N-CSR 1 d868677dncsr.htm OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS Oppenheimer Rochester Fund Municipals

 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

 

 

FORM N-CSR

 

 

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED

MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Investment Company Act file number 811-3614

 

 

Oppenheimer Rochester Fund Municipals

(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

 

 

6803 South Tucson Way, Centennial, Colorado 80112-3924

(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

 

 

Arthur S. Gabinet

OFI Global Asset Management, Inc.

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

(Name and address of agent for service)

 

 

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

Date of fiscal year end: December 31

Date of reporting period: 12/31/2014

 

 

 


Item 1. Reports to Stockholders.


 

LOGO

 


Table of Contents

 

Fund Performance Discussion

     3   

Top Holdings and Allocations

     12   

Fund Expenses

     16   

Statement of Investments

     18   

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

     38   

Statement of Operations

     40   

Statements of Changes in Net Assets

     41   

Statement of Cash Flows

     42   

Financial Highlights

     43   

Notes to Financial Statements

     47   

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

             66   

Federal Income Tax Information

     67   

Board Approval of the Fund’s Investment Advisory and Sub-

Advisory Agreements

     68   

Portfolio Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures; Updates to

Statement of Investments

     71   

Trustees and Officers

     72   

Privacy Policy Notice

     81   

 

 

Class A Shares

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS AT 12/31/14

 

                              Class A Shares of the Fund                                
     Without Sales Charge           With Sales Charge       Barclays Municipal    
Bond Index
   

1-Year

   14.43%   9.00%   9.05%  

 

 

5-Year

5.89   4.87   5.16  

 

 

10-Year

4.47   3.97   4.74  

 

 

Performance data quoted represents past performance, which does not guarantee future results. The investment return and principal value of an investment in the Fund will fluctuate so that an investor’s shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Fund returns include changes in share price, reinvested distributions, and a 4.75% maximum applicable sales charge except where “without sales charge” is indicated. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. Returns do not consider capital gains or income taxes on an individual’s investment. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit oppenheimerfunds.com or call 1.800.CALL OPP (225.5677).

Oppenheimer Rochester is using social media to provide timely information related to muni market developments at www.twitter.com/RochesterFunds.

 

2         OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Fund Performance Discussion

At the end of this reporting period, the Class A shares of Oppenheimer Rochester Fund Municipals provided a tax-free distribution yield of 6.33% at net asset value (NAV). For New Yorkers in the top federal and state income tax brackets, the Fund delivered an amount equivalent to a 2014 taxable investment with a yield of 11.86%; for high-income taxpayers in New York City, the amount was comparable to a taxable investment with a yield of 12.39%. At 14.43%, the annual total return at NAV for the Fund’s Class A shares significantly exceeded the Barclays Municipal Bond Index by 538 basis points this reporting period.

MARKET OVERVIEW

Overall, the muni market rallied during the 12 months ended December 31, 2014, thanks in part to positive reports from the Federal Reserve.

It came as no surprise to Fed watchers that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) voted in October 2014 to end quantitative easing the next month.

Considered by many to be the largest intervention in the Fed’s history, the program was initiated in 2008 to stimulate the economy by adding billions to its holdings of mortgage-backed and Treasury securities. According to a statement released December 17, 2014, the FOMC

observed an expanding economy, solid job gains, a lower unemployment rate and increases in household and business spending. However, a range of labor market indicators suggested that labor resources continued to be underutilized and the recovery in the housing sector remained slow.

The committee’s concerns about falling energy prices, among other factors, played into its decision to maintain its policy of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities and rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction.

 

 

   YIELDS & DISTRIBUTIONS FOR CLASS A SHARES

     

   Dividend Yield w/o sales charge

  6.33

   Dividend Yield with sales charge

  6.03   

   Standardized Yield

  6.12   

   Taxable Equivalent Yield

  11.86   

   Last distribution (12/31/14)

$ 0.081   

   Total distributions (1/1/14 to 12/31/14)

$ 0.960   

Endnotes for this discussion begin on page 14 of this report

 

3       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Also in December 2014, the Fed slightly modified its long-standing assurance that it planned to keep the Fed Funds target rate at its current level “for a considerable time” after the end of its bond-buying program. In its end-of-year assessment, the FOMC said it could be “patient” about normalizing its stance on monetary policy, especially if projected inflation continues to run below the committee’s longer-run goal of 2%. At a press conference following the December 2014 meeting, Fed Chair Janet Yellen said it would be unlikely for policymakers to consider an increase in the Fed’s benchmark short-term rate before its April meeting.

Given the current Fed Funds rate, the only plausible change would be an increase. We remind investors that a change in the Fed Funds rate does not automatically translate into a change in longer-term interest rates, which are determined by the marketplace.

The Fund’s investment team will continue to search for value in the muni market as it seeks to produce competitive levels of tax-free income amid stable or changing market conditions.

As of December 31, 2014, the average yield on
30-year, AAA-rated muni bonds was 3.05%, down 136 basis points from December 31, 2013. The average yield on 10-year, AAA-rated muni bonds was 2.07% on December 31, 2014, down 72 basis points from the December 2013 date, and the average yield on 1-year, AAA-rated muni bonds was 0.19%,

down 4 basis points from the December 2013 date.

In New York State, Governor Andrew Cuomo was elected for a second 4 year term in November 2014. Earlier in the reporting period he announced the state had passed its fourth consecutive on-time budget. The $138 billion spending plan for fiscal year 2015 earmarked $300 million for pre-kindergarten in New York City, and called for the state to redirect $40 million from transit operations to pay for debt service on $2.4 billion of bonds issued by the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) in 2002. Overall, the state’s annual spending is expected to be 2% higher in fiscal 2015, which began April 1, 2014, than it was in fiscal 2014.

In October 2014, New York State sold $1 billion of sales tax revenue bonds. Following credit rating upgrades from all 3 major credit rating agencies, these 30-year bonds were sold at the best rates in more than 50 years. The bonds were sold to finance previously authorized capital projects such as higher education facilities, highway and bridge projects, library construction, court facilities and hazardous waste remediation.

Moody’s Investors Service, citing New York State’s fourth consecutive on-time budget and a decline in outstanding state-related debt as a percentage of personal income, upgraded the state’s general obligation (G.O.) bonds to Aa1. The credit rating agency said that “New York has reversed historical financial management patterns and now benefits from

 

 

4       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


a sustained record of on-time budgets, contained spending growth, and lack of relying on external borrowing for liquidity purposes.” Fitch Ratings upgraded New York to AA-plus, its highest ever rating for the state, and Standard & Poor’s also upgraded the G.O.s to AA-plus.

The state’s first 10-year Statewide Capital Plan was released during this reporting period. It called for $9.4 billion in fiscal year 2015 capital infrastructure spending that would be financed through bond sales and “pay-as-you-go” funding.

In late June 2014, New York City’s Mayor de Blasio and the City Council agreed on a $75 billion, “social-justice themed” budget for its fiscal 2015. Spending in the new budget rose $5 billion and included a new 9-year contract with the United Federation of Teachers. The spending plan also set aside $6.2 million to hire 200 new civilian police administrative aides to relieve 200 police officers from desk jobs, and extended the free school lunch program to all of New York City’s middle school students.

In November 2014, the New York City Transitional Finance Authority (TFA) sold $850 million of future tax secured, fixed-rate subordinate bonds, including $700 million of tax-exempt new money bonds and $150 million of taxable new money bonds. S&P and Fitch rated the TFA subordinate lien bonds at AAA, and Moody’s Investors Service’s rating was Aa1. Also in November 2014, the New York City Municipal Water Finance Authority

came to market with $375 million of new water and sewer system revenue bonds, rated AA-plus by both S&P and Fitch.

Successful investors, we have found, maintain a long-term perspective regardless of the specific developments associated with any given reporting period. To maximize the benefits that municipal bond funds seek to provide, many investors reinvest their dividends and allow the income generated from their investments to compound over time.

FUND PERFORMANCE

Oppenheimer Rochester Fund Municipals held more than 710 securities as of December 31, 2014. The Fund was invested in a broad range of sectors, providing shareholders with a diversity of holdings that we believe would be difficult and costly to replicate in an individual portfolio.

The Class A shares had a distribution yield of 6.33% at NAV as of December 31, 2014. As long-time investors know, yields on fixed-income funds rise when share prices fall, and yields have historically contributed the lion’s share of the long-term total returns generated by bonds.

The Fund’s dividend trend this reporting period shows the positive impact a yield-driven approach can have amid challenging market conditions. This Fund’s Class A dividend, which was 7.9 cents per share at the outset of the reporting period, increased to 8.0 cents

 

 

5       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

LOGO

per share beginning with the March 2014 payout and again to 8.1 cents per share with the November 2014 payout. In all, the Fund distributed 96 cents per Class A share this reporting period.

Securities issued in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, which are exempt from federal, state and local income taxes, represented 22.5% of the Fund’s total assets (22.9% of net assets) at the end of this reporting period. Puerto Rico’s “tobacco bonds” are excluded from this figure, as they are backed by proceeds from the Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) and included in this Fund’s tobacco holdings, as discussed later in this report.

The Fund’s holdings, some of which are insured, include G.O. debt and securities from

many different sectors. Most of the Fund’s investments in securities issued in Puerto Rico are supported by taxes and other revenues and are designed to help finance electric utilities, highways and education, among other things. Our holdings in bonds issued in Puerto Rico contributed favorably to performance this reporting period.

Expanding on the fiscal discipline that was the hallmark of Luis Fortuño, his predecessor, first-time Governor Alejandro García Padilla has strengthened the island’s balance sheet, cut the government payrolls, enacted comprehensive pension reforms, and raised revenues via tax rate changes and improved enforcement.

In late June 2014, news about the Commonwealth’s first balanced general fund

 

 

6       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

LOGO

budget in more than 20 years was overshadowed by Gov. Padilla’s decision to sign legislation allowing Puerto Rico’s public corporations – PREPA (the electric utility authority), PRASA (the aqueduct and sewer authority) and PRHTA (the highway authority) – to restructure their debt. Were issuers to make use of this law – the Puerto Rico Public Corporation Debt Enforcement and Recovery Act (the “Recovery Act”) – they could potentially seek to lessen debt-service payments to their creditors.

During this reporting period, we filed a lawsuit in federal court in Puerto Rico, challenging the constitutional validity of the Recovery Act, which we will pursue vigorously. We are determined to protect our shareholders’ best interests and enforce the bond covenants that have been negotiated.

 

Puerto Rico debt continued to be the subject of a variety of critical reports during this reporting period as the media focused on the Recovery Act and the potential for debt restructuring. While most of the muni bonds issued by Puerto Rico faced some pricing pressure during this reporting period, the tide turned for many of the island’s securities before the end of 2014 and prices were rallying.

Investors should note that deterioration of the Puerto Rican economy could have an adverse impact on Puerto Rico bonds and the performance of the Oppenheimer Rochester municipal funds that hold them, including this Fund. Our investment team will continue to monitor credit rating changes and other developments related to our Puerto Rico holdings closely and will post information on

 

 

7       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


our website (oppenheimerfunds.com) and on our Twitter feed (twitter.com/RochesterFunds). We also encourage investors to contact their financial advisors for the latest information, as the situation remains quite fluid.

Given the degree to which Oppenheimer Rochester funds have been cited in news coverage about the economic and fiscal challenges facing Puerto Rico, we feel compelled to remind investors that all fund investments are actively managed. Our team is responsive to the dynamics of the market and may choose to adjust trading strategies in the interest of maximizing the potential benefits to our shareholders – and minimizing their potential losses.

Further, while we remain committed to keeping investors informed about our basic investing strategies, we do not provide comment about near-term trading strategies as we believe doing so might allow other market participants to impair our team’s ability to deliver shareholder value.

Municipal bonds backed by proceeds from the tobacco MSA, the national litigation settlement with U.S. tobacco manufacturers, represented 24.5% of the Fund’s total assets (24.8% of net assets) at the end of this reporting period and contributed favorably to the Fund’s total return this reporting period.

We believe the securities we hold in this sector are fundamentally sound credits, and we like that “tobacco bonds” can provide tax-exempt income for investors as well as benefits to the

issuing states and territories. Our long-term view of the sector remains bullish and, given attractive valuations, we believe that it is likely we will continue to hold a greater percentage of tobacco bonds in our portfolios than our peers. As in prior reporting periods, the tobacco bonds this Fund held during this reporting period made all scheduled payments of interest and principal on time and in full.

As of December 31, 2014, holdings in the electric utilities sector represented 7.9% of total assets (8.0% of net assets). This sector, which included securities issued by PREPA as well as securities issued in New York State and Guam, contributed favorably to the Fund’s total return this reporting period, although PREPA was a detractor.

The Fund’s airline holdings represented 7.9% of total assets (8.0% of net assets) as of December 31, 2014. Many of the Fund’s holdings in this sector are backed by a security interest in the airport terminal buildings or maintenance facilities whose construction they finance, and we believe that these bonds offer investors valuable collateral. This sector also contributed favorably to the Fund’s total return this reporting period.

At the end of this reporting period, the Special Tax sector represented 7.6% of the Fund’s total assets (7.7% of net assets) and included some securities issued in Puerto Rico. The Fund’s holdings in this sector are backed by various taxes, all of which have had consistently strong cash flows that must be used to cover the debt service obligations and

 

 

8       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


have consistently done so. The sector as a whole and the Special Tax bonds issued in Puerto Rico in particular were positive contributors to Fund performance this reporting period.

The Fund was also invested in securities used to finance marine and aviation facilities this reporting period. Many of these securities are high-grade investments that are backed by the valuable collateral of the projects whose construction they finance. As of December 31, 2014, the Fund’s holdings in this sector represented 5.7% of total assets (5.8% of net assets). This sector also contributed favorably to performance this reporting period.

More than three-quarters of the sales tax revenue bonds held by the Fund this reporting period were issued in Puerto Rico. In all, this sector represented 5.6% of the Fund’s total assets (5.7% of net assets) as of December 31, 2014, and included bonds issued in Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands and various New York municipalities. Debt-service payments on securities in this sector are paid using the issuing municipality’s sales tax revenue. This sector also contributed favorably to the Fund’s total return.

The Fund continued to be invested in the highways and commuter facilities sector this reporting period, which represented 5.0% of total assets (5.1% of net assets) as of December 31, 2014. The bonds in this sector, including some issued in Puerto Rico, are used to build and maintain roadways and highway amenities. The sector as a whole and the

PRHTA bonds in particular made favorable contributions to the Fund’s performance this reporting period.

As of December 31, 2014, the Fund’s holdings in the higher education sector represented 4.8% of total assets (4.8% of net assets). The investment-grade bonds we hold in this sector have regularly provided high levels of tax-free income with what we believe to be far less credit risk than their external ratings would suggest, and contributed favorably to total return this reporting period.

G.O. securities, which are backed by the full faith and taxing authority of state and local governments, comprised 4.4% of the Fund’s total assets (4.4% of net assets) as of December 31, 2014. The Fund’s holdings in this sector include bonds issued by the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the Northern Mariana Islands. As of the end of the reporting period, the G.O. sector contributed favorably to the Fund’s total return.

As of December 31, 2014, the Fund was invested in the hospital/healthcare sector, which represented 4.0% of its total assets (4.1% of net assets). Our holdings in this sector consist of securities across the credit spectrum, and the bonds contributed favorably to the Fund’s total return this reporting period.

The commercial services and supplies sector, which represented less than 0.1% of total and net assets as of December 31, 2014, was a slight detractor from the Fund’s performance.

 

 

9       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


During this reporting period, the Fund maintained an investment in municipal inverse-floating rate securities, which are tax-exempt securities with interest payments that move inversely to changes in short-term interest rates. “Inverse floaters” continued to provide high levels of income to funds across the industry during this reporting period, which was characterized by rising prices among high-grade municipal securities. We continue to believe that “inverse floaters” are an essential element of this Fund’s portfolio because they can produce attractive yields under certain market conditions. The Fund’s inverse floaters, in aggregate, contributed positively to Fund performance this reporting period.

Our approach to municipal bond investing is flexible and responsive to market conditions. Shareholders should note that market conditions during this reporting period did not affect the Fund’s overall investment goals or cause it to pay any capital gain distributions. In closing, we believe that the Fund’s structure and sector composition as well as our time-tested strategies will continue to benefit fixed-income investors through interest rate and economic cycles.

INVESTMENT STRATEGY

The Rochester investment team focuses exclusively on municipal bonds and has consistently used a time-tested, value-oriented and security-specific approach to fund management. We know that market conditions can and do fluctuate, but we do not waver in our belief in the power of tax-free

yield to help investors achieve their long-term objectives.

This Fund invests primarily in investment-grade municipal securities. It may invest up to 25% of its total assets in below-investment grade securities, or “junk” bonds; the percentage of assets is measured at the time of purchase as is the credit quality of the securities. Additionally, the credit quality is based on Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organization (“NRSRO”) ratings or, if no NRSRO rating, on internal ratings. As of December 31, 2014, market movements or rating changes of municipal bonds, notably the Fund’s investments in Puerto Rico paper, caused the Fund’s below-investment-grade holdings to exceed this threshold. As a result, no further purchases of below-investment-grade bonds will be made until the Fund’s holdings of these types of bonds is once again below 25% of total assets.

Our team continually searches for bonds that we believe are undervalued and can provide a meaningful level of tax-free income until maturity. Rather than making allocation shifts based on expected market conditions, we search the marketplace for what we believe to be the best values for generating income. It remains important to note that we do not manage our funds based on predictions of interest rate changes.

Instead, our investment approach involves scouring the market for municipal securities that meet our stringent credit criteria and buying bonds that we believe will deliver

 

 

10       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


above-average yields relative to peer funds. We focus on identifying inefficiencies in market pricing that can lead to investment advantages. We seek to maintain a thoughtful mix of industry sectors, maturities and credit ratings in this Fund’s portfolio.

The Rochester team also prospects for yield-enhancing opportunities in the secondary market, often picking up odd lots that we believe can add significant incremental yield

to our portfolios. We will also look for non-rated issues with solid credit qualities, which we believe can often help enhance a fund’s tax-free yield. Investors should note that non-rated or unrated securities may or may not be the equivalent of investment grade securities.

The Rochester Way, we believe, distinguishes our approach to municipal investing from those of our competitors.

 

 

LOGO

Daniel G. Loughran,

Senior Vice President, Senior Portfolio Manager and Team Leader, on behalf of the rest of the Rochester portfolio management team: Scott S. Cottier, Troy E. Willis, Mark R. DeMitry, Michael L. Camarella, Charles S. Pulire and Elizabeth S. Mossow.

 

 

11       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Top Holdings and Allocations

 

TOP TEN CATEGORIES

 

Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement

     24.5%   

Electric Utilities

     7.9      

Airlines

     7.9      

Special Tax

     7.6      

Marine/Aviation Facilities

     5.7      

Sales Tax Revenue

     5.6      

Highways/Commuter Facilities

     5.0      

Higher Education

     4.8      

General Obligation

     4.4      

Hospital/Healthcare

     4.0      

Portfolio holdings and allocations are subject to change. Percentages are as of December 31, 2014, and are based on total assets.

CREDIT ALLOCATION

 

     NRSRO-
Rated 
    Sub-
Adviser-
Rated
    Total  

  AAA

     1.0     0.1     1.1%     

  AA

     19.8        0.7        20.5       

  A

     9.0        0.5        9.5       

  BBB

     10.3        13.2        23.5       

  BB or lower

     39.9        5.5        45.4       

  Total

     80.0        20.0        100.0       

The percentages above are based on the market value of the securities as of December 31, 2014, and are subject to change. OppenheimerFunds, Inc. determines the credit allocation of the Fund’s assets using ratings by nationally recognized statistical rating organizations (NRSROs), such as Standard & Poor’s. For any security rated by an NRSRO other than S&P, the sub-adviser, OppenheimerFunds, Inc., converts that security’s rating to the equivalent S&P rating. If two or more NRSROs have assigned a rating to a security, the highest rating is used. For securities not rated by an NRSRO, the sub-adviser uses its own credit analysis to assign ratings in categories similar to those of S&P. The use of similar categories is not an indication that the sub-adviser’s credit analysis process is consistent or comparable with any NRSRO’s process were that NRSRO to rate the same security.

For the purposes of this Credit Allocation table, securities rated within the NRSROs’ four highest categories—AAA, AA, A and BBB—are investment-grade securities. For further details, please consult the Fund’s prospectus or Statement of Additional Information.

 

 

12       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Performance

DISTRIBUTION YIELDS

As of 12/31/14

     Without Sales
Charge
       With Sales Charge            

Class A

   6.33%        6.03%     

Class B

   5.32           N/A        

Class C

   5.33           N/A        

Class Y

   6.51           N/A        

 

STANDARDIZED YIELDS

For the 30 Days Ended 12/31/14

Class A

     6.12       

Class B

     5.55          

Class C

     5.56          

Class Y

     6.58          

 

TAXABLE EQUIVALENT YIELDS

As of 12/31/14

Class A

     11.86    

Class B

     10.76       

Class C

     10.78       

Class Y

     12.75       

 

 

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS WITHOUT SALES CHARGE AS OF 12/31/14

 

     Inception Date      1-Year      5-Year      10-Year      Since Inception   

Class A (RMUNX)

     5/15/86         14.43%         5.89%         4.47%       6.39%

Class B (RMUBX)

     3/17/97         13.41            4.94            3.92          4.88   

Class C (RMUCX)

     3/17/97         13.50            5.00            3.58          4.28   

Class Y (RMUYX)

     4/28/00         14.60            6.05            4.62          5.56   

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS WITH SALES CHARGE AS OF 12/31/14

 

     Inception Date      1-Year      5-Year      10-Year      Since Inception   

Class A (RMUNX)

     5/15/86         9.00%         4.87%         3.97%       6.20%

Class B (RMUBX)

     3/17/97         8.41            4.61            3.92          4.88   

Class C (RMUCX)

     3/17/97         12.50            5.00            3.58          4.28   

Class Y (RMUYX)

     4/28/00         14.60            6.05            4.62          5.56   

 

13       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


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

 

LOGO

Performance data quoted represents past performance, which does not guarantee future results. The investment return and principal value of an investment in the Fund will fluctuate so that an investor’s shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. Returns do not consider capital gains or income taxes on an individual’s investments. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit oppenheimerfunds.com or call 1.800.CALL OPP (225.5677). Fund returns include changes in share price, reinvested distributions, and the applicable sales charge: for Class A shares, the current maximum initial sales charge of 4.75%; for Class B shares, the contingent deferred sales charge of 5% (1-year) and 2% (5-year); and for Class C, the contingent deferred sales charge of 1% for the 1-year period. There is no sales charge for Class Y shares. Because Class B shares convert to Class A shares 72 months after purchase, the 10-year return for Class B shares uses Class A performance for the period after conversion.

The Fund’s performance is compared to the performance of the Barclays Municipal Bond Index, an unmanaged index of a broad range of investment-grade municipal bonds that is a measure of the general municipal bond market. The Fund’s performance is also compared to the Consumer Price Index, a non-securities index that measures changes in the inflation rate. Indices are unmanaged and cannot be purchased by investors. While index comparisons may be useful to provide a benchmark for the Fund’s performance, it must be noted that the Fund’s investments are not limited to the investments comprising the index. Index performance includes reinvestment of income, but does not reflect transaction costs, fees, expenses or taxes. Index performance is shown for illustrative purposes only as a benchmark for the Fund’s performance, and does not predict or depict performance of the Fund. The Fund’s performance reflects the effects of the Fund’s business and operating expenses.

