Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.
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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 811-22294

 

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

 

 

620 Eighth Avenue, 49th Floor, New York, NY 10018

(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

 

 

Robert I. Frenkel, Esq.

Legg Mason & Co., LLC

100 First Stamford Place

Stamford, CT 06902

(Name and address of agent for service)

 

 

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (888) 777-0102

Date of fiscal year end: November 30

Date of reporting period: May 31, 2015

 

 

 


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ITEM 1. REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS.

The Semi-Annual Report to Stockholders is filed herewith.


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LOGO

 

 

Semi-Annual Report   May 31, 2015

WESTERN ASSET

INVESTMENT GRADE

DEFINED OPPORTUNITY

TRUST INC. (IGI)

 

 

 

LOGO

 

INVESTMENT PRODUCTS: NOT FDIC INSURED • NO BANK GUARANTEE • MAY LOSE VALUE


Table of Contents
What’s inside      
Letter from the chairman     II   
Investment commentary     III   
Fund at a glance     1   
Spread duration     2   
Effective duration     3   
Schedule of investments     4   
Statement of assets and liabilities     15   
Statement of operations     16   
Statements of changes in net assets     17   
Financial highlights     18   
Notes to financial statements     19   
Additional shareholder information     35   
Dividend reinvestment plan     36   

 

Fund objective

The Fund’s primary investment objective is to provide current income and then to liquidate and distribute substantially all of the Fund’s net assets to stockholders on or about December 2, 2024. As a secondary investment objective, the Fund will seek capital appreciation. There can be no assurance the Fund will achieve its investment objectives.

The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objectives by investing, under normal market conditions, at least 80% of its net assets in investment grade corporate fixed-income securities of varying maturities.

 

Letter from the chairman

 

LOGO

 

Dear Shareholder,

We are pleased to provide the semi-annual report of Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. for the six-month reporting period ended May 31, 2015. Please read on for Fund performance information and a detailed look at prevailing economic and market conditions during the Fund’s reporting period.

As always, we remain committed to providing you with excellent service and a full spectrum of investment choices. We also remain committed to supplementing the support you receive from your financial advisor. One way we accomplish this is through our website, www.lmcef.com. Here you can gain immediate access to market and investment information, including:

 

Ÿ  

Fund prices and performance,

 

Ÿ  

Market insights and commentaries from our portfolio managers, and

 

Ÿ  

A host of educational resources.

We look forward to helping you meet your financial goals.

Sincerely,

 

LOGO

Kenneth D. Fuller

Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

June 26, 2015

 

II    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.


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Investment commentary

 

Economic review

The U.S. economy expanded moderately during the six months ended May 31, 2015 (the “reporting period”). While the U.S. Department of Commerce reported that third quarter 2014 U.S. gross domestic product (“GDP”)i growth was a strong 5.0%, fourth quarter 2014 GDP growth slowed to a more modest 2.2%. The deceleration in growth primarily reflected an upturn in imports, a downturn in federal government spending and moderating nonresidential fixed investment. In addition, the U.S. Department of Commerce reported that first quarter 2015 GDP growth was -0.2%. This downturn was attributed to a number of factors, including a deceleration in personal consumption expenditures, along with negative contributions from exports, nonresidential fixed investment, and state and local government spending.

Activity in the U.S. manufacturing sector also moderated during the reporting period. Based on the Institute for Supply Management’s Purchasing Managers’ Index (“PMI”)ii, U.S. manufacturing expanded during all six months of the reporting period (a reading below 50 indicates a contraction, whereas a reading above 50 indicates an expansion). After a reading of 55.1 in December 2014, the PMI generally decelerated over much of the reporting period and the PMI was 52.8 in May 2015.

The labor market was a moderate tailwind for the economy during the reporting period. When the period began, unemployment was 5.6%, as reported by the U.S. Department of Labor. By May 2015, unemployment was 5.5%, close to its lowest level since May 2008.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.   III


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Investment commentary (cont’d)

 

Market review

Q. How did the Federal Reserve Board (“Fed”)iii respond to the economic environment?

A. The Fed took a number of actions as it sought to meet its dual mandate of fostering maximum employment and price stability. As it has since December 2008, the Fed maintained the federal funds rateiv at a historically low range between zero and 0.25%. The Fed ended its asset purchase program that was announced in December 2012. In December 2014, the Fed said that “it can be patient in beginning to normalize the stance of monetary policy.” At its meeting that ended on April 29, 2015, the Fed said, “…economic growth slowed during the winter months, in part reflecting transitory factors.” Finally, at its meeting that concluded on June 17, 2015, after the reporting period ended, the Fed said, “The Committee currently anticipates that, even after employment and inflation are near mandate-consistent levels, economic conditions may, for some time, warrant keeping the target federal funds rate below levels the Committee views as normal in the longer run.”

