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: 811-04875
Name of Registrant: Royce Value Trust, Inc.
Address of Registrant: 1414
Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10019
Name and address of agent for service: | John E. Denneen,
Esquire 1414 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10019 |
Registrants telephone
number, including area code: (212) 486-1445
Date of fiscal year end: December
31
Date of reporting period: January 1, 2005 December 31, 2005
Item 1: Reports to Shareholders
A N N U A L R E V I E W | |||||||
Royce Value Trust | A N D | ||||||
R E P O R T T O S T O C K H O L D E R S | |||||||
Royce Micro-Cap Trust | |||||||
2005 | |||||||
Royce Focus Trust
www.roycefunds.com |
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TheRoyceFund |
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VALUE INVESTING IN SMALL COMPANIES FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS |
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A FEW WORDS ON CLOSED-END FUNDS
Royce & Associates, LLC manages three closed-end funds: Royce Value Trust, the first small-cap value closed-end fund offering; Royce Micro-Cap Trust, the only micro-cap closed-end fund; and Royce Focus Trust, a closed-end fund that invests in a limited number of primarily small-cap companies. A closed-end fund is an investment company whose shares are listed on a stock exchange or are traded in the over-the-counter market. Like all investment companies, including open-end mutual funds, the assets of a closed-end fund are professionally managed in accordance with the investment objectives and policies approved by the funds Board of Directors. A closed-end fund raises cash for investment by issuing a fixed number of shares through initial and other public offerings that may include periodic rights offerings. Proceeds from the offerings are invested in an actively managed portfolio of securities. Investors wanting to buy or sell shares of a publicly traded closed-end fund after the offerings must do so on a stock exchange or the Nasdaq market, as with any publicly traded stock. This is in contrast to open-end mutual funds, in which the fund sells and redeems its shares on a continuous basis. |
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A CLOSED-END FUND OFFERS SEVERAL DISTINCT ADVANTAGES NOT AVAILABLE FROM AN OPEN-END FUND STRUCTURE |
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Since a closed-end fund does not issue redeemable securities or offer its securities on a continuous basis, it does not need to
liquidate securities or hold uninvested assets to meet investor demands for cash redemptions, as an open-end fund must. |
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In a closed-end fund, not having to meet investor redemption requests or invest at inopportune times is ideal for value
managers who attempt to buy stocks when prices are depressed and sell securities when prices are high. |
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A closed-end fund may invest more freely in less liquid portfolio securities because it is not subject to potential stockholder
redemption demands. This is particularly beneficial for Royce-managed closed-end funds, which invest in small- and micro-cap
securities. |
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The fixed capital structure allows permanent leverage to be employed as a means to enhance capital appreciation potential. |
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Unlike Royces open-end funds, our closed-end funds are able to distribute capital gains on a quarterly basis. Each of the
Funds has adopted a quarterly distribution policy for its common stock. |
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We believe that the closed-end fund structure is very suitable for the long-term investor who understands the benefits of a stable pool of capital. |
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WHY DIVIDEND REINVESTMENT IS IMPORTANT |
A very important component of an investors total return comes from the reinvestment of distributions. By reinvesting
distributions, our investors can maintain an undiluted investment in a Fund. To get a fair idea of the impact of reinvested
distributions, please see the charts on pages 13, 15 and 17. For additional information on the Funds Distribution Reinvestment
and Cash Purchase Options and the benefits for stockholders, please see page 19 or visit our website at www.roycefunds.com. |
TABLE OF CONTENTS | ||
Annual Review |
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Performance Table | 2 | |
Letter to Our Stockholders | 3 | |
Online Update |
10 | |
Annual Report to Stockholders |
11 | |
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PERFORMANCE TABLE | |||||||||||||||||||||
Charles M. Royce, President |
AVERAGE ANNUAL NAV TOTAL RETURNS Through December 31, 2005 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Royce Value Trust |
Royce Micro-Cap Trust |
Royce Focus Trust |
Russell 2000 |
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Fourth Quarter 2005* | 2.68 | % | -0.31 | % | 5.98 | % | 1.13 | % | |||||||||||||
July - December 2005* | 10.66 | 8.26 | 20.91 | 5.88 | |||||||||||||||||
One-Year | 8.41 | 6.75 | 13.31 | 4.55 | |||||||||||||||||
Here at The Royce Funds, we talk a lot about earnings, the profits a company has after expenses, taxes and other costs have been deducted from revenues. As the principal source of long-term shareholder returns, earnings are a critical element in gauging the success of a business. To get a sense of their significance, even a value-oriented portfolio manager such as our own Buzz Zaino likes to joke, Were all growth investors, because ultimately were all looking for earnings growth. Of course, one may contrast Buzzs remark with the in-house example of Charlie Dreifus, who is more than happy to find companies with steady, but not necessarily growing (and certainly not fast- growing) earnings, yet there is no denying that earnings are arguably the most critical sign of a companys well-being. Continued on Page 4... |
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Three-Year | 22.83 | 25.38 | 31.22 | 22.13 | |||||||||||||||||
Five-Year | 12.50 | 15.96 | 16.82 | 8.22 | |||||||||||||||||
10-Year | 13.57 | 14.06 | n/a | 9.26 | |||||||||||||||||
Since Inception | 12.62 | 13.94 | 14.12 | ||||||||||||||||||
Inception Date | 11/26/86 | 12/14/93 | 11/1/96** | ||||||||||||||||||
Royce Value Trusts average annual
NAV total return for the 15-year period ended 12/31/05 was 15.22%. |
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IMPORTANT PERFORMANCE AND RISK INFORMATION | |||||||||||||||||||||
All performance information in this
Review reflects past performance, is presented on a total return basis and reflects
the reinvestment of distributions. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Performance information does not reflect the deduction of taxes that a stockholder
would pay on distributions or on the sale of Fund shares. Investment return and
principal value of an investment will fluctuate, so that shares may be worth more
or less than their original cost when sold. Current performance may be higher or
lower than performance quoted. Current month-end performance may be obtained at
www.roycefunds.com. The Royce Funds invest primarily in securities of small-cap
and/or micro-cap companies, which may involve considerably more risk than investments
in securities of larger-cap companies. The thoughts expressed in this Review and Report to Stockholders concerning recent market movements and future prospects for small company stocks are solely the opinion of Royce at December 31, 2005, and, of course, historical market trends are not necessarily indicative of future market movements. Statements regarding the future prospects for particular securities held in the Funds portfolios and Royces investment intentions with respect to those securities reflect Royces opinions as of December 31, 2005 and are subject to change at any time without notice. There can be no assurance that securities mentioned in this Review and Report to Stockholders will be included in any Royce-managed portfolio in the future. |
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2 | THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS |
LETTER TO OUR STOCKHOLDERS |
Its Not Unusual. . . But Its Not Quite Normal, Either There is an old curse, said to be of Chinese or Scottish origin, which states, May you live in interesting times. Anyone who has been an equity investor over the last 10 years has more than qualified for the curse of living through a decade of noteworthy days. It began uneventfully enough, with a move to large-cap stocks in the mid-90s. Internet stock mania then took hold. This feverish activity was attended by an insistence that the stock market was in a new era, one appropriate for the imminent arrival of a new millennium, in which all of the old rules about valuation and how to measure the success of a business were being quickly and thoroughly recast. Value investors were among those whose relatively ordinary returns between 1996 and 1999 consigned them to the trash heap of the markets new order, the investment equivalent of dinosaurs destined for extinction. Yet the 90s ended, and the new era began, with a stubborn assertion of one of the oldest rules of equity investing known to human kind, namely that markets are cyclical. The Internet bubble burst in 2000, which led to arguably the most interesting six years of the last 10 for the U.S. stock market. Along with Y2K hysteria, the collapse of Internet stock prices heralded a series of events that helped keep equity returns underwateror just barely above the surfacethrough the end of 2005. In fact, the period that spans 2000 through 2005 may be best thought of as a testament to the remarkable resilience of the stock market. Consider the following list of events that run the gamut from calamitous to criminal: The terrorist attacks of September 2001; accounting scandals and revelations of fraud that brought down more than a couple of corporate Goliaths; mutual fund trading scandals; war with Iraq; subsequent terrorist strikes in Israel, Indonesia, Madrid and London; record trade and budget deficits; natural disasters |
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Last year was the first time since we began to prognosticate low returns in 2003 that both small- and large-cap performance, regardless of style, ended the year in the low single digits. |
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THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 3 |
However, our portfolio managers occasionally buy shares of small- and micro-cap companies that have been enduring earnings disappointments or have ceased to post any earnings at all. An investor may well ask why we would make such purchases: If earnings are so important, why would we risk buying shares of a company whose earnings are depressed or nonexistent? How can a company satisfy our exacting security selection criteria if its missing such a crucial element? The apparent contradiction is resolved in part by another in our endless series of reminders that we always invest with a long-term perspective. Most of our security analyses begin with the balance sheet. We carefully scrutinize a companys underlying assets, which are the ultimate source of earnings, while also looking closely at its liabilities, the claims parties other than the shareholders have on assets. If the assets are in healthy proportion to the liabilities, that gives us confidence that future earnings can be produced, even if there are no current earnings. Continued on Page 6... |
LETTER TO OUR STOCKHOLDERS in Asia, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas;
skyrocketing energy prices; and ongoing political controversies. Far from capitulating
to each new, dispiriting development, the market managed to move forward. Returns
across styles and asset classes were generally unspectacular (though in certain
cases, such as small-cap values, they were strong on an absolute and relative
basis), but in general they avoided outright disaster, even in the more difficult,
negative-return years of 2000 and 2002. We continue to believe that the downturn earlier in 2005 marked the end of the market working through these various difficulties that took place during the last several years. Indeed, 2005 may ultimately be remarkable for its unremarkable nature, for its relatively low, but positive, returns. It will also go down as the year in which a six-year period of small-cap outperformance came to an end, though to what degree that will matter in the future remains to be seen. In a year in which little seemed to take investors by surprise, the most unexpected element may have been that one of our overall market predictions (finally) proved to be accurate. Since 2003, we have been unswerving in our conviction that the market had entered a low-return mode, but the success of our own and similar small-cap investment approaches made our predictive remarks inaccurate. Last year was the first time since we began to prognosticate low returns that both small- and large-cap performance, regardless of style, ended the year in the low single digits. We suspect that this means that the stock market has returned to more historically typical, if not normal, behavior after a decade of tumult. However, our reasons have nothing to do with the low returns themselves or the anomalous accuracy of our forecast. Looming Large When the subject is the perennially unpredictable stock market, we are fully aware of the danger of words such as typical or normal, terms that are difficult to define with precision in any context. Another danger is that normal markets often represent a transitional stage between bull and bear extremes. In addition, the farther out one looks from the 10-year period ended 12/31/05, long-term average annual returns for both small- and large-cap stocks reach into the low-to-mid teens, not the single-digit positive returns of 2005. Having issued these caveats, we think that the market has returned to more historically typical behavior, and the reason has to do with the narrowing of the gap between large- and small-cap results in the past year. For the first calendar year since 1998, large-cap stocks, as measured by the S&P 500, outperformed small-cap, as measured by the Russell 2000, but the advantage was slight. The S&P 500 was up 4.9% in 2005 versus 4.6% for the Russell 2000 (and 1.4% for the Tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite). The last time that small-cap enjoyed more than five consecutive years of outperformance was between 1975 and 1983. The recently concluded phase of small-cap | |||||
4 | THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
outperformance followed the period in which the Russell 2000 underperformed the S&P 500 in five out of six years. Perhaps unsurprisingly, small-caps (as measured by the CRSP 6-10) also underperformed the S&P 500 for four of the five years prior to the 1975-1983 reversal. Small-cap significantly outpaced large-cap from the 2005 market low on April 28, with the Russell 2000 up 18.1% versus 10.6% for the S&P 500. The Russell 2000 also led in months of positive returns (February, May, June, July, September and November). Equally compelling from our perspective was the stronger performance for large-caps during the negative or flat performance months of January, March, April, August, October and December, a development that we felt revealed nascent large-cap leadership. We have long believed that where investors turn when stock prices are falling is a very telling sign, so large-caps advantage during 2005s downdrafts indicated to us that investors were more confident in larger stocks. We expect that large-cap will continue to lead in the short and possibly intermediate terms, though we see no reason for small-cap investors to fret. Over long-term time periods, we anticipate that small-cap will continue to perform well, though probably without the substantial outperformance spreads that we have seen over the last six years. |
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Over long-term time periods, we anticipate that small-cap will continue to perform well, though probably without the substantial outperformance spreads that we have seen over the last six years. |
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Long-Term Values Another instance of narrowing spreads could be seen within small-cap in the one- and three-year average annual total returns ended 12/31/05 for the Russell 2000 Value and Growth indices. In each period the Russell 2000 Value index beat its growth counterpart, but the results were close. For the one-year period ended 12/31/05, both indices posted low returns: value was up 4.7% versus 4.2% for growth. For the three-year period, the Russell 2000 Value index gained 23.2% versus 20.9% for the Russell 2000 Growth index. However, the longer-term edge fell more dramatically in small-cap values favor. The upshot was that small-cap value owned a performance edge over small-cap growth for the one-, three-, five-, 10-, 15-, 20-and 25-year periods ended 12/31/05, an impressive run of outperformance that was bolstered by the Russell 2000 Value index outflanking the Russell 2000 Growth index in five of the last six calendar years (trailing slightly during 2003s surging small-cap rally) (see table below). This long-term advantage came primarily from small-cap values formidable edge in the current decade to date (+131.9% versus -13.2%), which has seen both up and down markets. |
RUSSELL 2000 VALUE VERSUS RUSSELL 2000 GROWTH | |||||||||||||||
Calendar-Year Returns: 2000-2005 |
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Russell | Russell | Russell | Russell | ||||||||||||
2000 Value |
2000 Growth |
2000 Value |
2000 Growth |
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2000 |
22.8 |
% |
-22.4 |
% |
2003 |
46.0 |
% |
48.5 |
% |
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2001 |
14.0 |
-9.2 |
2004 |
22.3 |
14.3 |
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2002 | -11.4 | -30.3 | 2005 | 4.7 | 4.2 |
THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS | 5 |
Our objective when looking at a companys earnings picture is to understand normalized earnings over long-term time periods. Industries usually move in very particular, though not always consistently predictable, business cycles. By focusing on normalized earnings, we are trying to filter out the effects of short-term earnings surprises, whether they are negative or positive. Our long-term investment horizon and thorough research process peer beyond the ebb and flow of near-term events in an attempt to discover long-term opportunities. In general, we seek businesses that have a solid-to-strong earnings history. A record of profitability is critical when trying to assess both the current financial health and the long-term prospects for a business that has fallen on hard times. In fact, it may be one of the more telling indications that a companys woes are likely to be temporary. We are willing to endure the short-term difficulties of what we believe is a high-quality company struggling with stalled profits, provided that Continued on Page 8... |
LETTER TO OUR STOCKHOLDERS Looking back
at 2005s second half and forward to 2006, one might expect growth to continue
to lead during updrafts, or at least during up quarters. In fact, we would not be
surprised to see small-cap growth assume a leadership role in the coming months,
but we suspect that its advantage will be small and its reign relatively short.
The Russell 2000 Growth index led the Russell 2000 Value index in the third and
fourth quarters of 2005 as well as from the 2005 market low on April 28, so one
could argue that small-cap growths leadership phase is already underway. In
any event, we think that small-cap value is likely to retain its long-term performance
edge over small-cap growth, though we do not expect the former to dominate the way
that it did over the last six years. We also do not anticipate a return to the
late 90s, when the Russell 2000 Growth index led in most short- and even some
long-term periods. As with small- and large-cap stocks, we think that small-cap
value and growth should be subject to frequent leadership rotation and low, but
positive returns. This Round to Royce Energy stocks were the dominant market sector in 2005 across all asset classes and investment styles. The industrys preeminent performance status helped each of our closed-end Funds to post strong absolute and relative returns in the calendar year. We began looking more closely at the industry in 2003, when forecasts of lower oil and gas commodity prices caused the stock prices of many energy companies to fall. While energy was clearly the most dynamic area, our closed-end portfolios also saw impressive gains in the Industrial and/or Financial sectors, as well as in Technology stocks, some of which enjoyed a resurgence in 2005s second half. As we first noted in July of last year, 2005 was unlike 2003, a year in which micro-caps dominated, and 2004, a year that saw stronger small-cap results. Both small- and micro-cap oriented portfolios enjoyed success in 2005, and individual gains and losses were more the result of stock (and sector) selection as opposed to capitalization. On both a net asset value (NAV) and market price basis, all three closed-end Funds outperformed the Russell 2000 for the one-year period ended 12/31/05. The years second half saw each Fund make an impressive comeback after subpar first-half performances in 2005. The results were just as encouraging for the three-year and five-year periods ended 12/31/05, in which Royce Value Trust, Micro-Cap Trust and Focus Trust each outpaced the Russell 2000 with double-digit average annual NAV and market price total returns. When looking at the 10-year period ended 12/31/05, the same advantage held for Royce Value Trust and Micro-Cap Trust, our two closed-end Funds with more than 10 years of history. All three Funds outperformed the Russell 2000 from the small-cap market peak on 3/9/00 through 12/31/05. They also were ahead of the small-cap index from the small-cap market trough on 10/9/02 through 12/31/05, three impressive instances of mostly bull-market | |||||
6 | THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
outperformance. While we would love for each of our Funds to continue to outpace the small-cap benchmark in most short- and long-term performance periods, we realize that such a feat is impossible, and are happy to hold a greater advantage over long-term and market cycle performance periods, which we believe offer a sterner test of a portfolios merits. |
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While we would love for each of our Funds to continue to outpace the small-cap benchmark in most short- and long-term performance periods, we realize that such a feat is impossible, and are happy to hold a greater advantage over long-term and market cycle performance periods, which we believe offer a sterner test of a portfolios merits. |
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Lake Wobegone, Not Lake Placid Although most equity indices enjoyed positive returns in 2005, few made new highs, two exceptions being the Russell 2000 Value index, which made its new high in August, and the Russell 2000 index, which reached a new peak in December. The past few years saw undeniable improvement in overall equity results, yet several major market indices remained substantially shy of the peaks that they established in March 2000: the Russell 2000 Growth index (-33.5%), S&P 500 (-10.4%) and Nasdaq Composite (-56.3%) all failed to surpass their March 2000 highs. Of course, these figures may indicate nothing more than the timeliness of the likely shift in overall market leadership from small- to large-cap, and an analogous change within small-cap from value to growth. Its also worth pointing out that, despite the relatively paltry returns of 2005, the three-year average annual total returns for both the S&P 500 and Russell 2000 were rather impressive on both an absolute and a relative basis, especially compared to the five-year returns for the periods ended 12/31/05 (see table at left). It occurs to us that the last three years felt remarkably different from the beginning of the current decade, a time in which low or negative large-cap returns were a source |
THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 7 |
LETTER TO OUR STOCKHOLDERS | ||||||
our estimate of the companys long-term prospects is positive. This is especially true with cyclical businesses that regularly go through the ups and downs of their industry. The downs are often synonymous with earnings trouble. The companys actions at such times are critical: Is management buying back stock? Does the firm have sufficient cash reserves to successfully deal with adversity? If so, our confidence is bolstered. If not, we generally look elsewhere. In addition, few events make investors more emotional than earnings trouble. An earnings disappointment can create a wave of selling that drives a stock price down to levels that meet our value criteria. In many cases over the years, we have waited patiently for a particular companys stock price to fall so that we could begin to build a position. Our years of experience have brought home again and again the lesson that even the best businesses have occasional trouble. When they do, we try to use other investors reactions to our advantage by purchasing shares at prices that we find attractive. |
of constant frustration for many investors.
The picture becomes even more interesting on viewing the 10-year average annual
total returns for the S&P 500 and Russell 2000. After the whirlwind of the
last 10 years, were not sure if investors will find it surprising or predictable
that these results for the 10-year period ended 12/31/05 were nearly identical:
9.3% for the Russell 2000 and 9.1% for the S&P 500. We may look back on 2005 as
the year in which everything changed. However, we want to emphasize again that the
most significant changes may not be the shifts in leadership to large-cap in general
and to small-cap growth within our investment universe (though they are certainly
important). The critical move from our perspective has been the narrowing of the
performance spread between asset classes and styles. We simply do not think its
likely any time soon that any asset class or investment approach will dominate the
way that small-cap value did between 2000 and 2005 or that large-cap did between
1995 and 1999. Low returns, however, do not equate to a lack of volatility. The
Russell 2000s positive return in 2005 was not achieved in a straight line,
as volatility was quite apparent throughout most of last year. The Russell 2000
posted eight directional high-to-low and/or low-to-high moves of at least 5% in
the last 12 months, resulting in two significant declines that were each followed
by strong rallies. | |||||
8 | THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
Navigating the Narrows With our expectation that leadership rotation between asset categories and styles should be the order of the day and that performance advantages should remain slim, we do not see particularly hard times ahead for small-cap and/or small-cap value. Regardless of what the future brings, its important to mention that our approach is not heavily invested in how the rest of the world defines value. In the past five years of terrific small-cap value performance, we continued to scrutinize those areas that were not enjoying the benefits of values good fortune, such as Health and Technology. This may seem counterintuitive, even contradictory, but the essence of value investing remains finding what we regard as high-quality companies whose stocks are trading at discounts to our estimate of their worth as businesses. This entails searching in areas that others are ignoring. Markets are always changing, but this aspect of our approach remains the same. We appreciate your continued support. |
Sincerely, | |||||
Charles M. Royce | W. Whitney George | Jack E. Fockler, Jr. | |||
President | Vice President | Vice President | |||
January 31, 2006 | |||||
The critical move from our perspective has been the narrowing of the performance spread between asset classes and styles. We simply do not think its likely that any asset class or investment approach will dominate the way that small-cap value did between 2000 and 2005 or that large-cap did between 1995 and 1999. |
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THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 9 |
ONLINE UPDATE |
Visit the New RoyceFunds.com |
Here are just a few of our new features: |
10 | THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
TABLE OF CONTENTS | ||
Annual Report to Stockholders | ||
Managers Discussion of Fund Performance | ||
Royce Value Trust |
12 | |
Royce Micro-Cap Fund |
14 | |
Royce Focus Trust |
16 | |
History Since Inception | 18 | |
Distribution Reinvestment and Cash Purchase Options | 19 | |
Schedules of Investments and Other Financial Statements | ||
Royce Value Trust |
20 | |
Royce Micro-Cap Fund |
35 | |
Royce Focus Trust |
49 | |
Directors and Officers | 58 | |
Other Important Information | 59 | |
Stockholder Meeting Results | 60 | |
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 11 |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST
AVERAGE ANNUAL NAV TOTAL RETURNS |
Managers Discussion After struggling in the difficult first half, Royce Value Trust (RVT) came back strong in the second half of 2005, which gave a much-needed boost to its calendar-year results. RVT was up 8.4% on a net asset value (NAV) basis and 7.0% on a market price basis in 2005, versus gains of 4.6% for the Russell 2000 and 7.7% for the S&P 600. The Fund thus outperformed each of its small-cap benchmarks on an NAV basis during 2005 and trailed the S&P 600 by only a narrow margin on a market price basis. Although both small-cap indices were ahead of the Fund in the early stages of the dynamic rally that began with the interim small-cap market low on 4/28/05, RVT more than made up for its late start. The Fund gained 7.8% on an NAV basis and 7.5% on a market price basis in the third quarter, ahead of both the Russell 2000 (+4.7%) and the S&P 600 (+5.4%). In the fourth quarter, RVTs NAV (+2.7%) and market price (+3.2%) returns were also ahead of the Russell 2000 (+1.1%) and the S&P 600 (+0.4%). Strong second-half NAV results helped RVT not only to achieve a performance edge over market cycle and other long-term periods, but to also provide terrific NAV returns on an absolute basis. From the small-cap market peak on 3/9/00 through 12/31/05, RVT gained 93.7% versus 19.7% for the Russell 2000 and 65.0% for the S&P 600. In the mostly upmarket phase running from the small-cap market trough on 10/9/02 through 12/31/05, RVT was up 120.5%, versus 114.2% for the Russell 2000 and 111.6% for the S&P 600. The Fund also beat its small-cap benchmarks on an NAV basis for the one-, three-, five-, 10-, 15-year and since inception (11/26/86) periods ended 12/31/05, while on a market price basis, the Fund outperformed for each of those periods with the exception of the one-year interval. RVTs average annual NAV total return since inception was 12.6%. Of the Funds 11 equity sectors, nine showed net gains in 2005. The bulk of the losses were confined to the Consumer Products sector. That area held the Funds top loser, The Boyds Collection, a collectibles company whose shares we sold in October on news that the firm was filing for reorganization under Chapter 11, ending a mostly dismal five-year experience with the stock. Another significant loser on a dollar basis was Willbros Group, a private contractor that provides construction, engineering and specialty services primarily to the oil and gas industry. While the companys business mostly grew in 2005, the results of an internal investigation (itself the result of a previous shake-up in upper management) led the company to restate earnings for 2002, 2003, 2004 and the first two fiscal quarters of 2005. We sold some shares during 2005, but we held a position at the end of the year because by November the company seemed to have put a good deal of its difficulties behind it. Elsewhere in the Natural Resources sector, the news was mostly very positive. As the sector that holds the portfolios energy stocks, the dominant industry in the market for the 18-month period ended 12/31/05, this was hardly a surprise. It was the Funds top net-gaining sector in 2005, followed by Industrial Services, Industrial Products and Technology. In contrast to Natural Resources, the latter sectors net gains for the year were somewhat unexpected, the result of a strong fourth-quarter comeback. We have owned shares of contract oil and gas well |
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Fourth Quarter 2005* |
2.68 | % | |||||||||||||
July - December 2005* |
10.66 | % | |||||||||||||
One-Year |
8.41 | ||||||||||||||
Three-Year |
22.83 | ||||||||||||||
Five-Year |
12.50 | ||||||||||||||
10-Year |
13.57 | ||||||||||||||
15-Year |
15.22 | ||||||||||||||
Since Inception (11/26/86) |
12.62 | ||||||||||||||
*Not annualized. |
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CALENDAR YEAR NAV TOTAL RETURNS |
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Year |
RVT | Year | RVT | ||||||||||||
2005 |
8.4 | % | 1996 | 15.5 | % | ||||||||||
2004 |
21.4 | 1995 | 21.1 | ||||||||||||
2003 |
40.8 | 1994 | 0.1 | ||||||||||||
2002 |
-15.6 | 1993 | 17.3 | ||||||||||||
2001 |
15.2 | 1992 | 19.3 | ||||||||||||
2000 |
16.6 | 1991 | 38.4 | ||||||||||||
1999 |
11.7 | 1990 | -13.8 | ||||||||||||
1998 |
3.3 | 1989 | 18.3 | ||||||||||||
1997 |
27.5 | 1988 | 22.7 | ||||||||||||
TOP 10 POSITIONS |
|||||||||||||||
Alliance Capital |
1.9 | % | |||||||||||||
Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers |
1.3 | ||||||||||||||
SEACOR Holdings |
1.0 | ||||||||||||||
Apollo Investment |
1.0 | ||||||||||||||
Simpson Manufacturing |
0.9 | ||||||||||||||
Ash Grove Cement Company Cl.B |
0.9 | ||||||||||||||
Cimarex Energy |
0.9 | ||||||||||||||
Sotheby's Holdings Cl. A |
0.9 | ||||||||||||||
Newport Corporation |
0.8 | ||||||||||||||
Forward Air |
0.8 | All performance information in this Report reflects past performance, is presented on a total
return basis and reflects the reinvestment of distributions. Past performance is no guarantee
of future results. Investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate, so
that shares may be worth more or less than their original cost when sold. Current performance
may be higher or lower than performance quoted. Current month-end performance
may be obtained at www.roycefunds.com. The Funds P/E ratio calculations exclude companies
with zero or negative earnings. |
|||||||||||||
PORTFOLIO SECTOR BREAKDOWN |
|||||||||||||||
Technology |
22.5 | % | |||||||||||||
Industrial Products |
17.1 | ||||||||||||||
Industrial Services |
13.3 | ||||||||||||||
Financial Services |
9.8 | ||||||||||||||
Natural Resources |
9.4 | ||||||||||||||
Financial Intermediaries |
8.8 | ||||||||||||||
Health |
8.0 | ||||||||||||||
Consumer Services |
5.8 | ||||||||||||||
Consumer Products |
5.0 | ||||||||||||||
Utilities |
0.2 | ||||||||||||||
Diversified Investment |
0.1 | ||||||||||||||
Miscellaneous |
4.9 | ||||||||||||||
Bonds & Preferred Stocks |
0.3 | ||||||||||||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents |
16.1 |
12 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS
Performance and Portfolio Review |
PORTFOLIO DIAGNOSTICS | ||||||||||||||
GOOD IDEAS THAT WORKED | driller Helmerich & Payne since 1998, though
our experience with the firm goes all the way
back to RVTs inception. In 2005, the firm
benefited from rising oil and gas prices, its own
growing business and minimal damage in the
aftermath of Katrina and Rita to its rigs located
in the Gulf of Mexico. We reduced our position
at rising share prices between February and
October. Pharmaceutical company Elan Corporation ran into difficulties with a multiple sclerosis drug, Tysabri, that it produces with
another firm, Biogen. Prospects for the drugs eventual use began to improve during the fall,
especially in the aftermath of an announcement in December that an FDA advisory panel would review the drug in March 2006. Its share
price received a healthy shot based on
|
Average Market Capitalization | $1,049 million | |||||||||||
2005 Net Realized and Unrealized Gain | ||||||||||||||
Helmerich & Payne | $4,642,059 | Weighted Average P/E Ratio | 19.9x* | |||||||||||
Alliance Capital | Weighted Average P/B Ratio | 2.2x | ||||||||||||
Management Holding L.P. | 4,376,806 | |||||||||||||
Weighted Average Yield | 0.9% | |||||||||||||
Energy Conversion Devices | 3,305,802 | |||||||||||||
Fund Net Assets | $1,032 million | |||||||||||||
Plexus Corporation | 3,267,758 | |||||||||||||
Turnover Rate | 31% | |||||||||||||
Elan Corporation | 3,196,564 | |||||||||||||
Net Leverage | 5% | |||||||||||||
this news. In Technology, Energy Conversion Devices saw its growing business and
approach toward profitability interest investors. A newer position in the
portfolio, we were drawn to its conservative balance sheet and interesting niche
business of developing alternative energy products and technology. Plexus
Corporation provides a variety of technological services, including product development, material
procurement and distribution, for several industries.