Distribution yields for Class A shares are based on dividends of $0.081 for the 36-day accrual period ended December 31, 2014. The yield without sales charge for Class A shares is calculated by dividing annualized dividends by the Class A net asset value on December 31, 2014; for the yield with sales charge, the denominator is the Class A maximum offering price on that date. Distribution yields for Class B, C and Y are annualized based on dividends of

 

14       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


$0.0679, $0.0681 and $0.0832, respectively, for the 36-day accrual period ended December 31, 2014, and on the corresponding net asset values on that date.

Standardized yield is based on the Fund’s net investment income for the 30-day period ended December 31, 2014, and either that date’s maximum offering price (for Class A shares) or net asset value (for the other classes). Each result is compounded semiannually and annualized. Falling share prices artificially increase yields.

Taxable equivalent yields are based on the standardized yield and the 2014 top federal and New York combined tax rate of 48.4% for New York State residents and 50.6% for New York City residents. Calculations factor in the 3.8% tax on unearned income under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, as applicable. A portion of the Fund’s distributions may be subject to tax; distributions may also increase an investor’s exposure to the alternative minimum tax. Capital gains distributions are taxable as capital gains. Tax treatments of the Fund’s distributions and capital gains may vary by state; investors should consult a tax advisor to determine if the Fund is appropriate for them. Each result is compounded semiannually and annualized. Falling share prices artificially increase yields. This Report must be preceded or accompanied by a Fund prospectus.

The average yields for AAA-rated municipal securities are provided by Municipal Market Advisors (MMA) and are based on its benchmark of general obligation bonds structured with a 5% coupon. The MMA 5% benchmark is constructed using yields from the leading underwriters, who represent a significant percentage of the primary activity of the top 10 underwriters and therefore the total issuance.

Investments in “tobacco bonds,” which are backed by the proceeds a state or territory receives from the 1998 national litigation settlement with tobacco manufacturers, may be vulnerable to economic and/or legislative events that affect issuers in a particular municipal market sector. Annual payments by MSA-participating manufacturers, for example, hinge on many factors, including annual domestic cigarette shipments, inflation and the relative market share of non-participating manufacturers. To date, we believe consumption figures remain within an acceptable range of the assumptions used to structure MSA bonds. Future MSA payments could be reduced if consumption were to fall more rapidly than originally forecast.

The Fund’s investment strategy and focus can change over time. The mention of specific fund holdings does not constitute a recommendation by OppenheimerFunds, Inc. or its affiliates.

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

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

 

15       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Fund Expenses

Fund Expenses. As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction costs, which may include sales charges (loads) on purchase payments, contingent deferred sales charges on redemptions; and (2) ongoing costs, including management fees; distribution and service fees; and other Fund expenses. These examples are intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of investing in other mutual funds.

The examples are based on an investment of $1,000.00 invested at the beginning of the period and held for the entire 6-month period ended December 31, 2014.

Actual Expenses. The first section of the table provides information about actual account values and actual expenses. You may use the information in this section for the class of shares you hold, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expense that you paid over the period. Simply divide your account value by $1,000.00 (for example, an $8,600.00 account value divided by $1,000.00 = 8.60), then multiply the result by the number in the first section under the heading entitled “Expenses Paid During 6 Months Ended December 31, 2014” to estimate the expenses you paid on your account during this period.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes. The second section of the table provides information about hypothetical account values and hypothetical expenses based on the Fund’s actual expense ratio for each class of shares, and an assumed rate of return of 5% per year for each class before expenses, which is not the Fund’s actual return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period. You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the Fund and other funds. To do so, compare this 5% hypothetical example for the class of shares you hold with the 5% hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of the other funds.

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transactional costs, such as front-end or contingent deferred sales charges (loads). Therefore, the “hypothetical” section of the table is useful in comparing ongoing costs only, and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different funds. In addition, if these transactional costs were included, your costs would have been higher.

 

16       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Actual   

Beginning

Account

Value

July 1, 2014

  

Ending

Account

Value

December 31, 2014

  

Expenses    

Paid During    

6 Months Ended    

December 31, 2014    

Class A

   $    1,000.00    $       1,048.60    $          5.33

Class B

         1,000.00             1,044.20                9.94

Class C

         1,000.00             1,044.30                9.73

Class Y

         1,000.00             1,049.40                4.45

Hypothetical

(5% return before expenses)

              

Class A

         1,000.00          1,020.01                5.26

Class B

         1,000.00          1,015.53                9.80

Class C

         1,000.00          1,015.73                9.60

Class Y

         1,000.00          1,020.87                4.39

Expenses are equal to the Fund’s annualized expense ratio for that class, multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by 184/365 (to reflect the one-half year period). Those annualized expense ratios, excluding indirect expenses from affiliated funds, based on the 6-month period ended December 31, 2014 are as follows:

 

Class    Expense Ratios       

Class A

     1.03    

Class B

     1.92       

Class C

     1.88       

Class Y

     0.86     

The “Financial Highlights” tables in the Fund’s financial statements, included in this report, also show the gross expense ratios, without waivers or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses, if applicable.

 

17       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS December 31, 2014

 

Principal

Amount

          Coupon     Maturity      Value       

 

 

 

Municipal Bonds and Notes—108.8%

  

  

 

New York—80.8%

  

  
  $605,000       Albany County, NY IDA (Wildwood Programs)1      4.900     07/01/2021       $ 608,473        
  8,165,000       Albany, NY Capital Resource Corp. (College Saint Rose)1      5.875        07/01/2041                 9,238,044        
  1,315,000       Albany, NY Capital Resource Corp. (College Saint Rose)1      5.625        07/01/2031         1,488,448        
  1,525,000       Albany, NY Capital Resource Corp. (College Saint Rose)1      5.375        07/01/2026         1,716,357        
  1,420,000       Albany, NY Hsg. Authority (Lark Drive)1      5.500        12/01/2028         1,422,130        
  600,000       Albany, NY IDA (Albany Rehabilitation)1      8.375        06/01/2023         600,240        
  900,000       Albany, NY IDA (Brighter Choice Charter School)1      5.000        04/01/2037         903,924        
  1,350,000       Albany, NY IDA (Brighter Choice Charter School)1      5.000        04/01/2032         1,358,734        
  3,125,000       Albany, NY IDA (Brighter Choice Charter School)1      5.000        04/01/2027         3,159,187        
  900,000       Albany, NY IDA (New Covenant Charter School)2      7.000        05/01/2025         11,232        
  1,760,000       Albany, NY IDA (Sage Colleges)1      5.300        04/01/2029         1,735,976        
  985,000       Albany, NY Parking Authority      1.232  3      11/01/2017         878,324        
  5,000,000       Amherst, NY IDA (Beechwood Health Care Center)1      5.200        01/01/2040         5,071,100        
  420,000       Blauvelt, NY Volunteer Fire Company      6.250        10/15/2017         420,773        
  2,735,000       Brookhaven, NY IDA (Enecon Corp.)1      6.300        11/01/2033         2,700,594        
  1,435,000       Brookhaven, NY IDA (Stony Brook Foundation)1      6.500        11/01/2020         1,446,753        
  1,770,000       Buffalo & Erie County, NY Industrial Land Devel. (Buffalo State College Foundation Hsg. Corp.)1      5.375        10/01/2041         1,972,630        
  870,000       Buffalo & Erie County, NY Industrial Land Devel. (Buffalo State College Foundation Hsg. Corp.)1      6.000        10/01/2031         1,031,028        
  500,000       Build NYC Resource Corp. (New York Methodist Hospital)1      5.000        07/01/2030         570,585        
  1,500,000       Build NYC Resource Corp. (Pratt Paper)1      4.500        01/01/2025         1,534,830        
  3,250,000       Build NYC Resource Corp. (Pratt Paper)1      5.000        01/01/2035         3,363,815        
  860,000       Build NYC Resource Corp. (YMCA of Greater New York)      5.000        08/01/2032         950,971        
  3,000,000       Bushnell Basin, NY Fire Assoc. (Volunteer Fire Dept.)1      5.750        11/01/2030         3,061,140        
  1,000,000       Canton, NY Resource Corp. Student Hsg. Facility (Grasse River-SUNY Canton)1      5.000        05/01/2040         1,095,530        
  250,000       Cattaraugus County, NY Capital Resource Corp. (St. Bonaventure University)1      5.000        05/01/2039         268,795        
  200,000       Cattaraugus County, NY Capital Resource Corp. (St. Bonaventure University)1      5.000        05/01/2034         217,962        
  830,000       Cattaraugus County, NY IDA (St. Bonaventure University)1      5.450        09/15/2019         831,013        
  105,000       Chautauqua, NY Utility District1      5.000        06/01/2025         108,137        
  95,000       Chautauqua, NY Utility District1      5.000        06/01/2023         98,049        
  1,515,000       Chemung County, NY IDA (Hathorn Redevel. Company)1      5.000        07/01/2033         1,517,424        
  740,000       Chemung County, NY IDA (Hathorn Redevel. Company)      4.850        07/01/2023         742,398        
  1,515,000       Clifton Springs, NY Hospital & Clinic1      8.000        01/01/2020         1,517,439      

 

18       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Principal

Amount

           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $2,200,000       Dutchess County, NY IDA (Elant Fishkill)1      5.250     01/01/2037       $         2,082,036   
  650,000       Dutchess County, NY Local Devel. Corp. (Health Quest System)1      5.750        07/01/2040         729,852   
  1,000,000       Dutchess County, NY Water & Wastewater Authority      5.400  3      06/01/2027         701,430   
  2,055,000       East Rochester, NY Hsg. Authority (Jefferson Park Apartments)1      6.750        03/01/2030         2,057,404   
  2,460,000       East Rochester, NY Hsg. Authority (Woodland Village)1      5.500        08/01/2033         2,505,092   
  2,675,000       Elmira, NY Hsg. Authority (Eastgate Apartments)1      6.250        06/01/2044         2,646,431   
  7,050,000       Erie County, NY IDA (Charter School Applied Tech)1      6.875        06/01/2035         7,221,315   
  2,845,000       Erie County, NY IDA (Global Concepts Charter School)1      6.250        10/01/2037         2,995,244   
  715,000       Erie County, NY IDA (The Episcopal Church Home)1      6.000        02/01/2028         716,158   
  135,450,000       Erie County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.      6.488  3      06/01/2050         3,265,699   
  194,300,000       Erie County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.      7.196  3      06/01/2055         1,766,187   
  1,024,000,000       Erie County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.      7.650  3      06/01/2060         4,270,080   
  25,330,000       Erie County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      5.000        06/01/2038         20,620,646   
  93,000,000       Erie County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.      6.140  3      06/01/2047         3,329,400   
  72,595,000       Erie County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      5.000        06/01/2045         57,552,590   
  1,410,000       Essex County, NY IDA (International Paper Company)1      4.600        03/01/2027         1,434,647   
  1,500,000       Essex County, NY IDA (International Paper Company)1      6.625        09/01/2032         1,696,020   
  410,000       Essex County, NY IDA (North Country Community College Foundation)1      5.200        06/01/2025         412,981   
  1,100,000       Essex County, NY IDA (North Country Community College Foundation)1      5.300        06/01/2035         1,106,182   
  975,000       Essex County, NY IDA (North Country Community College Foundation)1      5.000        06/01/2020         985,364   
  1,235,000       Essex County, NY IDA (North Country Community College Foundation)1      5.200        06/01/2025         1,245,411   
  320,000       Essex County, NY IDA (North Country Community College Foundation)1      5.000        06/01/2020         323,005   
  185,000       Fishkill, NY GO1      5.000        04/15/2029         185,368   
  900,000       Franklin County, NY IDA (North Country Community College Foundation)1      5.200        06/01/2025         907,587   
  100,000       Glens Falls, NY GO1      6.000        02/01/2040         112,385   
  1,945,000       Hempstead, NY IDA (Adelphi University)1      5.000        10/01/2030         2,015,234   
  3,665,000       Hempstead, NY IDA (Peninsula Counseling Center)1      6.500        11/01/2038         3,673,576   

 

19       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $1,250,000       Hempstead, NY Local Devel. Corp. (Molloy College)1      5.000     07/01/2039       $         1,358,800   
  1,000,000       Hempstead, NY Local Devel. Corp. (Molloy College)1      5.000        07/01/2044         1,080,440   
  1,500,000       Hempstead, NY Local Devel. Corp. (Molloy College)1      5.000        07/01/2034         1,658,160   
  1,700,000       Hempstead, NY Local Devel. Corp. (Molloy College)1      5.000        07/01/2029         1,914,098   
  34,450,000       Hudson Yards, NY Infrastructure Corp.1      5.750        02/15/2047         39,871,741   
  4,840,000       Hudson Yards, NY Infrastructure Corp.1      5.000        02/15/2047         5,158,278   
  10,475,000       L.I., NY Power Authority, Series A1      5.750        04/01/2039         11,897,086   
  6,315,000       L.I., NY Power Authority, Series A1      5.000        09/01/2039         7,110,753   
  1,250,000       L.I., NY Power Authority, Series A1      5.000        09/01/2044         1,402,050   
  29,735,000       L.I., NY Power Authority, Series A      5.000        09/01/2037         32,994,848   
  20,000,000       L.I., NY Power Authority, Series A      5.000        09/01/2042         22,107,200   
  3,400,000       L.I., NY Power Authority, Series A1      5.000        05/01/2036         3,788,416   
  1,900,000       L.I., NY Power Authority, Series B1      5.750        04/01/2033         2,168,052   
  65,000       L.I., NY Power Authority, Series B1      5.000        12/01/2035         68,450   
  7,000,000       L.I., NY Power Authority, Series B      5.000        09/01/2029         7,975,380   
  455,000       Lockport City, NY GO1      5.000        10/15/2021         507,270   
  435,000       Lockport City, NY GO1      5.000        10/15/2020         481,958   
  505,000       Lockport City, NY GO1      5.000        10/15/2023         564,777   
  530,000       Lockport City, NY GO1      5.000        10/15/2024         587,420   
  480,000       Lockport City, NY GO1      5.000        10/15/2022         536,112   
  3,000,000       Madison County, NY IDA (Colgate University)1      5.000        07/01/2040         3,069,390   
  5,300,000       Madison County, NY IDA (Commons II Student Hsg.)1      5.000        06/01/2040         5,499,227   
  100,000       Madison County, NY IDA (Commons II Student Hsg.)1      5.000        06/01/2033         104,411   
  860,000       Madison County, NY IDA (Morrisville State College Foundation)1      5.000        06/01/2028         872,840   
  1,100,000       Madison County, NY IDA (Morrisville State College Foundation)1      5.000        06/01/2032         1,115,554   
  570,000       Middletown, NY IDA (Flanagan Design & Display)2      7.500        11/01/2018         285,000   
  2,375,000       Monroe County, NY IDA (Parma Senior Hsg. Assoc.)1      6.500        12/01/2042         2,432,285   
  3,660,000       Monroe County, NY IDA (Summit at Brighton)1      5.500        07/01/2027         2,942,823   
  2,345,000       Monroe County, NY IDA (Summit at Brighton)1      5.375        07/01/2032         1,704,018   
  375,000       Monroe County, NY IDA (Volunteers of America)1      5.700        08/01/2018         374,962   
  2,765,000       Monroe County, NY IDA (Volunteers of America)1      5.750        08/01/2028         2,725,184   
  850,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (Monroe Community College)1      5.000        01/15/2038         955,417   
  850,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (Nazareth College of Rochester)1      5.000        10/01/2026         934,464   
  500,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (Nazareth College of Rochester)1      5.250        10/01/2031         548,865   
  1,840,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (Nazareth College of Rochester)1      5.500        10/01/2041         2,024,000   

 

20       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $850,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (St. John Fisher College)1      5.625     06/01/2026       $         961,885   
  500,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (St. John Fisher College)1      5.000        06/01/2029         564,205   
  1,515,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (St. John Fisher College)1      5.000        06/01/2044         1,628,549   
  960,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (St. John Fisher College)1      5.500        06/01/2034         1,104,970   
  1,495,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (St. John Fisher College)1      6.000        06/01/2034         1,692,938   
  15,100,000       Monroe County, NY Industrial Devel. Corp. (Unity Hospital Rochester)1      5.750        08/15/2035         18,034,987   
  650,000,000       Monroe County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp. (TASC)      7.701  3      06/01/2061         2,671,500   
  580,000       Monroe, NY Newpower Corp1      5.625        01/01/2026         584,246   
  2,305,000       Monroe, NY Newpower Corp.1      5.500        01/01/2034         2,318,323   
  700,000       Mount Vernon, NY IDA (Kings Court)1      5.200        12/01/2033         704,242   
  1,385,000       Mount Vernon, NY IDA (Meadowview)1      6.150        06/01/2019         1,387,964   
  2,600,000       Mount Vernon, NY IDA (Meadowview)1      6.200        06/01/2029         2,602,678   
  802,824       Municipal Assistance Corp. for Troy, NY      5.733  3      07/15/2021         702,913   
  1,218,573       Municipal Assistance Corp. for Troy, NY      5.741  3      01/15/2022         1,047,437   
  450,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (ACDS)1      5.950        11/01/2022         452,250   
  100,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (ALIA-ACDS)1      7.500        06/01/2015         100,271   
  310,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (ALIA-HH)1      7.125        06/01/2017         310,347   
  240,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (ALIA-HHS)1      7.125        06/01/2017         240,269   
  15,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (ALIA-LVH)1      7.500        06/01/2015         15,041   
  5,823,750       Nassau County, NY IDA (Amsterdam at Harborside)1      6.700        01/01/2049         5,709,139   
  2,101,661       Nassau County, NY IDA (Amsterdam at Harborside)2      2.000        01/01/2049         21   
  3,665,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (CSMR)1      5.950        11/01/2022         3,683,325   
  435,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (Epilepsy Foundation of L.I.)1      5.950        11/01/2022         437,175   
  1,660,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (Hispanic Counseling Center)      6.500        11/01/2037         1,664,748   
  3,150,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (Keyspan-Glenwood Energy Center)      5.250        06/01/2027         3,162,190   
  480,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (Life’s WORCA)1      5.950        11/01/2022         482,400   
  3,535,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (New York Water Service Corp.)1      5.000        12/01/2035         3,582,793   
  1,695,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (North Shore CFGA)1      6.750        05/01/2024         1,695,966   
  800,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (PLUS Group Home)1      6.150        11/01/2022         811,272   
  645,000       Nassau County, NY IDA (United Veteran’s Beacon House)1      6.500        11/01/2037         655,520   
  460,000       Nassau County, NY IDA, Series A-A1      6.000        06/01/2021         466,895   
  4,800,000       Nassau County, NY IDA, Series A-B1      6.000        06/01/2021         4,871,952   
  465,000       Nassau County, NY IDA, Series A-C1      6.000        06/01/2021         471,970   
  515,000       Nassau County, NY IDA, Series A-D1      6.000        06/01/2021         522,720   
  105,975,000       Nassau County, NY Tobacco Settlement Corp.      6.221  3      06/01/2046         3,548,043   
  1,055,215,000       Nassau County, NY Tobacco Settlement Corp.      5.646  3      06/01/2060         5,402,701   
  122,875,000       Nassau County, NY Tobacco Settlement Corp.1      5.125        06/01/2046         95,704,880   

 

21       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $20,000,000       Nassau County, NY Tobacco Settlement Corp.      5.820 %3      06/01/2046       $ 728,800   
  40,000,000       Nassau County, NY Tobacco Settlement Corp.      6.350  3      06/01/2060         166,800   
  22,780,000       Nassau County, NY Tobacco Settlement Corp. (TASC)1      5.000        06/01/2035         19,262,085   
  3,670,000       New Rochelle, NY IDA (Soundview Apartments)1      5.375        04/01/2036         3,708,425   
  1,500,000       Niagara County, NY IDA (Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center)      5.750        06/01/2018         1,502,640   
  125,000       Niagara Falls, NY Public Water Authority1      5.500        07/15/2034         126,431   
  850,000       Niagara, NY Area Devel. Corp. (Niagara University)      5.000        05/01/2042         913,300   
  500,000       Niagara, NY Area Devel. Corp. (Niagara University)      5.000        05/01/2035         541,220   
  2,055,000       North Tonawanda, NY HDC (Bishop Gibbons Associates)1      7.375        12/15/2021         2,409,672   
  6,245,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust I      6.500        06/01/2035         6,244,688   
  19,230,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust I1      6.625        06/01/2042         19,228,077   
  3,720,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust I      6.250        06/01/2028         3,719,814   
  29,770,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust II (TASC)1      5.625        06/01/2035                 29,810,189   
  53,880,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust II (TASC)1      5.750        06/01/2043         54,137,008   
  245,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust III      6.000        06/01/2043         244,995   
  7,000,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust IV1      5.000        06/01/2038         5,735,310   
  131,335,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust IV      4.866  3      06/01/2050         3,176,994   
  304,690,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust IV      5.373  3      06/01/2055         4,250,425   
  608,700,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust IV      5.823  3      06/01/2060         2,538,279   
  38,275,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust IV (TASC)1      5.000        06/01/2045         29,374,914   
  82,300,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust IV (TASC)1      6.250        06/01/2041         74,661,737   
  52,535,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust IV (TASC)1      5.000        06/01/2042         40,375,774   
  234,750,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust V      6.071  3      06/01/2038         42,337,162   
  643,195,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust V      6.850  3      06/01/2055         7,711,908   
  596,125,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust V      5.171  3      06/01/2050         16,441,127   
  3,179,100,000       NY Counties Tobacco Trust V      6.736  3      06/01/2060         14,369,532   
  62,345,000       NY Liberty Devel. Corp. (Bank of America Tower at One Bryant Park)4      5.625        01/15/2046         71,212,865   
  15,000,000       NY Liberty Devel. Corp. (Bank of America Tower)4      5.125        01/15/2044         16,744,050   
  2,199,995       NY Liberty Devel. Corp. (National Sports Museum)2      6.125        02/15/2019         22   
  795,000       NY MTA, Series A1      5.000        11/15/2025         932,026   
  500,000       NY MTA, Series A      5.000        11/15/2027         588,925   
  500,000       NY MTA, Series A      5.000        11/15/2026         593,885   
  3,400,000       NY MTA, Series A      5.000        11/15/2029         3,953,316   
  6,800,000       NY MTA, Series A1      5.250        11/15/2038         7,786,680   
  5,985,000       NY MTA, Series B1      5.000        11/15/2024         6,663,879   
  4,035,000       NY MTA, Series B1      5.000        11/15/2029         4,443,423   
  4,000,000       NY MTA, Series C      5.000        11/15/2038         4,523,440   
  2,150,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.000        11/15/2032         2,486,131   
  1,100,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.250        11/15/2032         1,303,269   
  1,100,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.250        11/15/2031         1,307,064   
  1,100,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.250        11/15/2033         1,299,485   
  1,100,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.250        11/15/2029         1,313,730   

 