Q. Did Treasury yields trend higher or lower during the six months ended May 31, 2015?

A. Short-term Treasury yields moved higher, whereas long-term Treasury yields declined during the reporting period. When the reporting period began, the yield on the two-year Treasury note was 0.47%. It peaked at 0.73% towards the end of December 2014 and again on March 6, 2015, and fell as low as 0.44% on January 15, 2015, before ending the period at 0.61%. The yield on the ten-year Treasury note began the period at 2.18% and its peak of 2.31% occurred on December 5, 2014. The yield on the ten-year Treasury note was as low as 1.68% in late January/early February 2015 and concluded the period at 2.12%.

Q. What factors impacted the spread sectors (non-Treasuries) during the reporting period?

A. The spread sectors generally posted positive, albeit small gains, during the reporting period. Performance fluctuated with investor sentiment given the uncertainties regarding future Fed monetary policy, along with concerns over global growth and geopolitical issues. The broad U.S. bond market, as measured by the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Indexv, gained 1.09% during the six months ended May 31, 2015.

Q. How did the high-yield bond market perform over the six months ended May 31, 2015?

A. The U.S. high-yield bond market, as measured by the Barclays U.S. Corporate High Yield — 2% Issuer Cap Indexvi, returned 2.57% for the six months ended May 31, 2015. High yield bonds were volatile during the reporting period. While the underlying fundamentals in the high-yield market remained generally solid and default rates were well below their long-term average, the asset class was dragged down at times, primarily due to sharply falling oil prices. However, the high-yield market rallied late in the reporting period as oil prices stabilized and investor demand improved

Q. How did the emerging markets debt asset class perform over the reporting period?

A. The JPMorgan Emerging Markets Bond Index Global (“EMBI Global”)vii returned 0.55% during the six months ended May 31, 2015. While the asset class generally rose

 

IV    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.


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during much of the reporting period, those gains were largely offset by a sharp decline during December 2014. This setback was triggered by a number of factors, including expectations for future Fed rate hikes, concerns over global growth, declining oil prices and weak investor demand.

Performance review

For the six months ended May 31, 2015, Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. returned 1.21% based on its net asset value (“NAV”)viii and 3.53% based on its New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) market price per share. The Fund’s unmanaged benchmark, the Barclays U.S. Credit Indexix, returned 0.99% for the same period. The Lipper Corporate Debt BBB-Rated Closed-End Funds Category Averagex returned 1.01% over the same time frame. Please note that Lipper performance returns are based on each fund’s NAV.

During this six-month period, the Fund made distributions to shareholders totaling $0.60 per share. As of May 31, 2015, the Fund estimates that all of the distributions were sourced from net investment income.* The performance table shows the Fund’s six-month total return based on its NAV and market price as of May 31, 2015. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

 

Performance Snapshot as of May 31, 2015
(unaudited)
 
Price Per Share   6-Month
Total Return**
 
$21.28 (NAV)     1.21 %† 
$21.00 (Market Price)     3.53 %‡ 

All figures represent past performance and are not a guarantee of future results. Performance figures for periods shorter than one year represent cumulative figures and are not annualized.

** Total returns are based on changes in NAV or market price, respectively. Returns reflect the deduction of all Fund expenses, including management fees, operating expenses, and other Fund expenses. Returns do not reflect the deduction of brokerage commissions or taxes that investors may pay on distributions or the sale of shares.

† Total return assumes the reinvestment of all distributions, including returns of capital, if any, at NAV.

‡ Total return assumes the reinvestment of all distributions, including returns of capital, if any, in additional shares in accordance with the Fund’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan.

Looking for additional information?

The Fund is traded under the symbol “IGI” and its closing market price is available in most newspapers under the NYSE listings. The daily NAV is available on-line under the symbol “XIGIX” on most financial websites. Barron’s and the Wall Street Journal’s Monday edition both carry closed-end fund tables that provide additional information. In addition, the Fund issues a quarterly press release that can be found on most major financial websites as well as www.lmcef.com.

