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 811-21586
                                                    ----------------------------

            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

                        1001 Warrenville Road, Suite 300
                                 LISLE, IL 60532
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

                             W. Scott Jardine, Esq.
                           First Trust Portfolios L.P.
                        1001 Warrenville Road, Suite 300
                                 LISLE, IL 60532
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                     (Name and address of agent for service)

       registrant's telephone number, including area code: (630) 241-4141
                                                          ---------------

                      Date of fiscal year end: DECEMBER 31
                                              ------------

                   Date of reporting period: DECEMBER 31, 2006
                                            ------------------

Form N-CSR is to be used by management investment companies to file reports with
the Commission not later than 10 days after the  transmission to stockholders of
any report that is required to be transmitted to  stockholders  under Rule 30e-1
under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (17 CFR 270.30e-1).  The Commission may
use the information provided on Form N-CSR in its regulatory, disclosure review,
inspection, and policymaking roles.

A registrant  is required to disclose the  information  specified by Form N-CSR,
and the  Commission  will make this  information  public.  A  registrant  is not
required to respond to the  collection  of  information  contained in Form N-CSR
unless the Form  displays a  currently  valid  Office of  Management  and Budget
("OMB")  control number.  Please direct comments  concerning the accuracy of the
information  collection  burden  estimate and any  suggestions  for reducing the
burden to  Secretary,  Securities  and Exchange  Commission,  100 F Street,  NE,
Washington,  DC 20549. The OMB has reviewed this collection of information under
the clearance requirements of 44 U.S.C. ss. 3507.



ITEM 1. REPORTS TO STOCKHOLDERS.

The Report to Shareholders is attached herewith.



            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                                 ANNUAL REPORT
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2006


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TABLE OF CONTENTS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND (FFA)
                               DECEMBER 31, 2006

 Shareholder Letter.....................................................   1
 Portfolio Commentary...................................................   2
 Portfolio Components...................................................   4
 Portfolio of Investments...............................................   5
 Statement of Assets and Liabilities....................................  13
 Statement of Operations................................................  14
 Statements of Changes in Net Assets....................................  15
 Financial Highlights...................................................  16
 Notes to Financial Statements..........................................  17
 Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm................  21
 Additional Information.................................................  22
     Dividend Reinvestment Plan
     Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures
     Portfolio Holdings
     NYSE Certification Information
     Tax Information
     By-Law Amendments
 Board of Trustees and Officers.........................................  24


                  CAUTION REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

This Annual Report contains certain forward-looking statements within the
meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933. Forward-looking statements
include statements regarding the goals, beliefs, plans or current expectations
of First Trust Advisors L.P. (the "Advisor") and/or Fiduciary Asset Management,
LLC (the "Sub-Advisor") and their respective representatives, taking into
account the information currently available to them. Forward-looking statements
include all statements that do not relate solely to current or historical fact.
For example, forward-looking statements include the use of words such as
"anticipate," "estimate," "intend," "expect," "believe," "plan," "may,"
"should," "would" or other words that convey uncertainty of future events or
outcomes.

Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and
other factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of
the First Trust/Fiduciary Asset Management Covered Call Fund (the "Fund") to be
materially different from any future results, performance or achievements
expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. When evaluating the
information included in this Annual Report, you are cautioned not to place undue
reliance on these forward-looking statements, which reflect the judgment of the
Advisor and Sub-Advisor and their respective representatives only as of the date
hereof. We undertake no obligation to publicly revise or update these
forward-looking statements to reflect events and circumstances that arise after
the date hereof.

                             HOW TO READ THIS REPORT

This report contains information that can help you evaluate your investment. It
includes details about the Fund and presents data and analysis that provide
insight into the Fund's performance and investment approach.

By reading the letter from the Fund's President, James A. Bowen, together with
the portfolio commentary by Mohammed Riad and K. Timothy Swanson, Co-Portfolio
Managers of the Sub-Advisor, you may obtain an understanding of how the market
environment affected the Fund's performance. The statistical information that
follows may help you understand the Fund's performance compared to that of
relevant market benchmarks.

It is important to keep in mind that the opinions expressed by Mr. Bowen and
personnel of the Sub-Advisor are just that: informed opinions. They should not
be considered to be promises or advice. The opinions, like the statistics, cover
the period through the date on the cover of this report. Of course, the risks of
investing in the Fund are spelled out in the prospectus.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SHAREHOLDER LETTER
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

         FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND (FFA)
                                  ANNUAL REPORT
                                DECEMBER 31, 2006

Dear Shareholders:

We are pleased to present this annual report of the First Trust/Fiduciary Asset
Management Covered Call Fund (the "Fund") (NYSE symbol: FFA). The Fund posted
gains in both market value and net asset value ("NAV") for the twelve-month
reporting period ended December 31, 2006.

The markets had a strong performance year in 2006. The U.S. economy expanded,
stock markets performed positively, and many of the major economic indicators
were positive. Value stocks outperformed growth stocks for the majority of 2006.
Throughout most of the year, the Fund had a bias toward growth oriented sectors,
which hindered underlying equity performance. As we begin 2007, one of the most
touted areas of the market is large-cap stocks, particularly large-cap growth
stocks. The portfolio managers continue to overweight the growth segments of the
economy based on relative valuations and their economic outlook. For a more
detailed discussion of the portfolio strategy, I encourage you to read the
commentary from the portfolio management team at Fiduciary Asset Management, LLC
found on the following pages. It includes a review of the specific market
conditions that affected the Fund's performance as well as the portfolio
managers' outlook for the markets.

First Trust serves as investment advisor or portfolio supervisor to investment
portfolios with approximately $28 billion in assets which it managed or
supervised as of December 31, 2006. We value our relationship with our investors
and appreciate the opportunity to assist you in achieving your financial goals.

Sincerely,

/S/ JAMES A. BOWEN
James A. Bowen
President of the First Trust/Fiduciary Asset Management Covered Call Fund
February 21, 2007

                                                                          Page 1





[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
MOHAMMED RIAD PIC

MOHAMMED RIAD
MANAGING DIRECTOR, SENIOR PORTFOLIO MANAGER, CHIEF DERIVATIVES STRATEGIST,
MEMBER OF STRATEGY COMMITTEE AND INVESTMENT COMMITTEE
Mr. Riad joined Fiduciary Asset Management, LLC ("Fiduciary") in 1999 and has 14
years of investment industry experience. He is a member of the portfolio
management team and serves as senior portfolio manager for Fiduciary's
institutional and hedged large-cap equity strategies, as well as closed-end and
open-end funds. Additionally, Mr. Riad has been instrumental in the development
of industry-leading large scale derivatives strategies. He is actively involved
with the Strategy Committee's macroeconomic assessment and top-down approach to
portfolio management. Prior to joining Fiduciary, Mr. Riad worked in management
for six years at Legg Mason Wood Walker in the Washington D.C. and New York
offices. Mr. Riad holds an M.B.A. from Washington University in St. Louis and a
B.S. in business from Wake Forest University.



[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
K. TIMOTHY SWANSON PIC

K. TIMOTHY SWANSON, CFA
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, PORTFOLIO MANAGER, MEMBER OF INVESTMENT COMMITTEE
Mr. Swanson performs quantitative and qualitative research and holds portfolio
management duties for Fiduciary's large-cap institutional equity strategies. He
implements portfolio management decisions for hedged equity institutional
portfolios, as well as closed-end and open-end funds. Mr. Swanson provides the
Strategy Committee with statistical and quantitative analysis of macroeconomic,
sector, industry, and company-specific recommendations and supporting data. He
assists in designing, structuring, and managing Fiduciary's quantitative
research effort. Prior to joining Fiduciary, he spent two years as a portfolio
manager for institutional and high-net worth clients and spent nearly seven
years at A.G. Edwards & Sons as a senior analyst for beverage and tobacco
industries, earning eight Wall Street Journal All-Star Analyst awards between
1997 and 2000. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst ("CFA") and member of the St.
Louis Society of Financial Analysts. Mr. Swanson received his M.B.A. from
Washington University in St. Louis and his bachelor of arts degree from Colgate
University.

FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT, LLC
Fiduciary Asset Management, LLC ("Fiduciary") is the sub-advisor to the First
Trust/Fiduciary Asset Management Covered Call Fund (the "Fund"). Fiduciary was
founded in 1994 as an employee-owned investment management firm. The investment
manager is a federally-registered investment advisor which manages a broad range
of equity and fixed-income strategies, including both traditional and hedged
strategies, for institutional and private wealth clients. Prior to 1994,
Fiduciary was the internal asset management group for a large corporate pension
plan for nearly 22 years. It continues to function as such plan's chief
investment officer. The investment manager currently supervises and manages
approximately $17 billion in client assets.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              PORTFOLIO COMMENTARY
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MARKET RECAP

The S&P 500 Index total return was dominated by value stocks during 2006, with
the top-three sectors in terms of performance including Telecommunication
Services, Energy, and Utilities. As a broader illustration, the Russell 1000
Value Index outperformed the Russell 1000 Growth Index by 13 percentage points
for the year ended December 31, 2006. We believe the Federal Reserve policy
outlook had much to do with the out-performance of the value sector in 2006
throughout the majority of the year, as investors focused on inflation
expectations and wage pressures to build a consensus view that projected further
interest rate hikes.

Based on our strategic view that inflationary pressures were transitory and that
the Federal Reserve Board ( the "Fed") would lean more toward easing interest
rate policy as the year progressed, we biased the Fund in more growth oriented
sectors given the valuation and growth attractiveness relative to value
counterparts. We chose to underweight defensive industries that exhibited
sub-market growth prospects, which paradoxically experienced dramatic
price-to-earnings multiple expansion and investor attention throughout the year.

Nonetheless, falling commodity prices and lower inflation based on slowing
economic activity has traditionally marked an inflection point in the market
cycle that has favored large-cap equities. As economic activity slows below
trend line and inflationary pressures wane, we believe Fed policy will favor a
more active role in reigniting economic growth. We continue to overweight the
growth segments of the economy based on relative valuations and our anticipated
economic outlook.

PERFORMANCE

The market value total return for the Fund was 17.3% for the year ending
December 31, 2006. The Fund produced a NAV total return of 7.1% for the year as
compared to the S&P 500 Index performance of 15.8%. The Lehman U.S. Aggregate
Index - the fixed-income comparable - returned 4.3%. Another index, the CBOE S&P
500 BuyWrite Index (BXM), returned 13.3% for the same period.

Page 2


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                        PORTFOLIO COMMENTARY - CONTINUED
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Despite investor bias for value-style equities, the Fund successfully
participated in a number of growth industries during 2006. Within the Consumer
Discretionary sector, the Fund's exposure to the casino industry helped to
generate excess relative returns, owning MGM MIRAGE, in particular,
(representing 2.3% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) which stock
value increased 56% and ranked as the top performing equity for the Fund during
the year. Similarly, positions in the retailing industry - namely Nordstrom
(representing 1.4% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) and Target
(representing 1.1% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) similarly
added to equity performance, advancing 34% and 17%, respectively.

Once again, Fund holdings in the Diversified Financial Services industry helped
to generate strong relative performance. Specific overweight holdings included
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (no longer owned in the Fund's portfolio as of December
31, 2006), Bear Stearns Cos. (representing 1.9% of the Fund's portfolio as of
December 31, 2006) and Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc. (representing 2.6% of the
Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) performed exceedingly well for the
year, increasing 55%, 42%, and 23%, respectively.

Given investor attraction to equities with relatively stable return streams, the
Fund's exposure to the Consumer Staples sector performed well during the year,
especially CVS Corp. (no longer owned in the portfolio as of December 31, 2006)
which added solid relative performance for the Fund by advancing 17%. Equities
within the Wireless Telecommunication Services sector such as ALLTEL Corp
(representing 3.4% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) and Verizon
Communications Inc. (representing 0.8% of the Fund's portfolio as of December
31, 2006) are similarly believed to have benefited from investor attention - up
19% and 35%, respectively -- despite uninspiring earnings performance.