22       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $27,675,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.000     11/15/2030       $         32,278,459   
  10,000,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.000        11/15/2027         11,502,600   
  1,225,000       NY MTA, Series D1      5.250        11/15/2034         1,389,628   
  585,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.250        11/15/2027         707,113   
  1,375,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.250        11/15/2026         1,674,172   
  690,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.250        11/15/2028         827,669   
  1,100,000       NY MTA, Series D      5.250        11/15/2030         1,310,859   
  3,500,000       NY MTA, Series D-1      5.000        11/01/2028         4,112,045   
  8,000,000       NY MTA, Series D-1      5.000        11/01/2027         9,464,480   
  61,110,000       NY MTA, Series F1      5.000        11/15/2030         71,275,037   
  3,000,000       NY MTA, Series H1      5.000        11/15/2025         3,580,740   
  2,100,000       NY MTA, Series H1      5.000        11/15/2033         2,413,908   
  2,100,000       NY Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Authority      5.000        11/15/2030         2,490,306   
  400,000       NY Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Authority      5.000        11/15/2028         477,432   
  3,200,000       NY Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Authority      5.000        11/15/2029         3,741,600   
  303,515,000       NY TSASC, Inc. (TFABs)1      5.125        06/01/2042         254,293,972   
  250,510,000       NY TSASC, Inc. (TFABs)1      5.000        06/01/2034         208,945,381   
  3,950,000       NY TSASC, Inc. (TFABs)1      5.000        06/01/2026         3,952,765   
  3,800,000       NYC GO1      5.000        08/01/2035         4,335,648   
  3,000,000       NYC GO1      5.000        08/01/2029         3,513,990   
  5,760,000       NYC GO      5.000        08/01/2031         6,668,582   
  5,000,000       NYC GO1      5.000        08/01/2029         5,805,000   
  5,135,000       NYC GO      5.000        10/01/2032         5,918,858   
  1,915,000       NYC GO      5.000        10/01/2034         2,192,962   
  350,000       NYC GO      5.000        10/01/2030         409,272   
  2,500,000       NYC GO1      5.000        10/01/2029         2,936,800   
  1,175,000       NYC GO1      5.000        08/01/2035         1,208,358   
  235,000       NYC GO1      5.000        08/01/2030         241,672   
  4,225,000       NYC GO4      5.000        08/01/2035         4,332,635   
  7,330,000       NYC GO4      5.000        08/01/2030         7,523,292   
  8,750,000       NYC GO      5.000        03/01/2033         10,073,875   
  15,000       NYC GO1      5.000        06/01/2020         15,305   
  15,000       NYC GO1      5.000        04/01/2035         15,166   
  60,000       NYC GO1      5.000        04/01/2035         60,733   
  5,000       NYC GO1      5.320        01/15/2028         5,021   
  15,000       NYC GO      5.500        11/15/2037         15,063   
  5,000       NYC GO1      7.750        08/15/2028         5,046   
  5,000       NYC GO      7.250        08/15/2024         5,029   
  4,750,000       NYC GO4      5.000        03/01/2035         4,785,053   
  10,000,000       NYC GO4      5.000        10/01/2034         11,491,300   
  20,000,000       NYC GO4      5.250        03/01/2021         23,167,400   
  230,000       NYC GO      5.250        06/01/2027         230,927   
  1,340,000       NYC GO1      5.000        05/15/2036         1,503,869   
  3,300,000       NYC GO1      5.000        10/01/2033         3,791,337   
  380,000       NYC GO      5.375        06/01/2032         381,581   
  2,000,000       NYC GO1      6.250        12/15/2031         2,378,100   
  5,395,000       NYC GO ROLs5      18.464  6      05/15/2036         8,034,018   
  1,475,000       NYC GO ROLs5      18.483  6      05/15/2031         2,275,866   
  875,000       NYC GO ROLs5      18.498  6      05/15/2033         1,350,090   
  7,205,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.250        11/01/2045         7,390,385   

 

23       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $5,140,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.350     11/01/2037       $ 5,328,021   
  3,735,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.450        11/01/2040         3,876,482   
  25,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.550        11/01/2039         26,887   
  890,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      4.950        11/01/2039         937,588   
  5,100,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.150        11/01/2037         5,160,129   
  1,215,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.350        05/01/2041         1,263,649   
  3,000,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)4      5.125        11/01/2032         3,088,320   
  3,500,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)4      5.000        11/01/2037         3,529,505   
  2,670,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.450        11/01/2046         2,733,466   
  780,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.000        11/01/2030         806,785   
  1,675,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.200        11/01/2035         1,726,238   
  3,090,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)4      5.500        11/01/2034         3,326,662   
  4,685,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)4      5.050        11/01/2039         4,724,476   
  2,435,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)4      5.100        11/01/2027         2,551,877   
  8,035,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)4      5.200        11/01/2040         8,241,893   
  10,910,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)4      5.700        11/01/2046         11,755,073   
  2,840,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.)4      5.550        11/01/2039         3,054,420   
  70,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.), Series A1      5.500        11/01/2034         70,230   
  29,070,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.), Series B4      5.350        05/01/2049         29,868,093   
  8,365,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.), Series C4      5.125        05/01/2040         8,438,526   
  11,250,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.), Series C4      5.050        11/01/2036         11,375,119   
  13,180,000       NYC HDC (Multifamily Hsg.), Series G-14      4.875        11/01/2039         13,326,584   
  2,750,000       NYC HDC, Series C4      5.000        11/01/2026         2,786,740   
  940,000       NYC IDA (Allied Metal)1      7.125        12/01/2027         932,113   
  2,130,000       NYC IDA (Amboy Properties)1      6.750        06/01/2020         2,097,581   
  338,060,000       NYC IDA (American Airlines)1      8.500        08/01/2028         352,647,289   
  59,350,000       NYC IDA (American Airlines)1      7.750        08/01/2031         64,964,510   
  200,000       NYC IDA (American Airlines)1      7.500        08/01/2016         211,840   
  39,860,000       NYC IDA (American Airlines)1      8.000        08/01/2028         43,826,469   
  18,200,000       NYC IDA (American Airlines)1      7.625        08/01/2025         19,981,780   
  365,000       NYC IDA (Atlantic Veal & Lamb)      8.375        12/01/2016         365,438   
  22,255,000       NYC IDA (Brooklyn Navy Yard Cogeneration Partners)      6.200        10/01/2022         21,850,849   
  97,130,000       NYC IDA (Brooklyn Navy Yard Cogeneration Partners)      5.650        10/01/2028         83,528,886   
  153,620,000       NYC IDA (Brooklyn Navy Yard Cogeneration Partners)      5.750        10/01/2036         131,429,591   
  2,895,000       NYC IDA (Center for Elimination of Family Violence)1      7.375        11/01/2036         3,005,357   
  3,400,000       NYC IDA (Center for Nursing/Rehabilitation)1      5.375        08/01/2027         3,174,104   
  13,600,000       NYC IDA (Center for Nursing/Rehabilitation)1      5.375        08/01/2027         12,696,416   
  18,000,000       NYC IDA (Chapin School)1      5.000        11/01/2038         18,358,020   
  1,490,000       NYC IDA (Comprehensive Care Management)      6.000        05/01/2026         1,577,776   
  3,145,000       NYC IDA (Comprehensive Care Management)      6.125        11/01/2035         3,148,711   
  470,000       NYC IDA (Comprehensive Care Management)      7.875        12/01/2016         471,683   
  1,285,000       NYC IDA (Comprehensive Care Management)1      6.375        11/01/2028         1,287,043   
  3,245,000       NYC IDA (Comprehensive Care Management)1      6.375        11/01/2028         3,250,354   
  620,000       NYC IDA (Cool Wind Ventilation)1      5.450        11/01/2017         617,477   
  5,685,000       NYC IDA (Cool Wind Ventilation)1      6.075        11/01/2027         5,475,223   
  555,000       NYC IDA (Cool Wind Ventilation)1      5.450        11/01/2017         552,741   

 

24       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Principal

Amount

           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $2,670,000       NYC IDA (Gourmet Boutique)1      5.750     05/01/2021       $ 1,963,117   
  7,290,000       NYC IDA (Guttmacher Institute)1      5.750        12/01/2036         7,357,797   
  600,000       NYC IDA (Independent Living Assoc.)1      6.200        07/01/2020         607,770   
  1,240,000       NYC IDA (Liberty-IAC/Interactive Corp.)1      5.000        09/01/2035         1,262,779   
  3,745,000       NYC IDA (Manhattan Community Access Corp.)1      6.000        12/01/2036         3,818,627   
  1,895,000       NYC IDA (Margaret Tietz Nursing & Rehabilitation Center)1      6.375        11/01/2038         1,953,764   
  9,175,000       NYC IDA (Margaret Tietz Nursing & Rehabilitation Center)1      6.375        11/01/2038         9,459,517   
  14,745,000       NYC IDA (MediSys Health Network)1      6.250        03/15/2024         14,090,764   
  1,945,000       NYC IDA (Metropolitan College of New York)1      5.750        03/01/2020         1,970,052   
  1,750,000       NYC IDA (PSCH)1      6.375        07/01/2033         1,750,717   
  6,800,000       NYC IDA (Reece School)1      7.500        12/01/2037         7,149,928   
  1,000,000       NYC IDA (Roundabout Theatre)1      5.000        10/01/2023         990,150   
  2,370,000       NYC IDA (Sahadi Fine Foods)1      6.750        11/01/2019         2,373,697   
  200,000       NYC IDA (Samaritan Aids Services)1      5.000        11/01/2024         200,422   
  875,000       NYC IDA (SFTU/YAI/CRV Obligated Group)1      5.000        07/01/2026         871,141   
  1,625,000       NYC IDA (Special Needs Facilities Pooled Program)1      4.750        07/01/2020         1,584,424   
  995,000       NYC IDA (Special Needs Facilities Pooled Program)1      5.250        07/01/2022         950,633   
  145,000       NYC IDA (Special Needs Facilities Pooled Program)1      7.875        08/01/2025         145,088   
  500,000       NYC IDA (Special Needs Facilities Pooled Program)1      6.650        07/01/2023         501,485   
  955,000       NYC IDA (Stallion)1      6.000        11/01/2027         953,701   
  5,760,000       NYC IDA (Stallion)1      5.500        11/01/2031         5,579,366   
  1,275,000       NYC IDA (Streamline Plastics)      8.125        12/01/2025         1,275,319   
  155,000       NYC IDA (Streamline Plastics)      7.750        12/01/2015         155,076   
  6,808,500       NYC IDA (Studio School)2      7.000        11/01/2038         5,460,417   
  1,500,000       NYC IDA (Terminal One Group Assoc.)1      5.500  7      01/01/2021         1,572,015   
  1,000,000       NYC IDA (The Bank Street College)1      5.250        12/01/2030         1,001,330   
  380,000       NYC IDA (The Bank Street College)1      5.250        12/01/2021         380,771   
  8,600,000       NYC IDA (The Child School)1      7.550        06/01/2033         8,638,012   
  3,475,000       NYC IDA (Therapy & Learning Center)1      8.250        09/01/2031         3,477,815   
  32,040,000       NYC IDA (UNICEF)1      5.300        11/01/2038         32,240,250   
  5,000,000       NYC IDA (United Jewish Appeal-Federal Jewish Philanthropies)      5.000        07/01/2034         5,652,450   
  3,525,000       NYC IDA (Urban Resource Institute)1      7.375        11/01/2033         3,537,584   
  70,500,000       NYC IDA (Visy Paper)1      7.950        01/01/2028         70,779,180   
  4,200,000       NYC IDA (Visy Paper)1      7.800        01/01/2016         4,216,338   
  1,930,000       NYC IDA (Vocational Instruction)2      7.750        02/01/2033         1,331,314   
  1,210,000       NYC IDA (W & W Jewelers)1      8.250        02/01/2021         1,210,472   
  2,900,000       NYC IDA (Weizmann Institute)1      5.900        11/01/2034         2,905,394   
  5,930,000       NYC IDA (Weizmann Institute)1      5.900        11/01/2034         5,941,030   
  855,000       NYC IDA (World Casing Corp.)1      6.700        11/01/2019         847,998   
  100,000       NYC IDA (Yankee Stadium)1,8      5.000        03/01/2031         103,463   
  16,500,000       NYC IDA (Yankee Stadium)1,8      7.000        03/01/2049         19,951,470   
  6,800,000       NYC IDA (Yankee Stadium)1,8      2.504        03/01/2022         6,572,336   
  18,110,000       NYC IDA (Yankee Stadium)1,8      5.000        03/01/2046         18,647,505   

 

25       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $70,000       NYC IDA (Yankee Stadium)1,8      5.000     03/01/2036       $         73,592   
  24,270,000       NYC IDA (Yeled Yalda Early Childhood)1      5.725        11/01/2037         24,542,795   
  31,750,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority4      5.500        06/15/2043         37,342,112   
  21,570,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority4      5.375        06/15/2043         25,219,825   
  7,595,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority1      0.030  7      06/15/2039         7,595,000   
  1,900,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority1      5.625        06/15/2027         2,204,133   
  7,350,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority1      5.250        06/15/2040         8,345,557   
  7,405,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority1      5.250        06/15/2044         8,466,359   
  2,650,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority1      5.750        06/15/2040         3,034,859   
  8,950,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority1      5.000        06/15/2031         10,185,100   
  700,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority1      5.125        01/15/2034         779,548   
  50,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority      5.000        02/01/2033         50,190   
  15,000,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Building Aid)4      5.250        07/15/2037         17,332,050   
  25,000,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Building Aid)4      5.000        07/15/2037         28,378,000   
  5,410,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Building Aid)1      5.000        07/15/2040         6,104,536   
  1,700,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Building Aid)1      5.500        01/15/2039         1,940,346   
  8,465,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Building Aid) SPEARS      0.140  7      01/15/2039         8,465,000   
  8,190,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Future Tax)1      5.000        02/01/2035         9,479,761   
  20,335,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Future Tax)4      5.000        02/01/2030         23,799,207   
  15,000,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Future Tax)4      5.000        05/01/2034         17,470,650   
  2,400,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Future Tax)1      5.250        02/01/2030         2,809,392   
  1,845,000       NYS Convention Center Devel. Corp. (Hotel Unit)1      5.000        11/15/2035         1,905,664   
  850,000       NYS DA (Brooklyn Law School)      5.000        07/01/2027         950,105   
  430,000       NYS DA (Brooklyn Law School)      5.000        07/01/2030         475,958   
  430,000       NYS DA (Brooklyn Law School)      5.000        07/01/2029         477,463   
  850,000       NYS DA (Brooklyn Law School)      5.000        07/01/2028         946,807   
  260,000       NYS DA (Catholic Health System)      5.000        07/01/2032         288,790   
  500,000       NYS DA (Catholic Health System)      5.000        07/01/2032         555,365   
  300,000       NYS DA (Culinary Institute of America)      5.000        07/01/2034         329,355   
  285,000       NYS DA (Fordham University)1      5.000        07/01/2038         314,734   
  200,000       NYS DA (Fordham University)1      5.000        07/01/2030         231,866   
  5,300,000       NYS DA (Interagency Council Pooled Loan Program)1      7.000        07/01/2031         5,561,502   
  5,700,000       NYS DA (Interagency Council)1      7.000        07/01/2035         7,089,375   
  3,000,000       NYS DA (Iona College)      5.000        07/01/2032         3,272,880   
  3,490,000       NYS DA (Manhattan College)1      5.300        07/01/2037         3,619,235   
  18,230,000       NYS DA (Memorial Sloan-Kettering)4      5.000        07/01/2035         19,191,052   
  16,250,000       NYS DA (Mental Health Services Facilities)1      0.030  7      02/15/2031         16,250,000   
  150,000       NYS DA (Mental Health Services Facilities)1      5.000        02/15/2037         157,113   
  860,000       NYS DA (Miriam Osborn Memorial Home Assoc.)      5.000        07/01/2029         927,020   
  1,000,000       NYS DA (New School University)1      5.750        07/01/2050         1,142,570   
  135,000       NYS DA (New School University)1      5.000        07/01/2033         135,194   
  5,150,000       NYS DA (New School University)1      5.000        07/01/2041         5,155,922   
  40,000,000       NYS DA (New York University)1      5.250        07/01/2048         44,395,600   

 

26       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $11,500,000       NYS DA (North Shore L.I. Jewish Obligated Group)1      5.250     05/01/2034       $         12,939,570   
  2,000,000       NYS DA (NYU Hospitals Center)1      5.625        07/01/2037         2,250,860   
  8,575,000       NYS DA (NYU Hospitals Center)1      5.000        07/01/2036         9,026,388   
  1,000,000       NYS DA (Pratt Institute)1,9      5.000        07/01/2034         1,153,980   
  6,035,000       NYS DA (Providence Rest)1      5.000        07/01/2035         6,058,657   
  2,700,000       NYS DA (Providence Rest)1      5.125        07/01/2030         2,714,877   
  3,100,000       NYS DA (Providence Rest)1      5.250        07/01/2025         3,123,591   
  1,750,000       NYS DA (School District Bond Financing Program), Series C1      7.250        10/01/2028         2,106,475   
  1,525,000       NYS DA (School District Bond Financing Program), Series C1      7.500        04/01/2039         1,839,089   
  2,645,000       NYS DA (School District Bond Financing Program), Series C1      7.375        10/01/2033         3,177,835   
  5,770,000       NYS DA (Smithtown Special Library District)1      6.000        07/01/2028         6,700,701   
  2,480,000       NYS DA (Special Surgery Hospital)1      6.000        08/15/2038         2,926,871   
  270,000       NYS DA (St. John’s University)      5.000        07/01/2028         309,245   
  10,750,000       NYS DA (St. John’s University)      5.000        07/01/2030         12,226,943   
  3,500,000       NYS DA (St. Joseph’s College)1      5.250        07/01/2035         3,797,640   
  46,700,000       NYS DA (St. Mary’s Hospital for Children)      7.875        11/15/2041         50,827,813   
  5,620,000       NYS DA (State Personal Income Tax Authority)1      5.000        02/15/2034         6,454,233   
  15,915,000       NYS DA (State Personal Income Tax Authority)4      5.000        03/15/2034         18,336,432   
  3,000,000       NYS DA (State University of New York)1      5.000        07/01/2040         3,422,100   
  5,240,000       NYS DA (The Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center)1      6.250        02/15/2035         6,057,230   
  4,395,000       NYS DA (The New School)1      5.000        07/01/2031         4,900,996   
  60,000       NYS DA (University of Rochester)1      5.000        07/01/2034         61,240   
  1,000,000       NYS DA (University of Rochester)1      5.750        07/01/2039         1,152,720   
  11,695,000       NYS DA (Vassar College)4      5.000        07/01/2046         12,719,938   
  6,565,000       NYS DA (Yeshiva University)1      5.000        09/01/2038         6,614,631   
  3,105,000       NYS DA (Yeshiva University)1      5.000        11/01/2031         3,175,018   
  3,500,000       NYS DA (Yeshiva University)1      5.000        09/01/2034         3,539,585   
  1,405,000       NYS EFC (Clean Water & Drinking Revolving Funds)1      5.000        06/15/2037         1,565,086   
  215,000       NYS EFC (NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority)      5.000        06/15/2034         219,100   
  250,000       NYS EFC (United Waterworks)1      5.150        03/01/2034         250,317   
  15,000       NYS ERDA (Brooklyn Union Gas Company)      5.500        01/01/2021         15,063   
  25,000       NYS ERDA (Brooklyn Union Gas Company)1      4.700        02/01/2024         25,976   
  7,000,000       NYS ERDA (Brooklyn Union Gas Company) RIBS      12.313  6      04/01/2020         7,017,500   
  16,300,000       NYS ERDA (Brooklyn Union Gas Company) RIBS      13.481  6      07/01/2026         16,466,260   
  150,000       NYS HFA (Affordable Hsg.)1      6.750        11/01/2038         173,177   
  1,080,000       NYS HFA (Affordable Hsg.)1      6.450        11/01/2029         1,197,839   
  2,000,000       NYS HFA (Affordable Hsg.)1      5.000        11/01/2042         2,129,180   
  2,365,000       NYS HFA (Affordable Hsg.)1      5.250        11/01/2038         2,438,197   
  10,220,000       NYS HFA (Affordable Hsg.)4      5.450        11/01/2045         10,553,191   
  600,000       NYS HFA (Affordable Hsg.)1      5.200        11/01/2030         634,530   
  1,060,000       NYS HFA (Children’s Rescue)1      7.625        05/01/2018         1,060,318   
  920,000       NYS HFA (Friendship)1      5.100        08/15/2041         925,805   
  1,125,000       NYS HFA (Golden Age Apartments)1      5.000        02/15/2037         1,137,791   
  150,000       NYS HFA (Highland Avenue Senior Apartments)1      5.000        02/15/2039         152,832   

 

27       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $120,000       NYS HFA (Horizons at Wawayanda)1      5.150     11/01/2040       $         124,078   
  2,080,000       NYS HFA (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.375        02/15/2035         2,082,309   
  1,255,000       NYS HFA (Multifamily Hsg.)1      6.400        11/15/2027         1,257,887   
  1,710,000       NYS HFA (Multifamily Hsg.)1      5.650        02/15/2034         1,712,360   
  105,000       NYS HFA (State Personal Income Tax Authority)1      5.000        03/15/2036         108,607   
  1,145,000       NYS HFA (State Personal Income Tax Authority)1      5.000        03/15/2036         1,184,331   
  835,000       NYS LGSC (SCSB)      7.750        12/15/2021         836,286   
  270,000       NYS LGSC (SCSB)      7.375        12/15/2016         272,452   
  20,000,000       NYS Liberty Devel. Corp. (4 World Trade Center)1      5.750        11/15/2051         23,439,200   
  1,000,000       NYS Liberty Devel. Corp. (4 World Trade Center)1      5.000        11/15/2031         1,132,960   
  7,650,000       NYS Thruway Authority      5.000        01/01/2032         8,715,722   
  5,015,000       NYS UDC (State Personal Income Tax Authority)1      5.000        03/15/2043         5,706,318   
  50,000       Oneida County, NY IDA (Civic Facilities-Mohawk Valley)1      4.625        09/15/2030         50,045   
  830,000       Oneida County, NY IDA (Civic Facilities-Mohawk Valley)1      5.000        09/15/2035         831,560   
  1,115,000       Onondaga County, NY IDA (Free Library)1      5.125        03/01/2037         1,169,323   
  1,185,000       Onondaga County, NY IDA (Free Library)1      5.125        03/01/2030         1,249,831   
  4,635,000       Onondaga County, NY Res Rec      5.000        05/01/2015         4,638,245   
  42,834,598       Onondaga County, NY Res Rec      0.000   10      05/01/2022         38,459,044   
  1,000,000       Onondaga, NY Civic Devel Corp. (Le Moyne College)      5.000        07/01/2032         1,087,540   
  3,465,000       Onondaga, NY Civic Devel Corp. (Upstate Properties)1      5.250        12/01/2041         3,815,554   
  2,000,000       Onondaga, NY Civic Devel. Corp. (Le Moyne College)1      5.375        07/01/2040         2,172,080   
  1,435,000       Orange County, NY Funding Corp. (Mount St. Mary College)1      5.000        07/01/2042         1,522,894   
  1,715,000       Orange County, NY IDA (St. Luke’s Cornwall Hospital Obligated Group)1      5.375        12/01/2021         1,717,350   
  6,330,000       Orange County, NY IDA (St. Luke’s Cornwall Hospital Obligated Group)      5.375        12/01/2026         6,352,915   
  2,235,000       Orange County, NY IDA (St. Luke’s Cornwall Hospital Obligated Group)1      5.375        12/01/2026         2,237,235   
  10,065,000       Port Authority NY/NJ (Continental Airlines)1      9.125        12/01/2015         10,225,537   
  345,000       Port Authority NY/NJ (JFK International Air Terminal)1      6.500        12/01/2028         361,998   
  32,140,000       Port Authority NY/NJ (JFK International Air Terminal)1      5.750        12/01/2025         32,236,099   
  16,565,000       Port Authority NY/NJ (JFK International Air Terminal)1      5.750        12/01/2022         16,659,421   
  34,400,000       Port Authority NY/NJ (KIAC)1      6.750        10/01/2019         34,396,216   
  27,255,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 141st Series4      4.500        09/01/2029         27,636,780   
  35,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 143rd Series1      5.000        04/01/2036         35,953   
  47,910,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 143rd Series4      5.000        10/01/2030         49,376,046   
  10,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 146th Series1      4.750        12/01/2027         10,646   
  10,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 146th Series1      4.500        12/01/2034         10,227   
  26,100,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 146th Series4      4.750        12/01/2027         27,769,199   
  13,005,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 147th Series4      4.750        10/15/2028         13,859,152   
  20,000,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 147th Series4      5.000        10/15/2032         20,879,780   
  17,790,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 147th Series4      5.000        10/15/2027         19,100,587   