 

* This estimate is not for tax purposes. The Fund will issue a Form 1099 with final composition of the distributions for tax purposes after year-end. A return of capital is not taxable and results in a reduction in the tax basis of a shareholder’s investment. For more information about a distribution’s composition, please refer to the Fund’s distribution press release or, if applicable, the Section 19 notice located in the press release section of our website, www.lmcef.com.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.   V


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Investment commentary (cont’d)

 

In a continuing effort to provide information concerning the Fund, shareholders may call 1-888-777-0102 (toll free), Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Eastern Time, for the Fund’s current NAV, market price and other information.

Thank you for your investment in Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. As always, we appreciate that you have chosen us to manage your assets and we remain focused on achieving the Fund’s investment goals.

Sincerely,

 

LOGO

Kenneth D. Fuller

Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

June 26, 2015

RISKS: The Fund’s investments are subject to credit risk, inflation risk and interest rate risk. As interest rates rise, bond prices fall, reducing the value of the Fund’s holdings. The Fund may invest in lower-rated high-yield bonds or “junk bonds”, which are subject to greater credit risk (risk of default) than higher-rated obligations. The Fund may use derivatives, such as options and futures, which can be illiquid, may disproportionately increase losses and have a potentially large impact on Fund performance. The Fund may invest in securities or engage in transactions that have the economic effects of leverage which can increase the risk and volatility of the Fund.

All investments are subject to risk including the possible loss of principal. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. All index performance reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes. Please note that an investor cannot invest directly in an index.

The information provided is not intended to be a forecast of future events, a guarantee of future results or investment advice. Views expressed may differ from those of the firm as a whole.

 

VI    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.


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i 

Gross domestic product (“GDP”) is the market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time.

 

ii 

The Institute for Supply Management’s PMI is based on a survey of purchasing executives who buy the raw materials for manufacturing at more than 350 companies. It offers an early reading on the health of the U.S. manufacturing sector.

 

iii 

The Federal Reserve Board (“Fed”) is responsible for the formulation of policies designed to promote economic growth, full employment, stable prices and a sustainable pattern of international trade and payments.

 

iv 

The federal funds rate is the rate charged by one depository institution on an overnight sale of immediately available funds (balances at the Federal Reserve) to another depository institution; the rate may vary from depository institution to depository institution and from day to day.

 

v 

The Barclays U.S. Aggregate Index is a broad-based bond index comprised of government, corporate, mortgage- and asset-backed issues, rated investment grade or higher, and having at least one year to maturity.

 

vi 

The Barclays U.S. Corporate High Yield — 2% Issuer Cap Index is an index of the 2% Issuer Cap component of the Barclays U.S. Corporate High Yield Index, which covers the U.S. dollar-denominated, non-investment grade, fixed-rate, taxable corporate bond market.

 

vii 

The JPMorgan Emerging Markets Bond Index Global (“EMBI Global”) tracks total returns for U.S. dollar-denominated debt instruments issued by emerging market sovereign and quasi-sovereign entities: Brady bonds, loans, Eurobonds and local market instruments.

 

viii 

Net asset value (“NAV”) is calculated by subtracting total liabilities, including liabilities associated with financial leverage (if any), from the closing value of all securities held by the Fund (plus all other assets) and dividing the result (total net assets) by the total number of the common shares outstanding. The NAV fluctuates with changes in the market prices of securities in which the Fund has invested. However, the price at which an investor may buy or sell shares of the Fund is the Fund’s market price as determined by supply of and demand for the Fund’s shares.

 

ix 

The Barclays U.S. Credit Index is an index composed of corporate and non-corporate debt issues that are investment grade (rated Baa3/BBB- or higher).