|
||||||||||||||
Symbol Market Price NAV |
RVT XRVTX |
|||||||||||||
Its stock price rose in 2005 primarily
because of improved earnings, but our overall experience with the company, which goes back to
2001, was still not profitable as of 12/31/05. |
* | Excludes 15% of portfolio holdings with zero or
negative earnings as of 12/31/05. |
||||||||||||
GOOD IDEAS AT THE TIME | |
Net leverage is the percentage, in excess of 100%, of the total value of equity type investments, divided by net assets, applicable to Common Stockholders. |
||||||||||||
2005 Net Realized and Unrealized Loss | ||||||||||||||
Boyds Collection (The) | $2,259,734 | |||||||||||||
CAPITAL STRUCTURE | ||||||||||||||
Willbros Group | 2,248,754 | Publicly Traded Securities Outstanding at | ||||||||||||
12/31/05 at NAV or Liquidation Value | ||||||||||||||
PXRE Group | 2,040,250 | 54.7 million shares | ||||||||||||
of Common Stock | $1,032 million | |||||||||||||
PRG-Schultz International | 1,975,935 | |||||||||||||
5.90% Cumulative | ||||||||||||||
MacDermid | 1,967,852 | Preferred Stock | $220 million |
RISK/RETURN COMPARISON Three-Year Period Ended 12/31/05 |
||||||||||||
Average Annual Total Return | Standard Deviation |
Return Efficiency* |
||||||||||
RVT (NAV) | 22.8% | 14.8 | 1.54 | |||||||||
S&P 600 | 22.4 | 14.0 | 1.60 | |||||||||
Russell 2000 | 22.1 | 15.3 | 1.44 | |||||||||
* | Return Efficiency is the average annual total return
divided by the annualized standard deviation over a
designated time period. |
|||||||||||
1 Reflects the cumulative total return of an investment made by a stockholder who purchased one share at
inception ($10.00 IPO) and then reinvested all annual distributions as indicated, and fully participated
in primary subscriptions of the Funds rights offerings.
2 Reflects the actual market price of one share as it has traded on the NYSE. |
||||||||||||
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 13 |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST
AVERAGE ANNUAL NAV TOTAL RETURNS |
Managers Discussion Royce Micro-Cap Trust (RMT) gained 6.8% on a net asset value (NAV) basis and 8.9% on a market price basis in 2005, in each case ahead of its small-cap benchmark, the Russell 2000, which was up 4.6% for the same period. When the stock market began to turn around following the interim small-cap market trough on 4/28/05, the Fund arrived a little late to the dance, but soon began to tear up the floor. RMT was up 8.6% on an NAV basis during the third quarter (+5.1% on a market price basis), outpacing the Russell 2000s 4.7% return. NAV results cooled off in the fourth quarter. The Fund was down 0.3%, though its market price result was strong, up 8.8% versus 1.1% for the Russell 2000. The performance spread between RMTs NAV and market price returns during the fourth quarter was the largest in eight years and third largest since the Funds inception in December 1993. While short-term outperformance is always welcome, we place much greater importance on long-term and market cycle NAV returns on an absolute and relative basis. Therefore, we were very pleased that the Fund beat the small-cap index from the small-cap market peak on 3/9/00 through 12/31/05, gaining 101.9% versus 19.7% for the Russell 2000. Arguably more impressive (though not any more significant) was RMT outperforming its small-cap benchmark from the small-cap market trough on 10/9/02 through 12/31/05 with a return of 133.7% versus a gain of 114.2% for the Russell 2000. In addition, the Fund was ahead of the small-cap index on both an NAV and market price basis for the one-, three-, five-, 10-year and since inception (12/14/93) periods ended 12/31/05. RMTs average annual NAV total return since inception was 13.9%. Seven of the Funds 10 equity sectors posted net gains in 2005, with Natural Resources (home to RMTs holdings in energy) and Industrial Products leading the way on a dollar basis. Energy stocks topped all other areas of the stock market for the year, so terrific performance for portfolio holdings in that industry was no surprise. We first built a position in domestic oil and gas company Gulfport Energy between March and August 2004, before its price began a significant climb. Rising oil and gas prices and increased production led to record earnings for the fiscal year 2004 and a surging share price in 2005. We sold off our remaining position in September after beginning to take gains at rising stock prices in May. Top-ten position Dril-Quip makes offshore drilling and production equipment. Its conservative balance sheet and solid earnings first attracted our interest in 1998. Rising oil and gas prices helped its earnings to improve, which in turn played a role in the companys mostly soaring share price in 2005. We trimmed our position in January, August and September. The Funds top gainer in 2005 came from Industrial Products. Sun Hydraulics manufactures high-performance industrial valves and manifolds. Strong earnings seemed to attract investors. We were just as pleased by the firms decision to use profits to remove debt from an already strong balance sheet. We took some gains in February and July. The Funds largest sector, Technology, was a net loser in 2005. TransAct Technologies makes specialized parts and printers used to produce ATM receipts, lottery tickets and other items. A |
||||||||||||||
Fourth Quarter 2005* |
-0.31 | % | |||||||||||||
July - December 2005* |
8.26 | ||||||||||||||
One-Year |
6.75 | ||||||||||||||
Three-Year |
25.38 | ||||||||||||||
Five-Year |
15.96 | ||||||||||||||
10-Year |
14.06 | ||||||||||||||
Since Inception (12/14/93) |
13.94 | ||||||||||||||
*Not annualized. |
|||||||||||||||
CALENDAR YEAR NAV TOTAL RETURNS |
|||||||||||||||
Year |
RMT | Year | RMT | ||||||||||||
2005 |
6.8 | % | 1999 | 12.7 | % | ||||||||||
2004 |
18.7 | 1998 | -4.1 | ||||||||||||
2003 |
55.6 | 1997 | 27.1 | ||||||||||||
2002 |
-13.8 | 1996 | 16.6 | ||||||||||||
2001 |
23.4 | 1995 | 22.9 | ||||||||||||
2000 |
10.9 | 1994 | 5.0 | ||||||||||||
TOP 10 POSITIONS |
|||||||||||||||
ASA Bermuda |
1.5 | % | |||||||||||||
Transaction Systems |
1.4 | ||||||||||||||
HomeFed Corporation |
1.3 | ||||||||||||||
Universal Truckload Services |
1.2 | ||||||||||||||
Abigail Adams National Bancorp |
1.2 | ||||||||||||||
Seneca Foods |
1.2 | ||||||||||||||
TriZetto Group (The) |
1.1 | ||||||||||||||
Covansys Corporation |
1.1 | ||||||||||||||
Pason Systems |
1.0 | ||||||||||||||
Dril-Quip |
1.0 |
All performance information in this
Report reflects past performance, is presented on a total return basis and reflects
the reinvestment of distributions. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate, so that shares
may be worth more or less than their original cost when sold. Current performance
may be higher or lower than performance quoted. Current month-end performance may
be obtained at www.roycefunds.com. The Funds P/E ratio calculations exclude
companies with zero or negative earnings. |
|||||||||||||
PORTFOLIO SECTOR BREAKDOWN |
|||||||||||||||
Technology |
25.4 | % | |||||||||||||
Industrial Products |
16.0 | ||||||||||||||
Industrial Services |
13.7 | ||||||||||||||
Health |
14.7 | ||||||||||||||
Natural Resources |
9.5 | ||||||||||||||
Financial Intermediaries |
7.0 | ||||||||||||||
Consumer Products |
5.7 | ||||||||||||||
Consumer Services |
5.5 | ||||||||||||||
Financial Services |
3.0 | ||||||||||||||
Diversified Investment |
2.1 | ||||||||||||||
Miscellaneous |
4.8 | ||||||||||||||
Preferred Stock |
0.5 | ||||||||||||||
Cash and Cash Equivalents |
12.5 |
14 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS
Performance and Portfolio Review |
PORTFOLIO DIAGNOSTICS | ||||||||||||||
GOOD IDEAS THAT WORKED | decline in domestic gambling early in 2005 hurt
sales and sent its share price on a downward
slope, which only grew steeper when the firm
became embroiled in a patent dispute shortly
afterward. We held a small position at the end of
the year, mainly because the firm remains
conservatively capitalized. We chose to hold a
good-sized position in IT business consultant
Sapient Corporation at the end of the year, in spite of difficult times for its stock price. Our
view at year-end was that the firm possesses a strong balance sheet and an attractive core
business. It also remained profitable in 2005, though its growth was slower than many
investors seemed to expect. Two gainers in Technology were also top-ten holdings: The TriZetto
|
Average Market Capitalization | $275 million | |||||||||||
2005 Net Realized and Unrealized Gain | ||||||||||||||
Sun Hydraulics | $2,185,808 | Weighted Average P/E Ratio | 19.2x* | |||||||||||
Gulfport Energy | 1,595,152 | Weighted Average P/B Ratio | 1.9x | |||||||||||
Dril-Quip | 1,473,127 | Weighted Average Yield | 0.8% | |||||||||||
TriZetto Group (The) | 1,388,940 | Fund Net Assets | $294 million | |||||||||||
PICO Holdings | 1,360,942 | Turnover Rate | 46% | |||||||||||
Net Leverage | 8% | |||||||||||||
TriZetto Group, which creates specialized
software and Internet portals to help healthcare
firms improve their business procedures,
benefited from strong earnings. Transaction
processing software manufacturer Transaction
Systems Architects made an acquisition of a
similar business, restructured its business units
for greater in-house efficiency and enjoyed
steadily improving earnings. Outside the Technology sector, Aceto Corporation, a specialty chemical maker |
||||||||||||||
Symbol Market Price NAV |
RMT XOTCX |
|||||||||||||
and distributor, was plagued
by declining growth rates, shrinking margins and plummeting pricing. We took
some losses during 2005, but at December 31 still thought that a turnaround could
eventually materialize. |
* | Excludes 17% of portfolio holdings with zero or
negative earnings as of 12/31/05. |
||||||||||||
GOOD IDEAS AT THE TIME | |
Net leverage is the percentage, in excess of 100%, of
the total value of equity type investments, divided by
net assets, applicable to Common Stockholders. |
||||||||||||
2005 Net Realized and Unrealized Loss | ||||||||||||||
Aceto Corporation | $1,625,478 | |||||||||||||
CAPITAL STRUCTURE | ||||||||||||||
Sapient Corporation | 1,110,000 | Publicly Traded Securities Outstanding at | ||||||||||||
12/31/05 at NAV or Liquidation Value | ||||||||||||||
TransAct Technologies | 1,057,956 | 21.9 million shares | ||||||||||||
of Common Stock | $294 million | |||||||||||||
DiamondCluster International | 1,011,354 | |||||||||||||
6.00% Cumulative | ||||||||||||||
PRG-Schultz International | 808,741 | Preferred Stock | $60 million |
RISK/RETURN COMPARISON Three-Year Period Ended 12/31/05 |
||||||||||||
Average Annual Total Return | Standard Deviation |
Return Efficiency* |
||||||||||
RMT (NAV) | 25.4% | 15.3 | 1.66 | |||||||||
Russell 2000 | 22.1 | 15.3 | 1.44 | |||||||||
* | Return Efficiency is the average annual total return
divided by the annualized standard deviation over a
designated time period. |
|||||||||||
1 Reflects the cumulative total return of an investment made by a stockholder who purchased one share at
inception ($7.50 IPO) and then reinvested distributions as indicated, and fully participated in the primary
subscription of the 1994 rights offering.
2 Reflects the actual market price of one share as it traded on the Nasdaq, and, beginning on 12/1/03,
on the NYSE. |
||||||||||||
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 15 |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST
AVERAGE ANNUAL NAV TOTAL RETURNS |
Managers Discussion Although each of our closed-end funds enjoyed impressive second-half rebounds during 2005, the award for 2005s Comeback Fund of the Year would have to go to Royce Focus Trust (FUND). The Fund was up 13.3% on a net asset value (NAV) basis and 3.0% on a market price basis during 2005. FUNDs small-cap benchmark, the Russell 2000, was up 4.6% for the same period, giving the Fund the performance edge on an NAV basis, but trailing the small-cap benchmark on a market price basis. Although one would never know it by looking at the Funds negative second-quarter returns, the market began to rally following the interim small-cap market trough on 4/28/05. Still, FUND was able to overcome its tardy participation in the burgeoning rally with terrific third- and fourth-quarter returns on both an NAV and market price basis. The Fund gained 14.1% on an NAV basis and 16.3% on a market price basis compared to a 4.7% gain for the Russell 2000 during the third quarter. Although returns for stocks as a whole were generally lower in the fourth quarter, FUND gained 6.0% on an NAV basis and 5.7% on a market price basis, while the Russell 2000 was up 1.1%. While the Funds NAV performance in 2005 was warmly welcomed, our attention is more focused on market cycle and other long-term time periods, where we seek strong returns on both an absolute and relative basis. From the small-cap market peak on 3/9/00 through 12/31/05, FUND trounced the Russell 2000, up 158.3% versus 19.7% for the benchmark. The Fund also handily outpaced the small-cap index from the small-cap market trough on 10/9/02 through 12/31/05, up 171.6% versus 114.2%. Our value approach admittedly makes outperformance from market peaks somewhat unsurprising, but its understandable if a performance edge during a generally more bullish period raises an eyebrow or two. For our part, we were very pleased with the results for both periods. The Fund also outperformed the Russell 2000 on an NAV basis for the one-, three-, five-year and since inception of our management (11/1/96) periods ended 12/31/05, and beat the benchmark on a market price basis for each of these intervals except the one-year period. FUNDs average annual NAV total return since inception was 14.1%. Short-term performance is not something that we typically give much attention, but we were struck by how thoroughly the Funds results turned around in 2005s second half. In the years first six months, eight of nine equity sectors showed net losses; for the 12-month period ended 12/31/05, only two were in the red. Of the six sectors that went from net losses to net gains, Natural Resources led, thanks to the ongoing dominance of energy stocks in the market as a whole, a move fueled by rising oil and natural gas prices. Canadian energy services company Trican Well Service manufactures piping and drilling equipment and provides oil well completion, maintenance and repair services. The firm posted record revenues and job activity in 2005s fiscal third quarter, boosted by strong business in Canada and overseas. Even after taking gains at various times between March and December, it was a top-ten holding at December 31. We made similar trims beginning in April to another top-ten position, Ensign Energy Services, which provides contract well drilling and other services for the oil and natural |
||||||||||||||
Fourth Quarter 2005* |
5.98 | % | |||||||||||||
July - December 2005* |
20.91 | ||||||||||||||
One-Year |
13.31 | ||||||||||||||
Three-Year |
31.22 | ||||||||||||||
Five-Year |
16.82 | ||||||||||||||
Since Inception (11/1/96) |
14.12 | ||||||||||||||
* Not annualized. | |||||||||||||||
Royce & Associates assumed investment management responsibility for the Fund on 11/1/96. | |||||||||||||||
CALENDAR YEAR NAV TOTAL RETURNS |
|||||||||||||||
Year |
RFT | Year | RFT | ||||||||||||
2005 |
13.3 | % | 2000 | 20.9 | % | ||||||||||
2004 |
29.2 | 1999 | 8.7 | ||||||||||||
2003 |
54.3 | 1998 | -6.8 | ||||||||||||
2002 |
-12.5 | 1997 | 20.5 | ||||||||||||
2001 |
10.0 | ||||||||||||||
TOP 10 POSITIONS |
|||||||||||||||
New Zealand |
4.8 | % | |||||||||||||
Athena
Neurosciences |
4.1 | ||||||||||||||
IPSCO |
3.8 | ||||||||||||||
Canadian Government 3.00% Bond |
3.7 | ||||||||||||||
Endo Pharmaceuticals Holdings |
3.2 | ||||||||||||||
Simpson Manufacturing |
3.0 | ||||||||||||||
Glamis Gold |
2.9 | ||||||||||||||
Ensign Energy Services |
2.8 | ||||||||||||||
Thor Industries |
2.8 | ||||||||||||||
Trican Well Service |
2.7 |
All performance information in this
Report reflects past performance, is presented on a total return basis and reflects
the reinvestment of distributions. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate, so that shares
may be worth more or less than their original cost when sold. Current performance
may be higher or lower than performance quoted. Current month-end performance may
be obtained at www.roycefunds.com. The Funds P/E ratio calculations exclude
companies with zero or negative earnings. |
|||||||||||||
PORTFOLIO SECTOR BREAKDOWN |
|||||||||||||||
Industrial Products |
21.8 | % | |||||||||||||
Natural Resources |
19.8 | ||||||||||||||
Technology |
11.9 | ||||||||||||||
Health |
9.5 | ||||||||||||||
Consumer Products |
6.3 | ||||||||||||||
Industrial Services |
5.5 | ||||||||||||||
Financial Services |
3.7 | ||||||||||||||
Financial Intermediaries |
3.3 | ||||||||||||||
Consumer Services |
3.3 | ||||||||||||||
Bonds |
13.5 | ||||||||||||||
Treasuries, Cash and |
18.9 |
16 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS
Performance and Portfolio Review |
PORTFOLIO DIAGNOSTICS | ||||||||||||||
GOOD IDEAS THAT WORKED | gas industry, primarily in western Canada and
the Rocky Mountain U.S. Its expanding
business in South America contributed to its
record third-quarter revenues in fiscal 2005.
The bull market for energy stocks helped two holdings in the Industrial Products sector. Canadian steel producing and fabricating company IPSCO makes pipes for oil and gas drilling companies, which helped its share price to climb in 2005. We were drawn to its pristine balance sheet and steady earnings at a time during the summer of 2004 when steel prices were recovering. It was the Funds largest equity holding at the end of 2005. Pason Systems creates specialized software and other drilling instrumentation products for the oil and gas |
Average Market Capitalization | $1,600 million | |||||||||||
2005 Net Realized and Unrealized Gain | ||||||||||||||
Trican Well Service | $3,945,382 | Weighted Average P/E Ratio | 16.7x | |||||||||||
IPSCO | 2,759,583 | Weighted Average P/B Ratio | 2.9x | |||||||||||
Elan Corporation | 2,405,404 | Weighted Average Yield | 1.4% | |||||||||||
Ensign Energy Services | 2,346,857 | Fund Net Assets | $143 million | |||||||||||
U.S. Global Investors Cl. A | 2,025,460 | Turnover Rate | 42% | |||||||||||
Net Leverage* | 0% | |||||||||||||
industry. Its
energy-related business, two-for-one stock split,
positive cash flow, growing earnings and record
fiscal third-quarter revenues all played a role in
its soaring stock price during 2005. Net losses on the sector level came from Consumer Services and Industrial Services. In terms of individual positions, Lexicon Genetics posted the most significant dollar-based loss. The firm specializes in proprietary gene |
||||||||||||||
Symbol Market Price NAV |
FUND XFUNX |
|||||||||||||
knockout technology used in the treatment of diseases.
Our high regard for the companys business and its conservative capitalization led us to add to
our stake in 2005, even as its growing revenues did little to attract other investors. With Hecla
Mining Company, we chose to take our losses and move on. A rare loser among precious metals
and mining companies in 2005, its business was hampered by exposure to a politically
uncertain situation in Venezuela and rising mining costs. |
* | Net leverage is the percentage, in excess of 100%, of
the total value of equity type investments, divided by
net assets applicable to Common Stockholders. |
||||||||||||
GOOD IDEAS AT THE TIME | ||||||||||||||
2005 Net Realized and Unrealized Loss | ||||||||||||||
Lexicon Genetics | $1,311,698 | |||||||||||||
CAPITAL STRUCTURE | ||||||||||||||
Hecla Mining Company | 1,183,369 | Publicly Traded Securities Outstanding at | ||||||||||||
12/31/05 at NAV or Liquidation Value | ||||||||||||||
Nu Skin Enterprises Cl. A | 977,903 | 14.7 million shares | ||||||||||||
of Common Stock | $143 million | |||||||||||||
Pier 1 Imports | 899,300 | |||||||||||||
6.00% Cumulative | ||||||||||||||
Orchid Cellmark | 585,052 | Preferred Stock | $25 million |
RISK/RETURN COMPARISON Three-Year Period Ended 12/31/05 |
||||||||||||
Average Annual Total Return | Standard Deviation |
Return Efficiency* |
||||||||||
FUND (NAV) | 31.2% | 16.2 | 1.93 | |||||||||
Russell 2000 | 22.1 | 15.3 | 1.44 | |||||||||
* | Return Efficiency is the average annual total return
divided by the annualized standard deviation over a
designated time period. |
|||||||||||
1 Royce & Associates assumed investment management responsibility for the Fund on 11/1/96.
2 Reflects the cumulative total return experience of a continuous common stockholder who reinvested all
distributions as indicated, and fully participated in the primary subscription of the 2005 rights offering.
3 Reflects the actual market price of one share as it has traded on the Nasdaq. |
||||||||||||
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 17 |
HISTORY SINCE INCEPTION |
The following table details the share accumulations by an initial investor in the Funds who reinvested all distributions (including fractional shares) and participated fully in primary subscriptions for each of the rights offerings. Full participation in distribution reinvestments and rights offerings can maximize the returns available to a long-term investor. This table should be read in conjunction with the Performance and Portfolio Reviews of the Funds.
Amount | Purchase | NAV | Market | |||||||||||||
History | Invested | Price* | Shares | Value** | Value** | |||||||||||
Royce Value Trust | ||||||||||||||||
11/26/86 | Initial Purchase | $ | 10,000 | $ | 10.000 | 1,000 | $ | 9,280 | $ | 10,000 | ||||||
10/15/87 | Distribution $0.30 | 7.000 | 42 | |||||||||||||
12/31/87 | Distribution $0.22 | 7.125 | 32 | 8,578 | 7,250 | |||||||||||
12/27/88 | Distribution $0.51 | 8.625 | 63 | 10,529 | 9,238 | |||||||||||
9/22/89 | Rights Offering | 405 | 9.000 | 45 | ||||||||||||
12/29/89 | Distribution $0.52 | 9.125 | 67 | 12,942 | 11,866 | |||||||||||
9/24/90 | Rights Offering | 457 | 7.375 | 62 | ||||||||||||
12/31/90 | Distribution $0.32 | 8.000 | 52 | 11,713 | 11,074 | |||||||||||
9/23/91 | Rights Offering | 638 | 9.375 | 68 | ||||||||||||
12/31/91 | Distribution $0.61 | 10.625 | 82 | 17,919 | 15,697 | |||||||||||
9/25/92 | Rights Offering | 825 | 11.000 | 75 | ||||||||||||
12/31/92 | Distribution $0.90 | 12.500 | 114 | 21,999 | 20,874 | |||||||||||
9/27/93 | Rights Offering | 1,469 | 13.000 | 113 | ||||||||||||
12/31/93 | Distribution $1.15 | 13.000 | 160 | 26,603 | 25,428 | |||||||||||
10/28/94 | Rights Offering | 1,103 | 11.250 | 98 | ||||||||||||
12/19/94 | Distribution $1.05 | 11.375 | 191 | 27,939 | 24,905 | |||||||||||
11/3/95 | Rights Offering | 1,425 | 12.500 | 114 | ||||||||||||
12/7/95 | Distribution $1.29 | 12.125 | 253 | 35,676 | 31,243 | |||||||||||
12/6/96 | Distribution $1.15 | 12.250 | 247 | 41,213 | 36,335 | |||||||||||
1997 | Annual distribution total $1.21 | 15.374 | 230 | 52,556 | 46,814 | |||||||||||
1998 | Annual distribution total $1.54 | 14.311 | 347 | 54,313 | 47,506 | |||||||||||
1999 | Annual distribution total $1.37 | 12.616 | 391 | 60,653 | 50,239 | |||||||||||
2000 | Annual distribution total $1.48 | 13.972 | 424 | 70,711 | 61,648 | |||||||||||
2001 | Annual distribution total $1.49 | 15.072 | 437 | 81,478 | 73,994 | |||||||||||
2002 | Annual distribution total $1.51 | 14.903 | 494 | 68,770 | 68,927 | |||||||||||
1/28/03 | Rights Offering | 5,600 | 10.770 | 520 | ||||||||||||
2003 | Annual distribution total $1.30 | 14.582 | 516 | 106,216 | 107,339 | |||||||||||
2004 | Annual distribution total $1.55 | 17.604 | 568 | 128,955 | 139,094 | |||||||||||
2005 | Annual distribution total $1.61 | 18.739 | 604 | |||||||||||||
12/31/05 | $ | 21,922 | 7,409 | $ | 139,808 | $ | 148,773 | |||||||||
Royce Micro-Cap Trust | ||||||||||||||||
12/14/93 | Initial Purchase | $ | 7,500 | $ | 7.500 | 1,000 | $ | 7,250 | $ | 7,500 | ||||||
10/28/94 | Rights Offering | 1,400 | 7.000 | 200 | ||||||||||||
12/19/94 | Distribution $0.05 | 6.750 | 9 | 9,163 | 8,462 | |||||||||||
12/7/95 | Distribution $0.36 | 7.500 | 58 | 11,264 | 10,136 | |||||||||||
12/6/96 | Distribution $0.80 | 7.625 | 133 | 13,132 | 11,550 | |||||||||||
12/5/97 | Distribution $1.00 | 10.000 | 140 | 16,694 | 15,593 | |||||||||||
12/7/98 | Distribution $0.29 | 8.625 | 52 | 16,016 | 14,129 | |||||||||||
12/6/99 | Distribution $0.27 | 8.781 | 49 | 18,051 | 14,769 | |||||||||||
12/6/00 | Distribution $1.72 | 8.469 | 333 | 20,016 | 17,026 | |||||||||||
12/6/01 | Distribution $0.57 | 9.880 | 114 | 24,701 | 21,924 | |||||||||||
2002 | Annual distribution total $0.80 | 9.518 | 180 | 21,297 | 19,142 | |||||||||||
2003 | Annual distribution total $0.92 | 10.004 | 217 | 33,125 | 31,311 | |||||||||||
2004 | Annual distribution total $1.33 | 13.350 | 257 | 39,320 | 41,788 | |||||||||||
2005 | Annual distribution total $1.85 | 13.848 | 383 | |||||||||||||
12/31/05 | $ | 8,900 | 3,125 | $ | 41,969 | $ | 45,500 | |||||||||
Royce Focus Trust | ||||||||||||||||
10/31/96 | Initial Purchase | $ | 4,375 | $ | 4.375 | 1,000 | $ | 5,280 | $ | 4,375 | ||||||
12/31/96 | 5,520 | 4,594 | ||||||||||||||
12/5/97 | Distribution $0.53 | 5.250 | 101 | 6,650 | 5,574 | |||||||||||
12/31/98 | 6,199 | 5,367 | ||||||||||||||
12/6/99 | Distribution $0.145 | 4.750 | 34 | 6,742 | 5,356 | |||||||||||
12/6/00 | Distribution $0.34 | 5.563 | 69 | 8,151 | 6,848 | |||||||||||
12/6/01 | Distribution $0.14 | 6.010 | 28 | 8,969 | 8,193 | |||||||||||
12/6/02 | Distribution $0.09 | 5.640 | 19 | 7,844 | 6,956 | |||||||||||
12/8/03 | Distribution $0.62 | 8.250 | 94 | 12,105 | 11,406 | |||||||||||
2004 | Annual distribution total $1.74 | 9.325 | 259 | 15,639 | 16,794 | |||||||||||
5/6/05 | Rights offering | 2,669 | 8.340 | 320 | ||||||||||||
2005 | Annual distribution total $1.21 | 9.470 | 249 | |||||||||||||
12/31/05 | $ | 7,044 | 2,173 | $ | 21,208 | $ | 20,709 | |||||||||
18 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
DISTRIBUTION REINVESTMENT AND CASH PURCHASE OPTIONS |
Why should I reinvest my distributions?