 

28       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $15,000,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 151st Series4      6.000     09/15/2028       $         16,939,800   
  82,000,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 151st Series4      5.750        03/15/2035         91,560,783   
  22,500,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 152nd Series4      5.750        11/01/2030         25,322,400   
  101,940,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 152nd Series4      5.250        11/01/2035         112,022,874   
  15,300,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 161st Series4      5.000        10/15/2031         17,579,394   
  20,250,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 163rd Series4      5.000        07/15/2039         22,893,597   
  15,000,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 166th Series4      5.250        07/15/2036         17,257,800   
  21,515,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 166th Series4      5.000        01/15/2041         24,274,195   
  2,720,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 169th Series1      5.000        10/15/2036         2,996,434   
  400,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 172nd Series1      5.000        10/01/2034         446,376   
  13,715,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, Series 2014-XF00014      5.250        05/01/2038         15,071,496   
  2,755,000       Poughkeepsie, NY IDA (Eastman & Bixby Redevel. Corp.)1      6.000        08/01/2032         2,760,648   
  2,525,000       Ramapo, NY Local Devel. Corp.1      5.000        03/15/2033         2,801,538   
  1,500,000       Rensselaer County, NY IDA (Franciscan Heights)1      5.375        12/01/2036         1,502,220   
  7,300,000       Rensselaer County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      5.750        06/01/2043         7,299,927   
  6,385,000       Rensselaer County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      5.625        06/01/2035         6,384,553   
  4,820,000       Rensselaer, NY City School District COP1      5.000        06/01/2036         4,893,891   
  1,195,000       Rockland County, NY IDA (CRV/Rockland County Assoc. for the Learning Disabled Obligated Group)1      4.900        07/01/2021         1,200,760   
  13,095,000       Rockland County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.      5.750        08/15/2043         13,094,476   
  30,000,000       Rockland County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.      5.875  3      08/15/2045         1,182,000   
  9,225,000       Rockland County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.      5.625        08/15/2035         9,224,908   
  486,000,000       Rockland County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.      6.596  3      08/15/2060         2,021,760   
  30,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2022         30,877   
  30,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2021         30,934   
  20,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2015         20,237   
  30,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2024         30,813   
  30,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2023         30,841   
  20,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2016         20,953   
  25,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2017         26,092   
  25,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2018         25,975   
  25,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2020         25,837   
  25,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2019         25,888   
  35,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2025         35,903   
  50,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2032         51,113   
  45,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2031         46,007   
  50,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2033         51,094   
  60,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2035         61,297   
  55,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2034         56,210   
  40,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2027         40,986   
  35,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2026         35,876   
  40,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2028         40,956   

 

29       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $45,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250     04/15/2030       $         46,030   
  40,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2029         40,941   
  60,000       Sanford Town, NY GO1      5.250        04/15/2036         61,305   
  22,160,000       SONYMA, Series 1374      4.700        10/01/2031         22,320,583   
  10,065,000       SONYMA, Series 1404      4.750        10/01/2037         10,132,636   
  7,135,000       SONYMA, Series 1434      4.900        10/01/2037         7,393,404   
  4,775,000       St. Lawrence County, NY IDA (Clarkson University)1      5.375        09/01/2041         5,396,896   
  520,000       St. Lawrence County, NY IDA (Clarkson University)1      6.000        09/01/2034         621,930   
  1,510,000       St. Lawrence County, NY IDA (Clarkson University)      5.000        09/01/2041         1,674,107   
  4,360,000       St. Lawrence County, NY IDA (Curran Renewable Energy)1      7.250        12/01/2029         3,790,061   
  1,355,000       St. Lawrence County, NY IDA (St. Lawrence University)      5.000        07/01/2031         1,532,586   
  1,280,000       St. Lawrence County, NY IDA (St. Lawrence University)      5.000        07/01/2030         1,453,568   
  25,075,000       Suffolk County, NY Economic Devel. Corp. (Catholic Health Services)1      5.000        07/01/2028         27,735,959   
  1,005,000       Suffolk County, NY Economic Devel. Corp. (Family Residences Essential Enterprises)1      6.750        06/01/2027         1,029,874   
  810,000       Suffolk County, NY Economic Devel. Corp. (Family Residences Essential Enterprises)1      6.000        12/01/2019         818,602   
  4,215,000       Suffolk County, NY Economic Devel. Corp., Series A1      7.375        12/01/2040         4,460,144   
  450,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ACLD)1      6.000        12/01/2019         454,779   
  1,425,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-ACLD)1      5.950        10/01/2021         1,453,386   
  165,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-ADD)1      7.125        06/01/2017         165,185   
  845,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-Adelante)1      6.500        11/01/2037         859,390   
  1,955,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-DDI)1      5.950        10/01/2021         1,993,944   
  555,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-FREE)1      5.950        10/01/2021         566,056   
  555,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-IGHL)1      5.950        11/01/2022         567,870   
  340,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-IGHL)1      6.000        10/01/2031         340,112   
  395,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-IGHL)1      5.950        10/01/2021         402,868   
  35,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-NYS ARC)      7.500        09/01/2015         35,196   
  505,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-NYS ARC)1      5.950        11/01/2022         516,711   
  80,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-Pederson-Krag Center)1      8.375        06/01/2016         80,944   
  45,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-SMCFS)      7.500        09/01/2015         45,252   
  1,325,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-UCPAGS)1      5.950        10/01/2021         1,351,394   
  200,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-UCPAGS)1      7.000        06/01/2016         201,198   
  3,530,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-UVBH)1      6.500        11/01/2037         3,590,116   
  490,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (ALIA-WORCA)1      5.950        11/01/2022         501,363   
  285,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Catholic Charities)1      6.000        10/01/2020         289,372   
  245,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (DDI)1      6.000        10/01/2020         248,758   
  230,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (DDI)1      6.000        10/01/2020         233,528   
  75,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (DDI)1      6.000        12/01/2019         75,797   
  130,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Dowling College)1      5.000        06/01/2036         118,073   
  1,980,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Federation of Organizations)1      8.125        04/01/2030         1,983,307   

 

30       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $1,545,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Huntington First Aid Squad)      6.650     11/01/2017       $         1,549,867   
  130,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Independent Group Home Living)1      6.000        12/01/2019         131,381   
  600,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Independent Group Home Living)1      6.000        10/01/2020         609,204   
  7,555,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Medford Hamlet Assisted Living)1      6.375        01/01/2039         7,656,464   
  1,865,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Nassau-Suffolk Services for Autism)1      6.750        11/01/2036         1,919,700   
  24,580,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Nissequogue Cogeneration Partners)1      5.500        01/01/2023         24,583,195   
  2,295,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Pederson-Krager Center)1      8.125        04/01/2030         2,295,367   
  4,800,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Pederson-Krager Center)1      7.200        02/01/2035         4,408,656   
  660,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Special Needs Facilities Pooled Program)1      5.250        07/01/2022         654,364   
  250,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (Suffolk Hotels)1      6.000        10/01/2020         254,370   
  910,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (United Cerebral Palsy Assoc.)1      6.000        12/01/2019         919,664   
  3,130,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (United Cerebral Palsy Assoc.)      7.875        09/01/2041         3,226,811   
  530,000       Suffolk County, NY IDA (WORCA)1      6.000        10/01/2020         538,130   
  29,915,000       Suffolk, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      6.000        06/01/2048         26,499,904   
  287,265,000       Suffolk, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.      8.000  3      06/01/2048         8,253,123   
  119,295,000       Suffolk, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      6.625        06/01/2044         118,036,438   
  10,080,000       Suffolk, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      5.375        06/01/2028         9,802,699   
  203,935,000       Syracuse, NY IDA (Carousel Center)1      5.000        01/01/2036         206,857,389   
  1,000,000       Syracuse, NY IDA (Crouse Irving Health Hospital)1      5.375        01/01/2023         1,000,920   
  3,830,000       Syracuse, NY IDA (James Square)      2.552  3      08/01/2025         1,916,532   
  2,425,000       Tompkins County, NY Devel. Corp. (Tompkins Cortland Community College Foundation)      5.000        07/01/2032         2,591,986   
  1,700,000       Tompkins County, NY Devel. Corp. (Tompkins Cortland Community College Foundation)      5.000        07/01/2038         1,797,002   
  22,465,000       Troy, NY Capital Resource Corp. (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute)1      5.000        09/01/2030         25,008,712   
  185,000       Ulster County, NY Res Rec1      5.000        03/01/2020         191,830   
  3,180,000       Ulster County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      6.000        06/01/2040         3,155,228   
  3,005,000       Ulster County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      6.450        06/01/2040         3,029,551   
  1,730,000       Ulster County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      6.250        06/01/2025         1,729,896   
  1,280,000       Warren & Washington Counties, NY IDA (GFH/GFHF Obligated Group)1      5.000        12/01/2035         1,282,214   
  6,245,000       Westchester County, NY Healthcare Corp., Series A1      5.000        11/01/2030         6,917,649   
  687,344       Westchester County, NY Healthcare Corp., Series A1      5.000        11/01/2044         772,018   

 

31       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Principal

Amount

           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

New York (Continued)

  

        
  $1,700,000       Westchester County, NY Healthcare Corp., Series B1      5.125     11/01/2041       $ 1,867,603   
  1,190,000       Westchester County, NY IDA (Clearview School)1      7.250        01/01/2035         1,208,493   
  1,145,000       Westchester County, NY IDA (Guiding Eyes for the Blind)1      5.375        08/01/2024         1,170,018   
  520,000       Westchester County, NY IDA (JDAM)1      6.750        04/01/2016         523,349   
  3,400,000       Westchester County, NY IDA (Lawrence Hospital)1      5.000        01/01/2028         3,408,840   
  300,000       Westchester County, NY IDA (Lawrence Hospital)1      5.125        01/01/2018         301,140   
  1,425,000       Westchester County, NY IDA (Schnurmacher Center)1      6.500        11/01/2033         1,477,640   
  4,500,000       Westchester County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      5.000        06/01/2026         4,425,300   
  59,400,000       Westchester County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      5.125        06/01/2038         55,697,004   
  52,815,000       Westchester County, NY Tobacco Asset Securitization Corp.1      5.125        06/01/2045         43,626,246   
  2,390,000       Yonkers, NY IDA (Hudson Scenic Studio)1      6.625        11/01/2019         2,378,671   
  1,370,000       Yonkers, NY IDA (Philipsburgh Hall Associates)1      7.500        11/01/2030         1,235,877   
  1,050,000       Yonkers, NY IDA (Sarah Lawrence College)1      6.000        06/01/2041         1,163,096   
  600,000       Yonkers, NY IDA (St. Joseph’s Hospital)      6.150        03/01/2015         600,474   
  1,000,000       Yonkers, NY IDA (St. Joseph’s Hospital), Series 98-A      6.150        03/01/2015         1,000,790   
  200,000       Yonkers, NY IDA (St. Joseph’s Hospital), Series 98-B      6.150        03/01/2015         200,158   
  565,000       Yonkers, NY Parking Authority1      6.000        06/15/2018         565,740   
  1,215,000       Yonkers, NY Parking Authority1      6.000        06/15/2024         1,139,512   
                                

 

        4,975,853,528

 

  

 

 

U.S. Possessions—28.0%

       
  825,000       Guam Education Financing Foundation COP1      5.000        10/01/2023         853,314   
  3,600,000       Guam Government Business Privilege1      5.000        01/01/2031         4,035,888   
  6,000,000       Guam Government Business Privilege      5.000        01/01/2032         6,706,440   
  345,000       Guam Hsg. Corp. (Single Family Mtg.)1      5.750        09/01/2031         378,527   
  1,560,000       Guam Power Authority, Series A      5.000        10/01/2024         1,854,013   
  1,230,000       Guam Power Authority, Series A      5.000        10/01/2023         1,458,952   
  2,790,000       Guam Power Authority, Series A      5.000        10/01/2030         3,232,745   
  1,700,000       Northern Mariana Islands Commonwealth, Series A1      5.000        10/01/2022         1,647,113   
  29,920,000       Northern Mariana Islands Commonwealth, Series A1      5.000        06/01/2030         26,359,520   
  7,465,000       Northern Mariana Islands Ports Authority, Series A1      6.250        03/15/2028         6,647,359   
  14,500,000       Northern Mariana Islands Ports Authority, Series A1      6.600        03/15/2028         14,510,730   
  52,635,000       Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority      6.000        07/01/2044         37,481,910   
  49,000,000       Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority1      5.125        07/01/2047         49,015,680   
  55,825,000       Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority      6.125        07/01/2024         43,552,432   
  1,580,000       Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority      5.250        07/01/2029         1,128,009   
  1,950,000       Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority      5.000        07/01/2033         1,340,742   

 

32       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

U.S. Possessions (Continued)

  

        
  $15,350,000       Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority      6.000     07/01/2047       $         10,916,306   
  80,800,000       Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority      6.000        07/01/2038         58,137,216   
  10,000,000       Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority      5.250        07/01/2024         7,530,800   
  56,685,000       Puerto Rico Children’s Trust Fund (TASC)1      5.625        05/15/2043         52,888,806   
  3,519,880,000       Puerto Rico Children’s Trust Fund (TASC)      7.625   3      05/15/2057         54,558,140   
  3,179,200,000       Puerto Rico Children’s Trust Fund (TASC)      8.375   3      05/15/2057         33,095,472   
  168,500,000       Puerto Rico Children’s Trust Fund (TASC)      6.627   3      05/15/2050         12,244,895   
  745,000,000       Puerto Rico Children’s Trust Fund (TASC)      6.324   3      05/15/2055         22,409,600   
  2,700,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      6.000        07/01/2035         2,001,942   
  30,000,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.750        07/01/2036         22,034,100   
  5,675,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      6.500        07/01/2040         4,274,580   
  1,000,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      6.000        07/01/2028         757,670   
  3,670,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      6.000        07/01/2040         2,691,835   
  1,000,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.500        07/01/2026         751,470   
  7,850,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.500        07/01/2029         5,934,286   
  5,000,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO      5.750        07/01/2028         3,758,300   
  3,205,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.625        07/01/2033         2,361,668   
  13,300,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.125        07/01/2031         9,566,557   
  2,000,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.000        07/01/2033         1,408,820   
  2,920,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.250        07/01/2030         2,136,739   
  2,500,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.250        07/01/2032         1,817,125   
  4,965,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.250        07/01/2037         3,535,279   
  3,315,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.125        07/01/2031         2,396,049   
  14,500,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.250        07/01/2031         10,574,705   
  10,230,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.250        07/01/2034         7,359,667   
  770,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.875        07/01/2036         567,482   
  5,050,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      6.500        07/01/2037         3,822,446   
  390,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      6.000        07/01/2039         287,044   
  5,000,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.375        07/01/2033         3,646,950   
  2,200,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.250        07/01/2026         1,631,278   
  76,300,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      5.500        07/01/2032         56,221,655   
  1,270,000       Puerto Rico Commonwealth GO1      6.000        07/01/2028         1,295,057   
  3,620,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series A11      7.000        07/01/2033         1,813,729   
  2,000,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series A11      5.000        07/01/2029         1,002,640   
  23,480,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series A11      7.000        07/01/2043         11,704,780   
  18,990,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series A11      6.750        07/01/2036         9,491,012   
  1,095,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series A11      5.000        07/01/2042         546,219   
  10,105,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series AAA11      5.250        07/01/2029         5,065,535   
  9,625,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series AAA11      5.250        07/01/2031         4,825,012   
  9,000,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series AAA11      5.250        07/01/2022         4,535,370   
  1,430,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series AAA11      5.250        07/01/2027         716,873   
  20,170,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series CCC11      5.250        07/01/2027         10,111,423   
  13,295,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series CCC11      5.250        07/01/2028         6,664,784   
  510,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series RR      5.000        07/01/2024         507,144   

 

33       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Principal

Amount

           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

U.S. Possessions (Continued)

  

        
  $6,885,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series TT11      5.000     07/01/2037       $         3,443,051   
  6,320,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series TT11      5.000        07/01/2032         3,168,279   
  33,350,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series WW11      5.500        07/01/2038         16,675,000   
  3,700,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series WW11      5.000        07/01/2028         1,854,921   
  7,000,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series XX11      5.250        07/01/2040         3,500,350   
  7,590,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series ZZ11      5.250        07/01/2025         3,805,019   
  10,000,000       Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Series ZZ11      5.250        07/01/2024         5,013,300   
  270,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority1      5.750        07/01/2020         173,891   
  4,000,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority      5.500        07/01/2029         3,950,880   
  4,945,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority1      5.300        07/01/2035         3,600,504   
  4,845,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority1      5.250        07/01/2030         4,639,378   
  9,515,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority1      5.000        07/01/2028         5,376,070   
  8,980,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series G1      5.000        07/01/2033         4,958,307   
  1,840,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series G1      5.000        07/01/2042         1,003,665   
  1,120,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series H1      5.450        07/01/2035         610,870   
  1,145,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series K1      5.000        07/01/2030         634,799   
  6,500,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series K1      5.000        07/01/2027         3,687,775   
  915,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series L1      5.250        07/01/2030         670,384   
  2,600,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series L1      5.250        07/01/2023         2,731,794   
  10,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series M1      5.000        07/01/2046         11,084   
  78,610,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series M1      5.000        07/01/2046         42,874,680   
  57,615,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series N1      5.250        07/01/2039         39,895,507   
  3,190,000       Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Series N1      5.250        07/01/2032         3,280,022   
  5,000,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure1      6.000        12/15/2026         3,621,150   
  142,985,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure1      5.000        07/01/2041         88,945,249   
  675,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure1      5.000        07/01/2037         427,599   
  65,725,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure      5.730  3      07/01/2045         5,852,811   
  1,295,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure1      5.500        07/01/2026         1,278,191   
  17,490,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure1      5.000        07/01/2037         11,079,565   
  25,255,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure1      5.000        07/01/2031         15,992,224   
  15,000,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure1      5.500        07/01/2027         14,701,650   
  41,740,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure1      5.000        07/01/2046         25,877,965   
  16,955,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure      5.650  3      07/01/2029         5,897,627   
  25,000,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure      5.800  3      07/01/2032         5,534,250   

 

34       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Principal
Amount
           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

U.S. Possessions (Continued)

  

        
  $1,680,000       Puerto Rico Infrastructure (Mepsi Campus)1      6.500     10/01/2037       $ 1,009,226   
  6,315,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (Ana G. Mendez University)1      5.500        12/01/2031         5,485,398   
  1,105,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (Ana G. Mendez University)1      5.375        12/01/2021         1,066,259   
  6,285,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (Ana G. Mendez University)1      5.000        03/01/2036         4,901,483   
  1,350,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (Ana G. Mendez University)      5.000        04/01/2027         1,168,263   
  1,200,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (Ana G. Mendez University)      5.375        04/01/2042         956,700   
  875,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (Ana G. Mendez University)      5.125        04/01/2032         721,963   
  3,280,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (Cogeneration Facilities)1      6.625        06/01/2026         3,153,294   
  5,000,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (Hospital Auxilio Mutuo)1      6.250        07/01/2026         5,142,750   
  650,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (International American University)      5.000        10/01/2031         654,810   
  5,250,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (Ryder Memorial Hospital)1      6.700        05/01/2024         5,132,190   
  7,000,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (San Lucas & Cristo Redentor Hospitals)      5.750        06/01/2029         2,765,000   
  200,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (University of the Sacred Heart)      5.000        10/01/2042         156,654   
  5,490,000       Puerto Rico ITEMECF (University Plaza)1      5.000        07/01/2033         5,376,467   
  4,990,000       Puerto Rico Municipal Finance Agency, Series A1      5.250        08/01/2025         3,101,684   
  9,450,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      5.375        07/01/2033         6,513,129   
  31,050,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      6.000        07/01/2041         21,521,065   
  2,110,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      5.625        07/01/2039         1,436,340   
  90,355,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      5.000        07/01/2036         60,817,047   
  1,500,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      6.250        07/01/2021         1,141,215   
  7,500,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      6.250        07/01/2031         5,496,900   
  850,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      5.500        07/01/2037         579,691   
  18,585,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      5.250        07/01/2029         12,922,708   
  7,500,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      5.000        07/01/2037         5,029,725   
  121,570,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      5.250        07/01/2033         83,488,197   
  7,500,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      6.750        07/01/2036         5,536,875   
  8,000,000       Puerto Rico Public Buildings Authority1      6.500        07/01/2030         5,892,640   
  11,810,000       Puerto Rico Public Finance Corp., Series B1      5.500        08/01/2031         6,213,241   
  15,265,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A      7.890  3      08/01/2034         2,689,540   
  8,205,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A1      6.500        08/01/2044         6,492,699   
  75,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A1      5.500        08/01/2037         55,001   
  296,445,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A4      5.250        08/01/2057                 222,063,806   
  1,490,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A1      5.000        08/01/2043         986,544   
  409,990,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A      5.606  3      08/01/2054         31,429,833   
  30,000,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A      6.504  3      08/01/2042         5,104,500   
  80,000,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A      6.504  3      08/01/2043         12,765,600   
  3,130,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A1      5.000        08/01/2024         2,565,254   
  10,000,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series A-11      5.250        08/01/2043         6,947,900   
  250,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series C1      6.000        08/01/2042         190,718   
  39,470,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series C1      0.000  10      08/01/2032         30,116,005   
  9,985,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series C1      5.250        08/01/2041         6,999,185   

 

35       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS Continued

 

Principal

Amount

           Coupon     Maturity      Value  

 

U.S. Possessions (Continued)

  

        
  $95,245,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series C1      5.750     08/01/2057       $ 77,157,022   
  4,000,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series C1      5.375        08/01/2036         2,914,120   
  1,450,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Series C1      6.000        08/01/2039         1,124,301   
  4,525,000       University of Puerto Rico1      5.000        06/01/2026         2,786,857   
  7,280,000       University of Puerto Rico, Series P1      5.000        06/01/2030         4,461,330   
  67,190,000       University of Puerto Rico, Series Q1      5.000        06/01/2036         40,807,847   
  24,375,000       University of Puerto Rico, Series Q1      5.000        06/01/2030         14,937,488   
  590,000       V.I. Public Finance Authority (Matching Fund Loan Note)1      6.000        10/01/2039         654,133   
  1,425,000       V.I. Public Finance Authority, Series A1      5.000        10/01/2032         1,601,315   
  11,100,000       V.I. Tobacco Settlement Financing Corp.      7.300   3      05/15/2035        

 

1,526,361

 

  

 

            

 

1,728,327,918

 

  

 

 

Total Municipal Bonds and Notes (Cost $7,710,291,534)

  

       6,704,181,446   
  Shares              

 

Common Stocks—0.0%

                         
 

 

1,401

 

  

 

  

CMS Liquidating Trust12,13 (Cost $4,483,200)

 

                     

 

4,048,890

 

  

 

 

Total Investments, at Value (Cost $7,714,774,734)—108.8%

  

             6,708,230,336   

 

Net Other Assets (Liabilities)—(8.8)

          (540,098,020

 

Net Assets—100.0%

        $     6,168,132,316   
     

Footnotes to Statement of Investments

1. All or a portion of the security position has been segregated for collateral to cover borrowings. See Note 8 of the accompanying Notes.
2. This security is not accruing income because the issuer has missed an interest payment on it and/or is not anticipated to make future interest and or principal payments. The rate shown is the original contractual interest rate. See Note 4 of the accompanying Notes.
3. Zero coupon bond reflects effective yield on the date of purchase.
4. Security represents the underlying municipal bond with respect to an inverse floating rate security held by the Fund. The bond was purchased by the Fund and subsequently transferred to a trust, which issued the related inverse floating rate security. See Note 4 of the accompanying Notes.
5. Represents an inverse floating rate security that is subject to a shortfall/reimbursement agreement. See Note 4 of the accompanying Notes.
6. Represents the current interest rate for the inverse floating rate security. See Note 4 of the accompanying Notes.
7. Represents the current interest rate for a variable or increasing rate security.
8. Denotes an inflation-indexed security: coupon or principal are indexed to a consumer price index

9. All or a portion of the security position is when-issued or delayed delivery to be delivered and settled after December 31, 2014. See Note 4 of the accompanying Notes.