 

x 

Lipper, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Reuters, provides independent insight on global collective investments. Returns are based on the six-month period ended May 31, 2015, including the reinvestment of all distributions, including returns of capital, if any, calculated among the 10 funds in the Fund’s Lipper category.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.   VII


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Fund at a glance (unaudited)

 

Investment breakdown (%) as a percent of total investments

 

LOGO

 

The bar graph above represents the composition of the Fund’s investments as of May 31, 2015 and November 30, 2014 and does not include derivatives, such as futures contracts, swap contracts and forward foreign currency contracts. The Fund is actively managed. As a result, the composition of the Fund’s investments is subject to change at any time.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   1


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Spread duration (unaudited)

 

Economic exposure — May 31, 2015

 

LOGO

 

Total Spread Duration

IGI   — 7.28 years
Benchmark   — 7.14 years

Spread duration measures the sensitivity to changes in spreads. The spread over Treasuries is the annual risk-premium demanded by investors to hold non-Treasury securities. Spread duration is quantified as the % change in price resulting from a 100 basis points change in spreads. For a security with positive spread duration, an increase in spreads would result in a price decline and a decline in spreads would result in a price increase. This chart highlights the market sector exposure of the Fund’s sectors relative to the selected benchmark sectors as of the end of the reporting period.

 

Benchmark   — Barclays U.S. Credit Index
EM   — Emerging Markets
HY   — High Yield
IG Credit   — Investment Grade Credit
IGI   — Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

2    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


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Effective duration (unaudited)

 

Interest rate exposure — May 31, 2015

 

LOGO

 

Total Effective Duration

IGI   — 6.86 years
Benchmark   — 7.23 years

Effective duration measures the sensitivity to changes in relevant interest rates. Effective duration is quantified as the % change in price resulting from a 100 basis points change in interest rates. For a security with positive effective duration, an increase in interest rates would result in a price decline and a decline in interest rates would result in a price increase. This chart highlights the interest rate exposure of the Fund’s sectors relative to the selected benchmark sectors as of the end of the reporting period.

 

Benchmark   — Barclays U.S. Credit Index
EM   — Emerging Markets
HY   — High Yield
IG Credit   — Investment Grade Credit
IGI   — Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   3


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Schedule of investments (unaudited)

May 31, 2015

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  
Corporate Bonds & Notes — 94.2%                                
Consumer Discretionary — 12.0%                                

Auto Components — 0.6%

                               

ZF North America Capital Inc., Senior Notes

    4.000     4/29/20      $ 570,000      $ 582,113  (a) 

ZF North America Capital Inc., Senior Notes

    4.500     4/29/22        300,000        306,375  (a) 

ZF North America Capital Inc., Senior Notes

    4.750     4/29/25        590,000        592,212  (a) 

Total Auto Components

                            1,480,700   

Automobiles — 2.5%

                               

Ford Motor Co., Senior Bonds

    9.215     9/15/21        1,140,000        1,506,473   

Ford Motor Credit Co., LLC, Senior Notes

    8.125     1/15/20        640,000        793,048   

Ford Motor Credit Co., LLC, Senior Notes

    4.250     9/20/22        380,000        405,086   

General Motors Co., Senior Notes

    4.875     10/2/23        1,470,000        1,573,886   

General Motors Co., Senior Notes

    5.200     4/1/45        490,000        501,887   

General Motors Financial Co. Inc., Senior Notes

    4.375     9/25/21        930,000        972,586   

Total Automobiles

                            5,752,966   

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure — 0.3%

                               

Hilton Worldwide Finance LLC/Hilton Worldwide Finance Corp., Senior Notes

    5.625     10/15/21        170,000        179,988   

Wynn Macau Ltd., Senior Notes

    5.250     10/15/21        480,000        469,200  (a) 

Total Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure

                            649,188   

Household Durables — 0.6%

                               

Toll Brothers Finance Corp., Senior Notes

    4.000     12/31/18        1,140,000        1,171,350   

Toll Brothers Finance Corp., Senior Notes

    6.750     11/1/19        160,000        181,200   

Total Household Durables

                            1,352,550   

Media — 7.2%

                               

21st Century Fox America Inc., Senior Notes

    6.650     11/15/37        2,400,000        3,055,946   

Comcast Corp., Bonds

    6.400     5/15/38        2,500,000        3,187,387   

Comcast Corp., Senior Notes

    5.700     7/1/19        1,500,000        1,728,720   

DISH DBS Corp., Senior Notes

    7.875     9/1/19        1,250,000        1,415,625   

DISH DBS Corp., Senior Notes

    5.875     11/15/24        700,000        703,500   

Time Warner Cable Inc., Debentures

    7.300     7/1/38        160,000        187,101   

Time Warner Cable Inc., Senior Bonds

    6.550     5/1/37        370,000        400,703   

Time Warner Cable Inc., Senior Bonds

    4.500     9/15/42        120,000        104,489   

Time Warner Cable Inc., Senior Notes

    8.750     2/14/19        1,390,000        1,659,866   

Time Warner Cable Inc., Senior Notes

    5.500     9/1/41        80,000        77,601   

Time Warner Entertainment Co., LP, Senior Notes

    8.375     7/15/33        370,000        469,524   

Time Warner Inc., Senior Notes

    4.900     6/15/42        250,000        257,938   

UBM PLC, Notes

    5.750     11/3/20        740,000        815,013  (a) 