How does the reinvestment of distributions
from the Royce closed-end funds work?
How does this apply to registered stockholders?
What if my shares are held by a brokerage
firm or a bank?
What other features are available for
registered stockholders?
How do the Plans work for registered
stockholders?
How can I get more information on the
Plans?
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 19 |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST
Schedule of Investments |
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||||||||
COMMON STOCKS 104.9% |
Restaurants and Lodgings - 0.9% |
|||||||||||||||||
Benihana Cl. Aa |
6,600 | $ | 152,064 | |||||||||||||||
Consumer Products 5.0% |
121,400 | 4,132,456 | ||||||||||||||||
Apparel and Shoes - 2.1% |
IHOP Corporation |
93,400 | 4,381,394 | |||||||||||||||
Brown Shoe Company |
15,000 | $ | 636,450 | Jack in the Boxa |
2,000 | 69,860 | ||||||||||||
34,600 | 1,651,458 | 7,200 | 86,832 | |||||||||||||||
Jones Apparel Group |
81,500 | 2,503,680 | Steak n Shake Company (The)a |
70,000 | 1,186,500 | |||||||||||||
K-Swiss Cl. A |
105,000 | 3,406,200 | ||||||||||||||||
Oakley |
94,900 | 1,394,081 | 10,009,106 | |||||||||||||||
Polo Ralph Lauren Cl. A |
68,200 | 3,828,748 | ||||||||||||||||
Tandy Brands Accessories |
16,900 | 202,800 | Retail Stores - 2.6% |
|||||||||||||||
Timberland Company Cl. Aa |
60,000 | 1,953,000 | 30,100 | 889,756 | ||||||||||||||
Tommy Hilfigera |
50,000 | 812,000 | Big Lotsa |
255,300 | 3,066,153 | |||||||||||||
Weyco Group |
307,992 | 5,882,647 | 103,000 | 2,851,040 | ||||||||||||||
Childrens Place Retail Storesa |
13,000 | 642,460 | ||||||||||||||||
22,271,064 | Claires Stores |
189,800 | 5,545,956 | |||||||||||||||
83,700 | 1,435,455 | |||||||||||||||||
Collectibles - 0.1% |
10,000 | 262,200 | ||||||||||||||||
Enesco Groupa |
174,800 | 321,632 | 52,300 | 1,664,186 | ||||||||||||||
53,300 | 315,536 | |||||||||||||||||
Food/Beverage/Tobacco - 0.3% |
Hot Topica |
86,400 | 1,231,200 | |||||||||||||||
37,800 | 799,848 | 102,000 | 585,480 | |||||||||||||||
Hershey Creamery Company |
709 | 1,418,000 | 95,000 | 993,700 | ||||||||||||||
Lancaster Colony |
16,900 | 626,145 | Payless ShoeSourcea |
109,600 | 2,750,960 | |||||||||||||
Stein Mart |
142,800 | 2,591,820 | ||||||||||||||||
2,843,993 | Urban Outfittersa |
47,000 | 1,189,570 | |||||||||||||||
31,100 | 434,778 | |||||||||||||||||
Home Furnishing and Appliances - 0.2% |
162,000 | 719,280 | ||||||||||||||||
Ethan Allen Interiors |
35,800 | 1,307,774 | ||||||||||||||||
La-Z-Boy |
68,200 | 924,792 | 27,169,530 | |||||||||||||||
2,232,566 | Other Consumer Services - 1.9% |
|||||||||||||||||
Coinstar a |
39,000 | 890,370 | ||||||||||||||||
Publishing - 0.3% |
130,800 | 1,540,824 | ||||||||||||||||
Scholastic Corporationa |
130,000 | 3,706,300 | ITT Educational Servicesa |
106,000 | 6,265,660 | |||||||||||||
MoneyGram International |
74,900 | 1,953,392 | ||||||||||||||||
Sports and Recreation - 0.4% |
Sothebys Holdings Cl. Aa |
485,200 | 8,908,272 | |||||||||||||||
Coachmen Industries |
47,700 | 563,337 | ||||||||||||||||
Monaco Coach |
161,050 | 2,141,965 | 19,558,518 | |||||||||||||||
Nautilus |
2,000 | 37,320 | ||||||||||||||||
Thor Industries |
26,100 | 1,045,827 | Total (Cost $44,149,071) | 59,566,141 | ||||||||||||||
3,788,449 | Diversified Investment Companies 0.1% |
|||||||||||||||||
Closed-End Mutual Funds - 0.1% |
||||||||||||||||||
Other Consumer Products - 1.6% |
Central Fund of Canada Cl. A |
191,500 | 1,304,115 | |||||||||||||||
Blyth |
14,700 | 307,965 | ||||||||||||||||
Burnham Holdings Cl. B |
36,000 | 770,400 | Total (Cost $1,039,679) | 1,304,115 | ||||||||||||||
22,000 | 523,600 | |||||||||||||||||
82,800 | 1,781,028 | Financial Intermediaries 8.8% |
||||||||||||||||
Lazare Kaplan Internationala |
103,600 | 815,332 | Banking - 3.0% |
|||||||||||||||
175,000 | 2,038,750 | BOK Financial |
129,327 | 5,875,326 | ||||||||||||||
Matthews International Cl. A |
166,000 | 6,044,060 | CFS Bancorp |
260,000 | 3,718,000 | |||||||||||||
RC2 Corporationa |
132,600 | 4,709,952 | Citizens Bancorp |
3,500 | 73,675 | |||||||||||||
Exchange National Bancshares |
50,400 | 1,486,800 | ||||||||||||||||
16,991,087 | Farmers & Merchants Bank of Long Beach |
1,266 | 7,241,520 | |||||||||||||||
Heritage Financial |
12,915 | 315,384 | ||||||||||||||||
Total (Cost $32,481,446) | 52,155,091 | HopFed Bancorp |
25,000 | 396,250 | ||||||||||||||
Jefferson Bancshares |
25,000 | 341,250 | ||||||||||||||||
Consumer Services 5.8% |
Mechanics Bank |
200 | 3,700,000 | |||||||||||||||
Direct Marketing - 0.1% |
Mercantile Bankshares |
20,000 | 1,128,800 | |||||||||||||||
FTD Groupa |
50,000 | 519,500 | NBC Capital |
30,300 | 720,837 | |||||||||||||
NetBank |
70,000 | 502,600 | ||||||||||||||||
Leisure and Entertainment - 0.2% |
Old Point Financial |
20,000 | 590,000 | |||||||||||||||
Gemstar-TV Guide Internationala |
201,100 | 524,871 | Partners Trust Financial Group |
100,000 | 1,205,000 | |||||||||||||
Hasbro |
50,000 | 1,009,000 | Sun Bancorpa |
42,000 | 829,500 | |||||||||||||
15,000 | 377,100 | Tompkins Trustco |
15,950 | 714,560 | ||||||||||||||
Steiner Leisurea |
2,100 | 74,676 | ||||||||||||||||
1,985,647 | ||||||||||||||||||
Media and Broadcasting - 0.1% |
||||||||||||||||||
Cox Radio Cl. Aa |
23,000 | 323,840 | ||||||||||||||||
20 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
DECEMBER 31, 2005
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||||||||
Financial Intermediaries (continued) |
Apollo Investment |
567,109 | $ | 10,168,264 | ||||||||||||||
Banking (continued) |
BKF Capital Group |
7,500 | 142,125 | |||||||||||||||
Whitney Holding |
40,500 | $ | 1,116,180 | Eaton Vance |
140,400 | 3,841,344 | ||||||||||||
Wilber Corporation |
31,700 | 343,945 | Federated Investors Cl. B |
121,900 | 4,515,176 | |||||||||||||
Wilmington Trust |
31,000 | 1,206,210 | GAMCO Investors Cl. A |
168,600 | 7,339,158 | |||||||||||||
Yadkin Valley Bank & Trust Company |
3,800 | 55,860 | MCG Capital |
138,000 | 2,013,420 | |||||||||||||
MVC Capital |
353,900 | 3,772,574 | ||||||||||||||||
31,561,697 | National Financial Partners |
22,000 | 1,156,100 | |||||||||||||||
Nuveen Investments Cl. A |
138,600 | 5,907,132 | ||||||||||||||||
Insurance - 4.7% |
||||||||||||||||||
Alleghany Corporationa |
10,880 | 3,089,920 | 58,801,912 | |||||||||||||||
99,600 | 3,263,892 | |||||||||||||||||
Aspen Insurance Holdings |
68,000 | 1,609,560 | Other Financial Services - 0.8% |
|||||||||||||||
Commerce Group |
44,500 | 2,548,960 | CharterMac |
59,600 | 1,262,328 | |||||||||||||
Erie Indemnity Company Cl. A |
139,900 | 7,442,680 | 60,000 | 966,000 | ||||||||||||||
IPC Holdings |
27,000 | 739,260 | 75,000 | 2,064,000 | ||||||||||||||
Leucadia National |
43,221 | 2,051,269 | MarketAxess Holdingsa |
67,000 | 765,810 | |||||||||||||
4,200 | 1,331,610 | Municipal Mortgage & Equity |
40,300 | 1,040,949 | ||||||||||||||
Montpelier Re Holdingsa |
66,000 | 1,247,400 | 25,000 | 879,500 | ||||||||||||||
NYMAGIC |
85,200 | 2,112,108 | PRG-Schultz Internationala |
247,000 | 150,670 | |||||||||||||
Navigators Groupa |
83,200 | 3,628,352 | Van der Moolen Holding ADR |
21,000 | 149,940 | |||||||||||||
Ohio Casualty |
107,000 | 3,030,240 | World Acceptancea |
21,700 | 618,450 | |||||||||||||
Phoenix Companies (The) |
81,900 | 1,117,116 | ||||||||||||||||
ProAssurance Corporationa |
38,070 | 1,851,725 | 7,897,647 | |||||||||||||||
PXRE Group |
166,551 | 2,158,501 | ||||||||||||||||
RLI |
99,724 | 4,973,236 | Total (Cost $71,306,125) | 101,182,165 | ||||||||||||||
21st Century Insurance Group |
62,000 | 1,003,160 | ||||||||||||||||
U.S.I. Holdingsa |
40,000 | 550,800 | Health 8.0% |
|||||||||||||||
Wesco Financial |
7,740 | 2,979,900 | Commercial Services - 0.9% |
|||||||||||||||
Zenith National Insurance |
38,550 | 1,777,926 | First Consulting Groupa |
560,900 | 3,292,483 | |||||||||||||
PAREXEL Internationala |
313,700 | 6,355,562 | ||||||||||||||||
48,507,615 | ||||||||||||||||||
9,648,045 | ||||||||||||||||||
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.1% |
||||||||||||||||||
Gladstone Commercial |
30,000 | 494,700 | Drugs and Biotech - 2.7% |
|||||||||||||||
49,100 | 2,344,525 | |||||||||||||||||
Securities Brokers - 0.9% |
34,900 | 574,803 | ||||||||||||||||
E*TRADE Financiala |
152,400 | 3,179,064 | 99,300 | 472,668 | ||||||||||||||
First Albany |
350,100 | 2,433,195 | 4,900 | 317,226 | ||||||||||||||
Investment Technology Groupa |
30,400 | 1,077,376 | Cerus Corporationa |
21,700 | 220,255 | |||||||||||||
229,700 | 2,271,733 | 14,300 | 206,635 | |||||||||||||||
79,700 | 858,369 | |||||||||||||||||
8,961,368 | 292,100 | 4,068,953 | ||||||||||||||||
256,200 | 7,752,612 | |||||||||||||||||
Other Financial Intermediaries - 0.1% |
Gene Logica |
365,000 | 1,222,750 | |||||||||||||||
17,400 | 865,998 | Hi-Tech Pharmacala |
1,100 | 48,719 | ||||||||||||||
44,000 | 212,960 | |||||||||||||||||
Total (Cost $55,982,131) | 90,391,378 | 90,000 | 770,400 | |||||||||||||||
K-V Pharmaceutical Company Cl. Aa |
47,000 | 968,200 | ||||||||||||||||
Financial Services 9.8% |
20,000 | 349,000 | ||||||||||||||||
Information and Processing - 2.2% |
100,000 | 970,000 | ||||||||||||||||
Advent Softwarea |
116,800 | 3,376,688 | 50,000 | 1,040,000 | ||||||||||||||
126,875 | 2,973,950 | Perrigo Company |
186,750 | 2,784,442 | ||||||||||||||
FactSet Research Systems |
35,350 | 1,455,006 | 1,000 | 6,360 | ||||||||||||||
Global Payments |
137,000 | 6,385,570 | 10,000 | 160,100 | ||||||||||||||
Interactive Data |
134,300 | 3,049,953 | Shire ADR |
20,853 | 808,888 | |||||||||||||
SEI Investments Company |
141,200 | 5,224,400 | 73,000 | 1,240,270 | ||||||||||||||
VIVUSa |
163,300 | 483,368 | ||||||||||||||||
22,465,567 | ||||||||||||||||||
27,881,503 | ||||||||||||||||||
Insurance Brokers - 1.1% |
||||||||||||||||||
Crawford & Company Cl. A |
289,200 | 1,677,360 | Health Services - 1.2% |
|||||||||||||||
Crawford & Company Cl. B |
162,300 | 934,848 | Albany Molecular Researcha |
85,000 | 1,032,750 | |||||||||||||
Gallagher (Arthur J.) & Company |
111,200 | 3,433,856 | 52,700 | 2,558,585 | ||||||||||||||
Hilb Rogal & Hobbs Company |
155,050 | 5,970,975 | Cross Country Healthcarea |
30,000 | 533,400 | |||||||||||||
20,000 | 378,600 | |||||||||||||||||
12,017,039 | Gentiva Health Servicesa |
30,150 | 444,411 | |||||||||||||||
Investment Management - 5.7% |
||||||||||||||||||
Alliance Capital Management Holding L.P. |
353,100 | 19,946,619 |
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 21 |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST |
|||||||||||||||
Schedule of Investments |
|||||||||||||||
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||
Health (continued) |
C & D Technologies |
345,700 | $ | 2,634,234 | ||||||||
Health Services (continued) | Donaldson Company |
92,800 | 2,951,040 | |||||||||
HMS Holdingsa |
50,000 | $ | 382,500 | 155,000 | 964,100 | |||||||
34,600 | 1,450,086 | 4,350 | 138,765 | |||||||||
MedQuista |
73,893 | 897,800 | PerkinElmer |
135,000 | 3,180,600 | |||||||
National Home Health Care |
20,000 | 195,200 | 92,400 | 1,659,504 | ||||||||
On Assignmenta |
425,400 | 4,641,114 | Woodhead Industries |
45,400 | 629,698 | |||||||
Quovadxa |
3,000 | 7,230 | ||||||||||
16,454,881 | ||||||||||||
12,521,676 | ||||||||||||
Machinery - 5.5% | ||||||||||||
Medical Products and Devices - 2.9% | Baldor Electric |
62,900 | 1,613,385 | |||||||||
Allied Healthcare Productsa |
197,700 | 1,134,798 | 238,500 | 7,078,680 | ||||||||
Arrow International |
195,728 | 5,674,155 | Federal Signal |
58,600 | 879,586 | |||||||
10,000 | 421,400 | Franklin Electric |
84,200 | 3,329,268 | ||||||||
Bruker BioSciencesa |
380,200 | 1,847,772 | Graco |
96,825 | 3,532,176 | |||||||
CONMED Corporationa |
81,500 | 1,928,290 | Hardinge |
309,300 | 5,335,425 | |||||||
Datascope |
12,000 | 396,600 | IDEX Corporation |
36,000 | 1,479,960 | |||||||
Diagnostic Products |
25,000 | 1,213,750 | Lincoln Electric Holdings |
203,680 | 8,077,949 | |||||||
79,000 | 5,686,420 | National Instruments |
56,400 | 1,807,620 | ||||||||
Invacare Corporation |
88,000 | 2,771,120 | Nordson Corporation |
172,200 | 6,975,822 | |||||||
Novoste Corporationa |
16,625 | 37,074 | 273,100 | 5,360,953 | ||||||||
STERIS Corporation |
98,600 | 2,466,972 | 128,000 | 5,564,160 | ||||||||
Thoratec Corporationa |
2,000 | 41,380 | T-3 Energy Servicesa |
128,110 | 1,243,436 | |||||||
Varian Medical Systemsa |
61,600 | 3,100,944 | 3,000 | 101,400 | ||||||||
Young Innovations |
62,550 | 2,131,704 | Woodward Governor Company |
51,600 | 4,438,116 | |||||||
Zoll Medicala |
20,200 | 508,838 | ||||||||||
56,817,936 | ||||||||||||
29,361,217 | ||||||||||||
Metal Fabrication and Distribution - 2.1% | ||||||||||||
Personal Care - 0.3% | Commercial Metals Company |
36,000 | 1,351,440 | |||||||||
86,600 | 1,395,126 | CompX International Cl. A |
292,300 | 4,682,646 | ||||||||
Inter Parfums |
500 | 8,980 | IPSCO |
14,500 | 1,203,210 | |||||||
Nutraceutical Internationala |
22,800 | 308,940 | Kaydon Corporation |
208,700 | 6,707,618 | |||||||
39,000 | 1,496,040 | NN |
127,100 | 1,347,260 | ||||||||
10,800 | 425,099 | |||||||||||
3,209,086 | 158,100 | 4,651,302 | ||||||||||
Schnitzer Steel Industries Cl. A |
34,000 | 1,040,060 | ||||||||||
Total (Cost $55,353,224) |
82,621,527 | |||||||||||
21,408,635 | ||||||||||||
Industrial Products 17.1% |
||||||||||||
Automotive - 0.8% | Paper and Packaging - 0.1% | |||||||||||
CLARCOR |
83,500 | 2,480,785 | Peak Internationala |
408,400 | 1,082,260 | |||||||
LKQ Corporationa |
128,000 | 4,431,360 | ||||||||||
Quantam Fuel Systems Technologies |
Pumps, Valves and Bearings - 0.2% | |||||||||||
15,500 | 41,540 | Conbraco Industriesa |
7,630 | 2,151,660 | ||||||||
Superior Industries International |
52,000 | 1,157,520 | ||||||||||
Specialty Chemicals and Materials - 1.8% | ||||||||||||
8,111,205 | Aceto Corporation |
1,050 | 6,909 | |||||||||
Bairnco Corporation |
43,000 | 374,960 | ||||||||||
Building Systems and Components - 1.3% | Balchem Corporation |
7,500 | 223,575 | |||||||||
Decker Manufacturing |
6,022 | 216,792 | CFC Internationala |
99,000 | 1,390,059 | |||||||
Preformed Line Products Company |
91,600 | 3,919,564 | Cabot Corporation |
56,500 | 2,022,700 | |||||||
Simpson Manufacturing |
250,800 | 9,116,580 | Hawkins |
206,878 | 2,894,223 | |||||||
Lydalla |
35,500 | 289,325 | ||||||||||
13,252,936 | MacDermid |
259,831 | 7,249,285 | |||||||||
Schulman (A.) |
183,100 | 3,940,312 | ||||||||||
Construction Materials - 1.6% | Sensient Technologies |
22,000 | 393,800 | |||||||||
Ash Grove Cement Company Cl. B |
50,518 | 9,093,240 | ||||||||||
ElkCorp |
48,000 | 1,615,680 | 18,785,148 | |||||||||
Florida Rock Industries |
25,475 | 1,249,803 | ||||||||||
Heywood Williams Groupa |
958,837 | 1,670,301 | Textiles - 0.1% | |||||||||
345,000 | 3,610,080 | Unifia |
165,100 | 501,904 | ||||||||
17,239,104 | Other Industrial Products - 2.0% | |||||||||||
Brady Corporation Cl. A |
228,800 | 8,277,984 | ||||||||||
Industrial Components - 1.6% | Diebold |
85,000 | 3,230,000 | |||||||||
AMETEK |
86,000 | 3,658,440 | Kimball International Cl. B |
437,380 | 4,649,349 | |||||||
Barnes Group |
2,000 | 66,000 | ||||||||||
Bel Fuse Cl. A |
22,900 | 572,500 |
22 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
DECEMBER 31, 2005 |
|||||||||||||||
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||
Industrial Products (continued) |
Printing - 0.1% | |||||||||||
Other Industrial Products (continued) | Bowne & Co. |
68,100 | $ | 1,010,604 | ||||||||
Maxwell Technologiesa |
21,500 | $ | 304,655 | |||||||||
Myers Industries |
30,499 | 444,675 | Transportation and Logistics - 3.8% | |||||||||
158,600 | 2,775,500 | Alexander & Baldwin |
60,000 | 3,254,400 | ||||||||
Steelcase Cl. A |
50,000 | 791,500 | Atlas Air Worldwide Holdingsa |
29,000 | 1,290,500 | |||||||
C. H. Robinson Worldwide |
80,000 | 2,962,400 | ||||||||||
20,473,663 | 100,000 | 2,130,000 | ||||||||||
123,125 | 4,625,806 | |||||||||||
Total (Cost $105,116,347) |
176,279,332 | Forward Air |
234,750 | 8,603,587 | ||||||||
286,635 | 3,161,584 | |||||||||||
Industrial Services 13.3% |
Hub Group Cl. Aa |
87,200 | 3,082,520 | |||||||||
Advertising and Publishing - 0.7% | Landstar System |
11,200 | 467,488 | |||||||||
Interpublic Group of Companiesa |
510,000 | 4,921,500 | Patriot Transportation Holdinga |
96,300 | 6,247,944 | |||||||
24,000 | 1,107,360 | UTI Worldwide |
35,000 | 3,249,400 | ||||||||
45,000 | 814,950 | |||||||||||
39,075,629 | ||||||||||||
6,843,810 | ||||||||||||
Other Industrial Services - 0.5% | ||||||||||||
Commercial Services - 4.7% | Landauer |
117,900 | 5,434,011 | |||||||||
ABM Industries |
134,800 | 2,635,340 | ||||||||||
Aaron Rents |
4,500 | 94,860 | Total (Cost $78,612,248) |
137,016,560 | ||||||||
Allied Waste Industriesa |
188,800 | 1,650,112 | ||||||||||
BB Holdings |
194,900 | 1,319,473 | Natural Resources 9.4% |
|||||||||
Central Parking |
18,300 | 251,076 | Energy Services - 3.1% | |||||||||
Convergys Corporationa |
121,000 | 1,917,850 | 14,700 | 1,147,041 | ||||||||
158,100 | 3,645,786 | Carbo Ceramics |
148,400 | 8,387,568 | ||||||||
5,000 | 133,550 | 10,000 | 373,600 | |||||||||
104,000 | 2,913,040 | ENSCO International |
6,443 | 285,747 | ||||||||
181,175 | 7,649,209 | Global Industriesa |
54,500 | 618,575 | ||||||||
75,000 | 3,938,250 | 160,000 | 2,257,600 | |||||||||
53,400 | 685,122 | Helmerich & Payne |
62,300 | 3,856,993 | ||||||||
MPS Groupa |
564,600 | 7,718,082 | Input/Outputa |
669,100 | 4,703,773 | |||||||
Manpower |
105,800 | 4,919,700 | Key Energy Servicesa |
10,000 | 134,700 | |||||||
Monster Worldwidea |
64,000 | 2,612,480 | 43,000 | 1,312,360 | ||||||||
New Horizons Worldwidea |
228,600 | 157,734 | Tidewater |
14,000 | 622,440 | |||||||
RemedyTemp Cl. Aa |
160,700 | 1,486,475 | 105,000 | 4,317,600 | ||||||||
Renaissance Learning |
15,000 | 283,650 | Veritas DGCa |
5,000 | 177,450 | |||||||
Reynolds & Reynolds Company Cl. A |
27,000 | 757,890 | W-H Energy Servicesa |
33,800 | 1,118,104 | |||||||
Rollins |
130,500 | 2,572,155 | 207,600 | 2,997,744 | ||||||||
Spherion Corporationa |
53,000 | 530,530 | ||||||||||
TRC Companiesa |
3,600 | 39,420 | 32,311,295 | |||||||||
Viad Corporation |
9,025 | 264,703 | ||||||||||
30,000 | 660,000 | Oil and Gas - 3.2% | ||||||||||
50,000 | 1,930,500 | |||||||||||
48,836,487 | Cimarex Energya |
208,990 | 8,988,660 | |||||||||
50,000 | 2,640,000 | |||||||||||
Engineering and Construction - 1.4% | Penn Virginia |
23,300 | 1,337,420 | |||||||||
66,000 | 1,452,000 | 65,800 | 1,179,794 | |||||||||
Fleetwood Enterprisesa |
234,300 | 2,893,605 | 76,500 | 3,039,345 | ||||||||
21,000 | 772,380 | Pogo Producing Company |
1,700 | 84,677 | ||||||||
174,300 | 3,376,191 | Remington Oil & Gasa |
78,500 | 2,865,250 | ||||||||
Jacobs Engineering Groupa |
10,000 | 678,700 | 153,500 | 10,453,350 | ||||||||
Washington Group Internationalc |
100,000 | 5,297,000 | Stone Energya |
18,500 | 842,305 | |||||||
14,469,876 | 33,361,301 | |||||||||||
Food and Tobacco Processors - 0.4% | Precious Metals and Mining - 2.2% | |||||||||||
MGP Ingredients |
216,400 | 2,553,520 | Agnico-Eagle Mines |
66,500 | 1,314,040 | |||||||
Seneca Foods Cl. Aa |
59,400 | 1,143,450 | 38,500 | 612,150 | ||||||||
Seneca Foods Cl. Ba |
10,900 | 198,925 | Bema Golda |
300,000 | 873,000 | |||||||
Etruscan Resourcesa |
675,900 | 930,311 | ||||||||||
3,895,895 | Gammon Lake Resourcesa |
206,300 | 2,454,970 | |||||||||
Glamis Golda |
237,000 | 6,512,760 | ||||||||||
Industrial Distribution - 1.7% | Golden Star Resourcesa |
135,000 | 356,400 | |||||||||
Central Steel & Wire |
5,634 | 3,222,648 | Hecla Mining Companya |
598,000 | 2,427,880 | |||||||
Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers |
310,400 | 13,114,400 | IAMGOLD Corporation |
220,000 | 1,720,400 | |||||||
Strategic Distributiona |
115,000 | 1,113,200 | ||||||||||
17,450,248 | ||||||||||||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 23 |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST |
|||||||||||||||
Schedule of Investments |
|||||||||||||||
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||
Natural Resources (continued) |
186,000 | $ | 2,559,360 | |||||||||
Precious Metals and Mining (continued) | 5,000 | 93,050 | ||||||||||
140,000 | $ | 1,006,600 | Zebra Technologies Cl. Aa |
76,525 | 3,279,096 | |||||||
128,500 | 2,810,295 | |||||||||||
Miramar Mininga |
245,000 | 612,500 | 71,794,622 | |||||||||
46,000 | 866,180 | |||||||||||
10,780 | 124,725 | Distribution - 1.9% | ||||||||||
Agilysys |
165,125 | 3,008,578 | ||||||||||
22,622,211 | Anixter International |
78,900 | 3,086,568 | |||||||||
Benchmark Electronicsa |
138,800 | 4,667,844 | ||||||||||
Real Estate - 0.7% | 33,500 | 928,955 | ||||||||||
Alico |
27,000 | 1,220,130 | 1,140,000 | 4,172,400 | ||||||||
CB Richard Ellis Group Cl. Aa |
70,000 | 4,119,500 | 86,500 | 3,432,320 | ||||||||
Consolidated-Tomoka Land |
13,564 | 961,688 | ||||||||||
46,500 | 1,192,725 | 19,296,665 | ||||||||||
7,494,043 | Internet Software and Services - 1.1% | |||||||||||
87,200 | 611,272 | |||||||||||
Other Natural Resources - 0.2% | 155,400 | 2,282,826 | ||||||||||
PICO Holdingsa |
55,200 | 1,780,752 | CryptoLogic |
137,000 | 2,683,830 | |||||||
10,000 | 66,000 | |||||||||||
Total (Cost $57,309,057) |
97,569,602 | 72,000 | 1,087,200 | |||||||||
40,000 | 838,000 | |||||||||||
Technology 22.5% |
Lionbridge Technologiesa |
37,500 | 263,250 | |||||||||
Aerospace and Defense - 0.8% | 14,000 | 157,220 | ||||||||||
Allied Defense Group (The)a |
45,700 | 1,040,589 | 245,400 | 1,904,304 | ||||||||
33,000 | 1,407,450 | 20,000 | 87,000 | |||||||||
Astronics Corporationa |
52,400 | 555,440 | Satyam Computer Services ADR |
20,000 | 731,800 | |||||||
Ducommuna |
117,200 | 2,503,392 | 170,000 | 717,400 | ||||||||
Herley Industriesa |
2,000 | 33,020 | ||||||||||
72,800 | 1,314,040 | 11,430,102 | ||||||||||
Integral Systems |
49,800 | 939,228 | ||||||||||
IT Services - 4.0% | ||||||||||||
7,793,159 | answerthinka |
655,000 | 2,783,750 | |||||||||
649,000 | 5,101,140 | |||||||||||
Components and Systems - 7.0% | Black Box |
47,000 | 2,226,860 | |||||||||
167,000 | 971,940 | CACI International Cl. Aa |
10,000 | 573,800 | ||||||||
American Power Conversion |
151,200 | 3,326,400 | CGI Group Cl. Aa |
136,700 | 1,101,802 | |||||||