On the whole, the Fund's overweighting in the growth-oriented Technology sector
hindered underlying equity performance, in particular companies participating in
the Communications Equipment industry. Despite generating strong earnings
performance throughout the year, equities such as QUALCOMM Inc (representing
1.0% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006), Texas Instruments
(representing 2.0% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) and Corning
Inc. (representing 1.5% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) found
price-to-earnings multiples contracting as investor risk aversions are believed
to have increased and returns declined correspondingly at 11%, 10%, and 23%,
respectively.

Conversely, bellwether technology stalwarts such as Apple Inc. (representing
1.6% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) and Microsoft Corp,
(representing 2.1% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) performed
modestly better than the sector, while the Fund's top-performing technology
company - BEA Systems Inc. (no longer owned in the Fund's portfolio as of
December 31, 2006) helped to offset some return weakness from other technology
holdings, advancing 39% for the year.

In contrast to 2005, the Fund's exposure to the healthcare services and
biotechnology industries in 2006 negatively impacted relative performance.
Similar to a large number of growth-oriented equities, strong profits from the
Fund's positions such as Genentech Inc. (representing 1.4% of the Fund's
portfolio as of December 31, 2006) and UnitedHealth Group Inc. (representing
2.0% of the Fund's portfolio as of December 31, 2006) nonetheless suffered in a
decline of valuations with returns down 12% and 13%, respectively.

Low volatility levels within the Fund's underlying equity portfolio reduced the
amount of call option premium the Fund was able to generate in advance of the
market correction during the spring of 2006, negatively impacting overall
covered call performance for that time period. However, once the market bottomed
during mid-summer 2006, we were able to adjust the option overlay to capture
more of the equity performance through the end of the year.

DIVIDENDS

During 2006, the Fund declared and paid four-quarterly dividends to
shareholders. The aggregate amount of these dividends, $1.60 per share, computes
to an annualized yield of 8.7% based upon the December 31, 2006 Common Share
price of $18.41 per share. Of this total, $1.30 per share represented ordinary
income and $0.30 per share was from long-term capital gains.

OUTLOOK

Since our semi-annual report to shareholders, our view of the economy has not
been dramatically altered as we continue to expect economic growth to remain
about a percentage-point below historic trend-line growth of approximately 3.5%.
We believe the current housing and manufacturing weakness is a direct result of
the Fed's continuing tight monetary policy, designed to soften these
flash-points of the economy enough to lower the core inflation reading to its
targeted range of 1% to 2% annually.

In our opinion, the equity market retains strong fundamentals despite perceived
uncertainty surrounding inflation, economic growth, or Fed's monetary actions.
Corporations have excess cash which we believe will continue to be used for
dividend increases, share buybacks, acquisitions and capital investments.
Private equity funds, which raised about $750 billion from investors in 2006,
are also cash rich with a mission to invest the money. Equity markets may also
derive thrust from rising price earnings multiples if inflation continues
decelerating, which should cause long-term bond yields to decline. Relative
valuation still favors equities versus fixed-income, although equities'
valuation advantage could diminish if earnings have an unexpected decline.

                                                                          Page 3



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
PORTFOLIO COMPONENTS+
DECEMBER 31, 2006

                                [GRAPHIC OMITTED]
               EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN GRAPHIC


Diversified Financial Services                       8.0%
Communications Equipment                             6.8%
Commercial Banks                                     5.6%
Computers & Peripherals                              5.2%
Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment             5.2%
Aerospace & Defense                                  4.6%
Capital Markets                                      4.5%
Health Care Providers & Services                     4.5%
Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure                        4.4%
Household Durables                                   4.0%
Biotechnology                                        3.7%
Wireless Telecommunication Services                  3.4%
Industrial Conglomerates                             3.2%
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels                          3.1%
Pharmaceuticals                                      3.0%
Specialty Retail                                     2.9%
Software                                             2.8%
Health Care Equipment & Supplies                     2.7%
Multiline Retail                                     2.6%
Machinery                                            2.4%
Energy Equipment & Services                          2.3%
Insurance                                            2.3%
Road & Rail                                          1.7%
Beverages                                            1.6%
Media                                                1.6%
Electrical Equipment                                 1.5%
Food & Staples Retailing                             1.5%
Air Freight & Logistics                              1.4%
Internet  Software & Services                        1.4%
Chemicals                                            0.8%
Diversified Telecommunication Services               0.8%
Put options purchased                                0.4%



+  Percentages are based on total investments. Please note that the percentages
   shown on the Portfolio of Investments are based on net assets.

Page 4



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
DECEMBER 31, 2006

                                                                    MARKET
   SHARES                                                            VALUE
------------                                                     ------------

 COMMON STOCKS+ - 100.0%


              AEROSPACE & DEFENSE - 4.6%
      240,600 Honeywell International, Inc.................... $   10,884,744
      102,900 United Technologies Corp........................      6,433,308
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   17,318,052
                                                               ---------------

              AIR FREIGHT & LOGISTICS - 1.5%
       49,900 FedEx Corp......................................      5,420,138
                                                               ---------------

              BEVERAGES - 1.6%
       96,000 PepsiCo, Inc....................................      6,004,800
                                                               ---------------

              BIOTECHNOLOGY - 3.7%
       86,300 Amgen, Inc.*....................................      5,895,153
       66,400 Genentech, Inc.*................................      5,387,032
       40,100 Gilead Sciences, Inc.*..........................      2,603,693
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   13,885,878
                                                               ---------------

              CAPITAL MARKETS - 4.5%
       43,000 Bear Stearns Companies (The), Inc...............      6,999,540
      125,000 Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc...................      9,765,000
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   16,764,540
                                                               ---------------

              CHEMICALS - 0.8%
       55,600 Monsanto Company................................      2,920,668
                                                               ---------------

              COMMERCIAL BANKS - 5.6%
      267,400 Wachovia Corp...................................     15,228,430
      156,500 Wells Fargo & Company...........................      5,565,140
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   20,793,570
                                                               ---------------

              COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT - 6.9%
      244,000 Cisco Systems, Inc.*............................      6,668,520
      294,600 Corning, Inc.*..................................      5,511,966
      402,500 Motorola, Inc...................................      8,275,400
      100,200 QUALCOMM, Inc...................................      3,786,558
      126,800 Tellabs, Inc.*..................................      1,300,968
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   25,543,412
                                                               ---------------

              COMPUTERS & PERIPHERALS - 5.3%
       70,200 Apple Computer, Inc.*...........................      5,955,768
      284,900 Dell, Inc.*.....................................      7,148,141
      491,500 EMC Corp.* .....................................      6,487,800
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   19,591,709
                                                               ---------------

              DIVERSIFIED FINANCIAL SERVICES - 8.1%
      143,700 Bank of America Corp............................      7,672,143
      117,600 CIT Group, Inc..................................      6,558,552
      182,100 Citigroup, Inc..................................     10,142,970
      118,200 JPMorgan Chase & Company........................      5,709,060
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   30,082,725
                                                               ---------------

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.                 Page 5



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2006

                                                                    MARKET
   SHARES                                                            VALUE
------------                                                     ------------

 COMMON STOCKS+ - CONTINUED


              DIVERSIFIED TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 0.8%
       75,600 Verizon Communications, Inc..................... $    2,815,344
                                                               ---------------

              ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT - 1.5%
      130,800 Emerson Electric Company........................      5,764,356
                                                               ---------------

              ENERGY EQUIPMENT & SERVICES - 2.3%
       50,800 Baker Hughes, Inc...............................      3,792,728
      103,200 BJ Services Company.............................      3,025,824
       29,300 Schlumberger Ltd................................      1,850,588
                                                               ---------------
                                                                    8,669,140
                                                               ---------------

              FOOD & STAPLES RETAILING - 1.5%
       78,900 Wal-Mart Stores, Inc............................      3,643,602
       40,000 Whole Foods Market, Inc.........................      1,877,200
                                                               ---------------
                                                                    5,520,802
                                                               ---------------

              HEALTH CARE EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES - 2.7%
      134,700 Medtronic, Inc..................................      7,207,797
       37,600 Zimmer Holdings, Inc.*..........................      2,947,088
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   10,154,885
                                                               ---------------

              HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS & SERVICES - 4.5%
       43,300 Cardinal Health, Inc............................      2,789,819
      127,050 Coventry Health Care, Inc.*.....................      6,358,853
      141,300 UnitedHealth Group, Inc.........................      7,592,049
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   16,740,721
                                                               ---------------

              HOTELS, RESTAURANTS & LEISURE - 4.4%
       98,300 Harrah's Entertainment, Inc.....................      8,131,376
      147,200 MGM MIRAGE*.....................................      8,441,920
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   16,573,296
                                                               ---------------

              HOUSEHOLD DURABLES - 4.0%
       54,500 Centex Corp.....................................      3,066,715
       81,600 Lennar Corp., Class A...........................      4,280,736
      118,400 Procter & Gamble (The) Company..................      7,609,568
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   14,957,019
                                                               ---------------

              INDUSTRIAL CONGLOMERATES - 3.2%
      317,800 General Electric Company........................     11,825,338
                                                               ---------------

              INSURANCE - 2.3%
      119,500 American International Group, Inc...............      8,563,370
                                                               ---------------

              INTERNET  SOFTWARE & SERVICES - 1.4%
      211,700 Yahoo! Inc.*....................................      5,406,818
                                                               ---------------

              MACHINERY - 2.4%
       93,100 Caterpillar, Inc................................      5,709,823
       32,900 Deere & Company.................................      3,127,803
                                                               ---------------
                                                                    8,837,626
                                                               ---------------

Page 6             See Notes to Financial Statements.



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2006

                                                                    MARKET
   SHARES                                                            VALUE
------------                                                     ------------

 COMMON STOCKS+ - CONTINUED


              MEDIA - 1.6%
      137,200 Comcast Corp., Class A*......................... $    5,807,676
                                                               ---------------

              MULTILINE RETAIL - 2.6%
      109,200 Nordstrom, Inc..................................      5,387,928
       74,300 Target Corp.....................................      4,238,815
                                                               ---------------
                                                                    9,626,743
                                                               ---------------

              OIL, GAS & CONSUMABLE FUELS - 3.1%
       56,600 Chevron Corp....................................      4,161,798
      289,400 Williams Companies (The), Inc...................      7,559,128
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   11,720,926
                                                               ---------------

              PHARMACEUTICALS - 3.0%
      357,000 Pfizer, Inc.....................................      9,246,300
       42,000 Sanofi-Aventis, SP ADR..........................      1,939,140
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   11,185,440
                                                               ---------------

              ROAD & RAIL - 1.7%
       86,700 Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp...............      6,399,327
                                                               ---------------

              SEMICONDUCTORS & SEMICONDUCTOR
                EQUIPMENT - 5.2%
      215,800 Broadcom Corp., Class A*........................      6,972,498
      248,200 Intel Corp......................................      5,026,050
      257,000 Texas Instruments, Inc..........................      7,401,600
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   19,400,148
                                                               ---------------

              SOFTWARE - 2.8%
      258,000 Microsoft Corp..................................      7,703,880
      132,800 Symantec Corp.*.................................      2,768,880
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   10,472,760
                                                               ---------------

              SPECIALTY RETAIL - 3.0%
      123,800 Best Buy Company, Inc...........................      6,089,722
      158,600 Lowe's Companies, Inc...........................      4,940,390
                                                               ---------------
                                                                   11,030,112
                                                               ---------------

              WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES - 3.4%
      208,100 ALLTEL Corp.....................................     12,585,888
                                                               ---------------

              TOTAL COMMON STOCKS+............................    372,383,227
                                                               ---------------
              (Cost $379,625,603)

 PUT OPTIONS PURCHASED - 0.4%
       14,500 SPDR Trust Series I Put
              @ 127 due June 07 ..............................      1,595,000
                                                               ---------------

              TOTAL PUT OPTIONS PURCHASED.....................      1,595,000
                                                               ---------------
              (Cost $2,494,000)

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.                 Page 7



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2006

                                                                    MARKET
                                                                     VALUE
                                                                 ------------

              TOTAL INVESTMENTS - 100.4%...................... $  373,978,227
              (Cost $382,119,603)**

              CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN - (2.0%)...................     (7,372,401)
              (Premiums received $8,241,701)

              NET OTHER ASSETS & LIABILITIES - 1.6%...........      5,969,746
                                                               ---------------
              NET ASSETS - 100.0%............................. $  372,575,572
                                                               ===============

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       ADR    American Depositary Receipt
         *    Non-income producing security.
        **    Aggregate cost for federal income tax purposes is $382,304,053 for
              investments and $6,529,950 for premiums received on options
              written.
         +    Call options were written on either entire or partial Common Stock
              positions; all Common Stocks are pledged as collateral.