Virgin Media Finance PLC, Senior Notes

    6.375     4/15/23        2,000,000        2,132,500  (a) 

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

4    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


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Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  

Media — continued

                               

WPP Finance 2010, Senior Notes

    5.625     11/15/43      $ 260,000      $ 298,125   

Total Media

                            16,494,038   

Specialty Retail — 0.8%

                               

American Greetings Corp., Senior Notes

    7.375     12/1/21        280,000        298,900   

Gap Inc., Senior Notes

    5.950     4/12/21        1,240,000        1,428,355   

Total Specialty Retail

                            1,727,255   

Total Consumer Discretionary

                            27,456,697   
Consumer Staples — 3.8%                                

Beverages — 1.1%

                               

Anheuser-Busch InBev Worldwide Inc., Senior Notes

    7.750     1/15/19        450,000        539,581   

Constellation Brands Inc., Senior Notes

    4.250     5/1/23        140,000        141,750   

Pernod-Ricard SA, Senior Bonds

    5.750     4/7/21        590,000        676,557  (a) 

Pernod-Ricard SA, Senior Notes

    5.500     1/15/42        960,000        1,098,013  (a) 

Total Beverages

                            2,455,901   

Food Products — 0.3%

                               

Kraft Foods Group Inc., Senior Notes

    5.000     6/4/42        280,000        290,744   

Mondelez International Inc., Senior Notes

    4.000     2/1/24        410,000        437,236   

Total Food Products

                            727,980   

Tobacco — 2.4%

                               

Altria Group Inc., Senior Notes

    9.250     8/6/19        1,000,000        1,272,617   

Altria Group Inc., Senior Notes

    9.950     11/10/38        430,000        720,676   

Altria Group Inc., Senior Notes

    10.200     2/6/39        280,000        477,746   

Lorillard Tobacco Co., Senior Notes

    8.125     6/23/19        540,000        655,649   

Lorillard Tobacco Co., Senior Notes

    8.125     5/1/40        470,000        635,712   

Lorillard Tobacco Co., Senior Notes

    7.000     8/4/41        510,000        633,486   

Reynolds American Inc., Senior Notes

    4.750     11/1/42        1,220,000        1,174,454   

Total Tobacco

                            5,570,340   

Total Consumer Staples

                            8,754,221   
Energy — 11.8%                                

Energy Equipment & Services — 0.4%

                               

Ensco PLC, Senior Notes

    5.200     3/15/25        790,000        815,952   

Pride International Inc., Senior Notes

    7.875     8/15/40        150,000        171,861   

Total Energy Equipment & Services

                            987,813   

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — 11.4%

                               

Anadarko Petroleum Corp., Senior Notes

    5.950     9/15/16        340,000        360,440   

Apache Corp., Senior Notes

    6.000     1/15/37        150,000        171,480   

Apache Corp., Senior Notes

    5.100     9/1/40        280,000        283,911   

Apache Corp., Senior Notes

    5.250     2/1/42        160,000        167,930   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   5


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Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)

May 31, 2015

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — continued

                               

Apache Corp., Senior Notes

    4.750     4/15/43      $ 670,000      $ 651,162   

Columbia Pipeline Group Inc., Senior Notes

    5.800     6/1/45        340,000        353,192  (a) 

Comstock Resources Inc., Senior Secured Notes

    10.000     3/15/20        580,000        562,600  (a) 

ConocoPhillips, Notes

    6.500     2/1/39        1,500,000        1,942,692   

Devon Financing Corp. LLC, Debentures

    7.875     9/30/31        1,080,000        1,442,274   

Ecopetrol SA, Senior Notes

    5.875     5/28/45        284,000        263,978   

Energy Transfer Equity LP, Senior Notes

    7.500     10/15/20        420,000        481,950   

EOG Resources Inc., Senior Notes

    6.875     10/1/18        800,000        935,158   

EXCO Resources Inc., Senior Notes

    7.500     9/15/18        120,000        83,100   

Halcon Resources Corp., Secured Notes

    8.625     2/1/20        290,000        295,075  (a) 