10. Denotes a step bond: a zero coupon bond that converts to a fixed or variable interest rate at a designated future date.

11. Subject to a forbearance agreement. Rate shown is the original contractual interest rate. See Note 4 of the accompanying Notes.
12. Non-income producing security.
13. Received as a result of a corporate action.

To simplify the listings of securities, abbreviations are used per the table below:

ACDS    Assoc. for Children with Down Syndrome
ACLD    Adults and Children with Learning and Developmental Disabilities
ADD    Aid to the Developmentally Disabled
ALIA    Alliance of Long Island Agencies

 

36       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Abbreviations (Continued)

ARC    Assoc. of Retarded Citizens
CFGA    Child and Family Guidance Assoc.
COP    Certificates of Participation
CRV    Crystal Run Village
CSMR    Community Services for the Mentally Retarded
DA    Dormitory Authority
DDI    Developmental Disabilities Institute
DRIVERS    Derivative Inverse Tax Exempt Receipts
EFC    Environmental Facilities Corp.
ERDA    Energy Research and Devel. Authority
FREE    Family Residences and Essential Enterprises
GFH    Glens Falls Hospital
GFHF    Glens Falls Hospital Foundation
GO    General Obligation
HDC    Housing Devel. Corp.
HFA    Housing Finance Agency
HH    Harmony Heights, Inc.
HHS    Harmony Heights School
IDA    Industrial Devel. Agency
IGHL    Independent Group Home for Living
ITEMECF    Industrial, Tourist, Educational, Medical and Environmental Community Facilities
JDAM    Julia Dyckman Andrus Memorial
JFK    John Fitzgerald Kennedy
L.I.    Long Island
LGSC    Local Government Services Corp.
LIFERS    Long Inverse Floating Exempt Receipts
LVH    Little Village House
MTA    Metropolitan Transportation Authority
NY/NJ    New York/New Jersey
NYC    New York City
NYS    New York State
NYU    New York University
PSCH    Professional Service Centers for the Handicapped, Inc.
Res Rec    Resource Recovery Facility
RIBS    Residual Interest Bonds
ROLs    Reset Option Longs
SCSB    Schuyler Community Services Board
SFTU    Services for the Underserved
SMCFS    St. Mary’s Children and Family Services
SONYMA    State of New York Mortgage Agency
SPEARS    Short Puttable Exempt Adjustable Receipts
SUNY    State University of New York
TASC    Tobacco Settlement Asset-Backed Bonds
TFABs    Tobacco Flexible Amortization Bonds
UCPAGS    United Cerebral Palsy Assoc. of Greater Suffolk
UDC    Urban Development Corporation
UNICEF    United Nations Children’s Fund
UVBH    United Veteran’s Beacon House
V.I.    United States Virgin Islands
WORCA    Working Organization for Retarded Children and Adults
YAI    Young Adult Institute
YMCA    Young Men’s Christian Assoc.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

 

37       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES December 31, 2014

 

Assets

        

Investments, at value (cost $7,714,774,734)—see accompanying statement of investments

   $ 6,708,230,336   

 

 

Cash

     537,567   

 

 

Receivables and other assets:

  

Interest

     115,967,080   

Investments sold

     2,625,000   

Other

     1,055,405   
  

 

 

 

Total assets

    

 

6,828,415,388

 

  

 

Liabilities

        

Payables and other liabilities:

  

Payable for short-term floating rate notes issued (See Note 4)

     581,425,000   

Payable for borrowings (See Note 8)

     44,400,000   

Shares of beneficial interest redeemed

     18,131,318   

Investments purchased (including $1,145,340 purchased on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis)

     7,835,839   

Dividends

     5,873,180   

Trustees’ compensation

     1,596,652   

Distribution and service plan fees

     839,472   

Shareholder communications

     17,453   

Interest expense on borrowings

     1,080   

Other

     163,078   
  

 

 

 

Total liabilities

     660,283,072   

Net Assets

   $ 6,168,132,316   
  

 

 

 
  

Composition of Net Assets

        

Paid-in capital

   $ 8,090,103,564   

Accumulated net investment income

     105,674,479   

Accumulated net realized loss on investments

     (1,021,101,329)   

Net unrealized depreciation on investments

     (1,006,544,398)   
  

 

 

 

Net Assets

   $ 6,168,132,316   
  

 

 

 

 

38       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

 

Net Asset Value Per Share

  

Class A Shares:

 

  

Net asset value and redemption price per share (based on net assets of $4,996,222,623 and 325,470,968 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)

 

   $ 15.35   
Maximum offering price per share (net asset value plus sales charge of 4.75% of offering price)    $ 16.12   

 

 

 

Class B Shares:

 

  
Net asset value, redemption price (excludes applicable contingent deferred sales charge) and offering price per share (based on net assets of $32,028,805 and 2,089,057 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)    $ 15.33   

 

 

 

Class C Shares:

 

  
Net asset value, redemption price (excludes applicable contingent deferred sales charge) and offering price per share (based on net assets of $908,755,777 and 59,327,593 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)    $ 15.32   

 

 

 

Class Y Shares:

 

  
Net asset value, redemption price and offering price per share (based on net assets of $231,125,111 and 15,054,856 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)    $ 15.35   

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

 

39       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS For the Year Ended December 31, 2014

 

 

 

Investment Income

    

Interest

     $ 478,361,146   

 

 

Expenses

    

Management fees

       28,720,179   

 

 

Distribution and service plan fees:

    

Class A

       7,430,065   

Class B

       380,101   

Class C

       8,995,725   

 

 

Transfer and shareholder servicing agent fees:

    

Class A

       5,045,912   

Class B

       37,751   

Class C

       898,266   

Class Y

       203,705   

 

 

Shareholder communications:

Class A

       123,086   

Class B

       3,884   

Class C

       33,383   

Class Y

       5,739   

 

 

Interest expense and fees on short-term floating rate notes issued (See Note 4)

       12,349,167   

 

 

Borrowing fees

       2,971,539   

 

 

Trustees’ compensation

       134,356   

 

 

Custodian fees and expenses

       64,051   

 

 

Interest expense on borrowings

       17,115   

 

 

Other

       478,420   
    

 

 

 

Total expenses

       67,892,444   

 

 

Net Investment Income

       410,468,702   

 

 

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

    

Net realized loss on investments

       (32,379,779)   

 

 

Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation on investments

       446,899,381   
    

 

 

 

Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

      $     824,988,304   
    

 

 

 

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

 

40       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS

 

     

Year Ended

December 31, 2014

     Year Ended
December 31, 2013
 
Operations      

Net investment income

   $ 410,468,702       $ 444,837,050   

 

 

Net realized loss

     (32,379,779)         (73,872,629)   

 

 

Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation

     446,899,381         (1,215,152,121)   
  

 

 

    

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

     824,988,304         (844,187,700)   

 

 
Dividends and/or Distributions to Shareholders      
Dividends from net investment income:      
Class A      (321,907,703)         (366,957,815)   

Class B

     (2,116,059)         (3,458,983)   

Class C

     (49,763,482)         (55,983,729)   
Class Y      (13,226,546)         (12,077,031)   
  

 

 

 
     (387,013,790)         (438,477,558)   

 

 
Beneficial Interest Transactions      

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from beneficial interest transactions:

     

Class A

     (310,227,667)         (727,116,140)   

Class B

     (17,035,449)         (37,794,713)   

Class C

     (22,474,060)         (167,788,631)   

Class Y

     49,842,451         3,288,005   
  

 

 

    

 

 

 
     (299,894,725)         (929,411,479)   

 

 
Net Assets      
Total increase (decrease)      138,079,789         (2,212,076,737)   

 

 

Beginning of period

     6,030,052,527         8,242,129,264   
  

 

 

    

 

 

 
End of period (including accumulated net investment income of $105,674,479 and $71,502,802, respectively)    $ 6,168,132,316       $ 6,030,052,527   
  

 

 

 

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

 

41       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS For the Year Ended December 31, 2014

 

 

 

Cash Flows from Operating Activities

  

Net increase in net assets from operations

   $ 824,988,304   

 

 

Adjustments to reconcile net increase in net assets from operations to net cash provided by operating activities:

  

Purchase of investment securities

     (550,745,475)   

Proceeds from disposition of investment securities

     1,173,096,275   

Short-term investment securities, net

     17,970,249   

Premium amortization

     13,330,700   

Discount accretion

     (74,631,073)   

Net realized loss on investments

     32,379,779   

Net change in unrealized appreciation/depreciation on investments

     (446,899,381)   

Change in assets:

  

Increase in other assets

     (77,431)   

Decrease in interest receivable

     8,508,839   

Decrease in receivable for securities sold

     1,293,659   

Change in liabilities:

  

Decrease in other liabilities

     (1,252,622)   

Increase in payable for securities purchased

     5,535,839   
  

 

 

 

Net cash provided by operating activities

     1,003,497,662   

 

 

Cash Flows from Financing Activities

  

Proceeds from borrowings

     352,300,000   

Payments on borrowings

     (409,000,000)   

Payments on short-term floating rate notes issued

     (251,355,000)   

Payment on bank overdraft

     (7,037,043)   

Proceeds from shares sold

     746,608,895   

Payments on shares redeemed

     (1,352,253,960)   

Cash distributions paid

     (82,222,987)   
  

 

 

 

Net cash used in financing activities

     (1,002,960,095)   

 

 

Net increase in cash

     537,567   

 

 

Cash, beginning balance

       
  

 

 

 

Cash, ending balance

    $ 537,567   
  

 

 

 

Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:

Noncash financing activities not included herein consist of reinvestment of dividends and distributions of $299,859,512.

Cash paid for interest on borrowings—$21,329.

Cash paid for interest on short-term floating rate notes issued—$12,349,167.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

 

42       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

 

Class A    Year Ended
December 31,
2014
    Year Ended
December 31,
2013
    Year Ended
December 31,
2012
    Year Ended
December 30,
2011 1
    Year Ended
December 31,
2010
 

 

 

Per Share Operating Data

          

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 14.29      $ 17.02      $ 15.98      $ 15.33      $ 15.70   

 

 

Income (loss) from investment operations:

          

Net investment income2

     1.02        0.97        0.95        1.02        0.98   

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

     1.00        (2.75     1.08        0.66        (0.38
  

 

 

 

Total from investment operations

     2.02        (1.78     2.03        1.68        0.60   

 

 

Dividends and/or distributions to shareholders:

          

Dividends from net investment income

     (0.96     (0.95     (0.99     (1.03     (0.97

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 15.35      $ 14.29      $ 17.02      $ 15.98      $ 15.33   
  

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return, at Net Asset Value3

     14.43     (10.84 )%      12.94     11.50     3.63

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

          

Net assets, end of period (in millions)

   $ 4,996      $ 4,948      $ 6,725      $ 6,115      $ 6,295   

 

 

Average net assets (in millions)

   $ 5,066      $ 6,159      $ 6,537      $ 5,937      $ 7,013   

 

 

Ratios to average net assets:4

          

Net investment income

     6.73%        6.05%        5.67%        6.65%        6.01%   
Expenses excluding interest and fees on short-term floating rate notes issued and interest and fees from borrowings      0.72%        0.72%        0.67%        0.69%        0.67%   

Interest and fees from borrowings

     0.05%        0.04%        0.05%        0.06%        0.08%   
Interest and fees on short-term floating rate notes issued5      0.20%        0.11%        0.14%        0.15%        0.18%   
  

 

 

 

Total expenses

     0.97%        0.87%        0.86%        0.90%        0.93%   
Expenses after payments, waivers and/or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses      0.97%        0.87%        0.86%        0.90%        0.93%   

 

 

Portfolio turnover rate

     8%        15%        10%        11%        7%   

1. December 30, 2011 represents the last business day of the Fund’s reporting period.

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

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

4. Annualized for periods less than one full year.

5. Interest and fee expense relates to the Fund’s liability for short-term floating rate notes issued in conjunction with inverse floating rate security transactions.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

 

43       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS Continued

 

Class B   

Year Ended

December 31,
2014

   

Year Ended

December 31,
2013

   

Year Ended

December 31,
2012

   

Year Ended

December 30,
2011 1

   

Year Ended

December 31,
2010

 

 

 

Per Share Operating Data

          

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 14.28      $ 17.00      $ 15.96      $ 15.31      $ 15.68   

 

 

Income (loss) from investment operations:

          

Net investment income2

     0.89        0.82        0.80        0.87        0.82   

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

     0.99        (2.73     1.07        0.67        (0.37
  

 

 

 

Total from investment operations

     1.88        (1.91     1.87        1.54        0.45   

 

 

Dividends and/or distributions to shareholders:

          

Dividends from net investment income

     (0.83     (0.81     (0.83     (0.89     (0.82

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 15.33      $ 14.28      $ 17.00      $ 15.96      $ 15.31   
  

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return, at Net Asset Value3

     13.41     (11.59 )%      11.91     10.47     2.67

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

          

Net assets, end of period (in millions)

   $ 32      $ 46      $ 94      $ 133      $ 181   

 

 

Average net assets (in millions)

   $ 38      $ 68      $ 115      $ 146      $ 220   

 

 

Ratios to average net assets:4

          

Net investment income

     5.89%        5.09%        4.76%        5.72%        5.07%   
Expenses excluding interest and fees on short-term floating rate notes issued and interest and fees from borrowings      1.58%        1.62%        1.61%        1.65%        1.62%   

Interest and fees from borrowings

     0.05%        0.04%        0.05%        0.06%        0.08%   
Interest and fees on short-term floating rate notes issued5      0.20%        0.11%        0.14%        0.15%        0.18%   
  

 

 

 

Total expenses

     1.83%        1.77%        1.80%        1.86%        1.88%   
Expenses after payments, waivers and/or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses      1.83%        1.77%        1.80%        1.86%        1.88%   

 

 

Portfolio turnover rate

     8%        15%        10%        11%        7%   

1. December 30, 2011 represents the last business day of the Fund’s reporting period.

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

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

4. Annualized for periods less than one full year.

5. Interest and fee expense relates to the Fund’s liability for short-term floating rate notes issued in conjunction with inverse floating rate security transactions.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

 

44        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Class C    Year Ended
  December 31,
2014
    Year Ended
December 31,
2013
    Year Ended
December 31,
2012
    Year Ended
December 30,
2011 1
    Year Ended
  December 31,
2010
 

 

 
Per Share Operating Data           

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 14.26      $ 16.99      $ 15.95      $ 15.30      $ 15.67   

 

 
Income (loss) from investment operations:           
Net investment income2      0.89        0.83        0.81        0.88        0.83   
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)      1.00        (2.75     1.07        0.67        (0.37
  

 

 

 
Total from investment operations      1.89        (1.92     1.88        1.55        0.46   

 

 
Dividends and/or distributions to shareholders:           
Dividends from net investment income      (0.83     (0.81     (0.84     (0.90     (0.83

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $     15.32      $     14.26      $     16.99      $     15.95      $     15.30   
  

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return, at Net Asset Value3

     13.50     (11.63 )%      12.00     10.56     2.75

 

 
Ratios/Supplemental Data           
Net assets, end of period (in millions)    $ 909      $ 868      $ 1,223      $ 1,069      $ 1,120   

 

 
Average net assets (in millions)    $ 903      $ 1,096      $ 1,167      $ 1,039      $ 1,271   

 

 
Ratios to average net assets:4           
Net investment income      5.88%        5.18%        4.79%        5.77%        5.14%   
Expenses excluding interest and fees on short-term floating rate notes issued and interest and fees from borrowings      1.57%        1.59%        1.54%        1.57%        1.54%   
Interest and fees from borrowings      0.05%        0.04%        0.05%        0.06%        0.08%   
Interest and fees on short-term floating rate notes issued5      0.20%        0.11%        0.14%        0.15%        0.18%   
  

 

 

 
Total expenses      1.82%        1.74%        1.73%        1.78%        1.80%   
Expenses after payments, waivers and/or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses      1.82%        1.74%        1.73%        1.78%        1.80%   

 

 
Portfolio turnover rate      8%        15%        10%        11%        7%   

1. December 30, 2011 represents the last business day of the Fund’s reporting period.

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

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

4. Annualized for periods less than one full year.

5. Interest and fee expense relates to the Fund’s liability for short-term floating rate notes issued in conjunction with inverse floating rate security transactions.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

 

45       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS Continued

 

Class Y   

Year Ended

December 31,
2014

   

Year Ended

December 31,
2013

   

Year Ended

December 31,
2012

   

Year Ended

December 30,
2011 1

   

Year Ended

December 31,
2010

 

 

 

Per Share Operating Data

          

Net asset value, beginning of period

   $ 14.29      $ 17.02      $ 15.98      $ 15.33      $ 15.69   

 

 
Income (loss) from investment operations:           
Net investment income2      1.04        0.99        0.97        1.04        0.99   
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)      1.00        (2.75)        1.08        0.66        (0.36)   
  

 

 

 
Total from investment operations      2.04        (1.76)        2.05        1.70        0.63   

 

 
Dividends and/or distributions to shareholders:           
Dividends from net investment income      (0.98)        (0.97)        (1.01)        (1.05)        (0.99)   

 

 

Net asset value, end of period

   $ 15.35      $ 14.29      $ 17.02      $ 15.98      $ 15.33   
  

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return, at Net Asset Value3

     14.60     (10.72 )%      13.10     11.64     3.84

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

          
Net assets, end of period (in millions)      $    231        $    168        $    200        $    124        $    101   

 

 
Average net assets (in millions)      $    205        $    198        $    179        $    109        $    100   

 

 
Ratios to average net assets:4           
Net investment income      6.87%        6.21%        5.78%        6.76%        6.14%   
Expenses excluding interest and fees on short-term floating rate notes issued and interest and fees from borrowings      0.57%        0.59%        0.54%        0.56%        0.54%   
Interest and fees from borrowings      0.05%        0.04%        0.05%        0.06%        0.08%   
Interest and fees on short-term floating rate notes issued5      0.20%        0.11%        0.14%        0.15%        0.18%   
  

 

 

 
Total expenses      0.82%        0.74%        0.73%        0.77%        0.80%   
Expenses after payments, waivers and/or reimbursements and reduction to custodian expenses      0.82%        0.74%        0.73%        0.77%        0.80%   

 

 
Portfolio turnover rate      8%        15%        10%        11%        7%   

1. December 30, 2011 represents the last business day of the Fund’s reporting period.

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

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

4. Annualized for periods less than one full year.

5. Interest and fee expense relates to the Fund’s liability for short-term floating rate notes issued in conjunction with inverse floating rate security transactions.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

 

46        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS December 31, 2014

 

 

1. Organization

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

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

The following is a summary of significant accounting policies consistently followed by the Fund.

 

 

2. Significant Accounting Policies

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

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

Dividends and Distributions to Shareholders. Dividends and distributions to shareholders, which are determined in accordance with income tax regulations and may differ from U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income distributions, if any, are declared daily and paid monthly. Capital gain distributions, if any, are declared and paid annually.

 

47       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

 

Investment Income. Interest income is recognized on an accrual basis. Discount and premium, which are included in interest income on the Statement of Operations, are amortized or accreted daily.

Custodian Fees. “Custodian fees and expenses” in the Statement of Operations may include interest expense incurred by the Fund on any cash overdrafts of its custodian account during the period. Such cash overdrafts may result from the effects of failed trades in portfolio securities and from cash outflows resulting from unanticipated shareholder redemption activity. The Fund pays interest to its custodian on such cash overdraft at a rate equal to the 1 Month LIBOR Rate plus 2.00%. The “Reduction to custodian expenses” line item, if applicable, represents earnings on cash balances maintained by the Fund during the period. Such interest expense and other custodian fees may be paid with these earnings.

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

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

Federal Taxes. The Fund intends to comply with provisions of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment companies and to distribute substantially all of its investment company taxable income, including any net realized gain on investments not offset by capital loss carryforwards, if any, to shareholders. Therefore, no federal income or excise tax provision is required. The Fund files income tax returns in U.S. federal and applicable state jurisdictions. The statute of limitations on the Fund’s tax return filings generally remain open for the three preceding fiscal reporting period ends.

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

 

Undistributed

Net Investment

Income

  

Undistributed

Long-Term

Gain

    

Accumulated

Loss

Carryforward1,2,3

    

Net Unrealized

Depreciation

Based on cost of

Securities and

Other Investments

for Federal Income

Tax Purposes

 

 

 

$86,739,604

     $—         $1,024,322,771         $1,003,298,571   

 

48        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

 

1. As of December 31, 2014, the Fund had $1,024,322,771 of net capital loss carryforward available to offset future realized capital gains, if any, and thereby reduce future taxable gain distributions. Details of the capital loss carryforwards are included in the table below. Capital loss carryovers with no expiration, if any, must be utilized prior to those with expiration dates.

Expiring        

2016

   $ 443,946,792   

2017

     324,022,087   

No expiration

     256,353,892   
  

 

 

 

Total

   $     1,024,322,771   
  

 

 

 

2. During the fiscal year ended December 31, 2014, the Fund did not utilize any capital loss carryforward.

3. During the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013, the Fund did not utilize any capital loss carryforward.

Net investment income (loss) and net realized gain (loss) may differ for financial statement and tax purposes. The character of dividends and distributions made during the fiscal year from net investment income or net realized gains may differ from their ultimate characterization for federal income tax purposes. Also, due to timing of dividends and distributions, the fiscal year in which amounts are distributed may differ from the fiscal year in which the income or net realized gain was recorded by the Fund.

Accordingly, the following amounts have been reclassified for December 31, 2014. Net assets of the Fund were unaffected by the reclassifications.

Reduction

to Paid-in Capital

  

Increase
to Accumulated
Net Investment

Income

    

Increase

to Accumulated Net
Realized Loss

on Investments

 

 

 

$104,974

     $10,716,765         $10,611,791   

The tax character of distributions paid during the years ended December 31, 2014 and December 31, 2013 was as follows:

    

Year Ended

December 31, 2014

     Year Ended
December 31, 2013
 

 

 

Distributions paid from:

     

Exempt-interest dividends

     $        386,531,417         $        436,964,547   

Ordinary income

     482,373         1,513,011   
  

 

 

 

Total

     $        387,013,790         $        438,477,558   
  

 

 

 

The aggregate cost of securities and other investments and the composition of unrealized appreciation and depreciation of securities and other investments for federal income tax purposes as of December 31, 2014 are noted in the following table. The primary difference between book and tax appreciation or depreciation of securities and other investments, if applicable, is attributable to the tax deferral of losses or tax realization of financial statement unrealized gain or loss.