 NUMBER OF                                                          MARKET
 CONTRACTS                                                           VALUE
------------                                                     ------------
 CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN - (2.0%)

                 ALLTEL Corp. Calls
        1,292    @ 60 due Jan 07 ............................. $     (290,700)
          789    @ 65 due Apr 07 .............................       (161,745)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (452,445)
                                                               ---------------
                 American International Group, Inc. Call
          865    @ 75 due May 07 .............................       (134,075)
                                                               ---------------

                 Amgen, Inc. Calls
          216    @ 85 due Apr 07..............................         (3,240)
          647    @ 30 due July 07.............................        (35,585)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (38,825)
                                                               ---------------
                 Apple Computer, Inc. Call
          702    @ 95 due Jan 07 .............................        (66,690)
                                                               ---------------

                 Baker Hughes Inc. Calls
          254    @ 75 due Jan 07..............................        (48,260)
          254    @ 85 due Apr 07..............................        (49,530)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (97,790)
                                                               ---------------
                 Bank of America Corp. Calls
          411    @ 55 due Jan 07..............................         (6,165)
          513    @ 55 due Feb 07..............................        (30,780)
          513    @ 57.5 due May 07............................        (28,728)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (65,673)
                                                               ---------------
                 Bear Stearns Companies (The), Inc. Call
          430    @ 165 due Apr 07 ............................       (356,900)
                                                               ---------------

                 Best Buy Company, Inc. Calls
          581    @ 50 due Mar 07..............................       (145,250)
          657    @ 60 due June 07.............................        (91,980)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (237,230)
                                                               ---------------

Page 8             See Notes to Financial Statements.


FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2006

 NUMBER OF                                                          MARKET
 CONTRACTS                                                           VALUE
------------                                                     ------------

CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN - CONTINUED

                 BJ Services Company Calls
          204    @ 35 due Jan 07.............................. $       (1,020)
          253    @ 37.5 due Jan 07............................         (1,265)
          204    @ 30 due Apr 07..............................        (45,492)
          371    @ 37.5 due Apr 07............................        (14,840)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (62,617)
                                                               ---------------
                 Broadcom Corp. Calls
        1,279    @ 40 due Feb 07..............................        (38,370)
          450    @ 40 due May 07..............................        (56,250)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (94,620)
                                                               ---------------
                 Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp. Calls
          681    @ 85 due Jan 07..............................         (3,405)
          186    @ 90 due Apr 07..............................         (7,440)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (10,845)
                                                               ---------------
                 Cardinal Health, Inc. Call
          433    @ 70 due Mar 07 .............................        (28,145)
                                                               ---------------

                 Caterpillar, Inc. Call
          751    @ 67.5 due Feb 07 ...........................        (26,285)
                                                               ---------------

                 Centex Corp. Calls
          204    @ 55 due Jan 07..............................        (48,144)
          227    @ 60 due Feb 07..............................        (30,645)
          114    @ 65 due Apr 07..............................        (13,680)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (92,469)
                                                               ---------------
                 Chevron Corp. Calls
          283    @ 75 due Mar 07..............................        (67,920)
          283    @ 80 due June 07.............................        (52,355)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (120,275)
                                                               ---------------
                 Cisco Systems, Inc. Call
        1,830    @ 27.5 due Apr 07 ...........................       (320,250)
                                                               ---------------

                 CIT Group, Inc. Call
        1,176    @ 55 due Jan 07 .............................       (205,800)
                                                               ---------------

                 Citigroup, Inc. Calls
          717    @ 55 due June 07.............................       (211,515)
          717    @ 57.5 due June 07...........................       (118,305)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (329,820)
                                                               ---------------
                 Comcast Corp. Call
        1,242    @ 45 due Apr 07 .............................       (167,670)
                                                               ---------------

                 Coventry Health Care, Inc. Call
          889    @ 55 due Apr 07 .............................        (97,790)
                                                               ---------------

                 Deere & Company Calls
          164    @ 95 due Jan 07..............................        (35,260)
          165    @ 100 due Jan 07.............................         (7,425)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (42,685)
                                                               ---------------

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.                 Page 9



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2006

 NUMBER OF                                                          MARKET
 CONTRACTS                                                           VALUE
------------                                                     ------------

CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN - CONTINUED

                 Dell, Inc. Calls
        1,795    @ 27.5 due Feb 07............................ $      (62,825)
        1,054    @ 30 due May 07..............................        (47,430)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (110,255)
                                                               ---------------
                 EMC Corp. Calls
        1,536    @ 14 due Apr 07..............................        (61,440)
          773    @ 15 due Apr 07..............................        (15,460)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (76,900)
                                                               ---------------
                 Emerson Electric Company Call
        1,062    @ 45 due Mar 07 .............................       (122,130)
                                                               ---------------

                 Fedex Corp. Call
          499    @ 125 due Apr 07 ............................        (44,910)
                                                               ---------------

                 General Electric Company Call
        3,178    @ 40 due June 07 ............................       (238,350)
                                                               ---------------

                 Genentech, Inc. Call
          531    @ 90 due Mar 07 .............................        (38,763)
                                                               ---------------

                 Gilead Sciences, Inc. Call
          401    @ 70 due May 07 .............................       (118,295)
                                                               ---------------

                 Honeywell International, Inc. Calls
        1,882    @ 45 due Jan 07..............................       (188,200)
          271    @ 45 due Mar 07..............................        (52,303)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (240,503)
                                                               ---------------
                 Intel Corp. Call
        1,941    @ 25 due July 07 ............................        (77,640)
                                                               ---------------

                 JPMorgan Chase & Company Call
          887    @ 50 due Mar 07 .............................        (70,960)
                                                               ---------------

                 Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc. Calls
        1,178    @ 80 due Jan 07..............................       (100,130)
           72    @ 90 due Apr 07..............................         (7,200)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (107,330)
                                                               ---------------
                 Lennar Corp. Calls
          241    @ 50 due Jan 07..............................        (79,530)
          575    @ 55 due Feb 07..............................        (77,625)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (157,155)
                                                               ---------------
                 Lowe's Companies, Inc. Calls
        1,086    @ 32.5 due Jan 07............................        (16,290)
          500    @ 32.5 due Apr 07............................        (22,500)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (38,790)
                                                               ---------------
                 Medtronic, Inc. Call
        1,347    @ 55 due May 07 .............................       (289,605)
                                                               ---------------

Page 10            See Notes to Financial Statements.



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2006

 NUMBER OF                                                          MARKET
 CONTRACTS                                                           VALUE
------------                                                     ------------

CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN - CONTINUED

                 MGM MIRAGE Call
          711    @ 60 due Jan 08 ............................. $     (433,710)
                                                               ---------------

                 Microsoft Corp. Calls
        1,460    @ 30 due Jan 07..............................        (58,400)
        1,120    @ 32.5 due July 07...........................       (106,400)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (164,800)
                                                               ---------------
                 Monsanto Company Call
          556    @ 50 due Jan 07 .............................       (177,920)
                                                               ---------------

                 Motorola, Inc. Calls
        1,662    @ 25 due Jan 07..............................         (8,310)
        2,363    @ 25 due July 07.............................       (120,513)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (128,823)
                                                               ---------------
                 Nordstrom, Inc. Calls
          726    @ 50 due Jan 07..............................        (72,600)
          295    @ 50 due Apr 07..............................       (100,300)
           71    @ 55 due Apr 07..............................        (10,295)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (183,195)
                                                               ---------------
                 PepsiCo, Inc. Calls
          229    @ 65 due Jan 07..............................         (1,145)
          731    @ 67.5 due Apr 07............................        (32,895)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (34,040)
                                                               ---------------
                 Pfizer, Inc. Call
        2,231    @ 30 due Jan 08 .............................       (178,480)
                                                               ---------------

                 Procter & Gamble (The) Company Call
        1,184    @ 65 due Jan 07 .............................        (41,440)
                                                               ---------------

                 QUALCOMM, Inc. Call
          752    @ 45 due Apr 07 .............................        (51,136)
                                                               ---------------

                 Sanofi-Aventis Call
          420    @ 50 due June 07 ............................        (61,950)
                                                               ---------------

                 Schlumberger Ltd. Call
          293    @ 70 due Feb 07 .............................        (23,440)
                                                               ---------------

                 Target Corp. Calls
          372    @ 60 due Jan 07..............................         (5,580)
          185    @ 57.5 due Feb 07............................        (33,300)
          186    @ 65 due Apr 07..............................        (10,230)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (49,110)
                                                               ---------------
                 Texas instruments, Inc. Call
        1,464    @ 37.5 due Apr 07 ...........................        (10,980)
                                                               ---------------

                       See Notes to Financial Statements.                Page 11


FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS - (CONTINUED)
DECEMBER 31, 2006

 NUMBER OF                                                          MARKET
 CONTRACTS                                                           VALUE
------------                                                     ------------

CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN - CONTINUED

                 United Technologies Corp. Calls
          684    @ 70 due Feb 07.............................. $       (6,840)
          345    @ 65 due May 07..............................        (74,175)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (81,015)
                                                               ---------------
                 UnitedHealth Group, Inc. Call
        1,041    @ 55 due Mar 07 .............................       (208,200)
                                                               ---------------

                 Verizon Communications, Inc. Call
          756    @ 40 due July 07 ............................        (69,552)
                                                               ---------------

                 Wachovia Corp. Calls
          669    @ 57.5 due Apr 07............................       (133,800)
        1,337    @ 60 due Apr 07..............................       (106,960)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                     (240,760)
                                                               ---------------
                 Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. Call
          665    @ 50 due Jan 07 .............................         (6,650)
                                                               ---------------

                 Wells Fargo & Company Calls
        1,174    @ 37.5 due Jan 07............................         (5,870)
          391    @ 40 due Apr 07..............................         (5,865)
                                                               ---------------
                                                                      (11,735)
                                                               ---------------
                 Whole Foods Market, Inc. Call
          400    @ 55 due May 07 .............................        (54,000)
                                                               ---------------

                 Williams Companies (The), Inc. Call
        2,894    @ 30 due May 07 .............................       (202,580)
                                                               ---------------

                 Yahoo! Inc. Call
        1,901    @ 30 due Apr 07 .............................       (152,080)
                                                               ---------------

                 Zimmer Holdings, Inc. Call
          376    @ 80 due Jan 07 .............................        (26,320)
                                                               ---------------


              TOTAL CALL OPTIONS WRITTEN...................... $   (7,372,401)
                                                               ===============
              (Premiums Received $8,241,701)

Page 12            See Notes to Financial Statements.