Hess Corp., Notes

    8.125     2/15/19        1,400,000        1,681,289   

Hess Corp., Notes

    7.875     10/1/29        440,000        573,519   

Hess Corp., Senior Bonds

    6.000     1/15/40        520,000        575,702   

Kerr-McGee Corp., Notes

    6.950     7/1/24        1,320,000        1,648,555   

Kerr-McGee Corp., Notes

    7.875     9/15/31        710,000        958,196   

Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP, Senior Notes

    5.950     2/15/18        800,000        881,249   

LUKOIL International Finance BV, Senior Notes

    4.563     4/24/23        940,000        856,575  (a) 

Marathon Petroleum Corp., Senior Notes

    3.625     9/15/24        560,000        566,817   

MEG Energy Corp., Senior Notes

    6.375     1/30/23        900,000        855,000  (a) 

Murray Energy Corp., Senior Secured Notes

    11.250     4/15/21        740,000        715,950  (a) 

Noble Energy Inc., Senior Notes

    6.000     3/1/41        660,000        729,583   

Noble Energy Inc., Senior Notes

    5.250     11/15/43        240,000        246,360   

Pemex Project Funding Master Trust, Senior Bonds

    6.625     6/15/35        1,000,000        1,128,000   

Petrobras Global Finance BV, Senior Notes

    7.250     3/17/44        440,000        435,644   

Petrobras International Finance Co., Senior Notes

    5.750     1/20/20        109,000        109,153   

Petroleos Mexicanos, Senior Notes

    5.500     1/21/21        250,000        274,153   

Petroleos Mexicanos, Senior Notes

    6.375     1/23/45        80,000        87,184   

Plains Exploration & Production Co., Senior Notes

    6.500     11/15/20        32,000        34,000   

Plains Exploration & Production Co., Senior Notes

    6.875     2/15/23        410,000        441,263   

Shell International Finance BV, Senior Notes

    4.375     5/11/45        590,000        606,322   

Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Co., LLC, Senior Notes

    5.400     8/15/41        10,000        10,053   

Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Co., LLC, Senior Notes

    4.450     8/1/42        860,000        761,945   

Valero Energy Corp., Senior Notes

    9.375     3/15/19        700,000        872,817   

Williams Cos. Inc., Notes

    7.875     9/1/21        952,000        1,166,111   

Williams Cos. Inc., Senior Notes

    4.550     6/24/24        1,130,000        1,158,323   

Williams Cos. Inc., Senior Notes

    7.750     6/15/31        62,000        73,991   

Williams Cos. Inc., Senior Notes

    8.750     3/15/32        148,000        190,634   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

6    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


Table of Contents

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels — continued

                               

Williams Partners LP, Senior Notes

    5.250     3/15/20      $ 460,000      $ 511,867   

Total Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels

                            26,145,197   

Total Energy

                            27,133,010   
Financials — 36.7%                                

Banks — 15.4%

                               

Bank of America Corp., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    6.100     3/17/25        650,000        656,500  (b)(c) 

Bank of America Corp., Junior Subordinated Notes

    6.250     9/5/24        970,000        990,612  (b)(c) 

Bank of America Corp., Junior Subordinated Notes

    6.500     10/23/24        400,000        423,500  (b)(c) 

Bank of America Corp., Senior Notes

    7.625     6/1/19        2,760,000        3,313,256   

Bank of America Corp., Senior Notes

    5.875     2/7/42        1,340,000        1,652,958   

Barclays Bank PLC, Subordinated Notes

    7.625     11/21/22        630,000        733,556   

CIT Group Inc., Secured Notes

    6.625     4/1/18        480,000        517,776  (a) 

CIT Group Inc., Senior Notes

    5.000     8/1/23        350,000        359,170   

Citigroup Inc., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    6.300     5/15/24        470,000        472,350  (b)(c) 

Citigroup Inc., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    5.950     5/15/25        880,000        869,000  (b)(c) 