Analogic Corporation |
40,900 | 1,957,065 | 10,000 | 66,000 | ||||||||
Belden CDT |
57,800 | 1,412,054 | 55,000 | 301,950 | ||||||||
Checkpoint Systemsa |
52,000 | 1,281,800 | Computer Task Groupa |
101,100 | 399,345 | |||||||
Dionex Corporationa |
81,000 | 3,975,480 | Covansys Corporationa |
238,900 | 3,251,429 | |||||||
25,000 | 665,250 | DiamondCluster Internationala |
80,400 | 638,376 | ||||||||
146,300 | 5,961,725 | Forrester Researcha |
40,300 | 755,625 | ||||||||
168,500 | 4,006,930 | Gartner Cl. Aa |
126,000 | 1,625,400 | ||||||||
42,800 | 1,217,660 | Keanea |
443,000 | 4,877,430 | ||||||||
Imation Corporation |
15,700 | 723,299 | MAXIMUS |
127,900 | 4,692,651 | |||||||
InFocus Corporationa |
245,800 | 985,658 | Perot Systems Cl. Aa |
165,100 | 2,334,514 | |||||||
KEMET Corporationa |
95,600 | 675,892 | 731,602 | 4,162,815 | ||||||||
Kronosa |
38,775 | 1,623,121 | Syntel |
152,679 | 3,180,304 | |||||||
Methode Electronics |
50,000 | 498,500 | 215,200 | 3,656,248 | ||||||||
15,000 | 288,900 | |||||||||||
642,200 | 8,695,388 | 41,729,439 | ||||||||||
40,000 | 547,200 | |||||||||||
Perceptrona |
397,400 | 2,813,592 | Semiconductors and Equipment - 2.3% | |||||||||
325,700 | 7,406,418 | 58,000 | 269,700 | |||||||||
Power-Onea |
10,000 | 60,200 | Brooks Automationa |
53,000 | 664,090 | |||||||
REMECa |
143,387 | 182,101 | Cabot Microelectronicsa |
131,200 | 3,848,096 | |||||||
Radiant Systemsa |
32,500 | 395,200 | CEVAa |
31,666 | 198,229 | |||||||
Richardson Electronics |
201,000 | 1,457,250 | Cognex Corporation |
55,300 | 1,663,977 | |||||||
36,240 | 1,167,653 | 11,980 | 27,075 | |||||||||
Symbol Technologies |
99,389 | 1,274,167 | 53,600 | 373,056 | ||||||||
TTM Technologiesa |
221,400 | 2,081,160 | 14,500 | 514,895 | ||||||||
Technitrol |
322,400 | 5,513,040 | DSP Groupa |
115,000 | 2,881,900 | |||||||
Tektronix |
159,680 | 4,504,573 | DTSa |
64,100 | 948,680 | |||||||
50,000 | 193,500 | Exar Corporationa |
181,976 | 2,278,340 |
24 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
DECEMBER 31, 2005 |
|||||||||||||||
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||
Technology (continued) |
Utilities 0.2% |
|||||||||||
Semiconductors and Equipment (continued) | CH Energy Group |
44,500 | $ | 2,042,550 | ||||||||
Fairchild Semiconductor |
Southern Uniona |
11,576 | 273,541 | |||||||||
51,200 | $ | 865,792 | ||||||||||
20,000 | 638,000 | Total (Cost $2,127,413) |
2,316,091 | |||||||||
57,450 | 758,340 | |||||||||||
105,800 | 935,272 | Miscellaneous (e) 4.9% |
||||||||||
36,000 | 798,120 | Total (Cost $47,892,514) |
50,516,897 | |||||||||
53,800 | 1,297,656 | |||||||||||
OmniVision Technologiesa |
38,800 | 774,448 | TOTAL COMMON STOCKS |
|||||||||
100,000 | 426,000 | (Cost $722,347,336) |
1,082,864,290 | |||||||||
Semitoola |
50,000 | 544,000 | ||||||||||
Silicon Storage Technologya |
88,900 | 448,945 | PREFERRED STOCKS 0.2% |
|||||||||
Staktek Holdingsa |
184,700 | 1,374,168 | Aristotle Corporation 11.00% Conv. |
4,800 | 37,440 | |||||||
Veeco Instrumentsa |
65,000 | 1,126,450 | 100 | 1,900 | ||||||||
85,000 | 1,472,625 | |||||||||||
23,655,229 | ||||||||||||
TOTAL PREFERRED STOCKS |
||||||||||||
Software - 2.8% | (Cost $1,311,958) |
1,511,965 | ||||||||||
Adobe Systems |
71,207 | 2,631,811 | ||||||||||
20,000 | 853,800 | PRINCIPAL |
||||||||||
Aspen Technologya |
27,100 | 212,735 | AMOUNT |
|||||||||
Business Objects ADRa |
20,500 | 828,405 | CORPORATE BONDS 0.1% |
|||||||||
35,000 | 504,350 | Athena Neurosciences Finance 7.25% |
||||||||||
268,400 | 1,760,704 | Senior Note due 2/21/08 |
$1,000,000 | 976,250 | ||||||||
JDA Software Groupa |
99,900 | 1,699,299 | Dixie Group 7.00% |
|||||||||
46,000 | 645,840 | Conv. Sub. Deb. due 5/15/12 |
445,000 | 427,200 | ||||||||
119,400 | 3,326,484 | |||||||||||
49,200 | 86,100 | TOTAL CORPORATE BONDS |
||||||||||
Novella |
20,000 | 176,600 | (Cost $1,213,707) |
1,403,450 | ||||||||
PLATO Learninga |
149,642 | 1,188,157 | ||||||||||
Progress Softwarea |
30,500 | 865,590 | REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS 16.2% |
|||||||||
SPSSa |
179,600 | 5,555,028 | State Street Bank & Trust Company, | |||||||||
82,600 | 1,805,636 | 4.10% dated 12/30/05, due 1/3/06, |
||||||||||
Transaction Systems Architects Cl. Aa |
203,150 | 5,848,689 | maturity value $82,000,339 (collateralized |
|||||||||
40,000 | 1,378,800 | by obligations of various U.S. Government |
||||||||||
Agencies, valued at $84,015,178) |
||||||||||||
29,368,028 | (Cost $81,963,000) |
81,963,000 | ||||||||||
Telecommunications - 2.6% | Lehman Brothers (Tri-Party), | |||||||||||
ADTRAN |
65,000 | 1,933,100 | 4.05% dated 12/30/05, due 1/3/06, |
|||||||||
Broadwing Corporationa |
1,000 | 6,050 | maturity value $85,038,250 (collateralized |
|||||||||
75,100 | 1,110,729 | by obligations of various U.S. Government |
||||||||||
China Techfaith Wireless Communication |
Agencies, valued at $86,742,959) |
|||||||||||
100,000 | 1,349,990 | (Cost $85,000,000) |
85,000,000 | |||||||||
35,000 | 34,300 | |||||||||||
373,400 | 5,156,654 | TOTAL REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS |
||||||||||
233,700 | 1,441,929 | (Cost $166,963,000) |
166,963,000 | |||||||||
IDT Corporationa |
25,000 | 289,000 | ||||||||||
65,000 | 760,500 | COLLATERAL RECEIVED FOR SECURITIES LOANED 7.1% |
||||||||||
200,000 | 574,000 | U.S. Treasury Bonds | ||||||||||
93,600 | 167,544 | 5.25%-8.125% due 8/15/19-5/15/30 |
286,945 | |||||||||
95,000 | 1,453,500 | Money Market Funds | ||||||||||
Scientific-Atlanta |
117,300 | 5,052,111 | State Street Navigator Securities Lending |
|||||||||
179,000 | 1,763,150 | Prime Portfolio |
73,215,181 | |||||||||
Tollgrade Communicationsa |
20,000 | 218,600 | ||||||||||
84,500 | 2,342,340 | TOTAL COLLATERAL RECEIVED FOR |
||||||||||
West Corporationa |
75,000 | 3,161,250 | SECURITIES LOANED |
|||||||||
20,000 | 63,400 | (Cost $73,502,126) |
73,502,126 | |||||||||
26,878,147 | ||||||||||||
Total (Cost $170,978,081) |
231,945,391 | |||||||||||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 25 |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST |
DECEMBER 31, 2005 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Schedule of Investments | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VALUE | |||
TOTAL INVESTMENTS 128.5% | |||
(Cost $965,338,127) |
$ | 1,326,244,831 | |
LIABILITIES LESS CASH | |||
AND OTHER ASSETS (7.2)% |
(74,124,745 | ) | |
PREFERRED STOCK (21.3)% | (220,000,000 | ) | |
NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO | |||
COMMON STOCKHOLDERS 100.0% |
$ | 1,032,120,086 | |
26 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST |
DECEMBER 31, 2005 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Statement of Assets and Liabilities | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ASSETS: | ||||
Investments at value (including collateral on loaned securities)* | ||||
Non-Affiliates (Cost $795,757,459) |
$ | 1,152,896,251 | ||
Affiliated Companies (Cost $2,617,668) |
6,385,580 | |||
Total investments at value | 1,159,281,831 | |||
Repurchase agreements (at cost and value) | 166,963,000 | |||
Cash | 1,137,297 | |||
Receivable for investments sold | 4,883,179 | |||
Receivable for dividends and interest | 782,662 | |||
Prepaid expenses | 29,550 | |||
Total Assets |
1,333,077,519 | |||
LIABILITIES: | ||||
Payable for collateral on loaned securities | 73,502,126 | |||
Payable for investments purchased | 5,583,642 | |||
Payable for investment advisory fee | 1,204,581 | |||
Preferred dividends accrued but not yet declared | 288,452 | |||
Accrued expenses | 378,632 | |||
Total Liabilities |
80,957,433 | |||
PREFERRED STOCK: | ||||
5.90% Cumulative Preferred Stock $0.001 par value, $25 liquidation value per share; 8,800,000 shares outstanding | 220,000,000 | |||
Total Preferred Stock |
220,000,000 | |||
NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS | $ | 1,032,120,086 | ||
ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: | ||||
Common Stock paid-in capital $0.001 par value per share; 54,710,798 shares outstanding (150,000,000 shares authorized) | $ | 664,322,777 | ||
Undistributed net investment income (loss) | 321,412 | |||
Accumulated net realized gain (loss) on investments | 6,857,642 | |||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments | 360,906,704 | |||
Preferred dividends accrued but not yet declared | (288,449 | ) | ||
Net Assets applicable to Common Stockholders (net asset value per share $18.87) |
$ | 1,032,120,086 | ||
*Investments at identified cost (including $73,502,126 of collateral on loaned securities) | $ | 798,375,127 | ||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 27 |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST | YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Statement of Operations |
INVESTMENT INCOME: | ||||
Income: | ||||
Dividends |
||||
Non-Affiliates |
$ | 11,526,693 | ||
Interest |
2,999,575 | |||
Securities lending |
297,885 | |||
Total income | 14,824,153 | |||
Expenses: | ||||
Investment advisory fees |
13,360,367 | |||
Stockholder reports |
478,219 | |||
Custody and transfer agent fees |
275,453 | |||
Directors fees |
114,805 | |||
Administrative and office facilities expenses |
99,404 | |||
Professional fees |
54,394 | |||
Other expenses |
120,099 | |||
Total expenses | 14,502,741 | |||
Net investment income (loss) | 321,412 | |||
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS: | ||||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments | ||||
Non-Affiliates |
104,573,195 | |||
Affiliated Companies |
(5,394,384 | ) | ||
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments | (4,983,024 | ) | ||
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments | 94,195,787 | |||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS |
94,517,199 | |||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO PREFERRED STOCKHOLDERS | (12,980,000 | ) | ||
NET INCREASE
(DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS |
$ | 81,537,199 | ||
28 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST | ||
Statement of Changes in Net Assets |
Year ended | Year ended | |||||||
12/31/05 | 12/31/04 | |||||||
INVESTMENT OPERATIONS: | ||||||||
Net investment income (loss) | $ | 321,412 | $ | (4,450,007 | ) | |||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments | 99,178,811 | 108,080,947 | ||||||
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments | (4,983,024 | ) | 87,658,900 | |||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from investment operations | 94,517,199 | 191,289,840 | ||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO PREFERRED STOCKHOLDERS: | ||||||||
Net realized gain on investments | (12,980,000 | ) | (12,980,000 | ) | ||||
Total distributions to Preferred Stockholders | (12,980,000 | ) | (12,980,000 | ) | ||||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS |
81,537,199 | 178,309,840 | ||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: | ||||||||
Net realized gain on investments | (85,780,292 | ) | (78,920,089 | ) | ||||
Total distributions to Common Stockholders | (85,780,292 | ) | (78,920,089 | ) | ||||
CAPITAL STOCK TRANSACTIONS: | ||||||||
Reinvestment of distributions to Common Stockholders | 43,058,750 | 43,141,563 | ||||||
Total capital stock transactions | 43,058,750 | 43,141,563 | ||||||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS | 38,815,657 | 142,531,314 | ||||||
NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: | ||||||||
Beginning of year |
993,304,429 | 850,773,115 | ||||||
End of year (including undistributed net investment income of $321,412 at 12/31/05) |
$ | 1,032,120,086 | $ | 993,304,429 | ||||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 29 |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST | ||
Financial Highlights |
This table is presented to show selected data for a share of Common Stock outstanding throughout each period, and to assist stockholders in evaluating the Funds performance for the periods presented.
Years ended December 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||
2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | ||||||||||||||||
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF PERIOD | $18.95 | $17.03 | $13.22 | $17.31 | $16.56 | |||||||||||||||
INVESTMENT OPERATIONS: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income (loss) |
0.01 | (0.08 | ) | (0.05 | ) | (0.02 | ) | 0.05 | ||||||||||||
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments |
1.75 | 3.81 | 5.64 | (2.25 | ) | 2.58 | ||||||||||||||
Total investment operations |
1.76 | 3.73 | 5.59 | (2.27 | ) | 2.63 | ||||||||||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO PREFERRED STOCKHOLDERS: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income |
| | | (0.01 | ) | (0.01 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net realized gain on investments |
(0.24 | ) | (0.26 | ) | (0.26 | ) | (0.28 | ) | (0.30 | ) | ||||||||||
Total distributions to Preferred Stockholders |
(0.24 | ) | (0.26 | ) | (0.26 | ) | (0.29 | ) | (0.31 | ) | ||||||||||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS |
1.52 | 3.47 | 5.33 | (2.56 | ) | 2.32 | ||||||||||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income |
| | | (0.07 | ) | (0.05 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net realized gain on investments |
(1.61 | ) | (1.55 | ) | (1.30 | ) | (1.44 | ) | (1.44 | ) | ||||||||||
Total distributions to Common Stockholders |
(1.61 | ) | (1.55 | ) | (1.30 | ) | (1.51 | ) | (1.49 | ) | ||||||||||
CAPITAL STOCK TRANSACTIONS: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Effect of reinvestment of distributions by Common Stockholders |
0.01 | 0.00 | (0.00 | ) | (0.02 | ) | (0.08 | ) | ||||||||||||
Effect of rights offering and Preferred Stock offering |
| | (0.22 | ) | | | ||||||||||||||
Total capital stock transactions |
0.01 | 0.00 | (0.22 | ) | (0.02 | ) | (0.08 | ) | ||||||||||||
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD | $18.87 | $18.95 | $17.03 | $13.22 | $17.31 | |||||||||||||||
MARKET VALUE, END OF PERIOD | $20.08 | $20.44 | $17.21 | $13.25 | $15.72 | |||||||||||||||
TOTAL RETURN (a): | ||||||||||||||||||||
Market Value | 6.95 | % | 29.60 | % | 41.96 | % | (6.87 | )% | 20.03 | % | ||||||||||
Net Asset Value | 8.41 | % | 21.42 | % | 40.80 | % | (15.61 | )% | 15.23 | % | ||||||||||
RATIOS BASED ON AVERAGE NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Total expenses (b,c) | 1.49 | % | 1.51 | % | 1.49 | % | 1.72 | % | 1.61 | % | ||||||||||
Management fee expense |
1.37 | % | 1.39 | % | 1.34 | % | 1.56 | % | 1.45 | % | ||||||||||
Other operating expenses |
0.12 | % | 0.12 | % | 0.15 | % | 0.16 | % | 0.16 | % | ||||||||||
Net investment income (loss) | 0.03 | % | (0.50 | )% | (0.36 | )% | (0.09 | )% | 0.35 | % | ||||||||||
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net Assets Applicable to Common Stockholders, | ||||||||||||||||||||
End of Period (in thousands) |
$1,032,120 | $993,304 | $850,773 | $560,776 | $689,141 | |||||||||||||||
Liquidation Value of Preferred Stock, | ||||||||||||||||||||
End of Period (in thousands) |
$220,000 | $220,000 | $220,000 | $160,000 | $160,000 | |||||||||||||||
Portfolio Turnover Rate | 31 | % | 30 | % | 23 | % | 35 | % | 30 | % | ||||||||||
PREFERRED STOCK: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Total shares outstanding | 8,800,000 | 8,800,000 | 8,800,000 | 6,400,000 | 6,400,000 | |||||||||||||||
Asset coverage per share | $142.29 | $137.88 | $121.68 | $112.62 | $132.68 | |||||||||||||||
Liquidation preference per share | $25.00 | $25.00 | $25.00 | $25.00 | $25.00 | |||||||||||||||
Average market value per share (d): | ||||||||||||||||||||
5.90% Cumulative |
$24.75 | $24.50 | $25.04 | | | |||||||||||||||
7.80% Cumulative |
| | $25.87 | $26.37 | $25.70 | |||||||||||||||
7.30% Tax-Advantaged Cumulative |
| | $25.53 | $25.82 | $25.37 | |||||||||||||||
30 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Notes to Financial Statements |
Summary of Significant Accounting Policies: Royce Value Trust, Inc. (the Fund) was incorporated under the laws of the State of Maryland on July 1, 1986 as a diversified closed-end investment company. The Fund commenced operations on November 26, 1986. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, and the reported amounts of income and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Valuation of Investments: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on the valuation date. Securities that trade on an exchange or Nasdaq are valued at their last reported sales price or Nasdaq official closing price taken from the primary market in which each security trades or, if no sale is reported for such day, at their bid price. Other over-the-counter securities for which market quotations are readily available are valued at their bid price. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available are valued at their fair value under procedures established by the Funds Board of Directors. Bonds and other fixed income securities may be valued by reference to other securities with comparable ratings, interest rates and maturities, using established independent pricing services. Investment Transactions and Related Investment Income: Investment transactions are accounted for on the trade date. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date and any non-cash dividend income is recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Interest income is recorded on an accrual basis. Realized gains and losses from investment transactions are determined on the basis of identified cost for book and tax purposes. Expenses: The Fund incurs direct and indirect expenses. Expenses directly attributable to the Fund are charged to the Funds operations, while expenses applicable to more than one of the Royce Funds are allocated in an equitable manner. Allocated personnel and occupancy costs related to The Royce Funds are included in administrative and office facilities expenses. The Fund has adopted a deferred fee agreement that allows the Funds Directors to defer the receipt of all or a portion of Directors Fees otherwise payable. The deferred fees are invested in certain Royce Funds until distributed in accordance with the agreement. Taxes: As a qualified regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, the Fund is not subject to income taxes to the extent that it distributes substantially all of its taxable income for its |
|
fiscal year. The Schedule of Investments
includes information regarding income taxes under the caption Income Tax Information. Distributions: The Fund currently has a policy of paying quarterly distributions on the Funds Common Stock. Distributions are currently being made at the annual rate of 9% of the rolling average of the prior four calendar quarterend NAVs of the Funds Common Stock, with the fourth quarter distribution being the greater of 2.25% of the rolling average or the distribution required by IRS regulations. Distributions to Preferred Stockholders are recorded on an accrual basis and paid quarterly. The Fund is required to allocate long-term capital gain distributions and other types of income proportionately to distributions made to holders of shares of Common Stock and Preferred Stock. To the extent that distributions are not paid from long-term capital gains, net investment income or net short-term capital gains, they will represent a return of capital. Distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations that may differ from accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Permanent book and tax basis differences relating to stockholder distributions will result in reclassifications within the capital accounts. Undistributed net investment income may include temporary book and tax basis differences, which will reverse in a subsequent period. Any taxable income or gain remaining undistributed at fiscal year end is distributed in the following year. Repurchase Agreements: The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements with institutions that the Funds investment adviser has determined are creditworthy. The Fund restricts repurchase agreements to maturities of no more than seven days. Securities pledged as collateral for repurchase agreements, which are held until maturity of the repurchase agreements, are marked-to-market daily and maintained at a value at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). Repurchase agreements could involve certain risks in the event of default or insolvency of the counter-party, including possible delays or restrictions upon the ability of the Fund to dispose of the underlying securities. Securities Lending: The Fund loans securities to qualified institutional investors for the purpose of realizing additional income. Collateral on all securities loaned for the Fund is accepted in cash and cash equivalents and invested temporarily by the custodian. The collateral is equal to at least 100% of the current market value of the loaned securities. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. Capital Stock: The Fund issued 2,294,908 and 2,459,541 shares of Common Stock as reinvestment of distributions by Common Stockholders for the years ended December 31, 2005 and 2004, respectively. |
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 31 |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST | ||
Notes to Financial Statements (continued) |
At December 31, 2005, 8,800,000 shares of
5.90% Cumulative Preferred Stock were outstanding. Commencing October 9, 2008 and
thereafter, the Fund, at its option, may redeem the Cumulative Preferred Stock,
in whole or in part, at the redemption price. The Cumulative Preferred Stock is
classified outside of permanent equity (net assets applicable to Common Stockholders)
in the accompanying financial statements in accordance with Emerging Issues Task
Force (EITF) Topic D-98, Classification and Measurement of Redeemable Securities,
that requires preferred securities that are redeemable for cash or other assets
to be classified outside of permanent equity to the extent that the redemption is
at a fixed or determinable price and at the option of the holder or upon the occurrence
of an event that is not solely within the control of the issuer.