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
DECEMBER 31, 2006



                                                                                                    
ASSETS:
Investments, at value
   Cost ($382,119,603).............................................................................    $  373,978,227
Cash ..............................................................................................         6,770,626
Prepaid expenses...................................................................................            19,249
Receivables:
     Dividends.....................................................................................           272,038
     Interest......................................................................................            35,290
                                                                                                       --------------
     Total Assets..................................................................................       381,075,430
                                                                                                       --------------
LIABILITIES:
Options written, at value (Premiums received $8,241,701)...........................................         7,372,401
Payables:
     Investment securities purchased...............................................................           594,804
     Investment advisory fees......................................................................           320,064
     Audit and legal fees..........................................................................            86,118
     Printing fees.................................................................................            72,404
     Administrative fees...........................................................................            29,002
     Custodian fees................................................................................            19,821
     Transfer agent fees...........................................................................             3,017
Accrued expenses and other liabilities.............................................................             2,227
                                                                                                       --------------
     Total Liabilities.............................................................................         8,499,858
                                                                                                       --------------
NET ASSETS.........................................................................................    $  372,575,572
                                                                                                       ==============

NET ASSETS CONSIST OF:
Accumulated net realized loss on investments and written options transactions .....................    $     (846,499)
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments and options written .....................        (7,272,076)
Par value..........................................................................................           199,732
Paid-in capital....................................................................................       380,494,415
                                                                                                       --------------
Net Assets.........................................................................................    $  372,575,572
                                                                                                       ==============
NET ASSET VALUE, per Common Share (par value $0.01 per Common Share)...............................    $        18.65
                                                                                                       --------------
Number of Common Shares outstanding (unlimited number of Common Shares has been authorized) .......        19,973,164
                                                                                                       ==============


                    See Notes to Financial Statements.                   Page 13



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2006



                                                                                                    
INVESTMENT INCOME:
Dividends..........................................................................................    $    4,937,105
Interest...........................................................................................           223,012
                                                                                                       --------------
     Total investment income.......................................................................         5,160,117
                                                                                                       --------------
EXPENSES:
Investment advisory fees...........................................................................         3,753,083
Administration fees................................................................................           340,247
Custodian fees.....................................................................................           181,630
Audit and legal fees...............................................................................           123,253
Printing fees......................................................................................           113,765
Trustees' fees and expenses........................................................................            41,722
Transfer agent fees................................................................................            35,570
Other..............................................................................................            76,809
                                                                                                       --------------
     Total expenses................................................................................         4,666,079
                                                                                                       --------------
NET INVESTMENT INCOME..............................................................................           494,038
                                                                                                       --------------
NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS):
Net realized gain (loss) on:
   Investments.....................................................................................        34,402,885
   Written option transactions.....................................................................        (4,525,690)
                                                                                                       --------------
Net realized gain (loss)...........................................................................        29,877,195
                                                                                                       --------------
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:
   Investments.....................................................................................        (2,351,770)
   Written option transactions.....................................................................        (2,732,123)
                                                                                                       --------------
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation)...............................................        (5,083,893)
                                                                                                       --------------
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments.............................................        24,793,302
                                                                                                       --------------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM OPERATIONS....................................    $   25,287,340
                                                                                                       ==============


Page 14            See Notes to Financial Statements.



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS



                                                                                                 YEAR            YEAR
                                                                                                 ENDED           ENDED
                                                                                              12/31/2006      12/31/2005
                                                                                           ---------------  --------------
                                                                                                      
OPERATIONS:
Net investment income.................................................................     $      494,038   $      140,038
Net realized gain (loss)..............................................................         29,877,195       32,569,965
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation)..................................         (5,083,893)     (20,366,292)
                                                                                           --------------   --------------
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations.......................         25,287,340       12,343,711

DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS FROM:
Net investment income.................................................................           (494,038)        (140,038)
Net realized gain on investments......................................................        (31,463,024)     (31,665,665)
                                                                                           ---------------  --------------
Total distributions to shareholders...................................................        (31,957,062)     (31,805,703)

CAPITAL TRANSACTIONS:
Proceeds from 192,928 Common Shares reinvested........................................                  --       3,682,849
                                                                                           ---------------  --------------
Total capital transactions............................................................                  --       3,682,849
                                                                                           ---------------  --------------
Net decrease in net assets............................................................         (6,669,722)     (15,779,143)

NET ASSETS:
Beginning of year.....................................................................        379,245,294      395,024,437
                                                                                           --------------   --------------
End of year...........................................................................     $  372,575,572   $  379,245,294
                                                                                           ==============   ==============
Undistributed net investment income at end of year....................................     $           --   $           --
                                                                                           ==============   ==============


                       See Notes to Financial Statements.                Page 15



FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
FOR A COMMON SHARE OUTSTANDING THROUGHOUT EACH PERIOD



                                                                          YEAR              YEAR            PERIOD
                                                                          ENDED             ENDED            ENDED
                                                                       12/31/2006        12/31/2005       12/31/2004*
                                                                      ------------      ------------     -------------
                                                                                                
Net asset value, beginning of period.............................     $      18.99      $      19.97     $       19.10 (c)
                                                                      ------------      ------------     -------------
INCOME FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS:
Net investment income (loss).....................................             0.02              0.01             (0.01)
Net realized and unrealized gain on investments..................             1.24              0.61              1.46
                                                                      ------------      ------------     -------------
Total from investment operations.................................             1.26              0.62              1.45
                                                                      ------------      ------------     -------------
DISTRIBUTIONS PAID TO SHAREHOLDERS FROM:
Net investment income............................................            (0.02)            (0.01)               --
Net realized gains...............................................            (1.58)            (1.59)            (0.54)
                                                                      ------------      ------------     -------------
Total from distributions.........................................            (1.60)            (1.60)            (0.54)
                                                                      ------------      ------------     -------------
Common Shares offering costs charged to paid-in capital..........               --                --             (0.04)
                                                                      ------------      ------------     -------------
Net asset value, end of period...................................     $      18.65      $      18.99     $       19.97
                                                                      ============      ============     =============
Market value, end of period......................................     $      18.41      $      17.12     $       20.00
                                                                      ============      ============     =============
TOTAL RETURN BASED ON NET ASSET VALUE (A)+.......................             7.09%             3.48%             7.29%
                                                                      ============      ============     =============
TOTAL RETURN BASED ON MARKET VALUE (B)+..........................            17.26%            (6.85)%            2.62%
                                                                      ============      ============     =============
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period (in 000's).............................     $    372,576      $    379,245     $     395,024
Ratio of total expenses to average net assets....................             1.24%             1.23%             1.26%**
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets......             0.13%             0.04%            (0.09)%**
Portfolio turnover rate..........................................              131%              266%               73%

--------------------------------------------------
*    The Fund commenced operations on August 17, 2004.
**   Annualized.
(a)  Total return based on net asset value is the combination of reinvested
     dividend distributions and reinvested capital gains distributions, if any,
     at prices obtained by the Dividend Reinvestment Plan, and changes in net
     asset value per share and does not reflect sales load.
(b)  Total return based on market value is the combination of reinvested
     dividend distributions and reinvested capital gains distributions, if any,
     at prices obtained by the Dividend Reinvestment Plan, and changes in Common
     Share market price per share, all based on Common Share market price per
     share.
(c)  Net of sales load of $0.90 per Common Share on initial offering.
+    Total return is not annualized for periods less than one year.



Page 16                See Notes to Financial Statements.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                                DECEMBER 31, 2006

                              1. FUND DESCRIPTION

First Trust/Fiduciary Asset Management Covered Call Fund (the "Fund") is a
diversified closed-end management investment company organized as a
Massachusetts business trust on May 20, 2004 and is registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") under the Investment Company Act of
1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"). The Fund trades under the ticker symbol FFA
on the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE").

The Fund's investment objective is to provide a high level of current income and
gains and, to a lesser extent, capital appreciation. The Fund seeks to achieve
its investment objective by investing in a diversified portfolio of equity
securities and writing (selling) call options on at least 80% of the Fund's
Managed Assets ("Managed Assets" means the average daily gross assets of the
Fund minus the sum of the Fund's accrued and unpaid dividends on any outstanding
Common Shares and accrued liabilities, including the value of call options
written). There can be no assurance that the Fund's investment objective will be
achieved.

                       2. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The following is a summary of significant accounting policies consistently
followed by the Fund in the preparation of its financial statements. The
preparation of financial statements in accordance with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make
estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts and disclosures in
the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

A. PORTFOLIO VALUATION:

The Fund determines the net asset value ("NAV") of its shares daily, as of the
close of regular session trading on the NYSE, normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time,
on each day the NYSE is open for trading. The NAV is computed by dividing the
value of all assets of the Fund (including accrued interest and dividends), less
all liabilities (including accrued expenses, the value of call options written
(sold) and dividends declared but unpaid), by the total number of Common Shares
outstanding.

The Fund's investments are valued at market value, or in the absence of market
value with respect to any portfolio securities, at fair value according to
procedures adopted by the Fund's Board of Trustees. Portfolio securities listed
on any exchange other than the NASDAQ National Market ("NASDAQ") are valued at
the last sale price on the business day as of which such value is being
determined. If there has been no sale on such day, the securities are valued at
the mean of the most recent bid and asked prices on such day. Securities traded
on the NASDAQ are valued at the NASDAQ Official Closing Price as determined by
NASDAQ. Portfolio securities traded on more than one securities exchange are
valued at the last sale price on the business day as of which such value is
being determined at the close of the exchange representing the principal market
for such securities. Portfolio securities traded in the over-the-counter market,
but excluding securities trading on the NASDAQ, are valued at the closing bid
prices. Fixed income securities with a remaining maturity of 60 days or more
will be valued by the Fund using a pricing service. Short-term investments that
mature in less than 60 days are valued at amortized cost.

The Fund values exchange-traded options and other derivative contracts at the
closing price on the exchange on which they are principally traded, or if not
traded, or no closing price is available, at the mean between the last bid and
asked price.

B. OPTION CONTRACTS:

COVERED OPTIONS. When the Fund purchases equity securities, it simultaneously
writes (sells) covered call or put options ("options") on substantially all of
such equity securities. The number of options the Fund can write (sell) is
limited by the amount of equity securities the Fund holds in its portfolio. The
Fund will not write (sell) "naked" or uncovered options. By writing (selling)
options, the Fund seeks to generate additional income, in the form of premiums
received for writing (selling) the options, and provide a partial hedge against
a market decline in the underlying equity security. Options are marked-to-market
daily and their value will be affected by changes in the value and dividend
rates of the underlying equity securities, an increase in interest rates,
changes in the actual or perceived volatility of the securities markets and the
underlying equity securities and the remaining time to the options' expiration.
The value of options may also be adversely affected if the market for the
options becomes less liquid or smaller.

Options the Fund writes (sells) will either be exercised, expire or be cancelled
pursuant to a closing transaction. If the price of the underlying equity
security exceeds the option's exercise price, it is likely that the option
holder will exercise the option. If an option written (sold) by the Fund is
exercised, the Fund would be obligated to deliver the underlying equity security
to the option holder upon

                                                                         Page 17



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - (CONTINUED)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                                DECEMBER 31, 2006

payment of the exercise price. In this case, the option premium received by the
Fund will be added to the amount realized on the sale of the underlying equity
security for purposes of determining gain or loss. If the price of the
underlying equity security is less than the option's exercise price, the option
will likely expire without being exercised. The option premium received by the
Fund will, in this case, be treated as short-term capital gain on the expiration
date of the option. The Fund may also elect to close out its position in an
option prior to its expiration by purchasing an option of the same series as the
option written (sold) by the Fund.

The Fund writes (sells) options on at least 80% of the Fund's Managed Assets.
These options give the option holder the right, but not the obligation, to
purchase a security from the Fund at the strike price on or prior to the
option's expiration date. The ability to successfully implement the Fund's
investment strategy depends on the ability of Fiduciary Asset Management, LLC
("Fiduciary" or the "Sub-Advisor") to predict pertinent market movements, which
cannot be assured. Thus, the use of options may require the Fund to sell
portfolio securities at inopportune times or for prices other than current
market value, may limit the amount of appreciation the Fund can realize on an
investment, or may cause the Fund to hold a security that it might otherwise
sell. As the writer (seller) of a covered option, the Fund forgoes, during the
option's life, the opportunity to profit from increases in the market value of
the security covering the option above the sum of the premium and the strike
price of the option, but has retained the risk of loss should the price of the
underlying security decline. The writer (seller) of an option has no control
over the time when it may be required to fulfill its obligation as a writer
(seller) of the option. Once an option writer (seller) has received an exercise
notice, it cannot effect a closing purchase transaction in order to terminate
its obligation under the option and must deliver the underlying security to the
option holder at the exercise price.