Citigroup Inc., Senior Notes

    6.000     8/15/17        2,250,000        2,463,464   

Citigroup Inc., Senior Notes

    8.500     5/22/19        500,000        617,400   

Citigroup Inc., Senior Notes

    8.125     7/15/39        1,350,000        2,041,203   

Citigroup Inc., Subordinated Notes

    6.675     9/13/43        630,000        803,382   

Cooperatieve Centrale Raiffeisen-Boerenleenbank BA of Netherlands, Subordinated Notes

    5.750     12/1/43        750,000        882,332   

Credit Agricole SA, Junior Subordinated Notes

    8.375     10/13/19        500,000        592,500  (a)(b)(c) 

HSBC Holdings PLC, Junior Subordinated Bonds

    6.375     9/17/24        1,000,000        1,028,750  (b)(c) 

HSBC Holdings PLC, Junior Subordinated Bonds

    6.375     3/30/25        200,000        205,700  (b)(c) 

JPMorgan Chase & Co., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    6.000     8/1/23        700,000        715,750  (b)(c) 

JPMorgan Chase & Co., Senior Notes

    6.400     5/15/38        1,500,000        1,920,058   

JPMorgan Chase & Co., Subordinated Notes

    5.625     8/16/43        760,000        862,507   

JPMorgan Chase & Co., Subordinated Notes

    4.950     6/1/45        150,000        152,562   

M&T Bank Corp., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    6.875     6/15/16        1,060,000        1,085,175  (c) 

Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, Junior Subordinated Bonds

    7.648     9/30/31        710,000        903,475  (b)(c) 

Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, Senior Notes

    6.400     10/21/19        1,170,000        1,337,674   

Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, Subordinated Notes

    6.100     6/10/23        1,540,000        1,681,392   

Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, Subordinated Notes

    6.000     12/19/23        150,000        163,404   

Royal Bank of Scotland NV, Subordinated Bonds

    7.750     5/15/23        820,000        976,444   

Societe Generale SA, Junior Subordinated Notes

    6.000     1/27/20        340,000        325,550  (a)(b)(c) 

Standard Chartered PLC, Subordinated Notes

    5.700     3/26/44        410,000        449,557  (a) 

Wachovia Capital Trust III, Junior Subordinated Bonds

    5.570     7/10/15        410,000        406,720  (b)(c) 

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   7


Table of Contents

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)

May 31, 2015

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  

Banks — continued

                               

Wachovia Corp., Senior Notes

    5.750     2/1/18      $ 4,400,000      $ 4,891,797   

Wells Fargo & Co., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    5.900     6/15/24        560,000        578,200  (b)(c) 

Wells Fargo & Co., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    5.875     6/15/25        300,000        315,750  (b)(c) 

Total Banks

                            35,389,424   

Capital Markets — 9.4%

                               

Bear Stearns Cos. LLC, Senior Notes

    7.250     2/1/18        1,570,000        1,794,083   

Credit Suisse Group AG, Junior Subordinated Notes

    6.250     12/18/24        1,540,000        1,515,745  (a)(b)(c) 

Credit Suisse Group Funding Guernsey Ltd., Senior Notes

    4.875     5/15/45        1,380,000        1,403,757  (a) 

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Senior Notes

    5.950     1/18/18        4,250,000        4,699,323   

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Senior Notes

    7.500     2/15/19        500,000        592,781   

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Senior Notes

    6.250     2/1/41        2,550,000        3,170,188   

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Subordinated Notes

    5.150     5/22/45        70,000        71,715   

KKR Group Finance Co. III LLC, Senior Bonds

    5.125     6/1/44        1,340,000        1,360,909  (a) 

Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., Notes

    6.875     4/25/18        990,000        1,128,436   

Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., Subordinated Notes

    7.750     5/14/38        670,000        920,800   

Morgan Stanley, Medium-Term Notes

    6.625     4/1/18        1,750,000        1,980,839   

Morgan Stanley, Senior Notes

    5.500     1/26/20        1,950,000        2,202,882   

Morgan Stanley, Senior Notes

    6.375     7/24/42        140,000        178,769   

UBS AG Stamford CT, Subordinated Notes

    7.625     8/17/22        330,000        393,578   

Total Capital Markets

                            21,413,805   

Consumer Finance — 1.7%

                               

