertainty of valuations of such investments, the fair values may differ from the values that would have been used had an active market existed. The Global Valuation Committee, or its delegate, employs various methods for calibrating valuation approaches for investments where an active market does not exist, including regular due diligence of the Series' pricing vendors, a regular review of key inputs and assumptions, transactional back-testing or disposition analysis to compare unrealized gains and losses to realized gains and losses, reviews of missing or stale prices and large movements in market values and reviews of any market related activity. The pricing of all Fair Value Assets is subsequently reported to the Board or a committee thereof on a quarterly basis. SEGREGATION AND COLLATERALIZATION -- In cases in which the 1940 Act and the interpretive positions of the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") require that the Series either deliver collateral or segregate assets in connection with certain investments (e.g., financial futures contracts), the Series will, consistent with SEC rules and/or certain interpretive letters issued by the SEC, segregate collateral or designate on their books and records cash or liquid securities having a market value at least equal to the amount that would otherwise be required to be physically segregated. Furthermore, based on requirements and agreements with certain exchanges and third party broker-dealers, the Series engaging in such transactions may have requirements to deliver/deposit securities to/with an exchange or broker-dealer as collateral for certain investments. ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 79 ================================================================================ INVESTMENT TRANSACTIONS AND INVESTMENT INCOME -- For financial reporting purposes, investment transactions are recorded on the dates the transactions are entered into (the trade dates). Realized gains and losses on investment transactions are determined on the identified cost basis. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend dates. Upon notification from issuers, some of the dividend income received from a real estate investment trust may be redesignated as a reduction of cost of the related investment and/or realized gain. INCOME TAXES -- The Series is classified as a partnership for federal income tax purposes. As such, each investor in the Series is treated as the owner of its proportionate share of net assets, income, expenses and realized and unrealized gains and losses of the Series. Therefore, no federal income tax provision is required. It is intended that the Series' assets will be managed so an investor in the Series can satisfy the requirements of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. The Series files US federal and various state and local tax returns. No income tax returns are currently under examination. The statute of limitations on the Series' US federal tax returns remains open for each of the four years ended December 31, 2012. The statutes of limitations on the Series' state and local tax returns may remain open for an additional year depending upon the jurisdiction. Management does not believe there are any uncertain tax positions that require recognition of a tax liability. OTHER -- Expenses directly related to the Series are charged to the Series. Other operating expenses shared by several funds are pro rated among those funds on the basis of relative net assets or other appropriate methods. The Series has an arrangement with the custodian whereby fees may be reduced by credits earned on uninvested cash balances, which, if applicable, are shown as fees paid indirectly in the Statement of Operations. The custodian imposes fees on overdrawn cash balances, which can be offset by accumulated credits earned or may result in additional custody charges. ================================================================================ 80 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ (3) SECURITIES AND OTHER INVESTMENTS SECURITIES LENDING -- The Series may lend securities to approved borrowers, such as banks, brokers and other financial institutions. The borrower pledges cash, securities issued or guaranteed by the US government or irrevocable letters of credit issued by a bank as collateral. The initial collateral received by the Series should have a value of at least 102% of the current value of the loaned securities for securities traded on US exchanges and a value of at least 105% for all other securities. The collateral is maintained thereafter in an amount equal to at least 100% of the current market value of the loaned securities. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Series and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Series on the next business day. Securities lending income, as disclosed in the Statement of Operations, represents the income earned from the investment of the cash collateral, net of rebates paid to, or fees paid by, borrowers and less the fees paid to the securities lending agent. During the term of the loan, the Series earns dividend or interest income on the securities loaned but does not receive interest income on the securities received as collateral. Loans of securities are terminable at any time and the borrower, after notice, is required to return borrowed securities within the standard time period for settlement of securities transactions. The market value of securities on loan and the value of the related collateral are shown separately in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as a component of investments at value, and collateral on securities loaned at value, respectively. The cash collateral invested by the securities lending agent, BlackRock Investment Management, LLC ("BIM"), if any, is disclosed in the Schedule of Investments. Securities lending transactions are entered into by the Series under Master Securities Lending Agreements ("MSLA") which provide the right, in the event of default (including bankruptcy or insolvency) for the non-defaulting party to liquidate the collateral and calculate a net exposure to the defaulting party or request additional collateral. In the event that a borrower defaults, the Series, as lender, would offset the market value of the collateral received against the market value of the securities loaned. The value of the collateral ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 81 ================================================================================ is typically greater than that of the market value of the securities loaned, leaving the lender with a net amount payable to the defaulting party. However, bankruptcy or insolvency laws of a particular jurisdiction may impose restrictions on or prohibitions against such a right of offset in the event of a MSLA counterparty's bankruptcy or insolvency. Under the MSLA, the Series can reinvest cash collateral, or, upon an event of default, resell or repledge the collateral, and the borrower can resell or repledge the loaned securities. The following table is a summary of the Series' open securities lending agreements by counterparty which are subject to offset under a MSLA as of June 30, 2013:
SECURITIES LOANED AT CASH COLLATERAL NET COUNTERPARTY VALUE RECEIVED(1) AMOUNT(2) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Barclays Capital, Inc. $ 242,705 $ (242,705) -- BNP Paribas S.A. 22,788 (22,788) -- Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. 370,244 (369,755) $489 Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC 10,397,961 (10,397,961) -- Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. 738,950 (738,950) -- Goldman Sachs & Co 1,719,245 (1,719,245) -- JPMorgan Securitas LLC 408,541 (408,541) -- Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. 87,208 (87,208) -- Morgan Stanley 16,483,082 (16,483,082) -- SG Americas Securities LLC 4,774 (4,774) -- UBS Securities LLC 666,081 (666,081) -- ------------------------------------------------ TOTAL $31,141,579 $(31,141,090) $489 ================================================
(1) Excess of collateral received from the individual counterparty is not shown for financial reporting purposes. Collateral with a value of $32,267,758 has been received in connection with securities lending transactions. (2) The market value of the loaned securities is determined as of June 30, 2013. Additional collateral is delivered to the Series on the next business day in accordance with the MSLA. The net amount would be subject to the borrower default indemnity in the event of default by the counterparty. The risks of securities lending also include the risk that the borrower may not provide additional collateral when required or may not return the securities when due. To mitigate this risk, the Series benefits from a ================================================================================ 82 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ borrower default indemnity provided by BlackRock, Inc. ("BlackRock"). BlackRock's indemnity allows for full replacement of securities lent. The Series also could suffer a loss if the value of an investment purchased with cash collateral falls below the market value of loaned securities or if the value of an investment purchased with cash collateral falls below the value of the original cash collateral received. During the six months ended June 30, 2013, any securities on loan were collateralized by cash. (4) DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS The Series engages in various portfolio investment strategies using derivative contracts both to increase the returns of the Series and/or to economically hedge, or protect, its exposure to certain risks such as equity risk. These contracts may be transacted on an exchange. FINANCIAL FUTURES CONTRACTS -- The Series purchases and/or sells financial futures contracts and options on financial futures contracts to gain exposure to, or economically hedge against, changes in the value of equity securities (equity risk). Financial futures contracts are agreements between the Series and a counterparty to buy or sell a specific quantity of an underlying instrument at a specified price and at a specified date. Depending on the terms of the particular contract, financial futures contracts are settled either through physical delivery of the underlying instrument on the settlement date or by payment of a cash settlement amount on the settlement date. Upon entering into a financial futures contract, the Series is required to deposit initial margin with the broker in the form of cash or securities in an amount that varies depending on a contract's size and risk profile. The initial margin deposit must then be maintained at an established level over the life of the contract. Securities deposited as initial margin are designated on the Schedule of Investments and cash deposited is recorded on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as cash pledged for financial futures contracts. Pursuant to the contract, the Series agrees to receive from or pay to the broker an amount of cash equal to the daily fluctuation in value of the contract. Such receipts or payments are known as variation margin and are recorded by the Series as unrealized appreciation or depreciation. When the contract is closed, the Series records a realized gain or loss equal to the difference between the value of the ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 83 ================================================================================ contract at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was closed. The use of financial futures contracts involves the risk of an imperfect correlation in the movements in the price of financial futures contracts, interest or foreign currency exchange rates and the underlying assets. The following is a summary of the Series' derivative financial instruments categorized by risk exposure: FAIR VALUES OF DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS AS OF JUNE 30, 2013
DERIVATIVE ASSETS ----------------------------------------------- STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES LOCATION VALUE ----------------------------------------------- Equity contracts Net unrealized appreciation(1) $15,725 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Includes cumulative appreciation/depreciation on financial futures contracts as reported in the Schedule of Investments. Only current day's variation margin is reported within the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. THE EFFECT OF DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS IN THE STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 2013 Net Realized Gain From Equity contracts Financial futures contracts $2,161,337 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation/Depreciation on Equity contracts Financial futures contracts $ (149,102) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the six months ended June 30, 2013, the average quarterly balances of outstanding derivative financial instruments were as follows: FINANCIAL FUTURES CONTRACTS: Average number of contracts purchased 166 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Average number of contracts sold 1 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Average notional value of contracts purchased $17,449,225 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Average notional value of contracts sold $ 115,100 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COUNTERPARTY CREDIT RISK -- A derivative contract may suffer a mark to market loss if the value of the contract decreases due to an unfavorable change in the market rates or values of the underlying instrument. Losses can also occur if the counterparty does not perform under the contract. ================================================================================ 84 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ With exchange traded futures there is less counterparty credit risk to the Series since the exchange or clearinghouse, as counterparty to such instruments, guarantees against a possible default. The clearinghouse stands between the buyer and the seller of the contract; therefore, the credit risk is limited to failure of the clearinghouse. While offset rights may exist under applicable law, the Series does not have a contractual right to offset against a clearing broker or clearinghouse in the event of a default (including the bankruptcy or insolvency) of the clearing broker or clearing house. Additionally, credit risk exists in exchange traded futures with respect to initial and variation margin that is held in a clearing broker's customer accounts. While clearing brokers are required to segregate customer margin from their own assets, in the event that a clearing broker becomes insolvent or goes into bankruptcy and at that time there is a shortfall in the aggregate amount of margin held by the clearing broker for all its clients, typically the shortfall would be allocated on a pro rata basis across all the