PURCHASED OPTIONS. The purchase of a put option entitles the Fund, in exchange
for the premium paid, to sell specific securities at a specified price during
the option period. The purchase of protective puts is designed to offset or
hedge against a decline in the market value of the Fund's portfolio securities.
Put options may also be purchased by the Fund for the purpose of affirmatively
benefiting from a decline in the price of securities which is does not own. The
Fund will ordinarily realize a gain if, during the option period, the value of
the underlying securities decreases below the exercise price sufficiently to
cover the premium and transaction costs; otherwise, the Fund will realize either
no gain or a loss on the purchase of the put option. Gains and losses on the
purchase of put options may be offset by countervailing changes in the value of
the Fund's portfolio securities.

C. SECURITIES TRANSACTIONS AND INVESTMENT INCOME:

Securities transactions are recorded as of the trade date. Realized gains and
losses from securities transactions are recorded on the identified cost basis.
Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income is recorded
on the accrual basis, including amortization of premiums and accretion of
discounts.

D. DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS:

Dividends from net investment income of the Fund are declared and paid quarterly
or as the Board of Trustees may determine from time to time. Distributions of
any net realized capital gains earned by the Fund are distributed at least
annually. Distributions will automatically be reinvested into additional Common
Shares pursuant to the Fund's Dividend Reinvestment Plan unless cash
distributions are elected by the shareholder.

Distributions from income and realized capital gains are determined in
accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from accounting
principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These differences
are primarily due to differing treatments of income and gains on various
investment securities held by the Fund, timing differences and differing
characterization of distributions made by the Fund.

The tax character of distributions paid during the fiscal years ended December
31, 2006 and December 31, 2005 is as follows:

Distributions paid from:

                                                     2006                2005
                                                     ----                ----
Ordinary Income................................   $ 26,007,917     $  31,805,703
Long-Term Capital Gains........................      5,949,145            --

As of December 31, 2006, the components of distributable earnings on a tax basis
were as follows:

Undistributed Long-Term Capital Gains..........   $  1,141,089
Net Unrealized Depreciation....................    (10,037,577)

Page 18



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - (CONTINUED)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                                DECEMBER 31, 2006

E. INCOME TAXES:

The Fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company by
complying with the requirements under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended, and by distributing substantially all of its net investment
income and net realized gains to shareholders. Accordingly, no provision has
been made for federal or state income taxes.

F. EXPENSES:

The Fund pays all expenses directly related to its operations.

G. NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENT:

In July 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued FASB
Interpretation No. 48 ("FIN 48"), "Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes."
This pronouncement provides guidance on the recognition, measurement,
classification, and disclosures related to uncertain tax positions, along with
any related interest and penalties. FIN 48 is effective for fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 2006. Management is currently evaluating the
implications of FIN 48 and its impact on the financial statements which has not
yet been determined.

In addition, in September 2006, Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No.
157 Fair Value Measurements ("SFAS 157") was issued by the FASB and is effective
for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. SFAS 157 defines fair value,
establishes a framework for measuring fair value and expands disclosures about
fair value measurements. Management is currently evaluating the impact the
adoption of SFAS 157 could have on the Fund's financial statement disclosures.

          3. INVESTMENT ADVISORY FEE AND OTHER AFFILIATED TRANSACTIONS

First Trust is a limited partnership with one limited partner, Grace Partners of
DuPage L.P., and one general partner, The Charger Corporation. First Trust
serves as investment advisor to the Fund pursuant to an Investment Management
Agreement. First Trust is responsible for the ongoing monitoring of the Fund's
investment portfolio, managing the Fund's business affairs and certain
administrative services necessary for the management of the Fund. For these
investment management services, First Trust is entitled to a monthly fee
calculated at an annual rate of 1.00% of the Fund's Managed Assets.

Fiduciary serves as the Fund's sub-advisor and manages the Fund's portfolio
subject to First Trust's supervision. The Sub-Advisor receives a portfolio
management fee calculated at an annual rate of 0.50% of the Fund's Managed
Assets that is paid monthly by First Trust out of its investment advisory fee.

PFPC Inc. ("PFPC"), an indirect, majority-owned subsidiary of The PNC Financial
Services Group, Inc., serves as the Fund's Administrator and Transfer Agent in
accordance with certain fee arrangements. PFPC Trust Company, also an indirect,
majority-owned subsidiary of The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc., serves as
the Fund's Custodian in accordance with certain fee arrangements.

The Fund paid each Trustee who is not an officer or employee of First Trust or
any of its affiliates (the "Independent Trustees") an annual retainer of
$10,000, which includes compensation for all Board and Committee meetings.
Trustees are also reimbursed for travel and out-of-pocket expenses in connection
with all meetings.

Effective June 12, 2006, the Board of Trustees unanimously appointed Robert F.
Keith to the Board of Trustees and as a member of the Fund's Audit Committee,
Valuation Committee and Nominating and Governance Committee.

                4. PURCHASES AND SALES OF SECURITIES AND OPTIONS

Cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investment securities, excluding
short-term investments, for the year ended December 31, 2006 were $499,044,415
and $537,549,755, respectively.

As of December 31, 2006, the aggregate gross unrealized appreciation for all
securities in which there was an excess of value over tax cost was $16,269,765
and the aggregate gross unrealized depreciation for all securities in which
there was an excess of tax cost over value was $25,438,042.

                                                                         Page 19



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                                DECEMBER 31, 2006

Written option activity was as follows.

                                                          NUMBER
                                                            OF
                                                         CONTRACTS     PREMIUMS
WRITTEN OPTIONS
Options outstanding at December 31, 2005.............     66,886   $  8,930,333
Options written......................................    696,394    103,833,423
Options expired......................................   (100,577)    (8,065,471)
Options exercised....................................       (823)      (111,717)
Options closed.......................................   (590,480)   (96,344,867)
                                                      ----------   ------------
Options outstanding at December 31, 2006.............     71,400   $  8,241,701
                                                      ==========   ============
                                5. COMMON SHARES

As of December 31, 2006, 19,973,164 of $0.01 par value Common Shares were
issued. An unlimited number of Common Shares has been authorized under the
Fund's Dividend Reinvestment Plan.

COMMON SHARE TRANSACTIONS WERE AS FOLLOWS:



                                                                YEAR ENDED                    YEAR ENDED
                                                             DECEMBER 31, 2006             DECEMBER 31, 2005
                                                            SHARES        AMOUNT        SHARES        AMOUNT
                                                                                        
Issued as reinvestment of dividends
   under the Dividend Reinvestment Plan..............           --       $     --         192,928   $  3,682,849
                                                           ----------    -----------   ----------   ------------
                                                                --       $     --         192,928   $  3,682,849
                                                           ==========    ===========   ==========   ============


                              6. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

The Board of Trustees of the Fund adopted a compensation policy pursuant to
which, effective January 1, 2007, the Independent Trustees are paid an annual
retainer of $10,000 for each investment company of the First Trust Fund Complex
up to a total of 14 investment companies (the "Trustees Compensation I") and an
annual retainer of $7,500 for each subsequent investment company added to the
First Trust Fund Complex (the "Trustees Compensation II" and together with
Trustees Compensation I, the "Aggregate Trustee Compensation"). The Aggregate
Trustee Compensation is divided equally among each of the investment companies
in the First Trust Fund Complex. No additional meeting fees are paid in
connection with board or committee meetings. Trustees are also reimbursed for
travel and out-of-pocket expenses in connection with all meetings.

Additionally, Thomas R. Kadlec is paid annual compensation of $10,000 to serve
as the Lead Trustee and Niel B. Nielson is paid annual compensation of $5,000 to
serve as the chairman of the Audit Committee of each of the investment companies
in the First Trust Fund Complex. Such additional compensation to Messrs. Kadlec
and Nielson is paid by the investment companies in the First Trust Fund Complex
and the fees are divided equally among those investment companies.

Page 20



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TO THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND SHAREHOLDERS OF FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET
MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND

We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of First
Trust/Fiduciary Asset Management Covered Call Fund (the "Fund"), including the
portfolio of investments, as of December 31, 2006, the related statements of
operations for the year then ended, the statement of changes in net assets for
each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for
the periods presented. 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. The Fund
is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its
internal control over financial reporting. Our audits included consideration of
internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit
procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of
expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Fund's internal control over
financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit also
includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and
disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles
used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the
overall financial statement presentation. Our procedures included confirmation
of securities owned as of December 31, 2006, by correspondence with the Fund's
custodian and broker; where replies were not received, we performed other
auditing procedures. 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 the
Fund as of December 31, 2006, the results of its operations, the changes in its
net assets, and the financial highlights for the respective stated periods, in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of
America.

[GRAPHIC OMITTED]
DELOITE LOGO ART
Chicago, Illinois
February 21, 2007

                                                                         Page 21



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                          DECEMBER 31, 2006 (UNAUDITED)

                           DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT PLAN

If your Common Shares are registered directly with the Fund or if you hold your
Common Shares with a brokerage firm that participates in the Fund's Dividend
Reinvestment Plan (the "Plan"), unless you elect, by written notice to the Fund,
to receive cash distributions, all dividends, including any capital gain
distributions on your Common Shares will be automatically reinvested by PFPC
Inc. (the "Plan Agent") in additional Common Shares under the Plan. If you elect
to receive cash distributions, you will receive all distributions in cash paid
by check mailed directly to you by PFPC Inc. as dividend paying agent.

If you decide to participate in the Plan, the number of Common Shares you will
receive will be determined as follows:

         (1) If Common Shares are trading at or above net asset value ("NAV")
             at the time of valuation, the Fund will issue new shares at a price
             equal to the greater of (i) NAV per Common Share on that date or
             (ii) 95% of the market price on that date.

         (2) If Common Shares are trading below NAV at the time of valuation,
             the Plan Agent will receive the dividend or distribution in cash
             and will purchase Common Shares in the open market, on the New York
             Stock Exchange or elsewhere, for the participants' accounts. It is
             possible that the market price for the Common Shares may increase
             before the Plan Agent has completed its purchases. Therefore, the
             average purchase price per share paid by the Plan Agent may exceed
             the market price at the time of valuation, resulting in the
             purchase of fewer shares than if the dividend or distribution had
             been paid in Common Shares issued by the Fund. The Plan Agent will
             use all dividends and distributions received in cash to purchase
             Common Shares in the open market within 30 days of the valuation
             date except where temporary curtailment or suspension of purchases
             is necessary to comply with federal securities laws. Interest will
             not be paid on any uninvested cash payments.

You may elect to opt-out of or withdraw from the Plan at any time by giving
written notice to the Plan Agent, or by telephone at (800) 331-1710, in
accordance with such reasonable requirements as the Plan Agent and Fund may
agree upon. If you withdraw or the Plan is terminated, you will receive a
certificate for each whole share in your account under the Plan and you will
receive a cash payment for any fraction of a share in your account. If you wish,
the Plan Agent will sell your shares and send you the proceeds, minus brokerage
commissions.

The Plan Agent maintains all Common Shareholders' accounts in the Plan and gives
written confirmation of all transactions in the accounts, including information
you may need for tax records. Common Shares in your account will be held by the
Plan Agent in non-certificated form. The Plan Agent will forward to each
participant any proxy solicitation material and will vote any shares so held
only in accordance with proxies returned to the Fund. Any proxy you receive will
include all Common Shares you have received under the Plan.

There is no brokerage charge for reinvestment of your dividends or distributions
in Common Shares. However, all participants will pay a pro rata share of
brokerage commissions incurred by the Plan Agent when it makes open market
purchases.

Automatically reinvesting dividends and distributions does not mean that you do
not have to pay income taxes due upon receiving dividends and distributions.
Capital gains and income are realized, although cash is not received by you.
Consult your financial advisor for more information.

If you hold your Common Shares with a brokerage firm that does not participate
in the Plan, you will not be able to participate in the Plan and any dividend
reinvestment may be effected on different terms than those described above.

The Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate the Plan if in the judgment of
the Board of Trustees the change is warranted. There is no direct service charge
to participants in the Plan; however, the Fund reserves the right to amend the
Plan to include a service charge payable by the participants. Additional
information about the Plan may be obtained by writing PFPC Inc., 301 Bellevue
Parkway, Wilmington, Delaware 19809.

Page 22



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION - (CONTINUED)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                          DECEMBER 31, 2006 (UNAUDITED)

                      PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

A description of the policies and procedures that the Fund uses to determine how
to vote proxies and information on how the Fund voted proxies relating to
portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 is
available (1) without charge, upon request, by calling (800) 988-5891; (2) on
the Fund's website located at http://www.ftportfolios.com; and (3) on the
Securities and Exchange Commission's website at http://www.sec.gov.

                               PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS

The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the Securities
and Exchange Commission ("SEC") for the first and third quarters of each fiscal
year on Form N-Q. The Fund's Forms N-Q are available (1) by calling (800)
988-5891; (2) on the Fund's website located at http://www.ftportfolios.com; (3)
on the SEC's website at http://www.sec.gov; and (4) for review and copying at
the SEC's Public Reference Room ("PRR") in Washington, DC. Information regarding
the operation of the PRR may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330.

                         NYSE CERTIFICATION INFORMATION

In accordance with Section 303A-12 of the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE")
Listed Company Manual, the Fund's President has certified to the NYSE that, as
of May 15, 2006, he was not aware of any violation by the Fund of NYSE corporate
governance listing standards, In addition, the Fund's reports to the SEC on Form
N-CSR and N-Q contain certifications by the Fund's principal executive officer
and principal financial officer to the Fund's public disclosure in such reports
and that are required by Rule 30a-2 under the 1940 Act.

                                TAX INFORMATION

Of the ordinary income (including short-term capital gain) distributions made by
the Fund during the year ended December 31, 2006, 18.63% qualifies for the
corporate dividend received deduction available to corporate shareholders.

The Fund hereby designates as qualified dividend income distributions 15.03% of
the ordinary income distributions (including short-term capital gain), for the
year ended December 31, 2006.

For the year ended December 31, 2006, the amount of long-term capital gain
distributions designated by the Fund was $7,090,234 which is taxable at a 15%
rate gain for federal income tax purposes.

                               BY-LAW AMENDMENTS

On June 12, 2006 and December 11, 2006, the Board of Trustees approved certain
changes to the By-Laws of the Fund which may have the effect of delaying or
preventing a change in control of the Fund, including the implementation of a
staggered Board of Trustees. The changes were not required to be, and were not,
approved by the Fund's shareholders. To receive a copy of the revised By-Laws,
investors may call the Fund at (800) 988-5891.

                                                                         Page 23



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS - (UNAUDITED)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                                DECEMBER 31, 2006

Information pertaining to the Trustees and Officers* of the Fund is set forth
below.


                                                                                       NUMBER OF                OTHER
                                                                                       PORTFOLIOS           TRUSTEESHIPS/
    NAME, D.O.B., ADDRESS AND     TERM OF OFFICE AND    PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)      IN FUND COMPLEX        DIRECTORSHIPS
     POSITION(S) WITH THE FUND   LENGTH OF TIME SERVED     DURING PAST 5 YEARS     OVERSEEN BY TRUSTEE     HELD BY TRUSTEE
                                                                                                    
                                        INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES

Richard E. Erickson, Trustee     o One year term        Physician; President,         34 portfolios             None
D.O.B. 04/51                     o 2 years, 7 months    Wheaton Orthopedics; Co-
c/o First Trust Advisors L.P.      served               owner and Co-Director,
1001 Warrenville Road                                   Sports Med Center for
Suite 300                                               Fitness; Limited Partner,
Lisle, IL 60532                                         Gundersen Real Estate
                                                        Partnership

Thomas R. Kadlec, Trustee        o One year term        Vice President and Chief      34 portfolios             None
D.O.B. 11/57                     o 2 years, 7 months    Financial Officer (1990 to
c/o First Trust Advisors L.P.      served               present), ADM Investor
1001 Warrenville Road                                   Services, Inc. (Futures
Suite 300                                               Commission Merchant);
Lisle, IL 60532                                         Registered Representative
                                                        (2000 to present),
                                                        Segerdahl & Company,
                                                        Inc., an NASD member
                                                        (Broker-Dealer); President,
                                                        ADM Derivatives, Inc.
                                                        (May 2005 to present)

Robert F. Keith, Trustee         o One year term        President, Hibs Enterprises   22 portfolios             None
D.O.B. 11/56                     o 7 months served      (Financial and
c/o First Trust Advisors L.P.                           Management Consulting)
1001 Warrenville Road                                   (2003 to present); Aramark
Suite 300                                               Service Master
Lisle, IL 60532                                         Management (2001 to
                                                        2003); President and Chief
                                                        Operating Officer, Service
                                                        Master Management
                                                        Services (1998 to 2003)

Niel B. Nielson, Trustee         o One year term        President, Covenant           34 portfolios         Director of Good
D.O.B. 03/54                     o 2 years, 7 months    College (June 2002 to                               News Publishers-
c/o First Trust Advisors L.P.      served               present); Pastor, College                           Crossway Books;
1001 Warrenville Road                                   Church in Wheaton (1997                             Covenant Transport,
Suite 300                                               to June 2002)                                       Inc.
Lisle, IL 60532


Page 24



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS - (UNAUDITED)-(CONTINUED)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                                DECEMBER 31, 2006



                                                                                       NUMBER OF                OTHER
                                                                                       PORTFOLIOS           TRUSTEESHIPS/
    NAME, D.O.B., ADDRESS AND     TERM OF OFFICE AND    PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)      IN FUND COMPLEX        DIRECTORSHIPS
     POSITION(S) WITH THE FUND   LENGTH OF TIME SERVED     DURING PAST 5 YEARS     OVERSEEN BY TRUSTEE     HELD BY TRUSTEE
                                                                                                    
                                        INTERESTED TRUSTEE

James A. Bowen, Trustee          o One year Trustee     President, First Trust        34 portfolios        Trustee of Wheaton
President, Chairman of the         term and indefinite  Advisors L.P. and First                                 College
Board and CEO                      officer term         Trust Portfolios L.P.;
D.O.B. 09/55                     o 2 years, 7 months    Chairman of the Board,
1001 Warrenville Road              served               BondWave LLC and
Suite 300                                               Stonebridge Advisors LLC
Lisle, IL 60532

                                   OFFICERS WHO ARE NOT TRUSTEES

Mark R. Bradley, Treasurer,      o Indefinite term      Chief Financial Officer,          N/A                   N/A
Controller, Chief Financial      o 2 years, 7 months    Managing Director, First
Officer, Chief Accounting          served               Trust Advisors L.P. and
Officer                                                 First Trust Portfolios L.P.;
D.O.B. 11/57                                            Chief Financial Officer,
1001 Warrenville Road                                   BondWave LLC and
Suite 300                                               Stonebridge Advisors LLC
Lisle, IL 60532

Kelley Christensen               o Indefinite term      Assistant Vice President of       N/A                   N/A
Vice President                   o Since December       First Trust Portfolios L.P.
D.O.B. 09/70                       10, 2006             and First Trust Advisors
1001 Warrenville Road                                   L.P.
Suite 300
Lisle, IL 60532

James M. Dykas                   o Indefinite term      Vice President, First Trust       N/A                   N/A
Assistant Treasurer              o 13 months served     Advisors L.P. and First
D.O.B. 01/66                                            Trust Portfolios L.P.
1001 Warrenville Road                                   (January 2005 to present);
Suite 300                                               Executive Director, Van
Lisle, IL 60532                                         Kampen Asset
                                                        Management and Morgan
                                                        Stanley Investment
                                                        Management (1999-2005)

Christopher R. Fallow            o Indefinite term      Assistant Vice President of       N/A                   N/A
Assistant Vice President         o Since December 10,   First Trust Portfolios L.P.
D.O.B. 04/79                       2006                 and First Trust Advisors
1001 Warrenville Road                                   L.P.
Suite 300
Lisle, IL 60532


                                                                         Page 25



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS - (UNAUDITED)-(CONTINUED)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND
                                DECEMBER 31, 2006



                                                                                       NUMBER OF                OTHER
                                                                                       PORTFOLIOS           TRUSTEESHIPS/
    NAME, D.O.B., ADDRESS AND     TERM OF OFFICE AND    PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)      IN FUND COMPLEX        DIRECTORSHIPS
     POSITION(S) WITH THE FUND   LENGTH OF TIME SERVED     DURING PAST 5 YEARS     OVERSEEN BY TRUSTEE     HELD BY TRUSTEE
                                                                                                    
                            OFFICERS WHO ARE NOT TRUSTEES - (CONTINUED)

W. Scott Jardine, Secretary      o Indefinite term      General Counsel, First        N/A                       N/A
and Chief Compliance Officer     o 2 years, 7 months    Trust Advisors L.P. and
D.O.B. 05/60                       served               First Trust Portfolios L.P.;
1001 Warrenville Road                                   Secretary, BondWave LLC
Suite 300                                               and Stonebridge Advisors
Lisle, IL 6053                                          LLC

Daniel J. Lindquist              o Indefinite term      Senior Vice President,        N/A                       N/A
Vice President                   o 13 months served     First Trust Advisors L.P.;
D.O.B. 02/70                                            Vice President, First Trust
1001 Warrenville Road                                   Portfolios L.P. (April 2004
Suite 300                                               to present); Chief
Lisle, IL 60532                                         Operating Officer, Mina
                                                        Capital Management, LLC
                                                        (January 2004-April 2004);
                                                        Chief Operating Officer,
                                                        Samaritan Asset
                                                        Management Services, Inc.
                                                        (April 2000-January 2004)

Kristi A. Maher                  o Indefinite term      Assistant General Counsel,    N/A                       N/A
Assistant Secretary              o 2 years, 7 months    First Trust Advisors L.P.
D.O.B. 12/66                       served               and First Trust Portfolios
1001 Warrenville Road                                   L.P. (March 2004 to
Suite 300                                               present); Associate,
Lisle, IL 60532                                         Chapman and Cutler LLP
                                                        (1995-2004)

-------------------
    *  The term "officer" means the president, vice president, secretary,
       treasurer, controller or any other officer who performs a policy making
       function.



Page 26



                       This Page Left Blank Intentionally.



                       This Page Left Blank Intentionally.



ITEM 2. CODE OF ETHICS.

     (a) The registrant, as of the end of the period covered by this report, 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,
         regardless of whether these  individuals are employed by the registrant
         or a third party.


     (c) There  have been no  amendments,  during  the  period  covered  by this
         report,  to a  provision  of the 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, regardless of whether these individuals are employed
         by the registrant or a third party,  and that relates to any element of
         the code of  ethics  definition  enumerated  in  paragraph  (b) of this
         item's instructions.


     (d) The  registrant  has not,  during  the period  covered by this  report,
         granted any waivers,  including an implicit waiver, from a provision of
         the 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,  regardless of
         whether  these  individuals  are employed by the  registrant or a third
         party,  that relates to one or more of the items set forth in paragraph
         (b) of this item's instructions.


ITEM 3. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT.

As of the end of the period  covered by the report,  the  Registrant's  board of
trustees has determined  that Thomas R. Kadlec and Robert F. Keith are qualified
to serve as audit committee financial experts serving on its audit committee and
that each of them is "independent," as defined by Item 3 of Form N-CSR.


ITEM 4. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES.


         (a) AUDIT FEES  (REGISTRANT)  -- The aggregate  fees billed for each of
the last two fiscal years for  professional  services  rendered by the principal
accountant  for the audit of the  Registrant's  annual  financial  statements or
services  that are  normally  provided  by the  accountant  in  connection  with
statutory  and  regulatory  filings or  engagements  were  $26,250  for 2005 and
$35,000 for 2006.