The Fund is required to meet certain asset coverage tests with respect to the Cumulative Preferred Stock as required by the 1940 Act. In addition, pursuant to the Rating Agency Guidelines established by Moodys, the Fund is required to maintain a certain discounted asset coverage. If the Fund fails to meet these requirements and does not correct such failure, the Fund may be required to redeem, in part or in full, the Cumulative Preferred Stock at a redemption price of $25.00 per share, plus an amount equal to the accumulated and unpaid dividends, whether or not declared on such shares, in order to meet these requirements. Additionally, failure to meet the foregoing asset coverage requirements could restrict the Funds ability to pay dividends to Common Stockholders and could lead to sales of portfolio securities at inopportune times. The Fund has met these requirements since issuing the Cumulative Preferred Stock. Investment Advisory Agreement: As compensation for its services under the Investment Advisory Agreement, Royce & Associates, LLC (Royce) receives a fee comprised of a Basic Fee (Basic Fee) and an adjustment to the Basic Fee based on the investment performance of the Fund in relation to the investment record of the S&P SmallCap 600 Index (S&P 600). The Basic Fee is a monthly fee equal to 1/12 of 1% (1% on an annualized basis) of the average of the Funds month-end net assets applicable to Common Stockholders, plus the liquidation value of Preferred Stock, for the rolling 60-month period ending with such month (the |
|
performance period). The Basic
Fee for each month is increased or decreased at the rate of 1/12 of .05% for each
percentage point that the investment performance of the Fund exceeds, or is exceeded
by, the percentage change in the investment record of the S&P 600 for the performance
period by more than two percentage points. The performance period for each such
month is a rolling 60-month period ending with such month. The maximum increase
or decrease in the Basic Fee for any month may not exceed 1/12 of .5%. Accordingly,
for each month, the maximum monthly fee rate as adjusted for performance is 1/12
of 1.5% and is payable if the investment performance of the Fund exceeds the percentage
change in the investment record of the S&P 600 by 12 or more percentage points
for the performance period, and the minimum monthly fee rate as adjusted for performance
is 1/12 of .5% and is payable if the percentage change in the investment record
of the S&P 600 exceeds the investment performance of the Fund by 12 or more
percentage points for the performance period. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Royce is not entitled to receive any fee for any month when the investment performance of the Fund for the rolling 36-month period ending with such month is negative. In the event that the Funds investment performance for such a performance period is less than zero, Royce will not be required to refund to the Fund any fee earned in respect of any prior performance period. Royce has voluntarily committed to waive the portion of its investment advisory fee attributable to an issue of the Funds Preferred Stock for any month in which the Funds average annual NAV total return since issuance of the Preferred Stock fails to exceed the applicable Preferred Stocks dividend rate. For the 12 rolling 60-month periods ending in 2005, the investment performance of the Fund exceeded the investment performance of the S&P 600 by 7% to 23%. Accordingly, the investment advisory fee consisted of a Basic Fee of $9,219,099 and an upward adjustment of $4,141,268 for performance of the Fund above that of the S&P 600. For the year ended December 31, 2005, the Fund accrued and paid Royce advisory fees totaling $13,360,367. The Fund paid Legg Mason Wood Walker, Incorporated, (Legg Mason), an affiliate of Royce, $4,408 in brokerage commissions for security transactions during the year ended December 31, 2005. |
32 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
DECEMBER 31, 2005 | ||
Distributions paid from: |
2005 | 2004 | ||||
Ordinary income |
$ | 11,811,731 | $ | | ||
Long-term capital gain |
86,948,561 | 91,900,089 | ||||
$ | 98,760,292 | $ | 91,900,089 | |||
As of December 31, 2005, the tax basis components of distributable earnings included in stockholders equity were as follows:
Undistributed net investment income |
$ | 1,599,418 | ||
Undistributed long-term capital gain |
7,803,757 | |||
Unrealized appreciation |
358,682,583 | |||
Accrued preferred distributions |
(288,449 | ) | ||
$ | 367,797,309 | |||
The difference between book basis and tax basis unrealized appreciation is attributable primarily to the tax deferral on wash sales and the unrealized gains on investments in Passive Foreign Investment Companies.
For financial reporting purposes, capital accounts and distributions to stockholders are adjusted to reflect the tax character of permanent book / tax differences. For the year ended December 31, 2005, the Fund recorded the following permanent reclassifications, which relate primarily to the current net operating losses. Results of operations and net assets were not affected by these reclassifications.
Undistributed | Accumulated | ||||||||||
Net Investment | Net Realized | Paid-in | |||||||||
Income | Gain (Loss) | Capital | |||||||||
$ | | $ | (178,960 | ) | $ | 178,960 | |||||
Shares | Market Value | Cost of | Cost of | Realized | Dividend | Shares | Market Value | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Affiliated Company | 12/31/04 | 12/31/04 | Purchases | Sales | Gain (Loss) | Income | 12/31/05 | 12/31/05 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Falcon Products* | 941,600 | $ | 197,736 | | $ | 5,418,871 | $ | (5,394,384 | ) | | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Peerless Manufacturing | 158,600 | 2,299,700 | | | | | 158,600 | $ | 2,775,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Synalloy Corporation | 345,000 | 3,415,500 | | | | 345,000 | 3,610,080 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
$ | 5,912,936 | $ | (5,394,384 | ) | | $ | 6,385,580 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
* Not an Affiliated Company at December 31, 2005. |
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 33 |
ROYCE VALUE TRUST | ||
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of Royce Value Trust, Inc.
TAIT, WELLER & BAKER LLP
34 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Schedule of Investments |
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||
COMMON STOCKS 107.4% | Restaurants and Lodgings - 0.1% | |||||||||||
Benihana Cl. Aa |
800 | $ | 18,432 | |||||||||
Consumer Products 5.7% | 2,100 | 67,137 | ||||||||||
Apparel and Shoes - 2.4% | ||||||||||||
Cherokee |
42,300 | $ | 1,454,697 | 85,569 | ||||||||
Delta Apparel |
146,400 | 2,276,520 | ||||||||||
50,000 | 390,500 | Retail Stores - 4.3% | ||||||||||
14,200 | 0 | 7,600 | 110,580 | |||||||||
Steven Madden |
14,500 | 423,835 | 113,000 | 1,866,760 | ||||||||
76,600 | 46,726 | Buckle (The) |
35,500 | 1,144,520 | ||||||||
Skechers U.S.A. Cl. Aa |
10,000 | 153,200 | Cachea |
3,200 | 55,424 | |||||||
Stride Rite |
10,000 | 135,600 | Casual Male Retail Groupa |
2,000 | 12,260 | |||||||
Weyco Group |
120,000 | 2,292,000 | Cato Corporation Cl. A |
71,850 | 1,541,182 | |||||||
1,700 | 35,411 | |||||||||||
7,173,078 | 31,477 | 539,831 | ||||||||||
Deb Shops |
19,900 | 591,627 | ||||||||||
Collectibles - 0.4% | La Senza Corporation |
99,900 | 1,632,844 | |||||||||
Topps Company (The) |
148,500 | 1,103,355 | Shoe Carnivala |
11,000 | 241,120 | |||||||
Stein Mart |
148,900 | 2,702,535 | ||||||||||
Food/Beverage/Tobacco - 0.4% | United Retail Groupa |
60,600 | 796,890 | |||||||||
26,600 | 1,079,960 | 74,000 | 1,034,520 | |||||||||
Nutrition 21a |
40,000 | 25,680 | 32,000 | 386,560 | ||||||||
1,105,640 | 12,692,064 | |||||||||||
Home Furnishing and Appliances - 0.4% | Other Consumer Services - 0.4% | |||||||||||
Lifetime Brands |
52,554 | 1,086,291 | Ambassadors Group |
15,000 | 343,350 | |||||||
Stanley Furniture Company |
5,000 | 115,900 | Ambassadors International |
6,100 | 94,550 | |||||||
20,000 | 98,800 | |||||||||||
1,202,191 | 26,000 | 527,280 | ||||||||||
Publishing - 0.1% | 1,063,980 | |||||||||||
Educational Development |
10,600 | 85,860 | ||||||||||
Total (Cost $9,486,837) | 16,107,698 | |||||||||||
Sports and Recreation - 0.6% | ||||||||||||
Monaco Coach |
73,900 | 982,870 | Diversified Investment Companies 2.1% | |||||||||
National R.V. Holdingsa |
31,800 | 200,022 | Closed-End Mutual Funds - 2.1% | |||||||||
7,400 | 28,120 | ASA Bermuda |
81,500 | 4,483,315 | ||||||||
Sturm, Ruger & Company |
95,000 | 665,950 | Central Fund of Canada Cl. A |
237,000 | 1,613,970 | |||||||
1,876,962 | Total (Cost $4,055,600) | 6,097,285 | ||||||||||
Other Consumer Products - 1.4% | Financial Intermediaries 7.0% | |||||||||||
Burnham Holdings Cl. A |
79,500 | 1,701,300 | Banking - 3.0% | |||||||||
Cobra Electronicsa |
10,000 | 133,700 | Abigail Adams National Bancorpc |
244,400 | 3,421,624 | |||||||
Cross (A. T.) Company Cl. Aa |
100,000 | 405,000 | Arrow Financial |
14,322 | 374,520 | |||||||
JAKKS Pacifica |
30,000 | 628,200 | 51,380 | 873,460 | ||||||||
Lazare Kaplan Internationala |
151,700 | 1,193,879 | 32,000 | 453,440 | ||||||||
6,000 | 90,660 | First National Lincoln |
40,200 | 706,837 | ||||||||
FirstBank NW |
4,930 | 156,873 | ||||||||||
4,152,739 | Lakeland Financial |
22,500 | 908,550 | |||||||||
Meta Financial Group |
44,800 | 907,200 | ||||||||||
Total (Cost $11,686,794) | 16,699,825 | Queen City Investmentsa |
948 | 801,060 | ||||||||
Sterling Bancorp |
22,869 | 451,205 | ||||||||||
Consumer Services 5.5% | ||||||||||||
Direct Marketing - 0.1% | 9,054,769 | |||||||||||
Sportsmans Guide (The)a |
6,000 | 143,100 | ||||||||||
5,000 | 63,000 | Insurance - 3.1% | ||||||||||
American Safety Insurance Holdingsa |
20,000 | 334,600 | ||||||||||
206,100 | Argonaut Groupa |
30,900 | 1,012,593 | |||||||||
First Acceptancea |
258,405 | 2,658,987 | ||||||||||
Leisure and Entertainment - 0.1% | Independence Holding |
33,534 | 655,590 | |||||||||
25,000 | 176,500 | NYMAGIC |
65,400 | 1,621,266 | ||||||||
9,500 | 93,765 | Navigators Groupa |
37,200 | 1,622,292 | ||||||||
5,000 | 46,250 | 100,000 | 510,000 | |||||||||
5,000 | 1,850 | Wellington Underwriting |
444,712 | 742,174 | ||||||||
20,000 | 102,400 | |||||||||||
9,157,502 | ||||||||||||
420,765 | ||||||||||||
Media and Broadcasting - 0.5% | ||||||||||||
Nelson (Thomas) |
28,300 | 697,595 | ||||||||||
69,750 | 941,625 | |||||||||||
1,639,220 | ||||||||||||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 35 |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | ||
Schedule of Investments |
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||
Financial Intermediaries (continued) | 55,000 | $ | 102,850 | |||||||||
Real Estate Investment Trusts - 0.3% | 26,500 | 551,200 | ||||||||||
Bimini Mortgage Management Cl. A |
99,000 | $ | 895,950 | 5,000 | 16,900 | |||||||
3,700 | 54,464 | |||||||||||
Securities Brokers - 0.5% | 30,000 | 197,700 | ||||||||||
First Albany |
45,000 | 312,750 | Nuveloa |
52,000 | 421,720 | |||||||
Sanders Morris Harris Group |
21,000 | 344,190 | 41,000 | 191,060 | ||||||||
21,233 | 798,148 | 78,000 | 592,800 | |||||||||
25,000 | 89,000 | |||||||||||
1,455,088 | 138,000 | 489,900 | ||||||||||
25,000 | 400,250 | |||||||||||
Other Financial Intermediaries - 0.1% | Sangamo BioSciencesa |
10,000 | 40,300 | |||||||||
Electronic Clearing Housea |
20,000 | 199,400 | 25,000 | 35,500 | ||||||||
61,900 | 443,823 | |||||||||||
Total (Cost $14,925,618) | 20,762,709 | Theragenics Corporationa |
145,800 | 440,316 | ||||||||
30,000 | 344,700 | |||||||||||
Financial Services 3.0% | ||||||||||||
Investment Management - 2.4% | 14,212,815 | |||||||||||
ADDENDA Capital |
48,000 | 1,298,636 | ||||||||||
Epoch Holdinga |
218,300 | 1,287,970 | Health Services - 2.0% | |||||||||
169,000 | 1,537,900 | ATC Healthcare Cl. Aa |
35,000 | 11,550 | ||||||||
MVC Capital |
211,200 | 2,251,392 | 40,000 | 486,000 | ||||||||
NGP Capital Resources Company |
50,000 | 656,500 | 42,400 | 135,680 | ||||||||
Covalent Groupa |
25,000 | 54,500 | ||||||||||
7,032,398 | Gentiva Health Servicesa |
23,000 | 339,020 | |||||||||
HMS Holdingsa |
71,900 | 550,035 | ||||||||||
Other Financial Services - 0.6% | Horizon Healtha |
50,000 | 1,131,500 | |||||||||
Clark |
20,900 | 276,925 | 18,000 | 333,900 | ||||||||
123,700 | 1,413,891 | 70,000 | 842,800 | |||||||||
MicroFinancial |
10,000 | 39,400 | National Home Health Care |
18,078 | 176,441 | |||||||
On Assignmenta |
80,100 | 873,891 | ||||||||||
1,730,216 | Quovadxa |
5,000 | 12,050 | |||||||||
RehabCare Groupa |
22,000 | 444,400 | ||||||||||
Total (Cost $7,377,970) | 8,762,614 | Sun Healthcare Groupa |
51,000 | 337,110 | ||||||||
U.S. Physical Therapya |
10,000 | 184,700 | ||||||||||
Health 14.7% | ||||||||||||
Commercial Services -1.4% | 5,913,577 | |||||||||||
Discovery Partners Internationala |
35,000 | 92,750 | ||||||||||
First Consulting Groupa |
274,700 | 1,612,489 | Medical Products and Devices - 5.8% | |||||||||
ICON ADRa |
800 | 32,912 | 20,000 | 421,000 | ||||||||
121,400 | 2,459,564 | Allied Healthcare Productsa |
253,500 | 1,455,090 | ||||||||
14,000 | 357,420 | |||||||||||
4,197,715 | Anika Therapeuticsa |
24,000 | 280,560 | |||||||||
187,200 | 909,792 | |||||||||||
Drugs and Biotech - 4.9% | Caliper Life Sciencesa |
52,100 | 306,348 | |||||||||
233,600 | 502,240 | 29,947 | 271,020 | |||||||||
3,800 | 50,768 | 3,900 | 92,274 | |||||||||
280,600 | 1,164,490 | Del Global Technologiesa |
168,279 | 546,907 | ||||||||
70,000 | 333,200 | 49,000 | 197,960 | |||||||||
50,000 | 41,500 | Endologixa |
7,500 | 51,750 | ||||||||
14,300 | 117,260 | 113,200 | 1,295,008 | |||||||||
43,000 | 59,340 | 28,000 | 616,840 | |||||||||
125,450 | 1,126,541 | Medical Action Industriesa |
83,500 | 1,706,740 | ||||||||
Cardiome Pharmaa |
56,000 | 565,600 | 5,700 | 69,198 | ||||||||
58,000 | 343,940 | 25,500 | 737,715 | |||||||||
Cerus Corporationa |
84,600 | 858,690 | NMT Medicala |
19,500 | 312,000 | |||||||
25,000 | 301,750 | 21,500 | 586,520 | |||||||||
10,000 | 54,200 | Orthofix Internationala |
28,000 | 1,116,920 | ||||||||
Durect Corporationa |
44,100 | 223,587 | OrthoLogic Corporationa |
85,000 | 416,500 | |||||||
DUSA Pharmaceuticalsa |
26,400 | 284,328 | PLC Systemsa |
105,200 | 52,600 | |||||||
Emisphere Technologiesa |
163,200 | 708,288 | 29,900 | 297,505 | ||||||||
Gene Logica |
241,579 | 809,290 | Schick Technologiesa |
25,000 | 823,975 | |||||||
3,000 | 23,850 | |||||||||||
6,000 | 51,660 | |||||||||||
44,000 | 225,720 | |||||||||||
42,000 | 472,920 | |||||||||||
5,000 | 37,550 | |||||||||||
65,500 | 1,443,620 |
36 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
DECEMBER 31, 2005 | ||
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||
Health (continued) | Lindsay Manufacturing |
10,000 | $ | 192,300 | ||||||||
Medical Products and Devices (continued) | MTS Systems |
10,000 | 346,400 | |||||||||
23,000 | $ | 230,690 | Mueller (Paul) Company |
9,650 | 272,613 | |||||||
127,000 | 490,220 | Pason Systems |
121,200 | 3,013,188 | ||||||||
Utah Medical Products |
42,300 | 1,355,292 | Sun Hydraulics |
38,950 | 752,903 | |||||||
Young Innovations |
61,450 | 2,094,216 | Tennant Company |
44,100 | 2,293,200 | |||||||
17,092,060 | 13,916,826 | |||||||||||
Personal Care - 0.6% | Metal Fabrication and Distribution - 1.9% | |||||||||||
CCA Industries |
51,040 | 472,120 | 4,075 | 131,378 | ||||||||
20,000 | 322,200 | 15,000 | 341,400 | |||||||||
20,050 | 733,028 | Harris Steel Group |
50,000 | 1,122,629 | ||||||||
Nutraceutical Internationala |
15,000 | 203,250 | Haynes Internationala |
23,800 | 559,300 | |||||||
Insteel Industries |
56,000 | 927,360 | ||||||||||
1,730,598 | NN |
176,900 | 1,875,140 | |||||||||
2,500 | 98,403 | |||||||||||
Total (Cost $32,672,334) | 43,146,765 | Oregon Steel Millsa |
3,300 | 97,086 | ||||||||
Universal Stainless & Alloy Productsa |
36,100 | 541,500 | ||||||||||
Industrial Products 16.0% | ||||||||||||
Automotive - 0.7% | 5,694,196 | |||||||||||
30,500 | 156,465 | |||||||||||
LKQ Corporationa |
5,700 | 197,334 | Paper and Packaging - 0.1% | |||||||||
Spartan Motors |
2,800 | 28,812 | 23,200 | 260,768 | ||||||||
Strattec Securitya |
28,300 | 1,143,886 | ||||||||||
Wescast Industries Cl. A |
37,900 | 572,844 | Pumps, Valves and Bearings - 0.2% | |||||||||
CIRCOR International |
28,000 | 718,480 | ||||||||||
2,099,341 | ||||||||||||
Specialty Chemicals and Materials - 2.0% | ||||||||||||
Building Systems and Components - 1.4% | Aceto Corporation |
334,419 | 2,200,477 | |||||||||
Aaona |
58,100 | 1,041,152 | Balchem Corporation |
15,000 | 447,150 | |||||||
45,600 | 822,624 | 40,600 | 570,065 | |||||||||
Craftmade International |
30,000 | 600,300 | Hawkins |
122,667 | 1,716,111 | |||||||
46,000 | 559,360 | 20,000 | 557,600 | |||||||||
LSI Industries |
63,812 | 999,296 | Park Electrochemical |
10,000 | 259,800 | |||||||
Modtech Holdingsa |
3,800 | 35,492 | ||||||||||
5,751,203 | ||||||||||||
4,058,224 | ||||||||||||
Textiles - 0.1% | ||||||||||||
Construction Materials - 1.5% | Fab Industriesd |
56,400 | 177,660 | |||||||||
Ash Grove Cement Company |
8,000 | 1,440,000 | ||||||||||
Monarch Cement |
50,410 | 1,166,992 | Other Industrial Products - 1.9% | |||||||||
Synalloy Corporationa |
171,000 | 1,789,344 | 50,000 | 719,500 | ||||||||
Eastern Company (The) |
26,500 | 517,015 | ||||||||||
4,396,336 | Maxwell Technologiesa |
15,300 | 216,801 | |||||||||
Myers Industries |
32,276 | 470,584 | ||||||||||
Industrial Components - 1.5% | Peerless Manufacturinga |
42,200 | 738,500 | |||||||||
67,000 | 527,290 | Quixote Corporation |
35,500 | 702,900 | ||||||||
Bel Fuse Cl. A |
55,200 | 1,380,000 | Raven Industries |
73,000 | 2,106,050 | |||||||
C & D Technologies |
53,000 | 403,860 | ||||||||||
Ladish Companya |
10,000 | 223,500 | 5,471,350 | |||||||||
1,370 | 7,028 | |||||||||||
50,300 | 903,388 | Total (Cost $33,903,554) | 46,946,543 | |||||||||
Scientific Technologiesa |
10,700 | 45,703 | ||||||||||
Tech/Ops Sevcon |
76,200 | 415,290 | Industrial Services 13.7% | |||||||||
II-VIa |
20,000 | 357,400 | Advertising and Publishing - 0.2% | |||||||||
Woodhead Industries |
10,000 | 138,700 | 20,000 | 117,200 | ||||||||
NetRatingsa |
50,000 | 616,500 | ||||||||||
4,402,159 | ||||||||||||
733,700 | ||||||||||||
Machinery - 4.7% | ||||||||||||
Alamo Group |
38,600 | 791,300 | Commercial Services - 5.4% | |||||||||
Ampco-Pittsburgh |
96,900 | 1,406,019 | Administaff |
10,000 | 420,500 | |||||||
Astec Industriesa |
40,200 | 1,312,932 | American Bank Note Holographicsa |
242,200 | 1,501,640 | |||||||
55,100 | 249,052 | BB Holdings |
390,000 | 2,640,300 | ||||||||
Gorman-Rupp Company |
3,375 | 74,621 | 87,000 | 523,740 | ||||||||
Hardinge |
117,000 | 2,018,250 | Collectors Universea |
11,700 | 188,604 | |||||||
31,400 | 967,748 | 28,450 | 540,266 | |||||||||
Keithley Instruments |
14,000 | 195,720 | Exponenta |
68,300 | 1,938,354 | |||||||
LeCroy Corporationa |
2,000 | 30,580 | Geo Group (The)a |
51,200 | 1,174,016 | |||||||
273,400 | 1,328,724 |
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 37 |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | ||
Schedule of Investments |
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||||
Industrial Services (continued) |
Other Industrial Services - 0.3% |
|||||||||||||
Commercial Services (continued) |
Landauer |
21,300 | $ | 981,717 | ||||||||||
55,000 | $ | 613,800 | Teama |
2,200 | 46,442 | |||||||||
20,000 | 338,400 | |||||||||||||
15,200 | 205,200 | 1,028,159 | ||||||||||||
RCM Technologiesa |
85,100 | 434,010 | ||||||||||||
Renaissance Learning |
2,365 | 44,722 | Total (Cost $23,380,147) |
40,222,186 | ||||||||||
31,300 | 257,599 | |||||||||||||
47,000 | 569,640 | Natural Resources 9.5% |
||||||||||||
2,819 | 96,128 | Energy Services - 3.4% |
||||||||||||
5,600 | 61,320 | Calfrac Well Services |
1,000 | 34,668 | ||||||||||
64,100 | 1,219,182 | Carbo Ceramics |
18,750 | 1,059,750 | ||||||||||
Westaffa |
362,500 | 1,794,375 | Conrad Industriesa |
154,000 | 261,800 | |||||||||
Dawson Geophysicala |
3,400 | 104,788 | ||||||||||||
15,890,520 | 62,500 | 2,950,000 | ||||||||||||
Enerflex Systems |
5,000 | 115,446 | ||||||||||||
Engineering and Construction - 1.0% |
Gulf Island Fabrication |
45,400 | 1,103,674 | |||||||||||
21,700 | 224,378 | 65,200 | 1,931,224 | |||||||||||
80,300 | 1,555,411 | 118,500 | 833,055 | |||||||||||
Skyline Corporation |
32,100 | 1,168,440 | Valley National Gases |
30,100 | 589,960 | |||||||||
77,500 | 1,119,100 | |||||||||||||
2,948,229 | ||||||||||||||
10,103,465 | ||||||||||||||
Food and Tobacco Processors - 1.2% |
||||||||||||||
Galaxy Nutritional Foodsa |
159,450 | 199,313 | Oil and Gas - 2.5% |
|||||||||||
ML Macadamia Orchards L.P. |
120,200 | 688,746 | ATP Oil & Gasa |
6,300 | 233,163 | |||||||||
Omega Proteina |
9,600 | 64,416 | Bonavista Energy Trust |
88,000 | 2,884,253 | |||||||||
62,500 | 1,203,125 | 52,100 | 723,669 | |||||||||||
Seneca Foods Cl. Ba |
42,500 | 775,625 | 115,200 | 887,040 | ||||||||||
Sunoptaa |
90,000 | 473,400 | Contango Oil & Gas Companya |
10,000 | 114,400 | |||||||||
Edge Petroleuma |
3,500 | 87,185 | ||||||||||||
3,404,625 | Nuvista Energya |
121,000 | 1,878,833 | |||||||||||
Pioneer Drilling Companya |
9,200 | 164,956 | ||||||||||||
Industrial Distribution - 1.0% |
Savanna Energy Servicesa |
2,500 | 61,508 | |||||||||||
Central Steel & Wire |
2,437 | 1,393,964 | VAALCO Energya |
61,500 | 260,760 | |||||||||
Elamexa |
60,200 | 90,300 | ||||||||||||
Lawson Products |
19,500 | 735,930 | 7,295,767 | |||||||||||
Strategic Distributiona |
59,690 | 577,799 | ||||||||||||
Precious Metals and Mining - 1.3% |
||||||||||||||
2,797,993 | Apex Silver Minesa |
76,100 | 1,209,990 | |||||||||||
Aurizon Minesa |
237,000 | 357,870 | ||||||||||||
Printing - 1.0% |
15,500 | 246,450 | ||||||||||||
Bowne & Co. |
66,500 | 986,860 | Gammon Lake Resourcesa |
23,000 | 273,700 | |||||||||
Champion Industries |
23,500 | 103,400 | Metallica Resourcesa |
281,300 | 523,218 | |||||||||
Courier Corporation |
22,950 | 788,103 | 116,000 | 596,240 | ||||||||||
Ennis |
9,700 | 176,249 | Nevsun Resourcesa |
5,000 | 10,450 | |||||||||
Schawk |
38,900 | 807,175 | Northern Orion Resourcesa |
53,400 | 176,754 | |||||||||
13,400 | 121,940 | |||||||||||||
2,861,787 | Spur Venturesa |
30,000 | 33,292 | |||||||||||
Western Silvera |
11,800 | 132,868 | ||||||||||||
Transportation and Logistics - 3.6% |
||||||||||||||
AirNet Systemsa |
180,000 | 613,800 | 3,682,772 | |||||||||||
Atlas Air Worldwide Holdingsa |
11,500 | 511,750 | ||||||||||||
Forward Air |
65,700 | 2,407,905 | Real Estate 1.3% |
|||||||||||
Frozen Food Express Industriesa |
92,000 | 1,014,760 | HomeFed Corporationa |
54,852 | 3,675,084 | |||||||||
Hub Group Cl. Aa |
11,000 | 388,850 | Kennedy-Wilsona |
21,500 | 290,250 | |||||||||
Knight Transportation |
31,500 | 652,995 | ||||||||||||
8,600 | 40,506 | 3,965,334 | ||||||||||||
4,050 | 73,791 | |||||||||||||
200,000 | 130,000 | Other Natural Resources - 1.0% |
||||||||||||
Patriot Transportation Holdinga |
15,700 | 1,018,616 | PICO Holdingsa |
55,700 | 1,796,882 | |||||||||
154,200 | 3,546,600 | Pope Resources L.P. |
33,000 | 1,023,660 | ||||||||||
Vitran Corporation Cl. Aa |
8,000 | 157,600 | ||||||||||||
2,820,542 | ||||||||||||||
10,557,173 | ||||||||||||||
Total (Cost $10,819,994) |
27,867,880 | |||||||||||||
38 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
DECEMBER 31, 2005 | ||
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||||
Technology 25.4% |
5,000 | $ | 165,550 | |||||||||||
Aerospace and Defense - 2.6% |
65,700 | 509,832 | ||||||||||||
Allied Defense Group (The)a |
60,900 | $ | 1,386,693 | Stamps.coma |
21,200 | 486,752 | ||||||||
Astronics Corporationa |
26,400 | 279,840 | 15,000 | 148,950 | ||||||||||
4,700 | 84,365 | 89,400 | 379,950 | |||||||||||
Ducommuna |
84,500 | 1,804,920 | ||||||||||||
HEICO Corporation |
41,600 | 1,076,608 | 3,983,998 | |||||||||||
HEICO Corporation Cl. A |
24,160 | 495,763 | ||||||||||||
81,000 | 1,337,310 | IT Services - 5.4% |
||||||||||||
Integral Systems |
58,500 | 1,103,310 | 182,662 | 1,205,569 | ||||||||||
SIFCO Industriesa |
45,800 | 178,620 | Computer Task Groupa |
381,100 | 1,505,345 | |||||||||
Covansys Corporationa |
227,500 | 3,096,275 | ||||||||||||
7,747,429 | DiamondCluster Internationala |
138,100 | 1,096,514 | |||||||||||
Forrester Researcha |
105,500 | 1,978,125 | ||||||||||||
Components and Systems - 5.1% |
Rainmaker Systemsa |
2,000 | 5,660 | |||||||||||
147,900 | 408,204 | 500,000 | 2,845,000 | |||||||||||
Belden CDT |
15,000 | 366,450 | Syntel |
54,300 | 1,131,069 | |||||||||
CSPa |
122,581 | 849,486 | Tier Technologies Cl. Ba |
6,800 | 49,912 | |||||||||
2,000 | 13,860 | 182,300 | 3,097,277 | |||||||||||
Excel Technologya |
92,900 | 2,209,162 | ||||||||||||
Giga-tronicsa |
3,200 | 7,968 | 16,010,746 | |||||||||||
50,000 | 319,500 | |||||||||||||
108,500 | 644,490 | Semiconductors and Equipment - 2.2% |
||||||||||||
17,375 | 727,318 | ADE Corporationa |
23,000 | 553,380 | ||||||||||
Lowrance Electronics |
91,000 | 2,385,110 | 48,800 | 577,304 | ||||||||||
Merix Corporationa |
7,000 | 50,610 | California Micro Devicesa |
16,700 | 108,717 | |||||||||
2,900 | 55,854 | Cascade Microtecha |
5,000 | 63,000 | ||||||||||
1,000 | 9,660 | 139,700 | 677,545 | |||||||||||
MOCON |
15,600 | 145,392 | 39,800 | 536,504 | ||||||||||
2,600 | 60,580 | 25,000 | 85,750 | |||||||||||
117,250 | 960,277 | 281,700 | 816,930 | |||||||||||
Plexus Corporationa |
26,500 | 602,610 | Exar Corporationa |
41,208 | 515,924 | |||||||||
Richardson Electronics |
202,100 | 1,465,225 | Integrated Silicon Solutiona |
15,000 | 96,600 | |||||||||
20,000 | 579,600 | 40,550 | 535,260 | |||||||||||
SafeNeta |
11,781 | 379,584 | 10,000 | 56,800 | ||||||||||
SimpleTecha |
225,700 | 850,889 | 29,000 | 471,250 | ||||||||||
TTM Technologiesa |
125,000 | 1,175,000 | 29,750 | 448,035 | ||||||||||
TransAct Technologiesa |
78,600 | 620,940 | QuickLogic Corporationa |
20,000 | 79,000 | |||||||||
Zomaxa |
20,000 | 41,600 | 38,000 | 489,440 | ||||||||||
25,500 | 277,440 | |||||||||||||
14,929,369 | 4,000 | 39,520 | ||||||||||||
White Electronic Designsa |
10,000 | 51,100 | ||||||||||||
Distribution - 0.8% |
||||||||||||||
Agilysys |
90,000 | 1,639,800 | 6,479,499 | |||||||||||
Bell Industriesa |
85,700 | 223,677 | ||||||||||||
Jaco Electronicsa |
30,900 | 105,369 | Software - 4.9% |