 

 

49       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

 

Federal tax cost of securities

     $         7,085,594,157 1 
  

 

 

 

Gross unrealized appreciation

     $            275,210,452   

Gross unrealized depreciation

     (1,278,509,023
  

 

 

 

Net unrealized depreciation

     $      (1,003,298,571)   
  

 

 

 

1. The Federal tax cost of securities does not include cost of $625,934,750, which has otherwise been recognized for financial reporting purposes, related to bonds placed into trusts in conjunction with certain investment transactions. See the Inverse Floating Rate Securities note in Note 4.

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

 

 

3. Securities Valuation

The Fund calculates the net asset value of its shares as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (the “Exchange”), normally 4:00 P.M. Eastern time, on each day the Exchange is open for trading.

The Fund’s Board has adopted procedures for the valuation of the Fund’s securities and has delegated the day-to-day responsibility for valuation determinations under those procedures to the Manager. The Manager has established a Valuation Committee which is responsible for determining a “fair valuation” for any security for which market quotations are not “readily available.” The Valuation Committee’s fair valuation determinations are subject to review, approval and ratification by the Fund’s Board at its next regularly scheduled meeting covering the calendar quarter in which the fair valuation was determined.

Valuation Methods and Inputs

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

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

Securities traded on a registered U.S. securities exchange (including exchange-traded derivatives other than futures and futures options) are valued based on the last sale price of the security reported on the principal exchange on which it is traded, prior to the time when the Fund’s assets are valued. In the absence of a sale, the security is valued at the last sale price on the prior trading day, if it is within the spread of the current day’s closing “bid” and “asked” prices, and if not, at the current day’s closing bid price. A security of a foreign issuer traded on a foreign exchange, but not listed on a registered U.S. securities exchange, is valued based on the last sale price on the principal exchange on which the security is traded, as identified by the third party pricing service used by the Manager, prior to the time when

 

50        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

3. Securities Valuation (Continued)

 

the Fund’s assets are valued. If the last sale price is unavailable, the security is valued at the most recent official closing price on the principal exchange on which it is traded. If the last sales price or official closing price for a foreign security is not available, the security is valued at the mean between the bid and asked price per the exchange or, if not available from the exchange, obtained from two dealers. If bid and asked prices are not available from either the exchange or two dealers, the security is valued by using one of the following methodologies (listed in order of priority): (1) using a bid from the exchange, (2) the mean between the bid and asked price as provided by a single dealer, or (3) a bid from a single dealer.

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

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

Short-term money market type debt securities with a remaining maturity of sixty days or less are valued at cost adjusted by the amortization of discount or premium to maturity (amortized cost), which approximates market value. Short-term debt securities with a remaining maturity in excess of sixty days are valued at the mean between the “bid” and “asked” prices utilizing evaluated prices obtained from third party pricing services or broker-dealers.

A description of the standard inputs that may generally be considered by the third party pricing vendors in determining their evaluated prices is provided below.

Security Type  

Standard inputs generally considered by third-party

pricing vendors

Corporate debt, government debt, municipal, mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities   Reported trade data, broker-dealer price quotations, benchmark yields, issuer spreads on comparable securities, the credit quality, yield, maturity, and other appropriate factors.
Loans   Information obtained from market participants regarding reported trade data and broker-dealer price quotations.
Event-linked bonds   Information obtained from market participants regarding reported trade data and broker-dealer price quotations.

If a market value or price cannot be determined for a security using the methodologies described above, or if, in the “good faith” opinion of the Manager, the market value or price obtained does not constitute a “readily available market quotation,” or a significant event has occurred that would materially affect the value of the security the security is fair valued either (i) by a standardized fair valuation methodology applicable to the security type or the significant event as previously approved by the Valuation Committee and the Fund’s Board or (ii) as determined in good faith by the Manager’s Valuation Committee. The Valuation Committee considers all relevant facts that are reasonably available, through either public information or information available to the Manager, when determining the fair value of a

 

51        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

3. Securities Valuation (Continued)

 

security. Fair value determinations by the Manager are subject to review, approval and ratification by the Fund’s Board at its next regularly scheduled meeting covering the calendar quarter in which the fair valuation was determined. Those fair valuation standardized methodologies include, but are not limited to, valuing securities at the last sale price or initially at cost and subsequently adjusting the value based on: changes in company specific fundamentals, changes in an appropriate securities index, or changes in the value of similar securities which may be further adjusted for any discounts related to security-specific resale restrictions. When possible, such methodologies use observable market inputs such as unadjusted quoted prices of similar securities, observable interest rates, currency rates and yield curves. The methodologies used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risks associated with investing in those securities nor can it be assured that the Fund can obtain the fair value assigned to a security if it were to sell the security.

To assess the continuing appropriateness of security valuations, the Manager, or its third party service provider who is subject to oversight by the Manager, regularly compares prior day prices, prices on comparable securities, and sale prices to the current day prices and challenges those prices exceeding certain tolerance levels with the third party pricing service or broker source. For those securities valued by fair valuations, whether through a standardized fair valuation methodology or a fair valuation determination, the Valuation Committee reviews and affirms the reasonableness of the valuations based on such methodologies and fair valuation determinations on a regular basis after considering all relevant information that is reasonably available.

Classifications

Each investment asset or liability of the Fund is assigned a level at measurement date based on the significance and source of the inputs to its valuation. Various data inputs are used in determining the value of each of the Fund’s investments as of the reporting period end. These data inputs are categorized in the following hierarchy under applicable financial accounting standards:

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

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

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

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

The table below categorizes amounts that are included in the Fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities as of December 31, 2014 based on valuation input level:

 

52        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

3. Securities Valuation (Continued)

 

      

 

 

Level 1—

Unadjusted

Quoted Prices

  

  

  

    

 

 

Level 2—

Other Significant

Observable Inputs

  

  

  

    

 

 

 

Level 3—

Significant

Unobservable

Inputs

  

  

  

  

     Value   

Assets Table

           

Investments, at Value:

           

Municipal Bonds and Notes

           

New York

   $       $ 4,974,510,980       $ 1,342,546       $ 4,975,853,526   

U.S. Possessions

             1,728,327,920                 1,728,327,920   

Common Stock

                     4,048,890         4,048,890   
  

 

 

 

Total Assets

   $       $ 6,702,838,900       $ 5,391,436       $ 6,708,230,336   
  

 

 

 

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

 

 

4. Investments and Risks

Securities on a When-Issued or Delayed Delivery Basis. The Fund may purchase securities on a “when-issued” basis, and may purchase or sell securities on a “delayed delivery” basis. “When-issued” or “delayed delivery” refers to securities whose terms and indenture are available and for which a market exists, but which are not available for immediate delivery. Delivery and payment for securities that have been purchased by the Fund on a when-issued basis normally takes place within six months and possibly as long as two years or more after the trade date. During this period, such securities do not earn interest, are subject to market fluctuation and may increase or decrease in value prior to their delivery. The purchase of securities on a when-issued basis may increase the volatility of the Fund’s net asset value to the extent the Fund executes such transactions while remaining substantially fully invested. When the Fund engages in when-issued or delayed delivery transactions, it relies on the buyer or seller, as the case may be, to complete the transaction. Their failure to do so may cause the Fund to lose the opportunity to obtain or dispose of the security at a price and yield it considers advantageous. The Fund may also sell securities that it purchased on a when-issued basis or forward commitment prior to settlement of the original purchase.

As of December 31, 2014, the Fund had purchased securities issued on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis as follows:

 

      When-Issued or
Delayed Delivery
Basis Transactions
 

Purchased securities

     $1,145,340   

Inverse Floating Rate Securities. The Fund invests in inverse floating rate securities that pay interest at a rate that varies inversely with short-term interest rates. Because inverse floating rate securities are leveraged instruments, the value of an inverse floating rate security will change more significantly in response to changes in interest rates and other market

 

53        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

 

fluctuations than the market value of a conventional fixed-rate municipal security of similar maturity and credit quality, including the municipal bond underlying an inverse floating rate security.

An inverse floating rate security is created as part of a financial transaction referred to as a “tender option bond” transaction. In most cases, in a tender option bond transaction the Fund sells a fixed-rate municipal bond (the “underlying municipal bond”) to a broker dealer (the “sponsor”). The sponsor creates a trust (the “Trust”) into which it deposits the underlying municipal bond. The Trust then issues and sells short-term floating rate securities with a fixed principal amount representing a senior interest in the underlying municipal bond to third parties and a residual, subordinate interest in the underlying municipal bond (referred to as an “inverse floating rate security”) to the Fund. The interest rate on the short-term floating rate securities resets periodically, usually weekly, to a prevailing market rate and holders of these securities are granted the option to tender their securities back to the Trust for repurchase at their principal amount plus accrued interest thereon (the “purchase price”) periodically, usually daily or weekly. A remarketing agent for the Trust is required to attempt to re-sell any tendered short-term floating rate securities to new investors for the purchase price. If the remarketing agent is unable to successfully re-sell the tendered short-term floating rate securities, a liquidity provider to the Trust (typically an affiliate of the sponsor) must contribute cash to the Trust to ensure that the tendering holders receive the purchase price of their securities on the repurchase date.

Because holders of the short-term floating rate securities are granted the right to tender their securities to the Trust for repurchase at frequent intervals for the purchase price, with such payment effectively guaranteed by the liquidity provider, the securities generally bear short-term rates of interest commensurate with money market instruments. When interest is paid on the underlying municipal bond to the Trust, such proceeds are first used to pay the Trust’s administrative expenses and accrued interest to holders of the short-term floating rate securities, with any remaining amounts being paid to the Fund, as the holder of the inverse floating rate security. Accordingly, the amount of such interest on the underlying municipal bond paid to the Fund is inversely related the rate of interest on the short-term floating rate securities. Additionally, because the principal amount of the short-term floating rate securities is fixed and is not adjusted in response to changes in the market value of the underlying municipal bond, any change in the market value of the underlying municipal bond is reflected entirely in a change to the value of the inverse floating rate security.

Typically, the terms of an inverse floating rate security grant certain rights to the Fund, as holder. For example, the Fund may have the right upon request to require that the Trust compel a tender of the short-term floating rate securities to facilitate the Fund’s acquisition of the underlying municipal bond. Following such a request, the Fund pays the Trust the purchase price of the short-term floating rate securities and a specified portion of any market value gain on the underlying municipal bond since its deposit into the Trust, which the Trust uses to redeem the short-term floating rate securities. The Trust then distributes the underlying municipal bond to the Fund. Similarly, the Fund may have the right to directly purchase the underlying municipal bond from the Trust by paying to the Trust the purchase

 

54        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

 

price of the short-term floating rate securities and a specified portion of any market value gain on the underlying municipal bond since its deposit into the Trust, which the Trust uses to redeem the short-term floating rate securities. Through the exercise of either of these rights, the Fund can voluntarily terminate or “collapse” the Trust, terminate its investment in the related inverse floating rate security and obtain the underlying municipal bond. Additionally, the Fund also typically has the right to exchange with the Trust (i) a principal amount of short-term floating rate securities held by the Fund for a corresponding additional principal amount of the inverse floating rate security or (ii) a principal amount of the inverse floating rate security held by the Fund for a corresponding additional principal amount of short-term floating rate securities (which are typically then sold to other investors). Through the exercise of this right, the Fund may increase (or decrease) the principal amount of short-term floating rate securities outstanding, thereby increasing (or decreasing) the amount of leverage provided by the short-term floating rate securities to the Fund’s investment exposure to the underlying municipal bond.

The Fund’s investments in inverse floating rate securities involve certain risks. As short-term interest rates rise, an inverse floating rate security produces less current income (and, in extreme cases, may pay no income) and as short-term interest rates fall, an inverse floating rate security produces more current income. Thus, if short-term interest rates rise after the issuance of the inverse floating rate security, any yield advantage is reduced or eliminated. All inverse floating rate securities entail some degree of leverage represented by the outstanding principal amount of the related short-term floating rate securities. The value of, and income earned on, an inverse floating rate security that has a higher degree of leverage will fluctuate more significantly in response to changes in interest rates and to changes in the market value of the related underlying municipal bond than that of an inverse floating rate security with a lower degree of leverage, and is more likely to be eliminated entirely under adverse market conditions. Changes in the value of an inverse floating rate security will also be significant than changes in the market value of the related underlying municipal bond because the leverage provided by the related short-term floating rate securities increases the sensitivity of an inverse floating rate security to changes in interest rates and to the market value of the underlying municipal bond. An inverse floating rate security can be expected to underperform fixed-rate municipal bonds when the difference between long-term and short-term interest rates is decreasing (or is already small) or when long-term interest rates are rising, but can be expected to outperform fixed-rate municipal bonds when the difference between long-term and short-term interest rates is increasing (or is already large) or when long-term interest rates are falling. Additionally, a tender option bond transaction typically provides for the automatic termination or “collapse” of a Trust upon the occurrence of certain adverse events, usually referred to as “mandatory tender events” or “tender option termination events.” These events may include, among others, a credit ratings downgrade of the underlying municipal bond below a specified level, a decrease in the market value of the underlying municipal bond below a specified amount, a bankruptcy of the liquidity provider or the inability of the remarketing agent to re-sell to new investors short-term floating rate securities that have been tendered for repurchase by holders thereof. Following the occurrence of such

 

55        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

 

an event, the underlying municipal bond is generally sold for current market value and the proceeds distributed to holders of the short-term floating rate securities and inverse floating rate security, with the holder of the inverse floating rate security (the Fund) generally receiving the proceeds of such sale only after the holders of the short-term floating rate securities have received proceeds equal to the purchase price of their securities (and the liquidity provider is generally required to contribute cash to the Trust only in an amount sufficient to ensure that the holders of the short-term floating rate securities receive the purchase price of their securities in connection with such termination of the Trust). Following the occurrence of such events, the Fund could potentially lose the entire amount of its investment in the inverse floating rate security.

Finally, the Fund may enter into shortfall/reimbursement agreements with the liquidity provider of certain tender option bond transactions in connection with certain inverse floating rate securities held by the Fund. These agreements commit the Fund to reimburse the liquidity provider to the extent that the liquidity provider must provide cash to a Trust, including following the termination of a Trust resulting from the occurrence of a “mandatory tender event.” In connection with the occurrence of such an event and the termination of the Trust triggered thereby, the shortfall/reimbursement agreement will make the Fund liable for the amount of the negative difference, if any, between the liquidation value of the underlying municipal bond and the purchase price of the short-term floating rate securities issued by the Trust. Under the standard terms of a tender option bond transaction, absent such a shortfall/reimbursement agreement, the Fund, as holder of the inverse floating rate security, would not be required to make such a reimbursement payment to the liquidity provider. The Manager monitors the Fund’s potential exposure with respect to these agreements on a daily basis and intends to take action to terminate the Fund’s investment in related inverse floating rate securities, if it deems it appropriate to do so. As of December 31, 2014, the Fund’s maximum exposure under such agreements is estimated at $290,175,000.

When the Fund creates an inverse floating rate security in a tender option bond transaction by selling an underlying municipal bond to a sponsor for deposit into a Trust, the transaction is considered a secured borrowing for financial reporting purposes. As a result of such accounting treatment, the Fund includes the underlying municipal bond on its Statement of Investments and as an asset on its Statement of Assets and Liabilities (but does not separately include the related inverse floating rate security on either). The Fund also includes a liability on its Statement of Assets and Liabilities equal to the outstanding principal amount and accrued interest on the related short-term floating rate securities issued by the Trust. Interest on the underlying municipal bond is recorded as investment income on the Fund’s Statement of Operations, while interest payable on the related short-term floating rate securities is recorded as interest expense. At December 31, 2014, municipal bond holdings with a value of $1,219,120,652 shown on the Fund’s Statement of Investments are held by such Trusts and serve as the underlying municipal bonds for the related $581,425,000 in short-term floating rate securities issued and outstanding at that date.

At December 31, 2014, the inverse floating rate securities associated with tender option bond transactions accounted for as secured borrowings were as follows:

 

56      OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

 

Principal
Amount
     Inverse Floater1    Coupon
Rate2
   

Maturity

Date

     Value  
  $    14,655,000       NY Austin Trust Various States Inverse Certificates      6.472     11/1/39       $     14,926,704   
  15,585,000       NY Liberty Devel. Corp. (Bank of America at One Byrant Park) LIFERS      22.264        1/15/46         24,452,865   
  7,500,000       NY Liberty Devel. Corp. ROLs3      9.772        1/15/44         9,244,050   
  15,660,000       NY/NJ Port Authority Austin Trust Inverse Certificates      6.405        12/1/27         17,329,200   
  23,955,000       NY/NJ Port Authority Austin Trust Inverse Certificates      7.935        10/1/30         25,421,046   
  2,140,000       NYC GO ROLs      8.816        3/1/35         2,175,053   
  3,665,000       NYC GO ROLs      8.005        8/1/30         3,858,292   
  1,900,000       NYC GO ROLs      8.831        8/1/35         2,007,635   
  5,000,000       NYC GO ROLs      19.332        3/1/21         8,167,400   
  2,500,000       NYC GO ROLs3      18.588        10/1/34         3,991,300   
  1,500,000       NYC HDC, Series B-1 ROLs      8.182        11/1/32         1,588,320   
   NYC HDC, Series B-1 ROLs      8.093        11/1/27         1,341,877   
  4,180,000       NYC HDC, Series C ROLs      8.187        5/1/40         4,253,526   
  1,375,000       NYC HDC, Series C ROLs      7.966        11/1/26         1,411,740   
  775,000       NYC HDC, Series C-1 ROLs      17.063        11/1/34         1,011,662   
  2,730,000       NYC HDC, Series C-1 ROLs      17.794        11/1/46         3,575,072   
  710,000       NYC HDC, Series C-1 ROLs      17.289        5/1/29         924,420   
  4,015,000       NYC HDC, Series J-2-C ROLs      8.317        11/1/40         4,221,893   
  1,750,000       NYC HDC, Series K ROLs      7.965        11/1/37         1,779,505   
  2,340,000       NYC HDC, Series L ROLs      8.06        11/1/39         2,379,476   
  11,080,000       NYC Hsg. Devel. Corp. (Multifamily Hsg.) ROLs3      13.069        5/1/49         11,878,092   
  5,395,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority3      20.1        6/15/43         9,044,825   
  7,935,000       NYC Municipal Water Finance Authority LIFERS      20.151        6/15/43         13,527,112   
  3,750,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Building Aid) ROLs3      19.602        7/15/37         6,082,050   
  6,250,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Building Aid) ROLs3      18.588        7/15/37         9,628,000   
  10,170,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Future Tax) ROLs3      9.567        2/1/30         13,634,207   
  7,500,000       NYC Transitional Finance Authority (Future Tax) ROLs3      9.569        5/1/34         9,970,650   
  8,205,000       NYS DA (Memorial Sloan-Kettering) ROLs      8.824        7/1/35         9,166,052   
  5,265,000       NYS DA (Vassar College) ROLs      8.822        7/1/46         6,289,938   
  3,980,000       NYS DA ROLs3      18.582        3/15/34         6,401,432   
  3,410,000       NYS HFA ROLs3      15.153        11/1/45         3,743,191   
  3,750,000       Port Authority NY/NJ ROLs3      22.253        9/15/28         5,689,800   
  5,500,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 11588th Series ROLs3      17.001        10/15/32         6,379,780   
  3,580,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 11588th Series ROLs3      16.063        10/15/28         4,434,152   
  4,895,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 11588th Series ROLs3      16.991        10/15/27         6,205,587   
  9,090,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 11589th Series ROLs3      12.591        9/1/29         9,471,780   
  62,000,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 151st Series LIFERS      6.728        3/15/35         70,394,800   
  3,335,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 151st Series ROLs      13.597        3/15/35         4,500,983   
  38,970,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 152nd Series LIFERS      10.299        11/1/35         45,096,474   
  6,860,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 152nd Series ROLs      8.394        5/1/38         8,216,496   
  20,000,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 152nd Series ROLs      8.419        11/1/35         23,956,400   
  5,060,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 163rd Series LIFERS      18.278        7/15/39         7,703,597   
  10,755,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 166th Series      9.29        1/15/41         13,514,195   

 

57       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

 

Principal
Amount
  Inverse Floater1 Coupon
Rate2
 

Maturity

Date

  Value  
  $      7,500,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 3114th Series DRIVERS      13.456     11/1/30       $ 10,322,400   
  7,500,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 3249th Series ROLs3      10.026        7/15/36         9,757,800   
  7,650,000       Port Authority NY/NJ, 3264th Series ROLs3      9.519        10/15/31         9,929,394   
  222,865,000       Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp. LIFERS3      5.96        8/1/57         148,483,806   
  11,090,000       SONYMA ROLs3      8.803        10/1/31         11,250,583   
  5,055,000       SONYMA ROLs3      8.875        10/1/37         5,122,636   
  3,580,000       SONYMA ROLs3      9.186        10/1/37         3,838,404   
          

 

 

 
           $   637,695,652   
          

 

 

 

1. For a list of abbreviations used in the Inverse Floater table see the Portfolio Abbreviations table at the end of the Statement of Investments.

2. Represents the current interest rate for the inverse floating rate security.

3. Represents an inverse floating rate security that is subject to a shortfall/reimbursement agreement.

The Fund may also purchase an inverse floating rate security created as part of a tender option bond transaction not initiated by the Fund when a third party, such as a municipal issuer or financial institution, transfers an underlying municipal bond to a Trust. For financial reporting purposes, the Fund includes the inverse floating rate security related to such transaction on its Statement of Investments and as an asset on its Statement of Assets and Liabilities, and interest on the security is recorded as investment income on the Fund’s Statement of Operations.

The Fund may invest in inverse floating rate securities with any degree of leverage (as measured by the outstanding principal amount of related short-term floating rate securities). However, the Fund may only expose up to 20% of its total assets to the effects of leverage from its investments in inverse floating rate securities. This limitation is measured by comparing the aggregate principal amount of the short-term floating rate securities that are related to the inverse floating rate securities held by the Fund to the total assets of the Fund. The Fund’s exposure to the effects of leverage from its investments in inverse floating rate securities amounts to $581,425,000 or 8.51% of its total assets as of December 31, 2014.

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

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

Credit Risk. The Fund invests in high-yield, non-investment-grade bonds, which may be subject to a greater degree of credit risk. Credit risk relates to the ability of the issuer to meet interest or principal payments or both as they become due. The Fund may acquire securities

 

58       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

4. Investments and Risks (Continued)

 

that have missed an interest payment, and is not obligated to dispose of securities whose issuers or underlying obligors subsequently miss an interest payment. Information concerning securities not accruing interest as of December 31, 2014 is as follows:

Cost

   $ 10,057,260   

Market Value

   $ 7,088,006   

Market Value as % of Net Assets

     0.11%   

The Fund has entered into forbearance agreements with certain obligors under which the Fund has agreed to temporarily forego receipt of the original principal or coupon interest rates. As of December 31, 2014, securities with an aggregate market value of $93,937,297, representing 1.52% of the Fund’s net assets, were subject to these forbearance agreements.

Concentration Risk. There are certain risks arising from geographic concentration in any state, commonwealth or territory. Certain economic, regulatory or political developments occurring in the state, commonwealth or territory may impair the ability of certain issuers of municipal securities to pay principal and interest on their obligations.