         (b)  AUDIT-RELATED  FEES  (REGISTRANT)  -- The aggregate fees billed in
each of the last two fiscal years,  for  assurance  and related  services by the
principal accountant that are reasonably related to the



performance of the audit of the  Registrant's  financial  statements and are not
reported under paragraph (a) of this Item were $0.

                AUDIT-RELATED  FEES  (INVESTMENT  ADVISER) -- The aggregate fees
billed in each of the last two fiscal years of the  Registrant for assurance and
related services by the principal  accountant that are reasonably related to the
performance of the audit of the  Registrant's  financial  statements and are not
reported under paragraph (a) of this Item were $0.

         (c) TAX FEES  (REGISTRANT)  -- The aggregate fees billed in each of the
last two  fiscal  years for  professional  services  rendered  by the  principal
accountant for tax  compliance,  tax advice,  and tax planning to the Registrant
were $4,500 in 2005 and $4,725 in 2006. These fees were for tax preparation.

                TAX FEES  (INVESTMENT  ADVISER) -- The aggregate  fees billed in
each of the last two fiscal years of the  Registrant for  professional  services
rendered by the principal  accountant for tax  compliance,  tax advice,  and tax
planning to the Registrant's adviser were $6000 for 2005 and $0 for 2006. These
fees were for tax preparation.

         (d) ALL OTHER FEES (REGISTRANT) -- The aggregate fees billed in each of
the last two fiscal years for products  and services  provided by the  principal
accountant to the Registrant, other than the services reported in paragraphs (a)
through (c) of this Item were  $6,591.72  for 2005 and  $839.64 for 2006.  These
fees were for compliance consulting services.

                ALL OTHER FEES (INVESTMENT ADVISER) -- The aggregate fees billed
in each of the last two fiscal years for  products and services  provided by the
principal accountant to the Registrant's investment adviser, other than services
reported in  paragraphs  (a) through (c) of this Item were $130,569 for 2005 and
$9,308  for 2006.  These fees were for  Canadian  tax  consultation,  compliance
consulting and AIMR-PPS Verification Services.

  (e)(1) Disclose the audit  committee's  pre-approval  policies and  procedures
         described in paragraph (c)(7) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.

         Pursuant  to  its  charter  and  its  Audit  and   Non-Audit   Services
Pre-Approval  Policy both amended as of December 10, 2006,  the Audit  Committee
(the  "COMMITTEE") is responsible for the pre-approval of all audit services and
permitted  non-audit  services  (including  the fees and  terms  thereof)  to be
performed for the Registrant by its  independent  auditors.  The Chairman of the
Committee authorized to give such pre-approvals on behalf of the Committee up to
$25,000 and report any such pre-approval to the full Committee.

         The  Committee  is  also   responsible  for  the  pre-approval  of  the
independent  auditor's  engagements for non-audit services with the Registrant's
adviser  (not  including  a  sub-adviser  whose  role  is  primarily   portfolio
management and is sub-contracted or overseen by another investment  adviser) and
any  entity  controlling,  controlled  by  or  under  common  control  with  the
investment  adviser that provides  ongoing  services to the  Registrant,  if the
engagement  relates  directly to the operations  and financial  reporting of the
Registrant,  subject  to  the  DE  MINIMIS  exceptions  for  non-audit  services
described  in Rule  2-01 of  Regulation  S-X.  If the  independent  auditor  has
provided  non-audit  services  to  the  Registrant's  adviser  (other  than  any
sub-adviser whose role is primarily  portfolio  management and is sub-contracted
with or  overseen by another  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 its policies, the Committee will consider whether
the  provision  of  such  non-audit  services is compatible with  the  auditor's
independence.


  (e)(2) The percentage of services  described in each of paragraphs (b) through
         (d) for the Registrant and the Registrant's  investment adviser of this
         Item  that  were  approved  by  the  audit  committee  pursuant  to the
         pre-approval exceptions included in paragraph (c)(7)(i)(c) or paragraph
         (c)(7)(ii) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X are as follows:

                           (b)  0%

                           (c)  0%

                           (d)  0%



     (f) The  percentage  of  hours  expended  on  the  principal   accountant's
         engagement to audit the registrant's  financial statements for the most
         recent fiscal year that were  attributed  to work  performed by persons
         other than the principal  accountant's  full-time,  permanent employees
         was less than fifty percent.

     (g) The aggregate non-audit fees billed by the registrant's  accountant for
         services  rendered to the registrant,  and rendered to the registrant's
         investment  adviser  (not  including  any  sub-adviser  whose  role  is
         primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with or overseen by
         another investment adviser), and any entity controlling, controlled by,
         or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services
         to the  Registrant  for  2005  were  $11091.72  and  $136,569  for  the
         Registrant and the Registrant's  investment  adviser,  respectively and
         for  2006  were  $5564.64  and  $34,308  for  the  Registrant  and  the
         Registrant's investment adviser, respectively.

     (h) On December 10, 2006, the Registrant's  audit committee of its Board of
         Trustees  determined that the provision of non-audit services that were
         rendered to the  Registrant's  investment  adviser (not  including  any
         sub-adviser  whose  role  is  primarily  portfolio  management  and  is
         subcontracted with or overseen by another 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.



ITEM 5. AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS.

(a)    The Registrant has a separately  designated audit committee consisting of
       all the independent trustees of the Registrant.  The members of the audit
       committee are: Thomas R. Kadlec, Niel B. Nielson, Richard E. Erickson and
       Robert F. Keith.


ITEM 6. SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS.



Schedule of Investments in securities of unaffiliated issuers as of the close of
the  reporting  period is included as part of the report to  shareholders  filed
under Item 1 of this form.



ITEM 7. DISCLOSURE  OF  PROXY  VOTING  POLICIES  AND  PROCEDURES  FOR CLOSED-END
        MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

The Proxy Voting Policies are attached herewith.

                             FAM INVESTMENT ADVISER
                         POLICIES AND PROCEDURES MANUAL
                                  PROXY VOTING

         POLICY

         FAM,  as a matter of policy  and as a  fiduciary  to our  clients,  has
         responsibility for voting proxies for portfolio  securities  consistent
         with the best  economic  interests of the clients.  Our firm  maintains
         written  policies and procedures as to the handling,  research,  voting
         and reporting of proxy voting and makes  appropriate  disclosures about
         our firm's  proxy  policies  and  practices.  Our  policy and  practice
         includes the responsibility to monitor corporate  actions,  receive and
         vote client proxies and disclose any potential conflicts of interest as
         well as making  information  available  to clients  about the voting of
         proxies for their  portfolio  securities and  maintaining  relevant and
         required records.

         BACKGROUND

         Proxy voting is an important right of shareholders  and reasonable care
         and  diligence  must be  undertaken  to  ensure  that such  rights  are
         properly and timely exercised.  Investment advisers registered with the
         SEC,  and  which  exercise  voting  authority  with  respect  to client
         securities,  are  required by Rule  206(4)-6 of the Advisers Act to (a)
         adopt and implement written policies and procedures that are reasonably
         designed  to  ensure  that  client  securities  are  voted  in the best
         interests  of  clients,  which must  include  how an adviser  addresses
         material  conflicts  that may arise between an adviser's  interests and
         those of its  clients;  (b) to  disclose to clients how they may obtain
         information  from the adviser with respect to the voting of proxies for
         their  securities;  (c) to  describe  to clients a summary of its proxy
         voting policies and procedures and, upon request, furnish a copy to its
         clients;  and (d) maintain  certain  records  relating to the adviser's
         proxy  voting  activities  when the  adviser  does  have  proxy  voting
         authority.

         RESPONSIBILITY

         FAM's Vice President,  Client Administration has the responsibility for
         the   implementation   and  monitoring  of  our  proxy  voting  policy,
         practices,  disclosures  and record  keeping,  including  outlining our
         voting guidelines in our procedures.

         PROCEDURE

         FAM has adopted  procedures  to implement the firm's policy and reviews
         to  monitor  and  insure the  firm's  policy is  observed,  implemented
         properly  and amended or updated,  as  appropriate,  which  include the
         following:

         It is the  policy of FAM to vote all  proxies  over which it has voting
         authority in the best interest of FAM's clients.

         By "best  interest of FAM's  clients," FAM means clients' best economic
         interest  over the long term -- that is, the common  interest  that all
         clients share in seeing the value of a common investment  increase over
         time.  Clients may have differing  political or social  interests,  but
         their best economic interest is generally uniform.



         By "material  conflict of interest," FAM means  circumstances  when FAM
         itself  knowingly  does  business  with a  particular  proxy  issuer or
         closely  affiliated  entity,  and  may  appear  to  have a  significant
         conflict of interest  between its own  interests  and the  interests of
         clients in how proxies of that issuer are voted.

         FAM INVESTS WITH MANAGEMENT TEAMS THAT SEEK SHAREHOLDERS' BEST
         INTERESTS

         Under its investment philosophy,  FAM generally invests client funds in
         a company only if FAM believes that the company's  management  seeks to
         serve  shareholders' best interests.  Because FAM has confidence in the
         managements  of the  companies  in which it invests,  it believes  that
         management decisions and recommendations on issues such as proxy voting
         GENERALLY are likely to be in shareholders' best interests.

         FAM may periodically  reassess its view of company managements.  If FAM
         concludes  that a company's  management no longer serves  shareholders'
         best interests, FAM generally sells its clients' shares of the company.
         FAM believes that clients do not usually benefit from holding shares of
         a poorly managed company or engaging in proxy contests with management.

         FAM'S PROXY VOTING PROCEDURES

         When  companies in which FAM has invested  client funds issue  proxies,
         FAM routinely  votes the proxies as recommended by management,  because
         it  believes  that  recommendations  by  these  companies'  managements
         generally are in  shareholders'  best  interests,  and therefore in the
         best economic interest of FAM's clients.

         If FAM has decided to sell the shares of a company,  whether because of
         concerns  about the  company's  management  or for other  reasons,  FAM
         generally  abstains from voting proxies issued by the company after FAM
         has made the decision to sell.  FAM generally  will not notify  clients
         when this type of routine abstention occurs.

         FAM also may abstain from voting  proxies in other  circumstances.  FAM
         may determine,  for example, that abstaining from voting is appropriate
         if voting may be unduly  burdensome or  expensive,  or otherwise not in
         the best  economic  interest of  clients,  such as when  foreign  proxy
         issuers  impose  unreasonable  voting  or  holding  requirements.   FAM
         generally will not notify clients when this type of routine  abstention
         occurs.

         The  procedures  in this policy apply to all proxy voting  matters over
         which  FAM  has  voting  authority,   including  changes  in  corporate
         governance structures,  the adoption or amendment of compensation plans
         (including  stock  options),  and matters  involving  social  issues or
         corporate responsibility.

         ALTERNATIVE PROCEDURES FOR POTENTIAL MATERIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

         In  certain  circumstances,  such  as  when  the  proponent  of a proxy
         proposal  is also a  client  of FAM,  an  appearance  might  arise of a
         potential  conflict  between  FAM's  interests  and  the  interests  of
         affected clients in how the proxies of that issuer are voted.

         Because  FAM  does not  exercise  discretion  in  voting  proxies,  but
         routinely  votes proxies as  recommended  by  management,  no potential
         conflict of interest could actually affect FAM's voting of the proxies.

         Nevertheless, when FAM itself knowingly does business with a particular
         proxy  issuer  and  a  material  conflict  of  interest  between  FAM's
         interests  and clients'  interests  may appear to exist,  FAM generally
         would,  to  avoid  any  appearance  concerns,   follow  an  alternative
         procedure  rather than vote proxies as recommended by management.  Such
         an alternative procedure generally would involve causing the proxies to
         be  voted in  accordance  with the  recommendations  of an  independent
         service provider that FAM may use to assist in voting proxies.

         FAM  generally  will not notify  clients if it uses this  procedure  to
         resolve an apparent  material  conflict of interest.  FAM will document
         the  identification  of any  material  conflict  of  interest  and  its
         procedure for resolving the particular conflict.