clearing broker's customers, potentially resulting in losses to the Series. (5) INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. is the largest stockholder and an affiliate, for 1940 Act purposes, of BlackRock. The Master LLC, on behalf of the Series, entered into an Investment Advisory Agreement with BlackRock Advisors, LLC (the "Manager"), the Series' investment advisor, an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of BlackRock, to provide investment advisory and administration services. The Manager is responsible for the management of the Series' portfolio and provides the necessary personnel, facilities, equipment and certain other services necessary to the operations of the Series. For such services, the Series pays the Manager a monthly fee at an annual rate of 0.01% of the Series' average daily net assets. The Manager voluntarily agreed to waive its investment advisory fees by the amount of investment advisory fees the Series pays to the Manager indirectly through its investment in affiliated money market funds. However, the Manager does not waive its investment advisory fees by the amount of investment advisory fees paid in connection with the Series' investment ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 85 ================================================================================ in other affiliated investment companies, if any. This amount is included in fees waived and/or reimbursed by Manager in the Statement of Operations. For the six months ended June 30, 2013, the amount waived was $7,057. The Manager entered into a sub-advisory agreement with BIM, an affiliate of the Manager. The Manager pays BIM, for services it provides, a monthly fee that is a percentage of the investment advisory fees paid by the Series to the Manager. For the six months ended June 30, 2013, the Series reimbursed the Manager $1,829 for certain accounting services, which is included in accounting services in the Statement of Operations. The Manager contractually agreed to waive and/or reimburse fees or expenses, excluding interest expense, dividend expense, acquired fund fees and expenses and certain other fund expenses, which constitute extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of the Series' business, in order to limit expenses to 0.12% of the Series' average daily net assets. The Manager has agreed not to reduce or discontinue this contractual waiver or reimbursement prior to May 1, 2014 unless approved by the Board, including a majority of the Independent Trustees. There were no fees waived and/or reimbursed by Manager for the six months ended June 30, 2013. The Master LLC, on behalf of the Series, received an exemptive order from the SEC permitting it, among other things, to pay an affiliated securities lending agent a fee based on a share of the income derived from the securities lending activities and has retained BIM as the securities lending agent. BIM may, on behalf of the Series, invest cash collateral received by the Series for such loans, in a private investment company managed by the Manager or in registered money market funds advised by the Manager or its affiliates. The market value of securities on loan and the value of the related collateral, if applicable, is shown in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as securities loaned at value and collateral on securities loaned at value, respectively. The cash collateral invested by BIM, if any, is disclosed in the Schedule of Investments. Securities lending income is ================================================================================ 86 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ equal to the total of income earned from the reinvestment of cash collateral, net of rebates paid to, or fees paid by, borrowers of securities. The Series retains 65% of securities lending income and pays a fee to BIM equal to 35% of such income. The Series benefits from a borrower default indemnity provided by BlackRock. As securities lending agent, BIM bears all operational costs directly related to securities lending as well as the cost of borrower default indemnification. BIM does not receive any fees for managing the cash collateral. The share of income earned by the Series is shown as securities lending -- affiliated -- net in the Statement of Operations. For the six months ended June 30, 2013, BIM received $188,984 in securities lending agent fees related to securities lending activities for the Series. Certain officers and/or directors of the Master LLC are officers and/or directors of BlackRock or its affiliates. (6) PURCHASES AND SALES Purchases and sales of investments, excluding short-term securities for the six months ended June 30, 2013, were $51,970,895 and $25,349,342, respectively. (7) BANK BORROWINGS The Series, along with certain other funds managed by the Manager and its affiliates ("Participating Funds"), is a party to a 364-day, $800 million credit agreement with a group of lenders, under which the Series may borrow to fund shareholder redemptions. The agreement expires in April 2014. Excluding commitments designated for a certain individual fund, other Participating Funds, including the Series, can borrow up to an aggregate commitment amount of $500 million, subject to asset coverage and other limitations as specified in the agreement. The credit agreement has the following terms: a fee of 0.065% per annum on unused commitment amounts and interest at a rate equal to the higher of (a) the one-month LIBOR plus 0.80% per annum or (b) the Fed Funds rate plus 0.80% per annum on amounts borrowed. Participating Funds paid administration and arrangement fees, which, along with commitment fees, were allocated among such funds based upon portions of the aggregate commitment available to them and relative net assets of Participating Funds. The Series ================================================================================ NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS | 87 ================================================================================ did not borrow under the credit agreement during the six months ended June 30, 2013. (8) CONCENTRATION, MARKET AND CREDIT RISK In the normal course of business, the Series invests in securities and enters into transactions where risks exist due to fluctuations in the market (market risk) or failure of the issuer of a security to meet all its obligations (issuer credit risk). The value of securities held by the Series may decline in response to certain events, including those directly involving the issuers whose securities are owned by the Series; conditions affecting the general economy; overall market changes; local, regional or global political, social or economic instability; and currency and interest rate and price fluctuations. Similar to issuer credit risk, the Series may be exposed to counterparty credit risk, or the risk that an entity with which the Series has unsettled or open transactions may fail to or be unable to perform on its commitments. The Series manages counterparty credit risk by entering into transactions only with counterparties that it believes have the financial resources to honor their obligations and by monitoring the financial stability of those counterparties. Financial assets, which potentially expose the Series to market, issuer and counterparty credit risks, consist principally of financial instruments and receivables due from counterparties. The extent of the Series' exposure to market, issuer and counterparty credit risks with respect to these