|||||||||||
Nu Horizons Electronicsa |
40,000 | 404,000 | Aladdin Knowledge Systemsa |
43,300 | 745,626 | |||||||||
6,000 | 33,960 | 30,800 | 1,314,852 | |||||||||||
Pomeroy IT Solutionsa |
6,900 | 57,615 | Applixa |
20,000 | 146,000 | |||||||||
35,000 | 604,800 | |||||||||||||
2,464,421 | 19,200 | 60,288 | ||||||||||||
InterVideoa |
24,500 | 258,475 | ||||||||||||
Internet Software and Services - 1.4% |
iPassa |
190,000 | 1,246,400 | |||||||||||
4,100 | 47,015 | 59,500 | 1,012,095 | |||||||||||
CryptoLogic |
24,900 | 487,791 | MSC.Softwarea |
12,700 | 215,900 | |||||||||
98,840 | 1,237,477 | 2,500 | 2,925 | |||||||||||
7,242 | 8,401 | 5,000 | 63,050 | |||||||||||
83,600 | 152,152 | 18,199 | 69,156 | |||||||||||
Inforte Corporationa |
11,400 | 45,030 | MetaSolva |
5,800 | 16,820 | |||||||||
LookSmarta |
4,000 | 15,040 | MIND C.T.I. |
20,000 | 52,400 | |||||||||
MIVAa |
10,000 | 49,500 | Pegasystemsa |
320,200 | 2,340,662 | |||||||||
NICa |
26,800 | 165,088 | 43,000 | 419,250 | ||||||||||
11,000 | 85,470 |
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 39 |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Schedule of Investments |
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||||
Technology (continued) |
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS |
|||||||||||||
Software (continued) |
(Cost $208,992,798) |
$ | 315,599,914 | |||||||||||
SPSSa |
41,800 | $ | 1,292,874 | |||||||||||
5,000 | 39,500 | PREFERRED STOCK 0.5% |
||||||||||||
158,600 | 348,920 | Seneca Foods Conv.a |
75,409 | 1,432,771 | ||||||||||
Transaction Systems Architects Cl. Aa |
140,100 | 4,033,479 | ||||||||||||
7,500 | 90,375 | TOTAL PREFERRED STOCK |
||||||||||||
(Cost $943,607) |
1,432,771 | |||||||||||||
14,373,847 | ||||||||||||||
REPURCHASE AGREEMENT 12.2% |
||||||||||||||
Telecommunications - 3.0% |
State Street Bank & Trust Company, | |||||||||||||
Anarena |
24,300 | 379,809 | 4.10% dated 12/30/05, due 1/3/06, |
|||||||||||
C-COR.neta |
5,000 | 24,300 | maturity value $35,802,303 (collateralized |
|||||||||||
Captarisa |
67,800 | 250,182 | by obligations of various U.S. Government |
|||||||||||
5,000 | 73,950 | Agencies, valued at $36,685,000) |
||||||||||||
Centillium Communicationsa |
11,000 | 38,500 | (Cost $35,786,000) |
35,786,000 | ||||||||||
71,100 | 352,940 | |||||||||||||
Communications Systems |
87,200 | 1,070,816 | COLLATERAL RECEIVED FOR SECURITIES LOANED 9.2% |
|||||||||||
20,000 | 167,000 | Money Market Funds | ||||||||||||
Globecomm Systemsa |
6,300 | 38,871 | State Street Navigator Securities Lending |
|||||||||||
58,000 | 461,680 | Prime Portfolio |
||||||||||||
North Pittsburgh Systems |
15,700 | 296,259 | (Cost $26,979,986) |
26,979,986 | ||||||||||
29,000 | 351,190 | |||||||||||||
PC-Tela |
47,100 | 412,596 | TOTAL INVESTMENTS 129.3% |
|||||||||||
20,315 | 255,360 | (Cost $272,702,391) |
379,798,671 | |||||||||||
Radyne ComStreama |
47,000 | 684,790 | ||||||||||||
SpectraLink Corporation |
57,000 | 676,590 | LIABILITIES LESS CASH |
|||||||||||
87,482 | 740,973 | AND OTHER ASSETS (8.9)% |
(26,079,474 | ) | ||||||||||
91,812 | 2,454,135 | |||||||||||||
PREFERRED STOCK (20.4)% |
(60,000,000 | ) | ||||||||||||
8,729,941 | ||||||||||||||
NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO |
||||||||||||||
Total (Cost $47,669,006) |
74,719,250 | COMMON STOCKHOLDERS 100.0% |
$ | 293,719,197 | ||||||||||
Miscellaneous(e) 4.8% |
||||||||||||||
Total (Cost $13,014,944) |
14,267,159 | |||||||||||||
40 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Statement of Assets and Liabilities |
ASSETS: | ||||
Investments at value (including collateral on loaned securities)* | ||||
Non-Affiliates (cost $233,005,991) |
$ | 340,591,047 | ||
Affiliated Companies (cost $3,910,400) |
3,421,624 | |||
Total investments at value | 344,012,671 | |||
Repurchase agreement (at cost and value) | 35,786,000 | |||
Cash | 2,450,888 | |||
Receivable for investments sold | 529,724 | |||
Receivable for dividends and interest | 277,573 | |||
Prepaid expenses | 8,651 | |||
Total Assets |
383,065,507 | |||
LIABILITIES: | ||||
Payable for collateral on loaned securities | 26,979,986 | |||
Payable for investments purchased | 1,743,648 | |||
Payable for investment advisory fee | 384,864 | |||
Preferred dividends accrued but not yet declared | 80,000 | |||
Accrued expenses | 157,812 | |||
Total Liabilities |
29,346,310 | |||
PREFERRED STOCK: | ||||
6.00% Cumulative Preferred Stock $0.001 par value, $25 liquidation value per share; 2,400,000 shares outstanding | 60,000,000 | |||
Total Preferred Stock |
60,000,000 | |||
NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS | $ | 293,719,197 | ||
ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: | ||||
Common Stock paid-in capital $0.001 par value per share; 21,869,051 shares outstanding (150,000,000 shares authorized) | $ | 184,445,927 | ||
Undistributed net investment income (loss) | (1,104 | ) | ||
Accumulated net realized gain (loss) on investments | 2,258,094 | |||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments | 107,096,280 | |||
Preferred dividends accrued but not yet declared | (80,000 | ) | ||
Net Assets applicable to Common Stockholders (net asset value per share $13.43) |
$ | 293,719,197 | ||
*Investments at identified cost (including $26,979,986 of collateral on loaned securites) | $ | 236,916,391 | ||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 41 |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Statement of Operations |
INVESTMENT INCOME: | ||||
Income: | ||||
Dividends |
||||
Non-Affiliates |
$ | 2,419,616 | ||
Affiliated Companies |
30,550 | |||
Interest |
1,325,185 | |||
Securities lending |
140,630 | |||
Total income | 3,915,981 | |||
Expenses: | ||||
Investment advisory fees |
4,114,659 | |||
Custody and transfer agent fees |
158,865 | |||
Stockholder reports |
146,709 | |||
Directors fees |
55,365 | |||
Professional fees |
35,924 | |||
Administrative and office facilities expenses |
29,054 | |||
Other expenses |
138,614 | |||
Total expenses | 4,679,190 | |||
Net investment income (loss) | (763,209 | ) | ||
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS: | ||||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments | ||||
Non-Affiliates |
37,754,245 | |||
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments | (14,066,144 | ) | ||
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments | 23,688,101 | |||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS | 22,924,892 | |||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO PREFERRED STOCKHOLDERS | (3,600,000 | ) | ||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS | ||||
RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS |
$ | 19,324,892 | ||
42 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | ||
Statement of Changes in Net Assets |
Year ended | Year ended | ||||||||
12/31/05 | 12/31/04 | ||||||||
INVESTMENT OPERATIONS: | |||||||||
Net investment income (loss) | $ | (763,209 | ) | $ | (1,486,082 | ) | |||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments | 37,754,245 | 25,396,860 | |||||||
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments | (14,066,144 | ) | 26,164,677 | ||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from investment operations | 22,924,892 | 50,075,455 | |||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO PREFERRED STOCKHOLDERS: | |||||||||
Net realized gain on investments | (3,600,000 | ) | (3,600,000 | ) | |||||
Total distributions to Preferred Stockholders | (3,600,000 | ) | (3,600,000 | ) | |||||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS | |||||||||
RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS |
19,324,892 | 46,475,455 | |||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: | |||||||||
Net realized gain on investments | (38,452,900 | ) | (25,919,005 | ) | |||||
Total distributions to Common Stockholders | (38,452,900 | ) | (25,919,005 | ) | |||||
CAPITAL STOCK TRANSACTIONS: | |||||||||
Reinvestment of distributions to Common Stockholders | 22,483,567 | 16,382,136 | |||||||
Total capital stock transactions | 22,483,567 | 16,382,136 | |||||||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS | 3,355,559 | 36,938,586 | |||||||
NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: | |||||||||
Beginning of year |
290,363,638 | 253,425,052 | |||||||
End of year (including undistributed net investment income (loss) of $(1,104) at 12/31/05) |
$ | 293,719,197 | $ | 290,363,638 | |||||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 43 |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | ||
Financial Highlights |
This table is presented to show selected data for a
share of Common Stock outstanding throughout each period, and to assist stockholders in evaluating the
Funds performance for the periods presented. |
||||||||||||||||||||
Years ended December 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||
2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | ||||||||||||||||
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF PERIOD | $14.34 | $13.33 | $9.39 | $11.83 | $10.14 | |||||||||||||||
INVESTMENT OPERATIONS: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income (loss) |
(0.03 | ) | (0.08 | ) | (0.09 | ) | (0.13 | ) | (0.05 | ) | ||||||||||
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments |
1.14 | 2.62 | 5.28 | (1.29 | ) | 2.57 | ||||||||||||||
Total investment operations |
1.11 | 2.54 | 5.19 | (1.42 | ) | 2.52 | ||||||||||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO PREFERRED STOCKHOLDERS: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income |
| | | | | |||||||||||||||
Net realized gain on investments |
(0.17 | ) | (0.19 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.19 | ) | ||||||||||
Total distributions to Preferred Stockholders |
(0.17 | ) | (0.19 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.18 | ) | (0.19 | ) | ||||||||||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON | ||||||||||||||||||||
STOCKHOLDERS RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS |
0.94 | 2.35 | 5.01 | (1.60 | ) | 2.33 | ||||||||||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income |
| | | | | |||||||||||||||
Net realized gain on investments |
(1.85 | ) | (1.33 | ) | (0.92 | ) | (0.80 | ) | (0.57 | ) | ||||||||||
Total distributions to Common Stockholders |
(1.85 | ) | (1.33 | ) | (0.92 | ) | (0.80 | ) | (0.57 | ) | ||||||||||
CAPITAL STOCK TRANSACTIONS: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Effect of reinvestment of distributions by Common Stockholders |
0.00 | (0.01 | ) | (0.04 | ) | (0.04 | ) | (0.07 | ) | |||||||||||
Effect of Preferred Stock offering |
| | (0.11 | ) | | | ||||||||||||||
Total capital stock transactions |
0.00 | (0.01 | ) | (0.15 | ) | (0.04 | ) | (0.07 | ) | |||||||||||
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD | $13.43 | $14.34 | $13.33 | $9.39 | $11.83 | |||||||||||||||
MARKET VALUE, END OF PERIOD | $14.56 | $15.24 | $12.60 | $8.44 | $10.50 | |||||||||||||||
TOTAL RETURN (a): | ||||||||||||||||||||
Market Value | 8.90 | % | 33.44 | % | 63.58 | % | (12.70 | )% | 28.76 | % | ||||||||||
Net Asset Value | 6.75 | % | 18.69 | % | 55.55 | % | (13.80 | )% | 23.40 | % | ||||||||||
RATIOS BASED ON AVERAGE NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO | ||||||||||||||||||||
COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Total expenses (b,c) | 1.63 | % | 1.62 | % | 1.82 | % | 1.96 | % | 1.78 | % | ||||||||||
Management fee expense |
1.43 | % | 1.43 | % | 1.59 | % | 1.59 | % | 1.57 | % | ||||||||||
Other operating expenses |
0.20 | % | 0.19 | % | 0.23 | % | 0.37 | % | 0.21 | % | ||||||||||
Net investment income (loss) | (0.27 | )% | (0.56 | )% | (0.82 | )% | (1.23 | )% | (0.43 | )% | ||||||||||
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Net Assets Applicable to Common Stockholders, | ||||||||||||||||||||
End of Period (in thousands) |
$293,719 | $290,364 | $253,425 | $167,571 | $200,443 | |||||||||||||||
Liquidation Value of Preferred Stock, | ||||||||||||||||||||
End of Period (in thousands) |
$60,000 | $60,000 | $60,000 | $40,000 | $40,000 | |||||||||||||||
Portfolio Turnover Rate | 46 | % | 32 | % | 26 | % | 39 | % | 27 | % | ||||||||||
PREFERRED STOCK: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Total shares outstanding | 2,400,000 | 2,400,000 | 2,400,000 | 1,600,000 | 1,600,000 | |||||||||||||||
Asset coverage per share | $147.38 | $145.98 | $130.59 | $129.73 | $150.28 | |||||||||||||||
Liquidation preference per share | $25.00 | $25.00 | $25.00 | $25.00 | $25.00 | |||||||||||||||
Average market value per share (d): | ||||||||||||||||||||
6.00% Cumulative |
$24.97 | $24.66 | $25.37 | | | |||||||||||||||
7.75% Cumulative |
| | $25.70 | $25.91 | $25.30 | |||||||||||||||
44 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Notes to Financial Statements |
Summary of Significant Accounting Policies: Royce Micro-Cap Trust, Inc. (the Fund) was incorporated under the laws of the State of Maryland on September 9, 1993 as a diversified closed-end investment company. The Fund commenced operations on December 14, 1993. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, and the reported amounts of income and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Valuation of Investments: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on the valuation date. Securities that trade on an exchange or Nasdaq are valued at their last reported sales price or Nasdaq official closing price taken from the primary market in which each security trades or, if no sale is reported for such day, at their bid price. Other over-the-counter securities for which market quotations are readily available are valued at their bid price. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available are valued at their fair value under procedures established by the Funds Board of Directors. Bonds and other fixed income securities may be valued by reference to other securities with comparable ratings, interest rates and maturities, using established independent pricing services. Investment Transactions and Related Investment Income: Investment transactions are accounted for on the trade date. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date and any non-cash dividend income is recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Interest income is recorded on an accrual basis. Realized gains and losses from investment transactions are determined on the basis of identified cost for book and tax purposes. Expenses: The Fund incurs direct and indirect expenses. Expenses directly attributable to the Fund are charged to the Funds operations, while expenses applicable to more than one of the Royce Funds are allocated in an equitable manner. Allocated personnel and occupancy costs related to The Royce Funds are included in administrative and office facilities expenses. The Fund has adopted a deferred fee agreement that allows the Funds Directors to defer the receipt of all or a portion of Directors Fees otherwise payable. The deferred fees are invested in certain Royce Funds until distributed in accordance with the agreement. Taxes: As a qualified regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, the Fund is not subject to income taxes to the extent that it distributes substantially all of its taxable income for its |
fiscal year.
The Schedule of Investments includes information regarding income taxes under the
caption Income Tax Information. Distributions: The Fund currently has a policy of paying quarterly distributions on the Funds Common Stock. Distributions are currently being made at the annual rate of 9% of the rolling average of the prior four calendar quarter-end NAVs of the Funds Common Stock, with the fourth quarter distribution being the greater of 2.25% of the rolling average or the distribution required by IRS regulations. Distributions to Preferred Stockholders are recorded on an accrual basis and paid quarterly. The Fund is required to allocate long-term capital gain distributions and other types of income proportionately to distributions made to holders of shares of Common Stock and Preferred Stock. To the extent that distributions are not paid from long-term capital gains, net investment income or net short-term capital gains, they will represent a return of capital. Distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations that may differ from accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Permanent book and tax basis differences relating to stockholder distributions will result in reclassifications within the capital accounts. Undistributed net investment income may include temporary book and tax basis differences, which will reverse in a subsequent period. Any taxable income or gain remaining undistributed at fiscal year end is distributed in the following year. Repurchase Agreements: The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements with institutions that the Funds investment adviser has determined are creditworthy. The Fund restricts repurchase agreements to maturities of no more than seven days. Securities pledged as collateral for repurchase agreements, which are held until maturity of the repurchase agreements, are marked-to-market daily and maintained at a value at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). Repurchase agreements could involve certain risks in the event of default or insolvency of the counter-party, including possible delays or restrictions upon the ability of the Fund to dispose of the underlying securities. Securities Lending: The Fund loans securities to qualified institutional investors for the purpose of realizing additional income. Collateral on all securities loaned for the Fund is accepted in cash and cash equivalents and invested temporarily by the custodian. The collateral is equal to at least 100% of the current market value of the loaned securities. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. Capital Stock: The Fund issued 1,625,665 and 1,228,046 shares of Common Stock as reinvestment of distributions by Common Stockholders for the years ended December 31, 2005 and 2004, respectively. |
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 45 |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | ||
Notes to Financial Statements (continued) |
At December
31, 2005, 2,400,000 shares of 6.00% Cumulative Preferred Stock were outstanding.
Commencing October 16, 2008 and thereafter, the Fund, at its option, may redeem
the Cumulative Preferred Stock, in whole or in part, at the redemption price. The
Cumulative Preferred Stock is classified outside of permanent equity (net assets
applicable to Common Stockholders) in the accompanying financial statements in accordance
with Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) Topic D-98, Classification and Measurement
of Redeemable Securities, that requires preferred securities that are redeemable
for cash or other assets to be classified outside of permanent equity to the extent
that the redemption is at a fixed or determinable price and at the option of the
holder or upon the occurrence of an event that is not solely within the control
of the issuer. The Fund is required to meet certain asset coverage tests with respect to the Cumulative Preferred Stock as required by the 1940 Act. In addition, pursuant to the Rating Agency Guidelines established by Moodys, the Fund is required to maintain a certain discounted asset coverage. If the Fund fails to meet these requirements and does not correct such failure, the Fund may be required to redeem, in part or in full, the Cumulative Preferred Stock at a redemption price of $25.00 per share, plus an amount equal to the accumulated and unpaid dividends, whether or not declared on such shares, in order to meet these requirements. Additionally, failure to meet the foregoing asset coverage requirements could restrict the Funds ability to pay dividends to Common Stockholders and could lead to sales of portfolio securities at inopportune times. The Fund has met these requirements since issuing the Cumulative Preferred Stock. Investment Advisory Agreement: As compensation for its services under the Investment Advisory Agreement, Royce & Associates, LLC (Royce) receives a fee comprised of a Basic Fee (Basic Fee) and an adjustment to the Basic Fee based on the investment performance of the Fund in relation to the investment record of the Russell 2000. |
The Basic
Fee is a monthly fee equal to 1/12 of 1% (1% on an annualized basis) of the average
of the Funds month-end net assets applicable to Common Stockholders, plus
the liquidation value of Preferred Stock, for the rolling 36-month period ending
with such month (the performance period). The Basic Fee for each month
is increased or decreased at the rate of 1/12 of .05% for each percentage point that
the investment performance of the Fund exceeds, or is exceeded by, the percentage
change in the investment record of the Russell 2000 for the performance period by
more than two percentage points. The performance period for each such month is a
rolling 36-month period ending with such month. The maximum increase or decrease
in the Basic Fee for any month may not exceed 1/12 of .5%. Accordingly, for each month,
the maximum monthly fee rate as adjusted for performance is 1/12 of 1.5% and is
payable if the investment performance of the Fund exceeds the percentage change
in the investment record of the Russell 2000 by 12 or more percentage points for
the performance period, and the minimum monthly fee rate as adjusted for performance
is 1/12 of .5% and is payable if the percentage change in the investment record of
the Russell 2000 exceeds the investment performance of the Fund by 12 or more percentage
points for the performance period. Royce has voluntarily committed to waive the portion of its investment advisory fee attributable to an issue of the Funds Preferred Stock for any month in which the Funds average annual NAV total return since issuance of the Preferred Stock fails to exceed the applicable Preferred Stocks dividend rate. For the 12 rolling 36-month periods ending in 2005, the investment performance of the Fund exceeded the investment performance of the Russell 2000 by 5% to 23%. Accordingly, the investment advisory fee consisted of a Basic Fee of $2,876,281 and an upward adjustment of $1,238,378 for performance of the Fund above that of the Russell 2000. For the year ended December 31, 2005, the Fund accrued and paid Royce advisory fees totaling $4,114,659. |
46 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
DECEMBER 31, 2005 | ||
Distributions paid from: | 2005 | 2004 | ||||||||
Ordinary income | $ | 4,022,315 | $ | 3,410,255 | ||||||
Long-term capital gain | 38,030,585 | 26,108,750 | ||||||||
$ | 42,052,900 | $ | 29,519,005 | |||||||
As of December 31, 2005, the tax basis components of distributable earnings included in stockholders equity were as follows:
Undistributed net investment income | $ | 1,714,386 | ||||||
Undistributed long-term capital gain | 2,887,865 | |||||||
Unrealized appreciation | 104,752,123 | |||||||
Post October currency loss | (1,104 | ) | ||||||
Accrued preferred distributions | (80,000 | ) | ||||||
$ | 109,273,270 | |||||||
The difference between book basis and tax basis unrealized appreciation is attributable primarily to the tax deferral on wash sales and the unrealized gains on investments in Passive Foreign Investment Companies.
For financial reporting purposes, capital accounts and distributions to stockholders are adjusted to reflect the tax character of permanent book / tax differences. For the year ended December 31, 2005, the Fund recorded the following permanent reclassifications, which relate primarily to the current net operating losses. Results of operations and net assets were not affected by these reclassifications.
Undistributed | Accumulated | ||||||||||||
Net Investment | Net Realized | Paid-in | |||||||||||
Income | Gain (Loss) | Capital | |||||||||||
$ | 762,105 | $ | (633,134 | ) | $ | (128,971 | ) | ||||||
Shares | Market Value | Cost of | Cost of | Realized | Dividend | Shares | Market Value | ||||||||||||||||
Affiliated Company | 12/31/04 | 12/31/04 | Purchases | Sales | Gain (Loss) | Income | 12/31/05 | 12/31/05 | |||||||||||||||
Abagail Adams National Bancorp | | | $ | 3,910,400 | | | $ | 30,550 | 244,400 | $ | 3,421,624 | ||||||||||||
| | $ | 30,550 | $ | 3,421,624 | ||||||||||||||||||
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 47 |
ROYCE MICRO-CAP TRUST | ||
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of Royce Micro-Cap Trust, Inc.
We have audited
the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of Royce Micro-Cap Trust, Inc.
(Fund), including the schedule of investments, as of December 31, 2005,
and the related statement of operations for the year then ended, and the statement
of changes in net assets for the two years in the period then ended and the financial
highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended. These financial
statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Funds management.
Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial
highlights based on our audits.
We conducted
our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight
Board (U.S.). 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. We were not engaged to perform an audit of the
Funds 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 Funds internal control over financial
reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An audit includes examining,
on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements and financial highlights. Our procedures included confirmation of securities
owned as of December 31, 2005, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers
or by other appropriate auditing procedures where replies from brokers were not
received. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant
estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement
presentation. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
In our opinion, the financial
statements and financial highlights referred to above and audited by us present
fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Royce Micro-Cap Trust,
Inc. at December 31, 2005, the results of its operations for the year then ended,
the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended
and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended,
in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States
of America.