         In unusual cases, FAM may use other  alternative  procedures to address
         circumstances when a material conflict of interest may appear to exist,
         such as, without limitation:

         (i)  Notifying  affected  clients  of  the  conflict  of  interest  (if
         practical),  and seeking a waiver of the conflict to permit FAM to vote
         the proxies under its usual policy;

         (ii) Abstaining from voting the proxies; or

         (iii)  Forwarding  the proxies to clients so that  clients may vote the
         proxies themselves.

         FAM generally will notify  clients if it uses one of these  alternative
         procedures to resolve a material conflict of interest.

         VOTING BY CLIENT INSTEAD OF FAM

         A FAM client may vote its own proxies  instead of  directing  FAM to do
         so. FAM  recommends  this  approach if a client  believes  that proxies
         should be voted based on political or social interests.

         FAM generally will not accept proxy voting authority from a client (and
         will  encourage the client to vote its own proxies) if the client seeks
         to impose  client-specific  voting  guidelines that may be inconsistent
         with FAM's  guidelines or with the client's  best economic  interest in
         FAM's view.

         FAM generally  will abstain from voting on (or otherwise  participating
         in) the  commencement of legal  proceedings  such as shareholder  class
         actions or bankruptcy proceedings.

         RESPONSIBILITY

         FAM's client services staff has primary responsibility for implementing
         FAM's proxy  voting  procedures,  including  ensuring  that proxies are
         timely  submitted.  FAM also may use a  service  provider  to assist in
         voting proxies, recordkeeping, and other matters.

         FAM's security  analysts  routinely  review proxy  proposals as part of
         their ongoing reassessment of companies and their managements.

         RECORDKEEPING

         FAM or a service provider  maintains,  in accordance with Rule 204-2 of
         the Investment Advisers Act:

         (i) Copies of all proxy voting policies and procedures;

         (ii) Copies of proxy statements  received (unless maintained  elsewhere
         as described below);

         (iii) Records of proxy votes cast on behalf of clients;

         (iv)  Documents  prepared by FAM that are material to a decision on how
         to vote or memorializing the basis for a decision;

         (v) Written  client  requests  for proxy voting  information,  and (vi)
         written responses by FAM to written or oral client requests.

         FAM will  obtain an  undertaking  from any  service  provider  that the
         service  provider will provide copies of proxy voting records and other
         documents  promptly upon request if FAM relies on the service  provider
         to maintain related records.

         FAM or its service  provider may rely on the SEC's EDGAR system to keep
         records  of  certain  proxy  statements  if the  proxy  statements  are
         maintained by issuers on that system (as is generally  true in the case
         of larger U.S.-based issuers).



         All proxy related  records will be  maintained in an easily  accessible
         place for five  years  (and an  appropriate  office of FAM or a service
         provider for the first two years).


ITEM 8. PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

(A)(1)   IDENTIFICATION OF PORTFOLIO  MANAGER(S) OR MANAGEMENT  TEAM MEMBERS AND
         DESCRIPTION OF ROLE OF PORTFOLIO MANAGER(S) OR MANAGEMENT TEAM MEMBERS

         As of December 31, 2006,  Mohammed Riad and K. Timothy Swanson serve as
primary   portfolio   manager  and  co-portfolio   manager  of  the  Registrant,
respectively.  Mr. Riad is a Managing Director,  Senior Portfolio  Manager,  and
Chief Derivatives  Strategist and has been with Fiduciary Asset Management,  LLC
("FAMCO"),  the Registrant's  sub-adviser,  for seven and a half years. Mr. Riad
joined  Fiduciary  Asset  Management in 1999 and has over 15 years of investment
industry experience.  He is a member of the portfolio management team and serves
as senior  portfolio  manager for  FAMCO's  institutional  and hedged  large-cap
equity strategies, as well as closed-end and open-end funds.  Additionally,  Mr.
Riad has been  instrumental in the  development of industry  leading large scale
derivatives  strategies.  He is actively involved with the Strategy  Committee's
macroeconomic assessment and top-down approach to portfolio management.

         Mr.  Swanson is a Senior Vice  President and Portfolio  Manager and has
worked at FAMCO for three and a half years.  Mr. Swanson  performs  quantitative
and  qualitative  research  and holds  portfolio  management  duties for FAMCO's
large-cap  institutional  equity strategies.  He implements portfolio management
decisions for hedged equity institutional  portfolios, as well as closed-end and
open-end funds. Mr. Swanson provides the Strategy Committee with statistical and
quantitative analysis of macroeconomic,  sector,  industry, and company-specific
recommendations and supporting data. He assists in designing,  structuring,  and
managing FAMCO's quantitative research effort.

 (A)(2)  OTHER ACCOUNTS MANAGED  BY  PORTFOLIO  MANAGER(S)  OR  MANAGEMENT  TEAM
         MEMBER AND POTENTIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

         OTHER ACCOUNTS MANAGED BY PORTFOLIO MANAGER(S) OR MANAGEMENT TEAM
         MEMBER

              The information in the table below is as of December 31, 2006.




                                                                                                   # of
                                                                                                 Accounts
                                                                                                Managed for   Total Assets
                                                                                                   which        for which
                                                                     Total # of                Advisory Fee   Advisory Fee
      Name of Portfolio Manager                                      Accounts       TOTAL      is Based on    is Based on
            OR TEAM MEMBER               TYPE OF ACCOUNTS*            MANAGED       ASSETS      PERFORMANCE    PERFORMANCE
            --------------               -----------------            -------       ------      -----------    -----------
                                                                                                    
     1.  Mohammed Riad           Registered Investment Companies:        3         $99.11 mil        0             $0
                                 Other Pooled Investment Vehicles:       1           $    7.0        0             $0
                                                                                          mil
                                 Other Accounts:                        116        $5,747 mil        0             $0

     2.  K. Timothy Swanson      Registered Investment Companies:        3         $99.11 mil        0             $0
                                 Other Pooled Investment Vehicles:       1           $    7.0        0             $0
                                                                                          mil
                                 Other Accounts:                        116        $5,747 mil        0             $0


         POTENTIAL CONFLICTS OF INTERESTS

         Actual or apparent  conflicts  of  interest  may arise when a portfolio
manager has day-to-day management responsibilities with respect to more than one
Fund or other account. More specifically, portfolio managers who manage multiple
Funds and /or other  accounts may be presented with one or more of the following
potential conflicts.



         The  management of multiple Funds and/or other accounts may result in a
portfolio  manager devoting unequal time and attention to the management of each
Fund and/or other account.  Fiduciary  seeks to manage such competing  interests
for the time and  attention  of a  portfolio  manager  by having  the  portfolio
manager's  focus on a  particular  investment  discipline.  Most other  accounts
managed by a portfolio manager are managed using the same investment models that
are used in connection with the management of the Fund

         If a portfolio  manager  identifies  a limited  investment  opportunity
which may be suitable for more than one Fund or other account, a Fund may not be
able to take full advantage of that  opportunity  due to an allocation of filled
purchase or sale orders across all eligible  Funds and other  accounts.  To deal
with  these  situations,  Fiduciary  and the Fund have  adopted  procedures  for
allocating  portfolio  transactions  across multiple  accounts.  With respect to
securities  transactions for the Funds, Fiduciary determines which broker to use
to execute each order,  consistent  with its duty to seek best  execution of the
transaction.  However,  with respect to certain other  accounts  (such as mutual
funds for which Fiduciary acts as sub-advisor,  other pooled investment vehicles
that  are  not  registered   mutual  funds,   and  other  accounts  managed  for
organizations  and  individuals),  Fiduciary  may be limited by the client  with
respect  to the  selection  of  brokers or may be  instructed  to direct  trades
through a particular  broker. In these cases,  trades for a Fund in a particular
security may be placed  separately from, rather than aggregated with, such other
accounts.   Having  separate   transactions  with  respect  to  a  security  may
temporarily  affect the market  price of the  security or the  execution  of the
transaction,  or both, to the possible detriment of the Fund or other account(s)
involved

         Fiduciary and the Fund have adopted certain compliance procedures which
are designed to address these types of conflicts. However, there is no guarantee
that such  procedures  will detect each and every  situation in which a conflict
arises.

 (A)(3)  COMPENSATION STRUCTURE OF PORTFOLIO MANAGER(S) OR MANAGEMENT TEAM
         MEMBERS

         The  portfolio  managers  are paid a fixed  base  salary  and an annual
bonus. The base salary is set at a level determined to be appropriate based upon
the  individual's   experience  and   responsibilities.   The  annual  bonus  is
discretionary  and is determined by the CEO. It is not based on the  performance
of the fund or managed accounts.

(A)(4)   DISCLOSURE OF SECURITIES OWNERSHIP




         The information below is as of December 31, 2006:

                          Name of Portfolio Manager or                     Dollar Range of Fund Shares
                                   TEAM MEMBER                                 BENEFICIALLY OWNED
                                                                              
                  Mohammed Riad                                                  $10,001-50,000
                  K. Timothy Swanson                                             $0


(B) 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.



There have been no material  changes to the procedures by which the shareholders
may  recommend  nominees to the  registrant's  board of  directors,  where those
changes were  implemented  after the  registrant  last  provided  disclosure  in
response to the  requirements  of Item  407(c)(2)(iv)  of Regulation S-K (17 CFR
229.407) (as required by Item  22(b)(15) of Schedule 14A (17 CFR  240.14a-101)),
or this Item.


ITEM 11. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

     (a) The registrant's  principal executive and principal financial officers,
         or  persons  performing  similar  functions,  have  concluded  that the
         registrant's  disclosure  controls and  procedures  (as defined in Rule
         30a-3(c)  under the  Investment  Company Act of 1940,  as amended  (the
         "1940 Act") (17 CFR 270.30a-3(c)))  are effective,  as of a date within
         90 days of the filing date of the report that  includes the  disclosure
         required by this paragraph, based on their evaluation of these controls
         and  procedures  required by Rule  30a-3(b)  under the 1940 Act (17 CFR
         270.30a-3(b))  and Rules  13a-15(b) or 15d-15(b)  under the  Securities
         Exchange   Act  of  1934,   as  amended   (17  CFR   240.13a-15(b)   or
         240.15d-15(b)).

     (b) There  were  no  changes  in the  registrant's  internal  control  over
         financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the 1940 Act (17
         CFR 270.30a-3(d))  that occurred during the registrant's  second fiscal
         quarter  of the  period  covered  by this  report  that has  materially
         affected,   or  is  reasonably   likely  to  materially   affect,   the
         registrant's internal control over financial reporting.


ITEM 12. EXHIBITS.

     (a)(1)   Code of ethics,  or any amendment thereto,  that is the subject of
              disclosure  required by Item 2 is attached hereto.

     (a)(2)   Certifications  pursuant to Rule  30a-2(a)  under the 1940 Act and
              Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 are attached hereto.

     (a)(3)   Not applicable.

     (b)      Certifications  pursuant to Rule  30a-2(b)  under the 1940 Act and
              Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 are 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.

(registrant) FIRST TRUST/FIDUCIARY ASSET MANAGEMENT COVERED CALL FUND

By (Signature and Title)*  /S/ JAMES A. BOWEN
                         -------------------------------------------------------
                           James A. Bowen, Chairman of the Board, President and
                           Chief Executive Officer
                           (principal executive officer)

Date:    FEBRUARY 22, 2007
      --------------------------------------------------------------------------


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


By (Signature and Title)*  /S/ JAMES A. BOWEN
                         -------------------------------------------------------
                           James A. Bowen, Chairman of the Board, President and
                           Chief Executive Officer
                           (principal executive officer)

Date:    FEBRUARY 22, 2007
      --------------------------------------------------------------------------


By (Signature and Title)* /S/ MARK R. BRADLEY
                         -------------------------------------------------------
                         Mark R. Bradley, Treasurer, Controller, Chief Financial
                         Officer and Chief Accounting Officer
                         (principal financial officer)

Date:    FEBRUARY 22, 2007
      --------------------------------------------------------------------------



* Print the name and title of each signing officer under his or her signature.