financial assets is generally approximated by their value recorded in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities, less any collateral held by the Series. As of June 30, 2013, the Series invested a significant portion of its assets in securities in the financials sector. Changes in economic conditions affecting the financials sector would have a greater impact on the Series and could affect the value, income and/or liquidity of positions in such securities. (9) SUBSEQUENT EVENTS Management has evaluated the impact of all subsequent events on the Series through the date the financial statements were issued and has determined that there were no subsequent events requiring adjustment or additional disclosure in the financial statements. ================================================================================ 88 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENTS June 30, 2013 (unaudited) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DISCLOSURE OF INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT AND SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT The Board of Directors (the "Board," and the members of which are referred to as "Board Members") of Quantitative Master Series LLC (the "Master LLC") met in person on April 11, 2013 (the "April Meeting") and May 21-22, 2013 (the "May Meeting") to consider the approval of the Master LLC's investment advisory agreement (the "Advisory Agreement") with BlackRock Advisors, LLC (the "Manager"), the Master LLC's investment advisor, on behalf of Master Extended Market Index Series (the "Portfolio"), a series of the Master LLC. The Board also considered the approval of the sub-advisory agreement (the "Sub-Advisory Agreement") between the Manager and BlackRock Investment Management, LLC (the "Sub-Advisor") with respect to the Portfolio. The Manager and the Sub-Advisor are referred to herein as "BlackRock." The Advisory Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement are referred to herein as the "Agreements." ACTIVITIES AND COMPOSITION OF THE BOARD The Board consists of fourteen individuals, twelve of whom are not "interested persons" of the Master LLC as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act") (the "Independent Board Members"). The Board Members are responsible for the oversight of the operations of the Portfolio and perform the various duties imposed on the directors of investment companies by the 1940 Act. The Independent Board Members have retained independent legal counsel to assist them in connection with their duties. The Co-Chairs of the Board are each Independent Board Members. The Board has established five standing committees: an Audit Committee, a Governance and Nominating Committee, a Compliance Committee, a Performance Oversight and Contract Committee and an Executive Committee, each of which is chaired by an Independent ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENTS | 89 ================================================================================ Board Member and composed of Independent Board Members (except for the Executive Committee, which also has one interested Board Member). THE AGREEMENTS Pursuant to the 1940 Act, the Board is required to consider the continuation of the Agreements on an annual basis. The Board has four quarterly meetings per year, each extending over two days, and a fifth one-day meeting to consider specific information surrounding the consideration of renewing the Agreements. In connection with this process, the Board assessed, among other things, the nature, scope and quality of the services provided to the Portfolio by BlackRock, its personnel and its affiliates, including investment management, administrative and shareholder services, oversight of fund accounting and custody, marketing services, risk oversight, compliance and assistance in meeting applicable legal and regulatory requirements. The Board, acting directly and through its committees, considers at each of its meetings, and from time to time as appropriate, factors that are relevant to its annual consideration of the renewal of the Agreements, including the services and support provided by BlackRock to the Portfolio and its interest holders. Among the matters the Board considered were: (a) investment performance for one-year, three-year, five-year and/or since inception periods, as applicable, against peer funds, and applicable benchmarks, if any, as well as senior management's and portfolio managers' analysis of the reasons for any over performance or underperformance against its peers and/or benchmark, as applicable; (b) fees, including advisory, administration, if applicable, and other amounts paid to BlackRock and its affiliates by the Portfolio for services, such as marketing and distribution, call center and fund accounting; (c) Portfolio operating expenses and how BlackRock allocates expenses to the Portfolio; (d) the resources devoted to, risk oversight of, and compliance reports relating to, implementation of the Portfolio's investment objective, policies and restrictions; (e) the Master LLC's compliance with its Code of Ethics and other compliance policies and procedures; (f) the nature, cost and character of non-investment management services provided by BlackRock and its affiliates; (g) BlackRock's and other service providers' internal controls and ================================================================================ 90 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ risk and compliance oversight mechanisms; (h) BlackRock's implementation of the proxy voting policies approved by the Board; (i) the use of brokerage commissions and execution quality of portfolio transactions; (j) BlackRock's implementation of the Portfolio's valuation and liquidity procedures; (k) an analysis of management fees for products with similar investment objectives across the open-end fund, exchange-traded fund ("ETF"), closed-end fund and institutional account product channels, as applicable; (l) BlackRock's compensation methodology for its investment professionals and the incentives it creates; and (m) periodic updates on BlackRock's business. The Board has engaged in an ongoing strategic review with BlackRock of opportunities to consolidate funds and of BlackRock's commitment to investment performance. In addition, the Board requested and BlackRock provided an analysis of fair valuation and stale pricing policies. BlackRock also furnished information to the Board in response to specific questions. These questions covered issues such as BlackRock's profitability, investment performance and management fee levels. The Board further considered the importance of: (i) organizational and structural variables to investment performance; (ii) rates of portfolio turnover; (iii) BlackRock's performance accountability for portfolio managers; (iv) marketing support for the funds; (v) services provided to the Portfolio by BlackRock affiliates; and (vi) BlackRock's oversight of relationships with third party service providers. BOARD CONSIDERATIONS IN APPROVING THE AGREEMENTS THE APPROVAL PROCESS -- Prior to the April Meeting, the Board requested and received materials specifically relating to the Agreements. The Board is engaged in a process with its independent legal counsel and BlackRock to review the nature and scope of the information provided to better assist its deliberations. The materials provided in connection with the April Meeting included (a) information independently compiled and prepared by Lipper, Inc. ("Lipper") on Portfolio fees and expenses as compared with a peer group of funds as determined by Lipper ("Expense Peers") and the investment performance of the Portfolio as compared with a peer group of funds as determined by Lipper(1), as well as the gross investment (1) Lipper ranks funds in quartiles, ranging from first to fourth, where first is the most desirable quartile position and fourth is the least desirable. ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENTS | 91 ================================================================================ performance of the Portfolio as compared with its benchmark; (b) information on the profits realized by BlackRock and its affiliates pursuant to the Agreements and a discussion of fall-out benefits to BlackRock and its affiliates; (c) a general analysis provided by BlackRock concerning investment management fees charged to other clients, such as institutional clients, ETFs and closed-end funds, under similar investment mandates, as well as the performance of such other clients, as applicable; (d) review of non-management fees; (e) the existence, impact and sharing of potential economies of scale; (f) a summary of aggregate amounts paid by the Portfolio to BlackRock; (g) sales and redemption data regarding the Portfolio's shares; and (h) if applicable, a comparison of management fees to similar BlackRock open-end funds, as classified by Lipper. At the April Meeting, the Board reviewed materials relating to its consideration of the Agreements. As a result of the discussions that occurred during the April Meeting, and as a culmination of the Board's year-long deliberative process, the Board presented BlackRock with questions and requests for additional information. BlackRock responded to these requests with additional written information in advance of the May Meeting. At the May Meeting, the Board, including the Independent Board Members, unanimously approved the continuation of the Advisory Agreement between the Manager and the Master LLC with respect to the Portfolio and the Sub-Advisory Agreement between the Manager and the Sub-Advisor with respect to the Portfolio, each for a one-year term ending June 30, 2014. In approving the continuation of the Agreements, the Board considered: (a) the nature, extent and quality of the services provided by BlackRock; (b) the investment performance of the Portfolio and BlackRock; (c) the advisory fee and the cost of the services and profits to be realized by BlackRock and its affiliates from their relationship with the Portfolio; (d) the Fund's costs to investors compared to the costs of Expense Peers and performance compared to the relevant performance comparison as previously discussed; (e) economies of scale; (f) fall-out benefits to BlackRock as a result of its relationship with the Portfolio; and (g) other factors deemed relevant by the Board Members. ================================================================================ 92 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ The Board also considered other matters it deemed important to the approval process, such as payments made to BlackRock or its affiliates relating to securities lending, services related to the valuation and pricing of portfolio holdings of the Portfolio, direct and indirect benefits to BlackRock and its affiliates from their relationship with the Portfolio and advice from independent legal counsel with respect to the review process and materials submitted for the Board's review. The Board noted the willingness of BlackRock personnel to engage in open, candid discussions with the Board. The Board did not identify any particular information as determinative, and each Board Member may have attributed different weights to the various items considered. NATURE, EXTENT AND QUALITY OF THE SERVICES PROVIDED BY BLACKROCK -- The Board, including the Independent Board Members, reviewed the nature, extent and quality of services provided by BlackRock, including the investment advisory services and the resulting performance of the Portfolio. Throughout the year, the Board compared Portfolio performance to the performance of a comparable group of mutual funds and/or the performance of a relevant benchmark, if any. The Board met with BlackRock's senior management personnel responsible for investment operations, including the senior investment officers. The Board also reviewed the materials provided by the Portfolio's portfolio management team discussing Portfolio performance and the Portfolio's investment objective, strategies and outlook. The Board considered, among other factors, with respect to BlackRock: the number, education and experience of investment personnel generally and the Portfolio's portfolio management team; investments by portfolio managers in the funds they manage; portfolio trading capabilities; use of technology; commitment to compliance; credit analysis capabilities; risk analysis and oversight capabilities; and the approach to training and retaining portfolio managers and other research, advisory and management personnel. The Board engaged in a review of BlackRock's compensation structure with respect to the Portfolio's portfolio management team and BlackRock's ability to attract and retain high-quality talent and create performance incentives. ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENTS | 93 ================================================================================ In addition to advisory services, the Board considered the quality of the administrative and other non-investment advisory services provided to the Portfolio. BlackRock and its affiliates provide the Portfolio with certain administrative, shareholder and other services (in addition to any such services provided to the Portfolio by third parties) and officers and other personnel as are necessary for the operations of the Portfolio. In particular, BlackRock and its affiliates provide the Portfolio with the following administrative services, including, among others: (i) preparing disclosure documents, such as the prospectus, the summary prospectus (as applicable), the statement of additional information and periodic shareholder reports; (ii) assisting with daily accounting and pricing; (iii) overseeing and coordinating the activities of other service providers; (iv) organizing Board meetings and preparing the materials for such Board meetings; (v) providing legal and compliance support; (vi) furnishing analytical and other support to assist the Board in its consideration of strategic issues such as the merger or consolidation of certain open-end funds; and (vii) performing other administrative functions necessary for the operation of the Portfolio, such as tax reporting, fulfilling regulatory filing requirements and call center services. The Board reviewed the structure and duties of BlackRock's fund administration, shareholder services, legal and compliance departments and considered BlackRock's policies and procedures for assuring compliance with applicable laws and regulations. THE INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE OF THE PORTFOLIO AND BLACKROCK -- The Board, including the Independent Board Members, also reviewed and considered the performance history of the Portfolio. In preparation for the April Meeting, the Board worked with its independent legal counsel, BlackRock and Lipper to develop a template for, and was provided with, reports independently prepared by Lipper, which included a comprehensive analysis of the Portfolio's performance. The Board also reviewed a narrative and statistical