 

 

5. Shares of Beneficial Interest

The Fund has authorized an unlimited number of no par value shares of beneficial interest of each class. Transactions in shares of beneficial interest were as follows:

     Year Ended December 31, 2014      Year Ended December 31, 2013   
     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

 

 

Class A

        

Sold

     31,683,554      $ 476,983,511        58,182,815      $ 939,765,979   

Dividends and/or distributions reinvested

     16,705,729        252,679,034        19,114,833        302,143,673   

Redeemed

     (69,092,179     (1,039,890,212     (126,143,272     (1,969,025,792
  

 

 

 

Net decrease

     (20,702,896   $ (310,227,667     (48,845,624   $ (727,116,140
  

 

 

 

 

 

Class B

        

Sold

     43,878      $ 657,773        63,517      $ 982,203   

Dividends and/or distributions reinvested

     108,724        1,640,072        183,023        2,915,459   

Redeemed

     (1,288,623     (19,333,294     (2,581,925     (41,692,375
  

 

 

 

Net decrease

     (1,136,021   $ (17,035,449     (2,335,385   $ (37,794,713
  

 

 

 

 

 

Class C

        

Sold

     8,761,290      $ 132,087,145        8,846,064      $ 140,521,583   

Dividends and/or distributions reinvested

     2,358,181        35,590,667        3,072,509        48,503,252   

Redeemed

     (12,666,824     (190,151,872     (23,026,222     (356,813,466
  

 

 

 

Net decrease

     (1,547,353   $ (22,474,060     (11,107,649   $ (167,788,631
  

 

 

 

 

59        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

5. Shares of Beneficial Interest (Continued)

 

     Year Ended December 31, 2014     Year Ended December 31, 2013  
     Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount  

 

 

Class Y

        

Sold

     8,017,322      $ 121,187,234        5,738,468      $ 91,460,318   

Dividends and/or distributions reinvested

     657,001        9,949,739        674,500        10,649,066   

Redeemed

     (5,386,374     (81,294,522     (6,386,709     (98,821,379
  

 

 

 

Net increase

     3,287,949      $ 49,842,451        26,259      $ 3,288,005   
  

 

 

 

 

 

6. Purchases and Sales of Securities

The aggregate cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of securities, other than short-term obligations, for the year ended December 31, 2014 were as follows:

      Purchases      Sales  

Investment securities

   $ 550,745,475       $ 1,173,096,275   

 

 

7. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates

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

  Fee Schedule        

  Up to $100 million

     0.54

  Next $150 million

     0.52   

  Next $1.75 billion

     0.47   

  Next $3 billion

     0.46   

  Next $3 billion

     0.45   

  Next $6 billion

     0.44   

  Over $14 billion

     0.42   

The Fund’s management fee for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2014 was 0.46% of average annual net assets before any applicable waivers.

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

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

 

60        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

7. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates (Continued)

 

Sub-Transfer Agent Fees. The Transfer Agent has retained Shareholder Services, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of OFI (the “Sub-Transfer Agent”), to provide the day-to-day transfer agent and shareholder servicing of the Fund. Under the Sub-Transfer Agency Agreement, the Transfer Agent pays the Sub-Transfer Agent an annual fee in monthly installments, equal to a percentage of the transfer agent fee collected by the Transfer Agent from the Fund, which shall be calculated after any applicable fee waivers. The fee paid to the Sub-Transfer Agent is paid by the Transfer Agent, not by the Fund.

Trustees’ Compensation. The Fund has adopted an unfunded retirement plan (the “Plan”) for the Fund’s Independent Trustees. Benefits are based on years of service and fees paid to each Trustee during their period of service. The Plan was frozen with respect to adding new participants effective December 31, 2006 (the “Freeze Date”) and existing Plan Participants as of the Freeze Date will continue to receive accrued benefits under the Plan. Active Independent Trustees as of the Freeze Date have each elected a distribution method with respect to their benefits under the Plan. During the year ended December 31, 2014, the Fund’s projected benefit obligations, payments to retired Trustees and accumulated liability were as follows:

Projected Benefit Obligations Increased

   $ 41,543   

Payments Made to Retired Trustees

     171,796   

Accumulated Liability as of December 31, 2014

     1,053,407   

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

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

Service Plan for Class A Shares. The Fund has adopted a Service Plan (the “Plan”) for Class A shares pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. Under the Plan, the Fund reimburses the Distributor for a portion of its costs incurred for services provided to accounts that hold Class A shares. Reimbursement is made periodically at an annual rate of up to 0.15% of the daily net assets of Class A shares of the Fund. The Distributor currently uses all

 

61        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

7. Fees and Other Transactions with Affiliates (Continued)

 

of those fees to pay dealers, brokers, banks and other financial institutions periodically for providing personal service and maintenance of accounts of their customers that hold Class A shares. Any unreimbursed expenses the Distributor incurs with respect to Class A shares in any fiscal year cannot be recovered in subsequent periods. Fees incurred by the Fund under the Plan are detailed in the Statement of Operations.

Distribution and Service Plans for Class B and Class C Shares. The Fund has adopted Distribution and Service Plans (the “Plans”) for Class B and Class C shares pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act to compensate the Distributor for distributing those share classes, maintaining accounts and providing shareholder services. Under the Plans, the Fund pays the Distributor an annual asset-based sales charge of 0.75% on Class B and Class C shares daily net assets. The Fund also pays a service fee under the Plans at an annual rate of 0.25% of daily net assets. The Plans continue in effect from year to year only if the Fund’s Board of Trustees vote annually to approve its continuance at an in person meeting called for that purpose. Fees incurred by the Fund under the Plans are detailed in the Statement of Operations.

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

Year Ended   

Class A

Front-End
Sales Charges
Retained by
Distributor

    

Class A
Contingent

Deferred Sales

Charges

Retained by

Distributor

    

Class B

Contingent

Deferred Sales

Charges

Retained by

Distributor

    

Class C

Contingent

Deferred Sales

Charges

Retained by

Distributor

 

December 31, 2014

     $686,754         $133,246         $75,864         $59,901   

 

 

8. Borrowings and Other Financing

Borrowings. The Fund can borrow money from banks in amounts up to one third of its total assets (including the amount borrowed) less all liabilities and indebtedness other than borrowings (meaning that the value of those assets must be at least 300% of the amount borrowed). The Fund can use those borrowings for investment-related purposes such as purchasing portfolio securities. The Fund also may borrow to meet redemption obligations or for temporary and emergency purposes. When the Fund invests borrowed money in portfolio securities, it is using a speculative investment technique known as leverage and changes in the value of the Fund’s investments will have a larger effect on its share price than if it did not borrow because of the effect of leverage.

The Fund can also use the borrowings for other investment-related purposes, including in connection with the Fund’s inverse floater investments as discussed in Note 4. The Fund may use the borrowings to reduce the leverage amount of, or unwind or “collapse” trusts that

 

62        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

8. Borrowings and Other Financing (Continued)

 

issued “inverse floaters” owned by the Fund, or in circumstances in which the Fund has entered into a shortfall and forbearance agreement with the sponsor of the inverse floater trust to meet the Fund’s obligation to reimburse the sponsor of the inverse floater for the difference between the liquidation value of the underlying bond and the amount due to holders of the short-term floating rate notes issued by the Trust. See the discussion in Note 4 (Inverse Floating Rate Securities) for additional information.

The Fund will pay interest and may pay other fees in connection with loans. If the Fund does borrow, it will be subject to greater expenses than funds that do not borrow. The interest on borrowed money and the other fees incurred in conjunction with loans are an expense that might reduce the Fund’s yield and return. Expenses incurred by the Fund with respect to interest on borrowings and commitment fees are disclosed separately or as other expenses on the Statement of Operations.

The Fund entered into a Revolving Credit and Security Agreement (the “Agreement”) with conduit lenders and Citibank N.A. which enables it to participate with certain other Oppenheimer funds in a committed, secured borrowing facility that permits borrowings of up to $2.5 billion, collectively, by the Oppenheimer Rochester Funds. To secure the loan, the Fund pledges investment securities in accordance with the terms of the Agreement. Securities held in collateralized accounts to cover these borrowings are noted in the Statement of Investments. Interest is charged to the Fund, based on its borrowings, at current commercial paper issuance rates (0.1563% as of December 31, 2014). The Fund pays additional fees annually to its lender on its outstanding borrowings to manage and administer the facility and is allocated its pro-rata share of an annual structuring fee and ongoing commitment fees both of which are based on the total facility size. Total fees and interest that are included in expenses on the Fund’s Statement of Operations related to its participation in the borrowing facility during the year ended December 31, 2014 equal 0.03% of the Fund’s average net assets on an annualized basis. The Fund has the right to prepay such loans and terminate its participation in the conduit loan facility at any time upon prior notice.

As of December 31, 2014, the Fund had borrowings outstanding at an interest rate of 0.1563%. Details of the borrowings for the year ended December 31, 2014 are as follows:

Average Daily Loan Balance

   $                 11,179,452   

Average Daily Interest Rate

     0.155

Fees Paid

   $ 2,270,489   

Interest Paid

   $ 21,329   

Reverse Repurchase Agreements. The Fund may engage in reverse repurchase agreements. A reverse repurchase agreement is the sale of one or more securities to a counterparty at an agreed-upon purchase price with the simultaneous agreement to repurchase those securities on a future date at a higher repurchase price. The repurchase price represents the repayment of the purchase price and interest accrued thereon over the term of the repurchase agreement. The cash received by the Fund in connection with a reverse repurchase agreement may be used for investment-related purposes such as purchasing portfolio securities or for other purposes such as those described in the preceding “Borrowings” note.

 

63        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Continued

 

 

8. Borrowings and Other Financing (Continued)

 

The Fund entered into a Committed Repurchase Transaction Facility (the “Facility”) with J.P. Morgan Securities LLC (the “counterparty’) which enables it to participate with certain other Oppenheimer funds in a committed reverse repurchase agreement facility that permits aggregate outstanding reverse repurchase agreements of up to $750 million, collectively. Interest is charged to the Fund on the purchase price of outstanding reverse repurchase agreements at current LIBOR rates plus an applicable spread. The Fund is also allocated its pro-rata share of an annual structuring fee based on the total Facility size and ongoing commitment fees based on the total unused amount of the Facility. The Fund retains the economic exposure to fluctuations in the value of securities subject to reverse repurchase agreements under the Facility and therefore these transactions are considered secured borrowings for financial reporting purposes. The Fund also continues to receive the economic benefit of interest payments received on securities subject to reverse repurchase agreements, in the form of a direct payment from the counterparty. These payments are included in interest income on the Statement of Operations. Total fees and interest related to the Fund’s participation in the Facility during the year ended December 31, 2014 are included in expenses on the Fund’s Statement of Operations and equal 0.01% of the Fund’s average net assets on an annualized basis.

The securities subject to reverse repurchase agreements under the Facility are valued on a daily basis. To the extent this value, after adjusting for certain margin requirements of the Facility, exceeds the cash proceeds received, the Fund may request the counterparty to return securities equal in margin value to this excess. To the extent that the cash proceeds received exceed the margin value of the securities subject to the transaction, the counterparty may request additional securities from the Fund. The Fund has the right to declare each Wednesday as the repurchase date for any outstanding reverse repurchase agreement upon delivery of advanced notification and may also recall any security subject to such a transaction by substituting eligible securities of equal or greater margin value according to the Facility’s terms.

The Fund executed no transactions under the Facility during the year ended December 31, 2014.

Details of reverse repurchase agreement transactions for the year ended December 31, 2014 are as follows:

Fees Paid

   $         869,155   

 

 

9. Pending Litigation

In 2009, seven class action lawsuits were filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado against OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (“OFI”), OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc., the Fund’s principal underwriter and distributor (the “Distributor”), and certain funds – including the Fund – advised by OFI Global Asset Management, Inc. and distributed by the Distributor (the “Defendant Funds”). The lawsuits also named as defendants certain officers and current and former trustees of the respective Defendant Funds. The lawsuits raised claims under federal securities laws and alleged, among other things, that the disclosure documents of the

 

64       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


 

9. Pending Litigation (Continued)

 

respective Defendant Funds contained misrepresentations and omissions and that the respective Defendant Funds’ investment policies were not followed. The plaintiffs in these actions sought unspecified damages, equitable relief and awards of attorneys’ fees and litigation expenses. The Defendant Funds’ Boards of Trustees also engaged counsel to represent the Funds and the present and former Independent Trustees named in those suits. In March 2014, the parties – including the Fund – in six of these lawsuits executed stipulations and agreements of settlement resolving those actions. In July 2014, the court entered an order and final judgment approving the settlements as fair, reasonable and adequate. The settlements do not resolve a seventh outstanding lawsuit relating to Oppenheimer Rochester California Municipal Fund (the “California Fund Suit”). OFI believes the California Fund Suit is without legal merit and is defending the suit vigorously. While it is premature to render any opinion as to the outcome in the California Fund Suit, or whether any costs that OFI may bear in defending the California Fund Suit might not be reimbursed by insurance, OFI believes the California Fund Suit should not impair the ability of OFI or the Distributor to perform their respective duties to the Fund, and that the outcome of the California Fund Suit should not have any material effect on the operations of any of the Oppenheimer funds.

 

65       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

 

 

The Board of Trustees and Shareholders of Oppenheimer Rochester Fund Municipals:

We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Oppenheimer Rochester Fund Municipals, including the statement of investments, as of December 31, 2014, and the related statement of operations and cash flows for the year then ended, the statements of changes in net assets for each of the years in the two-year period then ended, and the financial highlights for each of the years or periods in the five-year period then ended. These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Fund’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial highlights are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of December 31, 2014, by correspondence with the custodian, or by other appropriate auditing procedures where replies from brokers were not received. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Oppenheimer Rochester Fund Municipals as of December 31, 2014, the results of its operations and cash flows for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the years in the two-year period then ended, and the financial highlights for each of the years or periods in the five-year period then ended, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

KPMG LLP

Denver, Colorado

February 25, 2015

 

66        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


FEDERAL INCOME TAX INFORMATION Unaudited

 

 

In early 2015, if applicable, shareholders of record received information regarding all dividends and distributions paid to them by the Fund during calendar year 2014.

None of the dividends paid by the Fund during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2014 are eligible for the corporate dividend-received deduction. 99.88% of the dividends were derived from interest on municipal bonds and are not subject to federal income taxes; 100% of the dividends are not subject to New York State and New York City income taxes. For the state income tax reporting purposes of non-New York State shareholders, the distribution breaks down as follows: New York State (69.3%), Puerto Rico (29.7%), Guam (0.2%), Virgin Islands (0.1%); Northern Mariana Isles (0.7%).

During 2014, 25.8448% of this tax-exempt income was derived from “private activity bonds”. These are municipal bonds used to finance privately operated facilities. The interest on these bonds is not taxable for most investors. For the few investors subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax, the interest from these bonds is considered a preference item.

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

 

67        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


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

 

 

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

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

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

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

The Board also considered the quality of the services provided and the quality of the Managers’ resources that are available to the Fund. The Board took account of the fact that the Sub-Adviser has had over fifty years of experience as an investment adviser and that its assets under management rank it among the top mutual fund managers in the United States. The Board evaluated the Sub-Adviser’s advisory, administrative, accounting, legal, compliance

 

68        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


services and risk management, and information the Board has received regarding the experience and professional qualifications of the Managers’ key personnel and the size and functions of its staff. In its evaluation of the quality of the portfolio management services provided, the Board considered the experience of Daniel Loughran, Scott Cottier, Troy Willis, Mark DeMitry, Michael Camarella, Charles Pulire, and Elizabeth Mossow, the portfolio managers for the Fund, and the Sub-Adviser’s investment team and analysts. The Board members also considered the totality of their experiences with the Managers as directors or trustees of the Fund and other funds advised by the Managers. The Board considered information regarding the quality of services provided by affiliates of the Managers, which its members have become knowledgeable about in connection with the renewal of the Fund’s service agreements. The Board concluded, in light of the Managers’ experience, reputation, personnel, operations and resources that the Fund benefits from the services provided under the Agreements.

Investment Performance of the Adviser and the Fund. Throughout the year, the Adviser provided information on the investment performance of the Fund, including comparative performance information. The Board also reviewed information, prepared by the Adviser and by the independent consultant, comparing the Fund’s historical performance to relevant market indices and to the performance of other retail funds in the Muni New York Long category. The Board noted that the Fund’s five-year and ten-year performance was better than its category median although its one-year and three-year performance was below its category median.

Costs of Services by the Adviser. The Board reviewed the fees paid to the Adviser and the other expenses borne by the Fund. The Board also considered the comparability of the fees charged and the services provided to the Fund to the fees and services for other clients or accounts advised by the Adviser. The independent consultant provided comparative data in regard to the fees and expenses of the Fund and other retail front-end load Muni New York Long funds with comparable asset levels and distribution features. The Fund’s contractual management fees and total expenses were lower than its peer group median and category median.

Economies of Scale and Profits Realized by the Managers. The Board considered information regarding OFI Global’s costs in serving as the Fund’s investment adviser, including the costs associated with the personnel and systems necessary to manage the Fund, and information regarding the Managers’ profitability from their relationship with the Fund. The Board reviewed whether the Managers may realize economies of scale in managing and supporting the Fund. The Board noted that the Fund currently has management fee breakpoints, which are intended to share with Fund shareholders economies of scale that may exist as the Fund’s assets grow.

Other Benefits to the Managers. In addition to considering the profits realized by the Managers, the Board considered information that was provided regarding the direct and indirect benefits the Managers receive as a result of their relationship with the Fund, including compensation paid to the Managers’ affiliates. The Board also considered that the Managers must be able to pay and retain experienced professional personnel at competitive rates to provide quality services to the Fund.

 

69        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


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

AGREEMENTS Unaudited / Continued

 

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

Based on its review of the information it received and its evaluations described above, the Board, including a majority of the independent Trustees, decided to continue the Agreements through September 30, 2015. In arriving at its decision, the Board did not identify any factor or factors as being more important than others, but considered all of the above information, and considered the terms and conditions of the Agreements, including the management fees, in light of all the surrounding circumstances.

 

70        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


PORTFOLIO PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES; UPDATES TO STATEMENTS OF

INVESTMENTS Unaudited

 

 

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

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

Householding—Delivery of Shareholder Documents

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

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

 

71       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS Unaudited

 

 

Name, Position(s) Held with the Fund, Length of Service,

Year of Birth

  

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past 5 Years; Other

Trusteeships/Directorships Held; Number of Portfolios in the Fund

Complex Currently Overseen

INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES    The address of each Trustee in the chart below is 6803 S. Tucson Way, Centennial, Colorado 80112-3924. Each Trustee serves for an indefinite term, or until his or her resignation, retirement, death or removal.

Brian F. Wruble,

Chairman of the Board of Trustees (since 2007),

Trustee (since 2001)

Year of Birth: 1943

  

Director and Vice Chairman of Community Foundation of the Florida Keys (non-profit) (since July 2012); Trustee of the Board of Trustees, The Jackson Laboratory (non-profit) (1991-2011 and since May 2014); Chairman Emeritus (since August 2011) of The Jackson Laboratory (non-profit); Director of Special Value Opportunities Fund, LLC (registered investment company) (affiliate of the Sub-Adviser’s parent company) (since September 2004); Member of Zurich Insurance Group’s Investment Management Advisory Council (insurance) (since 2004); Treasurer (since 2007) and Trustee of the Institute for Advanced Study (non-profit educational institute) (since May 1992); General Partner of Odyssey Partners, L.P. (hedge fund) (September 1995-December 2007); Special Limited Partner of Odyssey Investment Partners, LLC (private equity investment) (January 1999-September 2004). Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Mr. Wruble has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since April 2001, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations.

David K. Downes,

Trustee (since 2005)

Year of Birth: 1940

   Director of THL Credit Inc. (since June 2009); Chief Executive Officer and Board Member of Community Capital Management (investment management company) (since January 2004); President of The Community Reinvestment Act Qualified Investment Fund (investment management company) (since 2004); Director of Actua Corporation (information technology company) (since October 2003); formerly, Independent Chairman GSK Employee Benefit Trust (April 2006-June 2013); Director of Correctnet (January 2006-2007); Independent Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Quaker Investment Trust (registered investment company) (2004-2007); Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer of Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc. (subsidiary of Lincoln National Corporation, a publicly traded company) and Delaware Investments U.S., Inc. (investment management subsidiary of Lincoln National Corporation) (1993-2003); President, Chief Executive Officer and Trustee of Delaware Investment Family of Funds (1993-2003); President and Board Member of Lincoln National Convertible Securities Funds, Inc. and the Lincoln National Income Funds, TDC (1993-2003); Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Retirement Financial Services, Inc. (registered transfer agent and investment adviser and subsidiary of Delaware Investments U.S., Inc.) (1993-2003); President and Chief Executive Officer of Delaware Service Company, Inc. (1995-2003); Chief Administrative Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Vice Chairman and Director of Equitable Capital Management Corporation (investment subsidiary of Equitable Life Assurance Society) (1985-1992); Corporate Controller of Merrill Lynch Company (financial services holding company) (1977-1985); held the following positions at the Colonial Penn Group, Inc. (insurance company): Corporate Budget Director (1974-1977), Assistant Treasurer (1972-1974) and Director of Corporate Taxes (1969-1972); held the following positions at Price Waterhouse

 

72       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


David K. Downes,

Continued

   Company (financial services firm): Tax Manager (1967-1969), Tax Senior (1965-1967) and Staff Accountant (1963-1965); United States Marine Corps (1957-1959). Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Mr. Downes has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since December 2005, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations.

Matthew P. Fink,

Trustee (since 2009)

Year of Birth: 1941

   Trustee of the Committee for Economic Development (policy research foundation) (2005-2011); Director of ICI Education Foundation (education foundation) (October 1991-August 2006); President of the Investment Company Institute (trade association) (October 1991-June 2004); Director of ICI Mutual Insurance Company (insurance company) (October 1991-June 2004); Author of The Rise of Mutual Funds: An Insider’s View published by Oxford University Press (second edition 2010). Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Mr. Fink has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since January 2005, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations.

Edmund P. Giambastiani, Jr.,

Trustee (since 2013)

Year of Birth: 1948

   Advisory Board Member of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs of Syracuse University (since April 2012); Director of Mercury Defense Systems Inc. (information technology) (August 2011-February 2013); Trustee of the U.S. Naval Academy Foundation (since November 2010); Advisory Board Member of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratory (federally-funded research development center) (since May 2010); Director of The Boeing Company (aerospace and defense) (since October 2009); Trustee of MITRE Corporation (federally-funded research development center) (since September 2008); Independent Director of QinetiQ Group Plc (defense technology and security) (February 2008-August 2011); Director of Monster Worldwide, Inc. (on-line career services) (since January 2008, Lead Director since June 2011); Chairman of Alenia North America, Inc. (military and defense products) (January 2008-October 2009); Director of SRA International, Inc. (information technology and services) (January 2008-July 2011); President of Giambastiani Group LLC (national security and energy consulting) (since October 2007); United States Navy, career nuclear submarine officer (June 1970-October 2007), Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (2005-October 2007), Supreme Allied Commander of NATO Commander Transformation (2003-2005), Commander, U.S. Joint Forces Command (2002-2005). Since his retirement from the U.S. Navy in October 2007, Admiral Giambastiani has also served on numerous U.S. Government advisory boards, investigations and task forces for the Secretaries of Defense, State and Interior and the Central Intelligence Agency. Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Admiral Giambastiani has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since February 2013, including as an Advisory Board Member for certain Oppenheimer funds, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations. For purposes of this report, Admiral Giambastiani is identified as a Trustee.