TAIT, WELLER, & BAKER LLP
Philadelphia,
PA
January 20, 2006
48 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Schedule of Investments | |||||||||||||||
SHARES | VALUE | SHARES | VALUE | |||||||||||
COMMON STOCKS 85.1% |
Pason Systems |
100,000 | $ | 2,486,128 | ||||||||||
Woodward Governor Company |
15,000 | 1,290,150 | ||||||||||||
Consumer Products 6.3% |
||||||||||||||
Apparel and Shoes - 1.2% |
6,750,778 | |||||||||||||
50,000 | $ | 1,627,500 | ||||||||||||
Metal Fabrication and Distribution - 12.8% |
||||||||||||||
Sports and Recreation - 5.1% |
Harris Steel Group |
150,000 | 3,367,887 | |||||||||||
Thor Industries |
100,000 | 4,007,000 | IPSCO |
65,000 | 5,393,700 | |||||||||
Winnebago Industries |
100,000 | 3,328,000 | Metal Management |
150,000 | 3,489,000 | |||||||||
Reliance Steel & Aluminum |
50,000 | 3,056,000 | ||||||||||||
7,335,000 | Schnitzer Steel Industries Cl. A |
100,000 | 3,059,000 | |||||||||||
Total (Cost $6,695,553) |
8,962,500 | 18,365,587 | ||||||||||||
Consumer Services 3.3% |
Total (Cost $16,295,295) |
31,195,465 | ||||||||||||
Direct Marketing - 2.5% |
||||||||||||||
Nu Skin Enterprises Cl. A |
200,000 | 3,516,000 | Industrial Services 5.5% |
|||||||||||
Commercial Services - 1.2% |
||||||||||||||
Other Consumer Services - 0.8% |
BB Holdings |
250,000 | 1,692,500 | |||||||||||
100,000 | 1,178,000 | |||||||||||||
Engineering and Construction - 1.9% |
||||||||||||||
Total (Cost $3,889,690) |
4,694,000 | 120,000 | 2,640,000 | |||||||||||
Financial Intermediaries 3.3% |
Transportation and Logistics - 2.4% |
|||||||||||||
Insurance - 2.3% |
Arkansas Best |
80,000 | 3,494,400 | |||||||||||
Alleghany Corporationa |
7,500 | 2,130,000 | ||||||||||||
25,000 | 1,216,000 | Total (Cost $5,486,466) |
7,826,900 | |||||||||||
3,346,000 | Natural Resources 19.8% |
|||||||||||||
Energy Services - 8.8% |
||||||||||||||
Other Financial Intermediaries - 1.0% |
Ensign Energy Services |
100,000 | 4,036,303 | |||||||||||
TSX Group |
35,000 | 1,409,996 | 250,000 | 1,757,500 | ||||||||||
Tesco Corporationa |
160,000 | 2,960,000 | ||||||||||||
Total (Cost $2,038,496) |
4,755,996 | Trican Well Servicea |
80,000 | 3,853,929 | ||||||||||
Financial Services 3.7% |
12,607,732 | |||||||||||||
Information and Processing - 2.4% |
||||||||||||||
150,000 | 3,516,000 | Precious Metals and Mining - 11.0% |
||||||||||||
100,000 | 1,190,000 | |||||||||||||
Investment Management - 1.3% |
Glamis Golda |
150,000 | 4,122,000 | |||||||||||
GAMCO Investors Cl. A |
41,500 | 1,806,495 | 400,000 | 2,876,000 | ||||||||||
120,000 | 2,624,400 | |||||||||||||
Total (Cost $3,678,413) |
5,322,495 | 120,000 | 2,259,600 | |||||||||||
180,000 | 2,755,800 | |||||||||||||
Health 9.5% |
||||||||||||||
Drugs and Biotech - 8.0% |
15,827,800 | |||||||||||||
200,000 | 2,786,000 | |||||||||||||
150,000 | 4,539,000 | Total (Cost $15,532,480) |
28,435,532 | |||||||||||
400,000 | 1,460,000 | |||||||||||||
75,000 | 1,560,000 | Technology 11.9% |
||||||||||||
150,000 | 1,140,000 | Components and Systems - 1.8% |
||||||||||||
Lowrance Electronics |
100,000 | 2,621,000 | ||||||||||||
11,485,000 | ||||||||||||||
Internet Software and Services - 1.9% |
||||||||||||||
Medical Products and Devices - 1.5% |
350,000 | 2,716,000 | ||||||||||||
200,000 | 1,176,000 | |||||||||||||
100,000 | 995,000 | IT Services - 0.9% |
||||||||||||
Syntel |
60,000 | 1,249,800 | ||||||||||||
2,171,000 | ||||||||||||||
Software - 4.9% |
||||||||||||||
Total (Cost $10,286,605) |
13,656,000 | 100,000 | 2,786,000 | |||||||||||
160,000 | 1,270,400 | |||||||||||||
Industrial Products 21.8% |
Transaction Systems Architects Cl. Aa |
100,100 | 2,881,879 | |||||||||||
Building Systems and Components - 3.1% |
||||||||||||||
Simpson Manufacturing |
120,000 | 4,362,000 | 6,938,279 | |||||||||||
Construction Materials - 1.2% |
Telecommunications - 2.4% |
|||||||||||||
Florida Rock Industries |
35,000 | 1,717,100 | 250,000 | 3,452,500 | ||||||||||
Machinery - 4.7% |
Total (Cost $12,073,536) |
16,977,579 | ||||||||||||
Lincoln Electric Holdings |
75,000 | 2,974,500 | ||||||||||||
TOTAL COMMON STOCKS |
||||||||||||||
(Cost $75,976,534) |
$ | 121,826,467 | ||||||||||||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 49 |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Schedule of Investments | |||||||||||||||
PRINCIPAL | ||||||||||||||||
AMOUNT | VALUE | VALUE | ||||||||||||||
CORPORATE BONDS 5.1% |
REPURCHASE AGREEMENT 11.7% |
|||||||||||||||
Athena Neurosciences Finance 7.25% |
State Street Bank & Trust Company, | |||||||||||||||
Senior Note due 2/21/08 |
$ | 6,000,000 | $ | 5,857,500 | 4.10% dated 12/30/05, due 1/3/06, |
|||||||||||
E*TRADE Financial 6.00% |
maturity value $16,757,631 (collateralized |
|||||||||||||||
Conv. Sub. Note due 2/1/07 |
1,500,000 | 1,515,000 | by obligations of various U.S. Government |
|||||||||||||
Agencies, valued at $17,172,625) |
||||||||||||||||
TOTAL CORPORATE BONDS |
(Cost $16,750,000) |
$ | 16,750,000 | |||||||||||||
(Cost $6,890,957) |
7,372,500 | |||||||||||||||
COLLATERAL RECEIVED FOR SECURITIES LOANED 13.5% |
||||||||||||||||
GOVERNMENT BONDS 8.4% |
Money Market Funds | |||||||||||||||
(Principal Amount shown | State Street Navigator Securities Lending |
|||||||||||||||
in local currency.) | Prime Portfolio |
19,262,846 | ||||||||||||||
Canadian Government Bond |
||||||||||||||||
3.00% due 6/1/07 |
6,150,000 | 5,230,132 | (Cost $19,262,846) |
19,262,846 | ||||||||||||
New Zealand Government Bond |
||||||||||||||||
6.50% due 2/15/06 |
10,000,000 | 6,824,030 | TOTAL INVESTMENTS 130.7% |
|||||||||||||
(Cost $140,080,099) |
187,210,115 | |||||||||||||||
TOTAL GOVERNMENT BONDS |
||||||||||||||||
(Cost $10,785,668) |
12,054,162 | LIABILITIES LESS CASH |
||||||||||||||
AND OTHER ASSETS (13.2)% |
(18,966,373 | ) | ||||||||||||||
U.S. TREASURY OBLIGATIONS 6.9% |
||||||||||||||||
U.S Treasury Notes | PREFERRED STOCK (17.5)% |
(25,000,000 | ) | |||||||||||||
Treasury Inflation Index Protection |
||||||||||||||||
Security 2.00% due 7/15/14 |
10,000,000 | 9,944,140 | NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO |
|||||||||||||
COMMON STOCKHOLDERS 100.0% |
$ | 143,243,742 | ||||||||||||||
TOTAL U.S TREASURY OBLIGATIONS |
||||||||||||||||
(Cost $10,414,094) |
9,944,140 | |||||||||||||||
50 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Statement of Assets and Liabilities |
ASSETS: |
||||
Investments at value (including collateral on loaned securities)* | $ | 170,460,115 | ||
Repurchase agreement (at cost and value) | 16,750,000 | |||
Cash | 320 | |||
Receivable for investments sold | 3,224 | |||
Receivable for dividends and interest | 547,724 | |||
Prepaid expenses | 3,389 | |||
Total Assets |
187,764,772 | |||
LIABILITIES: |
||||
Payable for collateral on loaned securities | 19,262,846 | |||
Payable for investment advisory fee | 142,998 | |||
Preferred dividends accrued but not yet declared | 33,333 | |||
Accrued expenses | 81,853 | |||
Total Liabilities |
19,521,030 | |||
PREFERRED STOCK: |
||||
6.00% Cumulative Preferred Stock $0.001 par value, $25 liquidation value per share; 1,000,000 shares outstanding | 25,000,000 | |||
Total Preferred
Stock |
25,000,000 | |||
NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS |
$ | 143,243,742 | ||
ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: |
||||
Common Stock paid-in capital $0.001 par value per share; 14,674,667 shares outstanding (100,000,000 shares authorized) | $ | 92,368,072 | ||
Undistributed net investment income (loss) | (55,839 | ) | ||
Accumulated net realized gain (loss) on investments | 3,834,826 | |||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments | 47,130,016 | |||
Preferred dividends accrued but not yet declared | (33,333 | ) | ||
Net Assets
applicable to Common Stockholders (net asset value per share $9.76) |
$ | 143,243,742 | ||
*Investments at identified cost (including $19,262,846 of collateral on loaned securities) | $ | 123,330,099 | ||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 51 |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST | YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Statement of Operations |
INVESTMENT INCOME: |
||||
Income: | ||||
Interest |
$ | 1,819,666 | ||
Dividends |
653,713 | |||
Securities lending |
20,780 | |||
Total income | 2,494,159 | |||
Expenses: | ||||
Investment advisory fees |
1,436,054 | |||
Custody and transfer agent fees |
88,136 | |||
Stockholder reports |
69,804 | |||
Professional fees |
28,333 | |||
Directors fees |
20,347 | |||
Administrative and office facilities expenses |
11,067 | |||
Other expenses |
96,836 | |||
Total expenses | 1,750,577 | |||
Net investment income (loss) | 743,582 | |||
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS: |
||||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments | 19,164,839 | |||
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments | 1,922,287 | |||
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments | 21,087,126 | |||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS |
21,830,708 | |||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO PREFERRED STOCKHOLDERS |
(1,500,000 | ) | ||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS |
||||
RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS |
$ | 20,330,708 | ||
52 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST | ||
Statement of Changes in Net Assets |
Year ended | Year ended | |||||||
12/31/05 | 12/31/04 | |||||||
INVESTMENT OPERATIONS: |
||||||||
Net investment income (loss) | $ | 743,582 | $ | 225,575 | ||||
Net realized gain (loss) on investments | 19,164,839 | 16,972,445 | ||||||
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments | 1,922,287 | 9,319,147 | ||||||
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from investment operations | 21,830,708 | 26,517,167 | ||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO PREFERRED STOCKHOLDERS: |
||||||||
Net investment income | (80,100 | ) | (21,150 | ) | ||||
Net realized gain on investments | (1,419,900 | ) | (1,478,850 | ) | ||||
Total distributions to Preferred Stockholders | (1,500,000 | ) | (1,500,000 | ) | ||||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS |
||||||||
RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS |
20,330,708 | 25,017,167 | ||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: |
||||||||
Net investment income | (853,787 | ) | (242,185 | ) | ||||
Net realized gain on investments | (15,134,720 | ) | (16,948,411 | ) | ||||
Total distributions to Common Stockholders | (15,988,507 | ) | (17,190,596 | ) | ||||
CAPITAL STOCK TRANSACTIONS: |
||||||||
Reinvestment of distributions to Common Stockholders | 11,288,577 | 11,013,943 | ||||||
Net proceeds from rights offering | 21,760,372 | | ||||||
Total capital stock transactions | 33,048,949 | 11,013,943 | ||||||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS |
37,391,150 | 18,840,514 | ||||||
NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: |
||||||||
Beginning of year |
105,852,592 | 87,012,078 | ||||||
End of year (including undistributed net investment income (loss) of $(55,839) at 12/31/05 |
||||||||
and $(15,000) at 12/31/04) |
$ | 143,243,742 | $ | 105,852,592 | ||||
THE ACCOMPANYING NOTES ARE AN INTEGRAL PART OF THESE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS. | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 53 |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST | ||
Financial Highlights |
Years ended December 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||
2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | ||||||||||||||||
NET ASSET VALUE, BEGINNING OF PERIOD |
$9.75 | $9.00 | $6.27 | $7.28 | $6.77 | |||||||||||||||
INVESTMENT OPERATIONS: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income (loss) |
0.06 | 0.02 | 0.08 | (0.01 | ) | 0.05 | ||||||||||||||
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments |
1.44 | 2.63 | 3.57 | (0.74 | ) | 0.79 | ||||||||||||||
Total investment operations |
1.50 | 2.65 | 3.65 | (0.75 | ) | 0.84 | ||||||||||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO PREFERRED STOCKHOLDERS: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income |
(0.01 | ) | (0.00 | ) | (0.02 | ) | (0.03 | ) | (0.04 | ) | ||||||||||
Net realized gain on investments |
(0.11 | ) | (0.15 | ) | (0.14 | ) | (0.13 | ) | (0.13 | ) | ||||||||||
Total distributions to Preferred Stockholders |
(0.12 | ) | (0.15 | ) | (0.16 | ) | (0.16 | ) | (0.17 | ) | ||||||||||
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO COMMON |
||||||||||||||||||||
STOCKHOLDERS RESULTING FROM INVESTMENT OPERATIONS |
1.38 | 2.50 | 3.49 | (0.91 | ) | 0.67 | ||||||||||||||
DISTRIBUTIONS TO COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Net investment income |
(0.06 | ) | (0.02 | ) | (0.06 | ) | (0.02 | ) | (0.03 | ) | ||||||||||
Net realized gain on investments |
(1.15 | ) | (1.72 | ) | (0.56 | ) | (0.07 | ) | (0.11 | ) | ||||||||||
Total distributions to Common Stockholders |
(1.21 | ) | (1.74 | ) | (0.62 | ) | (0.09 | ) | (0.14 | ) | ||||||||||
CAPITAL STOCK TRANSACTIONS: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Effect of reinvestment of distributions by Common Stockholders |
(0.03 | ) | (0.01 | ) | (0.03 | ) | (0.01 | ) | (0.02 | ) | ||||||||||
Effect of rights offering and Preferred Stock offering |
(0.13 | ) | | (0.11 | ) | | | |||||||||||||
Total capital stock transactions |
(0.16 | ) | (0.01 | ) | (0.14 | ) | (0.01 | ) | (0.02 | ) | ||||||||||
NET ASSET VALUE, END OF PERIOD |
$9.76 | $9.75 | $9.00 | $6.27 | $7.28 | |||||||||||||||
MARKET VALUE, END OF PERIOD |
$9.53 | $10.47 | $8.48 | $5.56 | $6.65 | |||||||||||||||
TOTAL RETURN (a): |
||||||||||||||||||||
Market Value | 3.03 | % | 47.26 | % | 63.98 | % | (15.06 | )% | 19.65 | % | ||||||||||
Net Asset Value | 13.31 | % | 29.21 | % | 54.33 | % | (12.50 | )% | 10.04 | % | ||||||||||
RATIOS BASED ON AVERAGE NET ASSETS APPLICABLE TO |
||||||||||||||||||||
COMMON STOCKHOLDERS: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Total expenses (b,c) | 1.48 | % | 1.53 | % | 1.57 | % | 1.88 | % | 1.47 | % | ||||||||||
Management fee expense |
1.21 | % | 1.27 | % | 1.14 | % | 1.13 | % | 1.11 | % | ||||||||||
Other operating expenses |
0.27 | % | 0.26 | % | 0.43 | % | 0.75 | % | 0.36 | % | ||||||||||
Net investment income (loss) | 0.63 | % | 0.24 | % | 1.07 | % | (0.16 | )% | 0.70 | % | ||||||||||
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Net Assets Applicable to Common Stockholders, | ||||||||||||||||||||
End of Period (in thousands) |
$143,244 | $105,853 | $87,012 | $57,956 | $66,654 | |||||||||||||||
Liquidation Value of Preferred Stock, | ||||||||||||||||||||
End of Period (in thousands) |
$25,000 | $25,000 | $25,000 | $20,000 | $20,000 | |||||||||||||||
Portfolio Turnover Rate | 42 | % | 52 | % | 49 | % | 61 | % | 54 | % | ||||||||||
PREFERRED STOCK: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Total shares outstanding | 1,000,000 | 1,000,000 | 1,000,000 | 800,000 | 800,000 | |||||||||||||||
Asset coverage per share | $168.24 | $130.85 | $112.01 | $97.44 | $108.32 | |||||||||||||||
Liquidation preference per share | $25.00 | $25.00 | $25.00 | $25.00 | $25.00 | |||||||||||||||
Average market value per share (d): | ||||||||||||||||||||
6.00% Cumulative |
$25.38 | $24.83 | $25.45 | | | |||||||||||||||
7.45% Cumulative |
| | $25.53 | $25.64 | $25.09 | |||||||||||||||
(a) | The Market
Value Total Return is calculated assuming a purchase of Common Stock on the opening
of the first business day and a sale on the closing of the last
business day of each period reported. Dividends and distributions, if any, are assumed
for the purposes of this calculation to be reinvested at prices
obtained under the Funds Distribution Reinvestment and Cash Purchase Plan.
Net Asset Value Total Return is calculated on the same basis, except that
the Funds net asset value is used on the purchase and sale dates instead of
market value. |
|
(b) | Expense ratios
based on total average net assets including liquidation value of Preferred Stock
were 1.22%, 1.21%, 1.20%, 1.43% and 1.11% for the periods ended
December 31, 2005, 2004, 2003, 2002 and 2001, respectively. |
|
(c) | Expense ratios
based on average net assets applicable to Common Stockholders before waiver of fees
by the investment adviser would have been 1.73%, 2.06%
and 1.69% for the periods ended December 31, 2003, 2002 and 2001, respectively. |
|
(d) | The average of month-end market values during the period that the preferred stock was outstanding. |
54 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Notes to Financial Statements |
Summary of Significant Accounting Policies: Royce Focus Trust, Inc. (the Fund) is a diversified closed-end investment company. The Fund commenced operations on March 2, 1988 and Royce & Associates, LLC (Royce) assumed investment management responsibility for the Fund on November 1, 1996. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, and the reported amounts of income and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. Valuation of Investments: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on the valuation date. Securities that trade on an exchange or Nasdaq are valued at their last reported sales price or Nasdaq official closing price taken from the primary market in which each security trades or, if no sale is reported for such day, at their bid price. Other over-the-counter securities for which market quotations are readily available are valued at their bid price. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available are valued at their fair value under procedures established by the Funds Board of Directors. Bonds and other fixed income securities may be valued by reference to other securities with comparable ratings, interest rates and maturities, using established independent pricing services. Investment Transactions and Related Investment Income: Investment transactions are accounted for on the trade date. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date and any non-cash dividend income is recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Interest income is recorded on an accrual basis. Realized gains and losses from investment transactions are determined on the basis of identified cost for book and tax purposes. Expenses: The Fund incurs direct and indirect expenses. Expenses directly attributable to the Fund are charged to the Funds operations, while expenses applicable to more than one of the Royce Funds are allocated in an equitable manner. Allocated personnel and occupancy costs related to The Royce Funds are included in administrative and office facilities expenses. The Fund has adopted a deferred fee agreement that allows the Funds Directors to defer the receipt of all or a portion of Directors Fees otherwise payable. The deferred fees are invested in certain Royce Funds until distributed in accordance with the agreement. Taxes: As a qualified regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, the Fund is not subject to income taxes to the extent that it distributes substantially all of its taxable income for its |
|
fiscal year. The Schedule of Investments
includes information regarding income taxes under the caption Income Tax Information. Distributions: The Fund currently has a policy of paying quarterly distributions on the Funds Common Stock. Distributions are currently being made at the annual rate of 5% of the rolling average of the prior four calendar quarter-end NAVs of the Funds Common Stock, with the fourth quarter distribution being the greater of 1.25% of the rolling average or the distribution required by IRS regulations. Distributions to Preferred Stockholders are recorded on an accrual basis and paid quarterly. The Fund is required to allocate long-term capital gain distributions and other types of income proportionately to distributions made to holders of shares of Common Stock and Preferred Stock. To the extent that distributions are not paid from long-term capital gains, net investment income or net short-term capital gains, they will represent a return of capital. Distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations that may differ from accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Permanent book and tax basis differences relating to stockholder distributions will result in reclassifications within the capital accounts. Undistributed net investment income may include temporary book and tax basis differences, which will reverse in a subsequent period. Any taxable income or gain remaining undistributed at fiscal year end is distributed in the following year. Repurchase Agreements: The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements with institutions that the Funds investment adviser has determined are creditworthy. The Fund restricts repurchase agreements to maturities of no more than seven days. Securities pledged as collateral for repurchase agreements, which are held until maturity of the repurchase agreements, are marked-to-market daily and maintained at a value at least equal to the principal amount of the repurchase agreement (including accrued interest). Repurchase agreements could involve certain risks in the event of default or insolvency of the counter-party, including possible delays or restrictions upon the ability of the Fund to dispose of the underlying securities. Securities Lending: The Fund loans securities to qualified institutional investors for the purpose of realizing additional income. Collateral on all securities loaned for the Fund is accepted in cash and cash equivalents and invested temporarily by the custodian. The collateral is equal to at least 100% of the current market value of the loaned securities. The market value of the loaned securities is determined at the close of business of the Fund and any additional required collateral is delivered to the Fund on the next business day. Capital Stock: The Fund issued 1,191,399 and 1,182,493 shares of Common Stock as reinvestment of distributions by Common Stockholders for the years ended December 31, 2005 and 2004, respectively. |
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 55 |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST | DECEMBER 31, 2005 | |
Notes to Financial Statements (continued) |
On June 10, 2005, the Fund completed a rights
offering of Common Stock to its stockholders at the rate of one common share for
each 5 rights held by stockholders of record on May 6, 2005. The rights offering
was fully subscribed, resulting in the issuance of 2,627,397 common shares at a
price of $8.34, and proceeds of $21,912,491 to the Fund prior to the deduction of
expenses of $152,119. The net asset value per share of the Funds Common Stock
was reduced by approximately $0.13 per share as a result of the issuance.
At December 31, 2005, 1,000,000 shares of 6.00% Cumulative Preferred Stock were outstanding. Commencing October 17, 2008 and thereafter, the Fund, at its option, may redeem the Cumulative Preferred Stock, in whole or in part, at the redemption price. The Cumulative Preferred Stock is classified outside of permanent equity (net assets applicable to Common Stockholders) in the accompanying financial statements in accordance with Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) Topic D-98, Classification and Measurement of Redeemable Securities, that requires preferred securities that are redeemable for cash or other assets to be classified outside of permanent equity to the extent that the redemption is at a fixed or determinable price and at the option of the holder or upon the occurrence of an event that is not solely within the control of the issuer. The Fund is required to meet certain asset coverage tests with respect to the Cumulative Preferred Stock as required by the 1940 Act. In addition, pursuant to the Rating Agency Guidelines established by |
|
Moodys, the Fund is required to maintain
a certain discounted asset coverage. If the Fund fails to meet these requirements
and does not correct such failure, the Fund may be required to redeem, in part or
in full, the Cumulative Preferred Stock at a redemption price of $25.00 per share,
plus an amount equal to the accumulated and unpaid dividends, whether or not declared
on such shares, in order to meet these requirements. Additionally, failure to meet
the foregoing asset coverage requirements could restrict the Funds ability
to pay dividends to Common Stockholders and could lead to sales of portfolio securities
at inopportune times. The Fund has met these requirements since issuing the Cumulative
Preferred Stock. Investment Advisory Agreement: The Investment Advisory Agreement between Royce and the Fund provides for fees to be paid at an annual rate of 1.0% of the Funds average daily net assets applicable to Common Stockholders plus the liquidation value of Preferred Stock. Royce has voluntarily committed to waive the portion of its investment advisory fee attributable to an issue of the Funds Preferred Stock for any month in which the Funds average annual NAV total return since issuance of the Preferred Stock fails to exceed the applicable Preferred Stocks dividend rate. For the year ended December 31, 2005, the Fund accrued and paid Royce advisory fees totaling $1,436,054. |
Distributions paid from: |
2005 | 2004 | ||||
Ordinary income |
$ | 1,682,395 | $ | 263,335 | ||
Long-term capital gain |
15,806,112 | 18,427,261 | ||||
$ | 17,488,507 | $ | 18,690,596 | |||
As of December 31, 2005, the tax basis components of distributable earnings included in stockholders equity were as follows:
Undistributed net investment income |
$ | 536,514 | ||
Undistributed long-term capital gain |
4,130,847 | |||
Unrealized appreciation |
46,241,642 | |||
Accrued preferred distributions |
(33,333 | ) | ||
$ | 50,875,670 | |||
The difference between book basis and tax basis unrealized appreciation is attributable primarily to the tax deferral on wash sales and the unrealized gains on investments in Passive Foreign Investment Companies.
For financial reporting purposes, capital accounts and distributions to stockholders are adjusted to reflect the tax character of permanent book / tax differences. For the year ended December 31, 2005, the Fund recorded the following permanent reclassifications, which relate primarily to the current net operating losses. Results of operations and net assets were not affected by these reclassifications.
Undistributed | Accumulated | ||||||||||
Net Investment | Net Realized | Paid-in | |||||||||
Income | Gain (Loss) | Capital | |||||||||
$ | 149,466 | $ | (149,466 | ) | $ | | |||||
56 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
ROYCE FOCUS TRUST | ||
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of Royce Focus Trust, Inc.
TAIT, WELLER, & BAKER LLP
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 57 |
DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS |
All Directors and Officers may be reached c/o The Royce Funds, 1414 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10019 |
NAME AND POSITION: Charles M. Royce (66), Director* and President Term Expires: 2006 Tenure: Since 1986 (RVT), 1993 (RMT), 1996 (FUND)
Number of Funds Overseen: 23 Non-Royce Directorships: Director of
Technology Investment Capital Corp.
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: President, Chief Investment Officer and Member of Board of Managers of
Royce & Associates, LLC (Royce) (since October 2001), the Trusts investment adviser.
NAME AND POSITION: Mark R. Fetting (51), Director* Term Expires: 2007 Tenure: Since 2001
Number of Funds Overseen: 46** Non-Royce Directorships: None
**Director/Trustee of all Royce Funds consisting of 23 portfolios; Director/Trustee of the Legg Mason Family of Funds consisting of 23 portfolios.
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Executive Vice President of
Legg Mason, Inc.; Member of Board of Managers of Royce (since October 2001);
Division President and Senior Officer, Prudential Financial Group, Inc. and related
companies, including Fund Boards and consulting services to subsidiary companies
(from 1991 to 2000). Mr. Fettings prior business experience includes having served
as Partner, Greenwich Associates and Vice President, T. Rowe Price Group, Inc.
NAME AND POSITION: Donald R. Dwight (74), Director Term Expires: 2008 Tenure: Since 1998
Number of Funds Overseen: 23 Non-Royce Directorships: None
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: President of Dwight Partners,
Inc., corporate communications consultant; Chairman (from 1982 to March
1998) and Chairman Emeritus (since March 1998) of Newspapers of New
England, Inc. Mr. Dwights prior experience includes having served as
Lieutenant Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as President and
Publisher of Minneapolis Star and Tribune Company, and as Trustee of the
registered investment companies constituting the Eaton Vance Funds.
NAME AND POSITION: Richard M. Galkin (67), Director Term Expires: 2007
Tenure: Since 1986 (RVT), 1993 (RMT),
1996 (FUND)
Number of Funds Overseen: 23 Non-Royce Directorships: None
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Private investor. Mr. Galkins
prior business experience includes having served as President of Richard M.
Galkin Associates, Inc., telecommunications consultants, President of
Manhattan Cable Television (a subsidiary of Time, Inc.), President of Haverhills
Inc. (another Time, Inc. subsidiary), President of Rhode Island Cable Television
and Senior Vice President of Satellite Television Corp. (a subsidiary of Comsat).
NAME AND POSITION: Stephen L. Isaacs (66), Director Term Expires: 2008 (RVT), 2008 Tenure: Since 1986 (RVT), 1993
(RMT), 2006 (FUND) (RMT), 1996 (FUND)
Number of Funds Overseen: 23 Non-Royce Directorships: None
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: President of The Center for
Health and Social Policy (since September 1996); Attorney and President of Health
Policy Associates, Inc., consultants. Mr. Isaacss prior business experience includes
having served as Director of Columbia University Development Law and Policy
Program and Professor at Columbia University (until August 1996).