analysis of the Lipper data that was prepared by BlackRock, which analyzed various factors that affect Lipper's rankings. In connection with its review, the Board received and reviewed information regarding the investment performance of the Portfolio as compared to other funds in its applicable Lipper category and the gross investment performance of the Portfolio as compared with its benchmark. The Board was provided ================================================================================ 94 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ with a description of the methodology used by Lipper to select peer funds and periodically meets with Lipper representatives to review its methodology. The Board and its Performance Oversight and Contract Committee regularly review, and meet with Portfolio management to discuss, the performance of the Portfolio throughout the year. The Board noted that the Portfolio's gross performance (before fees and expenses), as agreed upon by the Board, was within tolerance of its benchmark during each of the one-, three- and five-year periods reported. BlackRock believes that gross performance relative to the benchmark is an appropriate performance metric for the Portfolio. The Board noted that BlackRock has recently made, and continues to make, changes to the organization of BlackRock's overall portfolio management structure designed to result in strengthened leadership teams. CONSIDERATION OF THE ADVISORY/MANAGEMENT FEES AND THE COST OF THE SERVICES AND PROFITS TO BE REALIZED BY BLACKROCK AND ITS AFFILIATES FROM THEIR RELATIONSHIP WITH THE PORTFOLIO -- The Board, including the Independent Board Members, reviewed the Portfolio's contractual management fee rate compared with the other funds in its Lipper category. The contractual management fee rate represents a combination of the advisory fee and any administrative fees, before taking into account any reimbursements or fee waivers. The Board also compared the Portfolio's total net operating expense ratio, as well as actual management fee rate, to those of other funds in its Lipper category. The total net operating expense ratio and actual management fee rate both give effect to any expense reimbursements or fee waivers that benefit the funds. The Board considered the services provided and the fees charged by BlackRock to other types of clients with similar investment mandates, including institutional accounts. The Board received and reviewed statements relating to BlackRock's financial condition. The Board was also provided with a profitability analysis that detailed the revenues earned and the expenses incurred by BlackRock for services provided to the Portfolio. The Board reviewed BlackRock's profitability with respect to the Portfolio and other funds the Board currently oversees for the year ended December 31, 2012 compared to ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENTS | 95 ================================================================================ available aggregate profitability data provided for the two prior years. The Board reviewed BlackRock's profitability with respect to certain other fund complexes managed by the Manager and/or its affiliates. The Board reviewed BlackRock's assumptions and methodology of allocating expenses in the profitability analysis, noting the inherent limitations in allocating costs among various advisory products. The Board recognized that profitability may be affected by numerous factors including, among other things, fee waivers and expense reimbursements by the Manager, the types of funds managed, precision of expense allocations and business mix. As a result, comparing profitability is difficult. The Board noted that, in general, individual fund or product line profitability of other advisors is not publicly available. The Board reviewed BlackRock's overall operating margin, in general, compared to that of certain other publicly-traded asset management firms. The Board considered the differences between BlackRock and these other firms, including the contribution of technology at BlackRock, BlackRock's expense management, and the relative product mix. In addition, the Board considered the cost of the services provided to the Portfolio by BlackRock, and BlackRock's and its affiliates' profits relating to the management and distribution of the Portfolio and the other funds advised by BlackRock and its affiliates. As part of its analysis, the Board reviewed BlackRock's methodology in allocating its costs to the management of the Portfolio. The Board also considered whether BlackRock has the financial resources necessary to attract and retain high quality investment management personnel to perform its obligations under the Agreements and to continue to provide the high quality of services that is expected by the Board. The Board noted that the Portfolio's contractual management fee rate ranked in the first quartile relative to the Portfolio's Expense Peers. The Board also noted that BlackRock has contractually agreed to a cap on the Portfolio's total net operating expenses as a percentage of the Portfolio's average daily net assets. ECONOMIES OF SCALE -- The Board, including the Independent Board Members, considered the extent to which economies of scale might be ================================================================================ 96 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ realized as the assets of the Portfolio increase, as well as the existence of expense caps, as applicable. The Board also considered the extent to which the Portfolio benefits from such economies and whether there should be changes in the advisory fee rate or breakpoint structure in order to enable the Portfolio to participate in these economies of scale, for example through the use of breakpoints in the advisory fee based upon the asset level of the Portfolio. In its consideration, the Board took into account the existence of any expense caps and further considered the continuation and/or implementation, as applicable, of such caps. OTHER FACTORS DEEMED RELEVANT BY THE BOARD MEMBERS -- The Board, including the Independent Board Members, also took into account other ancillary or "fall-out" benefits that BlackRock or its affiliates may derive from their respective relationships with the Portfolio, both tangible and intangible, such as BlackRock's ability to leverage its investment professionals who manage other portfolios and risk management personnel, an increase in BlackRock's profile in the investment advisory community, and the engagement of BlackRock's affiliates as service providers to the Portfolio, including for administrative, distribution, securities lending and cash management services. The Board also considered BlackRock's overall operations and its efforts to expand the scale of, and improve the quality of, its operations. The Board also noted that BlackRock may use and benefit from third party research obtained by soft dollars generated by certain registered fund transactions to assist in managing all or a number of its other client accounts. The Board further noted that it had considered the investment by BlackRock's funds in ETFs without any offset against the management fees payable by the funds to BlackRock. In connection with its consideration of the Agreements, the Board also received information regarding BlackRock's brokerage and soft dollar practices. The Board received reports from BlackRock which included information on brokerage commissions and trade execution practices throughout the