 

73       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS Unaudited / Continued

 

Elizabeth Krentzman,

Trustee (since 2014)

Year of Birth: 1959

   Advisory Board Member of the Securities and Exchange Commission Historical Society (since 2007); held the following positions at Deloitte & Touche LLP: Principal and Chief Regulatory Advisor for Asset Management Services (2007 - 2014) and U.S. Mutual Fund Leader (2011 - 2014); General Counsel of the Investment Company Institute (trade association) (June 2004 - April 2007); held the following positions at Deloitte & Touche LLP: National Director of the Investment Management Regulatory Consulting Practice (1997 - 2004), Principal
(2003 - 2004), Director (1998 - 2003) and Senior Manager (1997 - 1998); Assistant Director of the Division of Investment Management – Office of Disclosure and Investment Adviser Regulation (1996 - 1997) and various positions with the Division of Investment Management – Office of Regulatory Policy (1991 - 1996) of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission; Associate at Ropes & Gray (1987 - 1991); former Chair of the Investment Management Subcommittee of the Washington, D.C. Bar. Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Ms. Krentzman has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since August 2014, during which time she has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations.

Mary F. Miller,

Trustee (since 2009)

Year of Birth: 1942

   Trustee of International House (not-for-profit) (since June 2007); Trustee of the American Symphony Orchestra (not-for-profit) (October 1998-November 2011); and Senior Vice President and General Auditor of American Express Company (financial services company) (July 1998-February 2003). Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Ms. Miller has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since August 2004, during which time she has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations.

Joel W. Motley,

Trustee (since 2009)

Year of Birth: 1952

   Director of Greenwall Foundation (since October 2013); Member of the Vestry of Trinity Wall Street (since April 2012); Director of Southern Africa Legal Services Foundation (since March 2012); Board Member of Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting (non-profit journalism) (since March 2011); Managing Director of Public Capital Advisors, LLC (privately-held financial advisor) (since January 2006); Managing Director of Carmona Motley, Inc. (privately-held financial advisor) (since January 2002); Director of Columbia Equity Financial Corp. (privately-held financial advisor) (2002-2007); Managing Director of Carmona Motley Hoffman Inc. (privately-held financial advisor) (January 1998-December 2001); Member of the Finance and Budget Committee of the Council on Foreign Relations, Member of the Investment Committee and Board of Human Rights Watch (since July 2000) and Member of the Investment Committee and Board of Historic Hudson Valley (since February 2010). Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Mr. Motley has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since October 2002, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations.

Joanne Pace,

Trustee/Advisory Board

Member (since 2012)

Year of Birth: 1958

   Board Director of Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey (since November 2012); Advisory Board Director of The Alberleen Group LLC (since March, 2012); Advisory Council Member of 100 Women in Hedge Funds (non-profit) (since December, 2012); Advisory Council Member of Morgan

 

74        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Joanne Pace,

Continued

   Stanley Children’s Hospital (non-profit) (since May, 2012); Board Director of The Komera Project (non-profit) (since April, 2012); Advisory Board Director of The Agile Trading Group LLC (2012-2013); New York Advisory Board Director of Peace First (non-profit) (2010-2013); Senior Advisor of SECOR Asset Management, LP (2010-2011); Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer of Morgan Stanley Investment Management (2006-2010); Partner and Chief Operating Officer of FrontPoint Partners, LLC (hedge fund) (2005-2006); held the following positions at Credit Suisse: Managing Director (2003-2005); Global Head of Human Resources and member of Executive Board and Operating Committee (2004-2005), Global Head of Operations and Product Control (2003-2004); held the following positions at Morgan Stanley: Managing Director (1997-2003), Controller and Principal Accounting Officer (1999-2003); Chief Financial Officer (temporary assignment) for the Oversight Committee, Long Term Capital Management (1998-1999). Lead Independent Director and Chair of the Audit and Nominating Committee of The Global Chartist Fund, LLC of Oppenheimer Asset Management (2011-2012); Board Director of Managed Funds Association (2008-2010); Board Director of Morgan Stanley Foundation (2007-2010) and Investment Committee Chair (2008-2010). Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Ms. Pace has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since November 2012, including as an Advisory Board Member for certain Oppenheimer funds, during which time she has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Board’s deliberations. For purposes of this report, Ms. Pace is identified as a Trustee.

Daniel Vandivort,

Trustee (since 2014)

Year of Birth: 1954

   Chairman and Lead Independent Director/Trustee (March 2010-September 2014), Chairman of the Audit Committee (March 2009-September 2014) and Director/Trustee (December 2008-September 2014) of the Board of Directors/Trustees of Value Line Funds; Trustee, Board of Trustees of Huntington Disease Foundation of America (June 2007-December 2013): Trustee, Board of Trustees, RIM Retirement Savings Plan (2005-2007); President and Chief Investment Officer, Robeco Investment Management, formerly known as Weiss Peck and Greer (January 2005-June 2007); Member, Management Committee of Robeco Investment Management (2001-2007); Chairman and Trustee of the Board of Trustees of Weiss, Peck and Greer Funds (2004-2005); Managing Director and Head of Fixed Income, Weiss, Peck and Greer (November 1994-January 2005); Managing Director and Head of Fixed Income, CS First Boston Investment Management (January 1992-November 1994); Director, Global Product Development, First Boston Asset Management (November 1989-January 1992); Vice President, Fixed Income Sales, First Boston Corp. (May 1984-November 1989). Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Mr. Vandivort has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since 2014, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations.

Peter I. Wold,

Trustee (since 2009)

Year of Birth: 1948

   President of Wold Energy Partners, LLC (oil and gas exploration and production) (since 2013); Director of Arch Coal, Inc. (since 2010); President of Wold Oil Properties, LLC (oil and gas exploration and production company) (since 1994); Vice President of American Talc Company, Inc. (talc mining and

 

75       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS Unaudited / Continued

 

Peter I. Wold,

Continued

  

milling) (since 1999); Managing Member of Hole-in-the-Wall Ranch (cattle ranching) (since 1979); Director and Chairman of Wyoming Enhanced Oil Recovery Institute Commission (enhanced oil recovery study) (2004-2012); Director and Chairman of the Denver Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City (1993-1999); and Director of PacifiCorp. (electric utility) (1995-1999). Oversees 53 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Mr. Wold has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since August 2005, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations.

 

   
INTERESTED TRUSTEE    Mr. Glavin is an “Interested Trustee” because he is affiliated with the Manager and the Sub-Adviser by virtue of his positions as director of the Sub-Adviser, and as a shareholder of the Sub-Adviser’s parent company. As a Trustee, he serves for an indefinite term, or until his resignation, retirement, death or removal. Mr. Glavin’s address is 225 Liberty Street, 11th Floor, New York, New York 10281-1008.

William F. Glavin, Jr.,

Trustee (since 2009)

Year of Birth: 1958

   Chairman of the Sub-Adviser (July 2014-December 2014 and December 2009-December 2012) and Director of the Sub-Adviser (since January 2009); Chairman, Director and Chief Executive Officer (January 2013-June 2014) of the Manager; President of the Manager (January 2013-May 2013); Chief Executive Officer (January 2009-December 2012); President of the Sub-Adviser (May 2009-December 2012); Management Director (June 2009-June 2014), President (December 2009-June 2014) and Chief Executive Officer (January 2011-June 2014) of Oppenheimer Acquisition Corp. (“OAC”) (the Sub-Adviser’s parent holding company); Director of Oppenheimer Real Asset Management, Inc. (March 2010-June 2014); Executive Vice President (March 2006-February 2009) and Chief Operating Officer (July 2007-February 2009) of Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company (OAC’s parent company); Director (May 2004-March 2006) and Chief Operating Officer and Chief Compliance Officer (May 2004-January 2005), President (January 2005-March 2006) and Chief Executive Officer (June 2005-March 2006) of Babson Capital Management LLC; Director (March 2005-March 2006), President (May 2003-March 2006) and Chief Compliance Officer (July 2005-March 2006) of Babson Capital Securities, Inc. (a broker-dealer); President (May 2003-March 2006) of Babson Investment Company, Inc.; Director (May 2004-August 2006) of Babson Capital Europe Limited; Director (May 2004-October 2006) of Babson Capital Guernsey Limited; Director (May 2004-March 2006) of Babson Capital Management LLC; Non-Executive Director (March 2005-March 2007) of Baring Asset Management Limited; Director (February 2005-June 2006) Baring Pension Trustees Limited; Director and Treasurer (December 2003-November 2006) of Charter Oak Capital Management, Inc.; Director (May 2006-September 2006) of C.M. Benefit Insurance Company; Director (May 2008-June 2009) and Executive Vice President (June 2007-July 2009) of C.M. Life Insurance Company; President (March 2006-May 2007) of MassMutual Assignment Company; Director (January 2005-December 2006), Deputy Chairman (March 2005-December 2006) and President (February 2005-March 2005) of MassMutual Holdings (Bermuda) Limited; Director (May 2008-June 2009) and Executive Vice President (June 2007-July 2009) of MML Bay State Life Insurance Company; Chief Executive Officer and President (April 2007-January 2009) of MML

 

76        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


William F. Glavin, Jr.,

Continued

  

Distributors, LLC; and Chairman (March 2006-December 2008) and Chief Executive Officer (May 2007-December 2008) of MML Investors Services, Inc. An officer of 91 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex. Mr. Glavin has served on the Boards of certain Oppenheimer funds since December 2009, during which time he has become familiar with the Fund’s (and other Oppenheimer funds’) financial, accounting, regulatory and investment matters and has contributed to the Boards’ deliberations.

 

   
OTHER OFFICERS OF THE FUND    The addresses of the Officers in the chart below are as follows: for Messrs. Loughran, Cottier, Willis, DeMitry, Camarella, Pulire, Stein, Steinmetz, Gabinet, Mss. Sexton and Picciotto, 225 Liberty Street, New York, New York 10281-1008, for Mr. Wixted, 6803 S. Tucson Way, Centennial, Colorado 80112-3924. Each Officer serves for an indefinite term or until his or her resignation, retirement, death or removal.

Daniel G. Loughran,

Vice President (since 2005)

Year of Birth: 1963

   Senior Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (since July 2007) and a Senior Portfolio Manager (since December 2001); Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (April 2001-June 2007) and a Portfolio Manager with the Sub-Adviser (December 1999- November 2001). Team Leader, a Senior Portfolio Manager, an officer and a trader for the Fund and other Oppenheimer funds.

Scott S. Cottier,

Vice President (since 2005)

Year of Birth: 1971

   Vice President of the Sub-Adviser and a Senior Portfolio Manager (since September 2002). Portfolio Manager and trader at Victory Capital Management (1999-2002). Senior Portfolio Manager, an officer and a trader for the Fund and other Oppenheimer funds.

Troy E. Willis,

Vice President (since 2005)

Year of Birth: 1972

   Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (since July 2009) and a Senior Portfolio Manager (since January 2006); Assistant Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (July 2005-June 2009). Portfolio Manager of the Sub-Adviser (June 2003-December 2005). Corporate Attorney for Southern Resource Group (June 1999-December 2003). Senior Portfolio Manager, an officer and a trader for the Fund and other Oppenheimer funds.

Mark R. DeMitry

Vice President (since 2009)

Year of Birth: 1976

   Vice President of the Sub-Adviser and a Senior Portfolio Manager (since July 2009); Associate Portfolio Manager of the Fund (September 2006- June 2009). Research Analyst of the Sub-Adviser (June 2003-September 2006) and a Credit Analyst of the Sub-Adviser (July 2001-May 2003). Senior Portfolio Manager, an officer and a trader for the Fund and other Oppenheimer funds.

Michael L. Camarella

Vice President (since 2009)

Year of Birth: 1976

   Vice President of the Sub-Adviser and a Senior Portfolio Manager (since January 2011); Assistant Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (July 2009-December 2010); Associate Portfolio Manager of the Sub-Adviser (January 2008-December 2010). Research Analyst of the Sub-Adviser (April 2006-December 2007) and a Credit Analyst of the Sub-Adviser (June 2003-March 2006). Senior Portfolio Manager, an officer and a trader for the Fund and other Oppenheimer funds.

 

77       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS Unaudited / Continued

 

 

Charles S. Pulire,

Vice President (since 2011)

Year of Birth: 1977

   Vice President of the Sub-Adviser and a Senior Portfolio Manager (since February 2013); Assistant Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (December 2010-January 2013); Research Analyst of the Manager (February 2008-November 2010); Credit Analyst of the Sub-Adviser (May 2006-January 2008). Senior Portfolio Manager, an officer and a trader for the Fund and other Oppenheimer funds.

Richard Stein

Vice President (since 2007)

Year of Birth: 1957

   Director of the Rochester Credit Analysis team (since March 2004); Senior Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (since June 2011) and a Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (November 1997-May 2011); heads up the Rochester Credit Analysis team (since May 1993).

Arthur P. Steinmetz,

President and Principal Executive Officer (since 2014)

Year of Birth: 1958

   Chairman of the Sub-Adviser (since January 2015); CEO and Chairman of the Manager (since July 2014), President of the Manager (since May 2013), a Director of the Manager (since January 2013), Director of the Sub-Adviser (since July 2014), President, Management Director and CEO of Oppenheimer Acquisition Corp. (the Sub-Adviser’s parent holding company) (since July 2014), and President and Director of OFI SteelPath, Inc. (since January 2013). Chief Investment Officer of the OppenheimerFunds advisory entities from (January 2013-December 2013); Executive Vice President of the Manager (January 2013-May 2013); Chief Investment Officer of the Sub-Adviser (October 2010-December 2012); Chief Investment Officer, Fixed-Income, of the Sub-Adviser (April 2009-October 2010); Executive Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (October 2009-December 2012); Director of Fixed Income of the Sub-Adviser (January 2009-April 2009); and a Senior Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (March 1993-September 2009). An officer of 91 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex.

Arthur S. Gabinet,

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer (since 2011)

Year of Birth: 1958

   Executive Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel of the Manager (since January 2013); General Counsel OFI SteelPath, Inc. (since January 2013); Executive Vice President (May 2010-December 2012) and General Counsel (since January 2011) of the Sub-Adviser; General Counsel of the Distributor (since January 2011); General Counsel of Centennial Asset Management Corporation (January 2011-December 2012); Executive Vice President (January 2011-December 2012) and General Counsel of HarbourView Asset Management Corporation (since January 2011); Assistant Secretary (since January 2011) and Director (since January 2011) of OppenheimerFunds International Ltd. and OppenheimerFunds plc; Director of Oppenheimer Real Asset Management, Inc. (January 2011-December 2012) and General Counsel (since January 2011); Executive Vice President (January 2011-December 2011) and General Counsel of Shareholder Financial Services, Inc. and Shareholder Services, Inc. (since January 2011); Executive Vice President (January 2011-December 2012) and General Counsel of OFI Private Investments Inc. (since January 2011); Vice President of OppenheimerFunds Legacy Program (January 2011-December 2011); Executive Vice President (January 2011-December 2012) and General Counsel of OFI Institutional Asset Management, Inc. (since January 2011); General Counsel, Asset Management of the Sub-Adviser (May 2010-December 2010); Principal, The Vanguard Group (November 2005-April 2010); District Administrator, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (January 2003-October 2005). An officer of 91 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex.

 

78        OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


Jennifer Sexton,

Vice President and Chief Business

Officer (since 2014)

Year of Birth: 1969

  

Senior Vice President of OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc. (since June 2014); Vice President of OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc. (April 2006-June 2014); Vice President of the Sub-Adviser

(January 1998-March 2006); Assistant Vice President of the Sub-Adviser (October 1991-December 1998). An officer of 91 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex.

Mary Ann Picciotto,

Chief Compliance Officer and

Chief Anti-Money Laundering

Officer (since 2014)

Year of Birth: 1973

   Senior Vice President and Chief Compliance Officer of the Manager (since March 2014); Chief Compliance Officer of the Sub-Adviser, OFI SteelPath, Inc., OFI Global Trust Company, OFI Global Institutional, Inc., Oppenheimer Real Asset Management, Inc., OFI Private Investments, Inc., Harborview Asset Management Corporation, Trinity Investment Management Corporation, and Shareholder Services, Inc. (since March 2014); Managing Director of Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc. and certain of its various affiliated entities; Chief Compliance Officer of various Morgan Stanley Funds (May 2010-January 2014); Chief Compliance Officer of Morgan Stanley Investment Management Inc. (April 2007-January 2014). An officer of 91 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex.

Brian W. Wixted,

Treasurer and Principal Financial

& Accounting Officer (since 1999)

Year of Birth: 1959

  

Senior Vice President of the Manager (since January 2013); Treasurer of the Sub-Adviser, HarbourView Asset Management Corporation, Shareholder Financial Services, Inc., Shareholder Services, Inc., and Oppenheimer Real Asset Management, Inc. (March 1999-June 2008), OFI Private Investments, Inc. (March 2000-June 2008), OppenheimerFunds International Ltd. and OppenheimerFunds plc (since May 2000), OFI Institutional Asset Management, Inc. (November 2000-June 2008), and OppenheimerFunds Legacy Program (charitable trust program established by the Sub-Adviser) (June 2003-December 2011); Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of OFI Trust Company (since May 2000); Assistant Treasurer of Oppenheimer Acquisition Corporation

(March 1999-June 2008). An officer of 91 portfolios in the OppenheimerFunds complex.

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

 

79       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS

 

Manager

   OFI Global Asset Management, Inc.

Sub-Adviser

   OppenheimerFunds, Inc.

Distributor

   OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc.

Transfer and Shareholder

   OFI Global Asset Management, Inc.

Servicing Agent

  

Sub-Transfer Agent

  

Shareholder Services, Inc.

DBA OppenheimerFunds Services

Independent Registered

   KPMG LLP

Public Accounting Firm

  

Legal Counsel

   Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP

 

 

© 2015 OppenheimerFunds, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

 

80       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


PRIVACY POLICY NOTICE

 

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

Information Sources

We obtain nonpublic personal information about our shareholders from the following sources:

  Applications or other forms
  When you create a user ID and password for online account access
  When you enroll in eDocs Direct, our electronic document delivery service
  Your transactions with us, our affiliates or others
  A software program on our website, often referred to as a “cookie,” which indicates which parts of our site you’ve visited
  When you set up challenge questions to reset your password online

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

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

If you have set your browser to warn you before accepting cookies, you will receive the warning message with each cookie. You can refuse cookies by turning them off in your browser. However, doing so may limit your access to certain sections of our website.

We use cookies to help us improve and manage our website. For example, cookies help us recognize new versus repeat visitors to the site, track the pages visited, and enable some special features on the website. This data helps us provide a better service for our website visitors.

Protection of Information

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

Disclosure of Information

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

Right of Refusal

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

 

81      OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


PRIVACY POLICY NOTICE Continued

 

Internet Security and Encryption

In general, the email services provided by our website are encrypted and provide a secure and private means of communication with us. To protect your own privacy, confidential and/or personal information should only be communicated via email when you are advised that you are using a secure website. As a security measure, we do not include personal or account information in non-secure emails, and we advise you not to send such information to us in non-secure emails. Instead, you may take advantage of the secure features of our website to encrypt your email correspondence. To do this, you will need to use a browser that supports Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol.

We do not guarantee or warrant that any part of our website, including files available for download, are free of viruses or other harmful code. It is your responsibility to take appropriate precautions, such as use of an anti-virus software package, to protect your computer hardware and software.

  All transactions, including redemptions, exchanges and purchases, are secured by SSL and 128-bit encryption. SSL is used to establish a secure connection between your PC and OppenheimerFunds’ server. It transmits information in an encrypted and scrambled format.
  Encryption is achieved through an electronic scrambling technology that uses a “key” to code and then decode the data. Encryption acts like the cable converter box you may have on your television set. It scrambles data with a secret code so that no one can make sense of it while it is being transmitted. When the data reaches its destination, the same software unscrambles the data.
  You can exit the secure area by either closing your browser, or for added security, you can use the Log Out button before you close your browser.

Other Security Measures

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

How You Can Help

You can also do your part to keep your account information private and to prevent unauthorized transactions. If you obtain a user ID and password for your account, do not allow it to be used by anyone else. Also, take special precautions when accessing your account on a computer used by others.

Who We Are

This joint notice describes the privacy policies of the Oppenheimer funds, OppenheimerFunds, Inc., each of its investment adviser subsidiaries, OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc. and OFI Global Trust Co. It applies to all Oppenheimer fund accounts you presently have, or may open in the future, using your Social Security number—whether or not you remain a shareholder of our funds. This notice was last updated November 2014. In the event it is updated or changed, we will post an updated notice on our website at oppenheimerfunds.com. If you have any questions about this privacy policy, write to us at P.O. Box 5270, Denver, CO 80217-5270, email us by clicking on the Contact Us section of our website at oppenheimerfunds.com or call us at 1.800.CALL OPP (225.5677).

 

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87       OPPENHEIMER ROCHESTER FUND MUNICIPALS


LOGO


Item 2. Code of Ethics.

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

 

Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert.

The Board of Trustees of the registrant has determined that David Downes, the Board’s Audit Committee Chairman, is an audit committee financial expert and that Mr. Downes is “independent” for purposes of this Item 3.


Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services.

 

(a) Audit Fees

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed $54,800 in fiscal 2014 and $53,700 in fiscal 2013.

 

(b) Audit-Related Fees

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed no such fees in fiscal 2014 and no such fees in fiscal 2013.

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed $1,012,359 in fiscal 2014 and $697,965 in fiscal 2013 to the registrant’s investment adviser or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant.

Such services include: Internal control reviews, GIPS attestation procedures, reorganization, and system conversion testing

 

(c) Tax Fees

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed no such fees in fiscal 2014 and no such fees in fiscal 2013.

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed $477,069 in fiscal 2014 and $581,620 in fiscal 2013 to the registrant’s investment adviser or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant.

Such services include: tax compliance, tax planning and tax advice. Tax compliance generally involves preparation of original and amended tax returns, claims for a refund and tax payment-planning services. Tax planning and tax advice includes assistance with tax audits and appeals, tax advice related to mergers and acquisitions and requests for rulings or technical advice from taxing authorities.

 

(d) All Other Fees

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed no such fees in fiscal 2014 and no such fees in fiscal 2013.

The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed no such fees in fiscal 2014 and no such fees in fiscal 2013 to the registrant’s investment adviser or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant.


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

 

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

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

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

(2) 0%

 

(f) Not applicable as less than 50%.

 

(g) The principal accountant for the audit of the registrant’s annual financial statements billed $1,489,428 in fiscal 2014 and $1,279,585 in fiscal 2013 to the registrant and the registrant’s investment adviser or any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant related to non-audit fees. Those billings did not include any prohibited non-audit services as defined by the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

 

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

 

Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants

Not applicable.


Item 6. Schedule of Investments.

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

b) Not applicable.

 

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

Not applicable.

 

Item 8. Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies.

Not applicable.

 

Item 9. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment Company and Affiliated Purchasers.

Not applicable.

 

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

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

None

 

Item 11. Controls and Procedures.

Based on their evaluation of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30a-3(c)) as of 12/31/2014, the registrant’s principal executive officer and principal financial officer found the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures to provide reasonable assurances that information required to be disclosed by the registrant in the reports that it files under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (a) is accumulated and communicated to registrant’s management, including its principal executive officer and principal financial officer, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure, and (b) is recorded, processed, summarized and reported, within the time periods specified in the rules and forms adopted by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

There have been no changes in the registrant’s internal controls over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that


have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

Item 12. Exhibits.

 

(a) (1) Exhibit attached hereto.

(2) Exhibits attached hereto.

(3) Not applicable.

 

(b) Exhibit attached hereto.


SIGNATURES

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

 

Oppenheimer Rochester Fund Municipals
By:

/s/ Arthur P. Steinmetz

Arthur P. Steinmetz
Principal Executive Officer
Date: 2/11/2015

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

 

By:

/s/ Arthur P. Steinmetz

Arthur P. Steinmetz
Principal Executive Officer
Date: 2/11/2015

 

By:

/s/ Brian W. Wixted

Brian W. Wixted
Principal Financial Officer
Date: 2/11/2015