NAME AND POSITION: William L. Koke (71), Director Term Expires: 2006 (RVT), 2006 Tenure: Since 2001 (RVT), 2001
(RMT), 2008 (FUND) (RMT), 1997 (FUND)
Number of Funds Overseen: 23 Non-Royce Directorships: None
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Private Investor. Mr. Kokes
prior business experience includes having served as Director of Financial
Relations of SONAT, Inc., Treasurer of Ward Foods, Inc. and President of
CFC, Inc. |
NAME AND POSITION: Arthur S. Mehlman (64), Director Term Expires: 2007 Tenure: Since 2004
Number of Funds Overseen: 46** Non-Royce Directorships: Director of Municipal Mortgage & Equity, LLC.
**Director/Trustee of all Royce Funds consisting of 23 portfolios; Director/Trustee
of the Legg Mason Family of Funds consisting of 23 portfolios.
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Director of The League for People with Disabilities, Inc.; Director of University of Maryland Foundation and University of Maryland College Park Foundation (nonprofits). Formerly Partner, KPMG LLP (international accounting firm) (1972-2002). Director of Maryland Business Roundtable for Education (July 1984June 2002). NAME AND POSITION: David L. Meister (66), Director Term Expires: 2006
Tenure: Since 1986 (RVT), 1993
(RMT), 1996 (FUND) Number of Funds Overseen: 23 Non-Royce Directorships: None
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Private Investor. Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer of The Tennis Channel (June 2000March 2005).
Chief Executive Officer of Seniorlife.com (from December 1999 to May 2000).
Mr. Meisters prior business experience includes having served as a consultant
to the communications industry, President of Financial News Network, Senior
Vice President of HBO, President of Time-Life Films and Head of Broadcasting
for Major League Baseball.
NAME AND POSITION: G. Peter OBrien (60), Director Term Expires: 2006 Tenure: Since 2001
Number of Funds Overseen: 46** Non-Royce Directorships: Director of Technology Investment Capital Corp.
**Director/Trustee of all Royce Funds
consisting of 23 portfolios; Director/
Trustee of the Legg Mason Fmaily of Funds consisting of 23 portfolios.
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Trustee Emeritus of Colgate University; Board Member of Hill House, Inc. (since 1999); Formerly Trustee of Colgate University (from 19962005), President of Hill House, Inc. (from 20012005) and Managing Director/Equity Capital Markets Group of Merrill Lynch & Co. (from 1971 to 1999). NAME AND POSITION: John D. Diederich (54), Vice President and Treasurer Tenure: Since 1997 Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Managing Director, Chief
Operating Officer and Member of Board of Managers of Royce (since October
2001); Director of Administration of the Funds since April 1993.
NAME AND POSITION: Jack E. Fockler, Jr. (47), Vice President Tenure: Since 1995 (RVT), 1995 (RMT), 1996 (FUND) Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Managing Director and Vice
President of Royce, having been employed by Royce since October 1989. NAME AND POSITION: W. Whitney George (47), Vice President Tenure: Since 1995 (RVT), 1995 (RMT), 1996 (FUND) Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Managing Director and Vice
President of Royce, having been employed by Royce since October 1991. NAME AND POSITION: Daniel A. OByrne (43), Vice President and Assistant Secretary Tenure: Since 1994 (RVT), 1994 (RMT), 1996 (FUND) Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: Vice President of Royce, having been employed by Royce since October 1986. NAME AND POSITION: John E. Denneen (38), Secretary Tenure: 1996-2001 and Since April 2002 Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years: General Counsel (Deputy General Counsel prior to 2003), Principal, Chief Legal and Compliance Officer and Secretary of Royce (1996-2001 and since April 2002); Principal of Credit Suisse First Boston Private Equity (2001-2002). |
58 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS
NOTES TO PERFORMANCE AND OTHER IMPORTANT INFORMATION | ||
the Funds future operating
results
the prospects of the Funds portfolio companies
the impact of investments that the Funds have made or may make
the dependence of the Funds future success on the general economy and
its impact on the companies and industries in which the Funds invest, and
the ability of the Funds portfolio companies to achieve their objectives.
THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS | 59 |
NOTES TO PERFORMANCE AND OTHER IMPORTANT INFORMATION (CONTINUED) | ||
Votes For | Votes Abstained | ||||||||
* | Donald R. Dwight | 55,341,521 | 524,245 | ||||||
* | Stephen L. Isaacs | 55,442,757 | 423,009 | ||||||
** | William L. Koke | 7,494,598 | 67,784 | ||||||
** | David L. Meister | 7,482,620 | 79,762 |
* | Common Stock and Preferred Stock Voting Together as a Single Class | |
** | Preferred Stock Voting as a Separate Class |
Votes For | Votes Abstained | |||||||||
* | Donald R. Dwight | 21,354,815 | 181,227 | |||||||
* | Stephen L. Isaacs | 21,362,901 | 173,141 | |||||||
** | William L. Koke | 1,951,681 | 18,351 | |||||||
** | David L. Meister | 1,952,481 | 17,551 |
* | Common Stock and Preferred Stock Voting Together as a Single Class | |
** | Preferred Stock Voting as a Separate Class |
Votes For | Votes Abstained | |||||||||
* | Donald R. Dwight | 12,467,299 | 123,891 | |||||||
** | Stephen L. Isaacs | 920,921 | 4,780 | |||||||
* | William L. Koke | 12,723,349 | 118,841 | |||||||
** | David L. Meister | 920,521 | 5,180 |
* | Common Stock and Preferred Stock Voting Together as a Single Class | |
** | Preferred Stock Voting as a Separate Class |
60 | THE ROYCE FUNDS 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
POSTSCRIPT |
Our Favorite Things
Royces Holiday Tune (Sung to the Tune of My Favorite Things)
Well-run small companies selling for peanuts,
Balance sheets so pure they dont need much clean-up,
Cash flow, good management, lots of earnings
These are a few of our favorite things.
Micro-cap businesses Wall Streets
not heard of,
Research til midnight until we feel
sure of
A firm that is debt-free and high-returning
These are a few of our favorite things.
People who sell at the first sign of trouble,
Bargain-priced stocks from the burst of
a bubble,
Prices dropped so low they make our hearts sing
These are a few of our favorite things
Financial statements that tell a good story,
Transparent accounting that wont make
us sorry,
Prices that bottom out from missed earnings
These are a few of our favorite things
When the price stalls
As the bell rings,
When returns are bad,
We simply remember our favorite things,
And then we dont feel so sad.
THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE 2005 REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS |
The
RoyceFunds
Wealth Of Experience
With approximately $22.4 billion in open- and closed-end
fund assets under management, Royce &
Associates is committed to the same small-company investing principles that have served us well
for more than 30 years. Charles M. Royce, our Chief Investment Officer, enjoys one of the longest
tenures of any active mutual fund manager. Royces investment staff includes six other Portfolio
Managers, as well as eight assistant portfolio managers and analysts, and six traders.
Multiple Funds, Common Focus
Our goal is to offer both individual and institutional investors the best available small-cap value
portfolios. Unlike a lot of mutual fund groups with broad product offerings, we have chosen to
concentrate on small-company value investing by providing investors with a range of funds that
take full advantage of this large and diverse sector.
Consistent Discipline
Our approach emphasizes paying close attention to risk and maintaining the same discipline,
regardless of market movements and trends. The price we pay for a security must be significantly
below our appraisal of its current worth. This requires a thorough analysis of the financial and
business dynamics of an enterprise, as though we were purchasing the entire company.
Co-Ownership Of Funds
It is important that our employees and shareholders share a common financial goal; our officers,
employees and their families currently have approximately $108 million invested in The Royce Funds.
|
||||||
General Information
Additional Report Copies and Fund Inquiries (800) 221-4268 Computershare Transfer Agent and Registrar (800) 426-5523 |
Broker/Dealer Services For Fund Materials and Performance Updates, (800) 59-ROYCE (597-6923) Advisor Services For Fund Materials, Performance Updates or Account Inquiries (800) 33-ROYCE (337-6923) |
|||||
www.roycefunds.com | ||||||
CE-REP-1205 |
Item 2: Code(s) of Ethics As of the end of the period covered by this report, the Registrant had adopted a code of ethics, as defined in Item 2 of Form N-CSR, applicable to its principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer or controller, or persons performing similar functions. A copy of this code of ethics is filed as an exhibit to this Form N-CSR. No substantive amendments were approved or waivers were granted to this code of ethics during the period covered by this report.
Item 3: Audit Committee Financial Expert | ||
(a)(1) | The Board of Directors of the Registrant has determined that it has an audit committee financial expert. | |
(a)(2) | Arthur S. Mehlman was designated by the Board of Directors as the Registrants Audit Committee Financial Expert, effective April 15, 2004. Mr. Mehlman is independent as defined under Item 3 of Form N-CSR. |
Item 4: Principal Accountant Fees and Services. | ||
(a) | Audit Fees: | |
Year ended December 31, 2005 - $33,000 | ||
Year ended December 31, 2004 - $31,000 | ||
(b) | Audit-Related Fees: | |
Year ended December 31, 2005 - $1,500 Preparation of reports to rating agency for Preferred Stock | ||
Year ended December 31, 2004 - $1,500 Preparation of reports to rating agency for Preferred Stock | ||
(c) | Tax Fees: | |
Year ended December 31, 2005 - $2,500 - Preparation of tax returns | ||
Year ended December 31, 2004 - $2,500 - Preparation of tax returns | ||
(d) | All Other Fees: | |
Year ended December 31, 2005 - $2,500 Agreed upon procedures report relating to investment advisory fee calculation | ||
Year ended December 31, 2004 - $0 |
(e)(1) Annual Pre-Approval: On an annual basis, the Registrants independent auditor submits to the Audit Committee a schedule of proposed audit, audit-related, tax and other non-audit services to be rendered to the Registrant and/or investment adviser(s) for the following year that require pre-approval by the Audit Committee. This schedule provides a description of each type of service that is expected to require pre-approval and the maximum fees that can be paid for each such service without further Audit Committee approval. The Audit Committee then reviews and determines whether to approve the types of scheduled services and the projected fees for them. Any subsequent revision to already pre-approved services or fees (including fee increases) are presented for consideration at the next regularly scheduled Audit Committee meeting, as needed.
If subsequent to the annual pre-approval of services and fees by the Audit Committee, the Registrant or one of its affiliates determines that it would like to engage the Registrants independent auditor to perform a service not already pre-approved, the request is to be submitted to the Registrants Chief Financial Officer, and if he or she determines that the service fits within the independence guidelines (e.g., it is not a prohibited service), he or she will then arrange for a discussion of the proposed service and fee to be included on the agenda for the next regularly scheduled Audit Committee meeting so that pre-approval can be considered.
Interim Pre-Approval: If, in the judgment of the Registrants Chief Financial Officer, a proposed engagement needs to commence before the next regularly scheduled Audit Committee meeting, he or she shall submit a written summary of the proposed engagement to all members of the Audit Committee, outlining the services, the estimated maximum cost, the category of the services (e.g., audit, audit-related, tax or other) and the rationale for engaging the Registrants independent auditor to perform the services. To the extent the proposed engagement involves audit, audit-related or tax services, any individual member of the Audit Committee who is an
independent Board member is authorized to pre-approve the engagement. To the extent the proposed engagement involves non-audit services other than audit-related or tax, the Chairman of the Audit Committee is authorized to pre-approve the engagement. The Registrants Chief Financial Officer will arrange for this interim review and coordinate with the appropriate member(s) of the Committee. The independent auditor may not commence the engagement under consideration until the Registrants Chief Financial Officer has informed the auditor in writing that pre-approval has been obtained from the Audit Committee or an individual member who is an independent Board member. The member of the Audit Committee who pre-approves any engagements in between regularly scheduled Audit Committee meetings is to report, for informational purposes only, any pre-approval decisions to the Audit Committee at its next regularly scheduled meeting.
(e)(2) | Not Applicable | |
(f) | Not Applicable | |
(g) | Year ended December 31, 2005 - $11,500 | |
Year ended December 31, 2004 - $4,000 | ||
(h) | No such services were rendered during 2005 or 2004. |
Item 5: The Registrant has a separately designated standing audit committee
established in accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934. Donald R. Dwight, Richard M. Galkin, Stephen L. Isaacs, William L. Koke,
Arthur S. Mehlman, David L. Meister and G. Peter OBrien are members of the
Registrants audit committee.
Item 6: Not Applicable.
Item 7:
June 5, 2003 As amended on April 14, 2005 |
Royce & Associates Proxy Voting Guidelines and Procedures
These procedures apply to Royce & Associates, LLC (Royce) and all funds and other client accounts for which it is responsible for voting proxies, including all open and closed-end registered investment companies (The Royce Funds), limited partnerships, limited liability companies, separate accounts, other accounts for which it acts as investment adviser and any accounts for which it acts as sub-adviser that have directly or indirectly delegated proxy voting authority to Royce. The Boards of Trustees/Directors of The Royce Funds have delegated all proxy voting decisions to Royce, and in the case of Royce Technology Value Fund, to JHC Capital Management subject to these policies and procedures.
Receipt of Proxy Material. Under the continuous oversight of the Head of Administration, an Administrative Assistant designated by him is responsible for monitoring receipt of all proxies and ensuring that proxies are received for all securities for which Royce has proxy voting responsibility. All proxy materials are logged in upon receipt by Royces Librarian.
Voting of Proxies. Once proxy material has been logged in by Royces Librarian, it is then promptly reviewed by the designated Administrative Assistant to evaluate the issues presented. Regularly recurring matters are usually voted as recommended by the issuers board of directors or management. The Head of Administration, in consultation with the Chief Investment Officer, develops and updates a list of matters Royce treats as regularly recurring and is responsible for ensuring that the designated Administrative Assistant has an up-to-date list of these matters at all times, including instructions from Royces Chief Investment Officer on how to vote on those matters on behalf of Royce clients. Examples of regularly recurring matters include non-contested elections of directors and non-contested approval of independent auditors. Non-regularly recurring matters are brought to the attention of the portfolio manager(s) for the account(s) involved by the designated Administrative Assistant, and, after giving some consideration to advisories from Proxy Master (a service provided by Institutional Shareholder Services),
the portfolio manager directs that such matters be voted in a way that he or she believes should better protect or enhance the value of the investment. If the portfolio manager determines that information concerning any proxy requires analysis, is missing or incomplete, he or she then gives the proxy to an analyst or another portfolio manager for review and analysis.
a. |
From time to time, it is possible that one Royce portfolio manager will decide (i) to vote
shares held in client accounts he or she manages differently from the vote of another Royce portfolio
manager whose client accounts hold the same security or (ii) to abstain from voting on behalf of client
accounts he or she manages when another Royce portfolio manager is casting votes on behalf of other
Royce client accounts. |
|
The designated Administrative Assistant reviews all proxy votes collected from Royces portfolio
managers prior to such votes being cast. If any difference exists among the voting instructions given
by Royces portfolio managers, as described above, the designated Administrative Assistant then
presents these proposed votes to the Head of Administration and the Chief Investment Officer. The
Chief Investment Officer, after consulting with the relevant portfolio managers, either reconciles the
votes or authorizes the casting of differing votes by different portfolio managers. The Head of
Administration maintains a log of all votes for which different portfolio managers have cast differing
votes, that describes the rationale for allowing such differing votes and contains the initials of both the
Chief Investment Officer and Head of Administration allowing such differing votes. The Head of
Administration performs a weekly review of all votes cast by Royce to confirm that any conflicting
votes were properly handled in accordance with the above-described procedures. |
||
b. |
There are many circumstances that might cause Royce to vote against an issuers board of
directors or management proposal. These would include, among others, excessive compensation,
unusual management stock options, preferential voting, poison pills, etc. The portfolio managers
decide these issues on a case-by-case basis as described above. |
|
c. |
A portfolio manager may, on occasion, determine to abstain from voting a proxy or a specific
proxy item when he or she concludes that the potential benefit of voting is outweighed by the cost,
when it is not in the client accounts best interest to vote. |
|
d. |
When a client has authorized Royce to vote proxies on its behalf, Royce will generally not
accept instructions from the clients regarding how to vote proxies. |
|
e. |
If a security is on loan under The Royce Funds Securities Lending Program with State Street
Bank and Trust Company (Loaned Securities), the Head of Administration or the designated
Administrative Assistant will recall the Loaned Securities and request that they be delivered within the
customary settlement period after the notice, to permit the exercise of their voting rights if the number
of shares of the security on loan would have a material effect on The Royce Funds voting power at the
up-coming stockholder meeting. A material effect is defined as any case where the Loaned Securities
are 1% or more of a class of a companys outstanding equity securities. |
Custodian banks are authorized to release all shares held for Royce client account portfolios to Automated Data Processing Corporation (ADP) for voting, utilizing ADPs Proxy Edge software system. Substantially all portfolio companies utilize ADP to collect their proxy votes. However, for the limited number of portfolio companies that do not utilize ADP, Royce attempts to register at least a portion of its clients holdings as a physical shareholder in order to ensure its receipt of a physical proxy.
Under the continuous oversight of the Head of Administration, the designated Administrative Assistant is responsible for voting all proxies in a timely manner. Votes are returned to ADP using Proxy Edge as ballots are received, generally two weeks before the scheduled meeting date. The issuer can thus see that the shares were voted, but the actual vote cast is not released to the company until 4pm on the day before the meeting. If proxies must be mailed, they go out at least ten business days before the meeting date.
Conflicts of Interest. The designated Administrative Assistant reviews reports generated by Royces portfolio management system (Quest PMS) that set forth by record date, any security held in a Royce client account which is issued by a (i) public company that is, or a known affiliate of which is, a separate account client of Royce
(including sub-advisory relationships), (ii) public company, or a known affiliate of a public company, that has invested in a privately-offered pooled vehicle managed by Royce or (iii) public company, or a known affiliate of a public company, by which the spouse of a Royce employee or an immediate family member of a Royce employee living in the household of such employee is employed, for the purpose of identifying any potential proxy votes that could present a conflict of interest for Royce. The Head of Administration develops and updates the list of such public companies or their known affiliates which is used by Quest PMS to generate these daily reports. This list also contains information regarding the source of any potential conflict relating to such companies. Potential conflicts identified on the conflicts reports are brought to the attention of the Head of Administration by the designated Administrative Assistant, who then reviews them to determine if business or personal relationships exist between Royce, its officers, managers or employees and the company that could present a material conflict of interest. Any such identified material conflicts are voted by Royce in accordance with the recommendation given by an independent third party research firm (Institutional Shareholder Services). The Head of Administration maintains a log of all such conflicts identified, the analysis of the conflict and the vote ultimately cast. Each entry in this log is signed by the Chief Investment Officer before the relevant votes are cast.
Recordkeeping. A record of the issues and how they are voted is stored in the Proxy Edge system. Copies of all physically executed proxy cards, all proxy statements and any other documents created or reviewed that are material to making a decision on how to vote proxies are retained in the Company File maintained by Royces Librarian.
Item 8: (a)(1) Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies (information as of March 8, 2006)
Name | Title | Length of Service | Principal Occupation(s) During Past 5 Years |
Charles M. Royce | President, Chief Investment Officer and member of the Board of Managers of Royce & Associates, LLC and its predecessor, Royce & Associates, Inc. (collectively, Royce) |
Since 1972 |
President, Chief Investment Officer and member of the
Board of Managers of Royce, the Registrants investment
adviser; Director and President of the Registrant, Royce
Micro-Cap Trust, Inc. (RMT) and Royce Focus Trust,
Inc. (RFT), closed-end diversified management
investment companies of which Royce is the investment
adviser; Trustee and President of The Royce Fund (TRF)
and Royce Capital Fund (RCF), open-end diversified
management investment companies of which Royce is the
investment adviser (the Registrant, RMT, RFT, TRF, and
RCF collectively, The Royce Funds); Secretary and sole
director of Royce Fund Services, Inc., a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Royce and the distributor of the TRFs
shares; and managing general partner of Royce
Management Company, the general partner of various
private investment limited partnerships until October 2001. |
(a)(2) Other Accounts Managed by Portfolio Manager and Potential Conflicts of Interest (information as of December 31, 2005)
Type of Account | Number
of Accounts Managed |
Total Assets Managed |
Number
of Accounts Managed for which Advisory Fee is Performance-Based |
Value of
Managed Accounts for which Advisory Fee is Performance Based |
Registered investment companies | 11 | $14,108,049,219 | 4 | $1,632,203,240 |
Private pooled investment vehicles | 5 | $122,237,742 | 3 | $54,129,612 |
Other accounts* | 14 | $76,418,164 | - | - |
*Other accounts include all other accounts managed by the Portfolio Manager in either a professional or personal capacity except for personal accounts subject to pre-approval and reporting requirements under the Registrants Rule 17j-1 Code of Ethics.
As described below, there is a revenue-based component of the Portfolio Managers Performance Bonus and the Portfolio Manager also receives a Firm Bonus based on revenues (adjusted for certain imputed expenses) generated by Royce. In addition, the Portfolio Manager receives a bonus based on Royces retained pre-tax profits from operations. As a result, the Portfolio Manager may receive a greater relative benefit from activities that increase the value to Royce of The Royce Funds and/or other Royce client accounts, including, but not limited to, increases in sales of the Registrants shares and assets under management.
Also, as described above, the Portfolio Manager generally manages more than one client account, including, among others, registered investment company accounts, separate accounts and private pooled accounts managed on behalf of institutions (e.g., pension funds, endowments and foundations) and for high-net-worth individuals. The appearance of a conflict of interest may arise where Royce has an incentive, such as a performancebased management fee (or any other variation in the level of fees payable by The Royce Funds or other Royce client accounts to Royce), which relates to the management of one or more of The Royce Funds or accounts with respect to which the Portfolio Manager has day-to-day management responsibilities. The Performance Bonus paid to the Portfolio Manager for two registered investment company accounts (the Registrant and RMT) is based, in part, on performance-based fee revenues. The Registrant and RMT pay Royce a fulcrum fee that is adjusted up or down depending on the performance of that Fund relative to its benchmark index. In addition, two other registered investment company accounts managed by the Portfolio Manager, Royce Select Fund I and Royce Select Fund II, each pay Royce a performance-based fee.
Finally, conflicts of interest may arise when the Portfolio Manager personally buys, holds or sells securities held or to be purchased or sold for the Registrant or other Royce client account or personally buys, holds or sells the shares of one or more of The Royce Funds. To address this, Royce has adopted a written Code of Ethics designed to prevent and detect personal trading activities that may interfere or conflict with client interests (including Registrant shareholders interests). Royce generally does not permit its Portfolio Managers to purchase small- or micro-cap securities in their personal investment portfolios.
Royce and The Royce Funds have adopted certain compliance procedures which are designed to address the above-described types of conflicts. However, there is no guarantee that such procedures will detect each and every situation in which a conflict arises.
(a)(3) Description of Portfolio Manager Compensation Structure (information as of December 31, 2005)
Royce seeks to maintain a compensation program that is competitively positioned to attract and retain high-caliber investment professionals. The Portfolio Manager receives from Royce a base salary, a Performance Bonus and a benefits package. The Portfolio Managers compensation is reviewed and may be modified from time to time as appropriate to reflect changes in the market, as well as to adjust the factors used to determine bonuses. The Portfolio Managers compensation consists of the following elements:
- | BASE SALARY.
The Portfolio Manager is paid a base salary. In setting the base salary, Royce seeks
to be competitive in light of the Portfolio Managers experience and responsibilities. |
|
- | PERFORMANCE
BONUS. The Portfolio Manager receives a quarterly Performance Bonus that is either asset-based.
or revenue based and therefore in part based on the value of the accounts net assets, determined with
reference to each of the registered investment company and other client accounts managed by him. The revenue
used to determine the quarterly performance bonus received by the Portfolio Manager that relates to each of the
Registrant and RMT are performance-based fee revenues. Except as described below, the Performance Bonus
applicable to the registered investment company accounts managed by the Portfolio Manager is subject to upward
or downward adjustment or elimination based on a combination of 3-year and 5-year risk-adjusted pre-tax returns
of such accounts relative to all small-cap objective funds with three years of history tracked by Morningstar (as of
December 31, 2005 there were 390 such Funds tracked by Morningstar) and the 5-year absolute returns of such
accounts relative to 5-year U.S. Treasury Notes. The Performance Bonus applicable to non-registered investment
company accounts managed by the Portfolio Manager, and to Royce Select Fund I and Royce Select Fund II, is
not subject to a performance-related adjustment. |
Payment of the Performance Bonus may be deferred as described below, and any amounts deferred are forfeitable, if the Portfolio Manager is terminated by Royce with or without cause or resigns. The amount of the deferred Performance Bonus will appreciate or depreciate during the deferral period, based on the total return performance of one or more Royce-managed registered investment company accounts selected by the Portfolio Manager at the beginning of the deferral period. The amount deferred will depend on the Portfolio Managers total direct, indirect beneficial and deferred unvested bonus investments in the Royce registered investment company account for which he or she is receiving portfolio management compensation.
- | FIRM BONUS.
The Portfolio Manager receives a quarterly bonus based on Royces net revenues. |
|
- | BENEFIT PACKAGE.
The Portfolio Manager also receives benefits standard for all Royce employees,
including health care and other insurance benefits, and participation in Royces 401(k) Plan and Money Purchase
Pension Plan. From time to time, on a purely discretionary basis, the Portfolio Manager may also receive options
to acquire stock in Royces parent company, Legg Mason, Inc. Those options typically represent a relatively
small portion of a Portfolio Managers overall compensation. |
The Portfolio Manager, in addition to the above-described compensation, also receives a bonus based on Royces retained pre-tax operating profit. This bonus, along with the Performance Bonus and Firm Bonus, generally represents the most significant element of the Portfolio Managers compensation. A portion of the above-described compensation payable to the Portfolio Manager relates to his responsibilities as Royces Chief Executive Officer, Chief Investment Officer and President of The Royce Funds.
(a)(4) Dollar Range of Equity Securities in Registrant Beneficially Owned by Portfolio Manager (information as of December 31, 2005)
The following table shows the dollar range of the Registrants shares owned beneficially and of record by the Portfolio Manager, including investments by his immediately family members sharing the same household and amounts invested through retirement and deferred compensation plans.
Dollar Range of
Registrants Shares Beneficially Owned
Over $1,000,000
Item 9: Not Applicable.
Item 10: Not Applicable.
Item 11: Controls and Procedures.
(a) Disclosure Controls and Procedures. The Principal Executive and Financial Officers concluded that the Registrants Disclosure Controls and Procedures are effective based on their evaluation of the Disclosure Controls and Procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report.
(b) Internal Control over Financial Reporting. There were no significant changes in Registrants internal control over financial reporting or in other factors that could significantly affect this control subsequent to the date of the evaluation, including any corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report.
Item 12: Exhibits attached hereto.
(a)(1) The Registrants code of
ethics pursuant to Item 2 of Form N-CSR.
(a)(2) Separate certifications by the Registrants Principal Executive Officer and Principal Financial Officer as required by Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940.
(a)(3) Not Applicable
(b) Separate certifications by the Registrants Principal Executive Officer and Principal Financial Officer, pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and required by Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940.
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.
ROYCE VALUE TRUST, INC.
BY: | /s/Charles M. Royce |
Charles M. Royce | |
President |
Date: March 8, 2006
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.
ROYCE VALUE TRUST, INC.
BY: | /s/Charles M. Royce |
Charles M. Royce | |
President |
Date: March 8, 2006
ROYCE VALUE TRUST, INC.
BY: | /s/John D. Diederich |
John D. Diederich | |
Chief Financial Officer |
Date: March 8, 2006