year. CONCLUSION -- The Board, including the Independent Board Members, unanimously approved the continuation of the Advisory Agreement ================================================================================ ADVISORY AGREEMENTS | 97 ================================================================================ between the Manager and the Master LLC with respect to the Portfolio for a one-year term ending June 30, 2014, and the Sub-Advisory Agreement between the Manager and the Sub-Advisor with respect to the Portfolio for a one-year term ending June 30, 2014. Based upon its evaluation of all of the aforementioned factors in their totality, the Board, including the Independent Board Members, was satisfied that the terms of the Agreements were fair and reasonable and in the best interest of the Portfolio and its interest holders. In arriving at its decision to approve the Agreements, the Board did not identify any single factor or group of factors as all-important or controlling, but considered all factors together, and different Board Members may have attributed different weights to the various factors considered. The Independent Board Members were also assisted by the advice of independent legal counsel in making this determination. The contractual fee arrangements for the Portfolio reflect the results of several years of review by the Board Members and predecessor Board Members, and discussions between such Board Members (and predecessor Board Members) and BlackRock. As a result, the Board Members' conclusions may be based in part on their consideration of these arrangements in prior years. ================================================================================ 98 | MASTER EXTENDED MARKET INDEX SERIES ================================================================================ TRUSTEES Daniel S. McNamara Robert L. Mason, Ph.D. Barbara B. Ostdiek, Ph.D. Michael F. Reimherr Paul L. McNamara -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ADMINISTRATOR AND USAA Asset Management Company INVESTMENT ADVISER P.O. Box 659453 San Antonio, Texas 78265-9825 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- UNDERWRITER AND USAA Investment Management Company DISTRIBUTOR P.O. Box 659453 San Antonio, Texas 78265-9825 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TRANSFER AGENT USAA Shareholder Account Services 9800 Fredericksburg Road San Antonio, Texas 78288 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CUSTODIAN JP Morgan Chase Bank 4 Chase Metrotech Center Brooklyn, New York 11245 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ACCOUNTING AGENT State Street Bank and Trust Company 100 Summer Street Boston, Massachusetts 02110 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INDEPENDENT Ernst & Young LLP REGISTERED PUBLIC 100 West Houston St., Suite 1800 ACCOUNTING FIRM San Antonio, Texas 78205 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MUTUAL FUND Under "My Accounts" on SELF-SERVICE 24/7 usaa.com select "Investments," AT USAA.COM then "Mutual Funds" OR CALL Under "Investments" view (800) 531-USAA account balances, or click (8722) "I want to...," and select the desired action. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copies of the Manager's proxy voting policies and procedures, approved by the Trust's Board of Trustees for use in voting proxies on behalf of the Fund, are available without charge (i) by calling (800) 531-USAA (8722); (ii) at USAA.COM; and (iii) in summary within the Statement of Additional Information on the SEC's website at HTTP://WWW.SEC.GOV. Information regarding how the Fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 is available without charge (i) at USAA.COM; and (ii) on the SEC's website at HTTP://WWW.SEC.GOV. The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. These Forms N-Q are available at no charge (i) by calling (800) 531-USAA (8722); (ii) at USAA.COM; and (iii) on the SEC's website at HTTP://WWW.SEC.GOV. These Forms N-Q also may be reviewed and copied at the SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. Information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling (800) 732-0330. ================================================================================ USAA 9800 Fredericksburg Road -------------- San Antonio, TX 78288 PRSRT STD U.S. Postage PAID USAA -------------- >> SAVE PAPER AND FUND COSTS Under MY PROFILE on USAA.COM select MANAGE PREFERENCES Set your DOCUMENT PREFERENCES to USAA DOCUMENTS ONLINE. [LOGO OF USAA] USAA WE KNOW WHAT IT MEANS TO SERVE.(R) ============================================================================= 37757-0813 (C)2013, USAA. All rights reserved. ITEM 2. CODE OF ETHICS. NOT APPLICABLE. This item must be disclosed only in annual reports. ITEM 3. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT. NOT APPLICABLE. This item must be disclosed only in annual reports. ITEM 4. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES. NOT APPLICABLE. This item must be disclosed only in annual reports. ITEM 5. AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS. Not Applicable. ITEM 6. SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS. Filed as part of the report to shareholders. ITEM 7. DISCLOSURE OF PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES. Not Applicable. ITEM 8. PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES. Not Applicable. ITEM 9. PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS. Not Applicable. ITEM 10. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS. The Corporate Governance Committee selects and nominates candidates for membership on the Board as independent directors. Currently, there is no procedure for shareholders to recommend candidates to serve on the Board. ITEM 11. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES The principal executive officer and principal financial officer of USAA Mutual Funds Trust (Trust) have concluded that the Trust's disclosure controls and procedures are sufficient to ensure that information required to be disclosed by the Trust in this Form N-CSR/S was recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission's rules and forms, based upon such officers' evaluation of these controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of the report. There were no significant changes or corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies or material weaknesses in the Trust's internal controls or in other factors that could significantly affect the Trust's internal controls subsequent to the date of their evaluation. The only change to the procedures was to document the annual disclosure controls and procedures established for the new section of the shareholder reports detailing the factors considered by the Funds' Board in approving the Funds' advisory agreements. ITEM 12. EXHIBITS. (a)(1). NOT APPLICABLE. This item must be disclosed only in annual reports. (a)(2). Certification pursuant to Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-2(a)) is filed and attached hereto as Exhibit 99.CERT. (a)(3). Not Applicable. (b). Certification pursuant to Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-2(b))is filed and attached hereto as Exhibit 99.906CERT. SIGNATURES Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized. Registrant: USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST, Period Ended June 30, 2013 By:* /S/ JAMES G. WHETZEL ----------------------------------------------------------- Signature and Title: JAMES G. WHETZEL, Secretary Date: 08/22/2013 ------------------------------ Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated. By:* /S/ DANIEL S. MCNAMARA ----------------------------------------------------- Signature and Title: Daniel S. McNamara, President Date: 08/26/2013 ------------------------------ By:* /S/ ROBERTO GALINDO, JR. ----------------------------------------------------- Signature and Title: Roberto Galindo, Jr., Treasurer Date: 08/23/2013 ------------------------------ *Print the name and title of each signing officer under his or her signature.
EX-99.CERT 2 ncsrscert063013.txt USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST, CERTIFICATION, 06/30/2013 Certifications I, DANIEL S. MCNAMARA, certify that: ------------------ 1. I have reviewed the reports on Form N-CSR/S for the period ending June 30, 2013 for the following funds of USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST: S&P 500 Index Fund Reward Shares Ultra Short Term Bond Fund S&P 500 Index Fund Member Shares Target Retirement Income Fund Total Return Strategy Fund Target Retirement 2020 Fund Real Return Fund Shares Target Retirement 2030 Fund Real Return Fund Institutional Shares Target Retirement 2040 Fund Extended Market Index Fund Target Retirement 2050 Fund Nasdaq - 100 Index Fund Global Opportunities Fund 2. Based on my knowledge, these reports do not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by these reports; 3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in these reports, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the Registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in these reports; 4. The Registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the Registrant and have: (a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the Registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which these reports are being prepared; (b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles; (c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the Registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in these reports our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based on such evaluation; and (d) Disclosed in these reports any change in the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the Registrant's most recent fiscal half-year (the Registrant's second fiscal half-year in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and 5. The Registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed to the Registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the Registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions): (a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the Registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and (b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting. Date: 08/26/2013 /S/ DANIEL S. MCNAMARA ------------------- ---------------------------------------- Daniel S. McNamara President I, ROBERTO GALINDO, JR., certify that: -------------------- 1. I have reviewed the reports on Form N-CSR/S for the period ending June 30, 2013 for the following funds of USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST: S&P 500 Index Fund Reward Shares Ultra Short Term Bond Fund S&P 500 Index Fund Member Shares Target Retirement Income Fund Total Return Strategy Fund Target Retirement 2020 Fund Real Return Fund Shares Target Retirement 2030 Fund Real Return Fund Institutional Shares Target Retirement 2040 Fund Extended Market Index Fund Target Retirement 2050 Fund Nasdaq - 100 Index Fund Global Opportunities Fund 2. Based on my knowledge, these reports do not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by these reports; 3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in these reports, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the Registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in these reports; 4. The Registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the Registrant and have: (a) designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the Registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which these reports are being prepared; (b) designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles; (c) evaluated the effectiveness of the Registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in these reports our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based such evaluation; and (d) disclosed in these reports any change in the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the Registrant's most recent fiscal half-year (the Registrant's second fiscal half-year in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting; and 5. The Registrant's other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed to the Registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the Registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions): (a) all significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the Registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and (b) any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the Registrant's internal control over financial reporting. Date: 08/23/2013 /S/ ROBERTO GALINDO, JR. ----------------- ---------------------------------------- Roberto Galindo, Jr. Treasurer EX-99.906 CERT 3 ncsrs906cert063013.txt USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST, 906 CERTIFICATION, 06/30/2013 SECTION 906 CERTIFICATION CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350, AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 Name of Issuer: USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST S&P 500 Index Fund Reward Shares S&P 500 Index Fund Member Shares Total Return Strategy Fund Real Return Fund Shares Real Return Fund Institutional Shares Extended Market Index Fund Nasdaq - 100 Index Fund Ultra Short Term Bond Fund Target Retirement Income Fund Target Retirement 2020 Fund Target Retirement 2030 Fund Target Retirement 2040 Fund Target Retirement 2050 Fund Global Opportunities Fund In connection with the Annual Reports on Form N-CSR/S (Reports) of the above-named issuer for the Funds listed above for the period ended June 30, 2013, the undersigned hereby certifies, that: 1. The Reports fully comply with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and 2. The information contained in the Reports fairly present, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer. Date: 08/26/2013 /S/ DANIEL S. MCNAMARA ---------------- -------------------------- Daniel S. McNamara President SECTION 906 CERTIFICATION CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350, AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 Name of Issuer: USAA MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST S&P 500 Index Fund Reward Shares S&P 500 Index Fund Member Shares Total Return Strategy Fund Real Return Fund Shares Real Return Fund Institutional Shares Extended Market Index Fund Nasdaq - 100 Index Fund Ultra Short Term Bond Fund Target Retirement Income Fund Target Retirement 2020 Fund Target Retirement 2030 Fund Target Retirement 2040 Fund Target Retirement 2050 Fund Global Opportunities Fund In connection with the Annual Reports on Form N-CSR/S (Reports) of the above-named issuer for the Funds listed above for the period ended June 30, 2013, the undersigned hereby certifies, that: 1. The Reports fully comply with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and 2. The information contained in the Reports fairly present, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer. Date: 08/23/2013 /S/ ROBERTO GALINDO, JR. ---------------- -------------------------- Roberto Galindo, Jr. Treasurer