HSBC Finance Corp., Senior Notes

    6.676     1/15/21        1,620,000        1,908,757   

Navient Corp., Senior Notes

    7.250     1/25/22        1,430,000        1,547,231   

Navient Corp., Senior Notes

    6.125     3/25/24        480,000        468,000   

Total Consumer Finance

                            3,923,988   

Diversified Financial Services — 5.5%

                               

Argos Merger Sub Inc., Senior Notes

    7.125     3/15/23        400,000        425,000  (a) 

Blackstone Holdings Finance Co., LLC, Senior Notes

    4.450     7/15/45        310,000        296,969  (a) 

Carlyle Holdings II Finance LLC, Senior Secured Notes

    5.625     3/30/43        360,000        397,984  (a) 

CME Group Inc., Senior Notes

    5.300     9/15/43        750,000        885,662   

General Electric Capital Corp., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    7.125     6/15/22        100,000        117,000  (b)(c) 

General Electric Capital Corp., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    6.250     12/15/22        1,000,000        1,118,437  (b)(c) 

General Electric Capital Corp., Senior Notes

    6.875     1/10/39        2,820,000        3,957,757   

General Electric Capital Corp., Subordinated Debentures

    6.375     11/15/67        210,000        229,425  (b) 

General Electric Capital Corp., Subordinated Notes

    5.300     2/11/21        130,000        149,676   

ILFC E-Capital Trust I, Junior Subordinated Notes

    4.090     12/21/65        800,000        782,000  (a)(b) 

International Lease Finance Corp., Senior Notes

    8.875     9/1/17        810,000        919,350   

International Lease Finance Corp., Senior Notes

    6.250     5/15/19        220,000        244,750   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

8    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


Table of Contents

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  

Diversified Financial Services — continued

                               

International Lease Finance Corp., Senior Notes

    8.250     12/15/20      $ 330,000      $ 401,775   

International Lease Finance Corp., Senior Secured Notes

    6.750     9/1/16        670,000        709,781  (a) 

International Lease Finance Corp., Senior Secured Notes

    7.125     9/1/18        1,200,000        1,353,000  (a) 

ZFS Finance USA Trust II, Bonds

    6.450     12/15/65        500,000        520,000  (a)(b) 

Total Diversified Financial Services

                            12,508,566   

Insurance — 4.2%

                               

American Equity Investment Life Holding Co., Senior Notes

    6.625     7/15/21        90,000        96,300   

American International Group Inc., Senior Notes

    6.400     12/15/20        1,000,000        1,196,694   

Aon PLC, Senior Notes

    4.750     5/15/45        160,000        163,503   

Delphi Financial Group Inc., Senior Notes

    7.875     1/31/20        290,000        346,893   

Fidelity & Guaranty Life Holdings Inc., Senior Notes

    6.375     4/1/21        330,000        345,675  (a) 

Liberty Mutual Group Inc., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    7.800     3/7/87        330,000        400,950  (a) 

Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., Subordinated Notes

    7.875     10/15/26        840,000        1,052,727  (a) 

MetLife Inc., Junior Subordinated Bonds

    5.250     6/15/20        1,140,000        1,144,275  (b)(c) 

MetLife Inc., Senior Notes

    6.817     8/15/18        1,300,000        1,508,179   

Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co., Notes

    9.375     8/15/39        520,000        808,088  (a) 

Teachers Insurance & Annuity Association of America, Subordinated Notes

    4.900     9/15/44        660,000        708,709  (a) 

Teachers Insurance & Annuity Association of America — College Retirement Equity Fund, Notes

    6.850     12/16/39        1,050,000        1,396,440  (a) 

Travelers Cos. Inc., Senior Notes

    6.250     6/15/37        400,000        525,963   

Total Insurance

                            9,694,396   

Real Estate Management & Development — 0.4%

                               

Communications Sales & Leasing Inc., Senior Notes

    8.250     10/15/23        180,000        184,050  (a) 

Communications Sales & Leasing Inc., Senior Secured Notes

    6.000     4/15/23        90,000        90,675  (a) 

Security Capital Group Inc., Senior Notes

    7.700     6/15/28        460,000        627,863   

Total Real Estate Management & Development

                            902,588   

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance — 0.1%

                               

Quicken Loans Inc., Senior Notes

    5.750     5/1/25        240,000        240,900  (a)  

Total Financials

                            84,073,667   
Health Care — 4.1%                                

Biotechnology — 1.1%

                               

Amgen Inc., Senior Notes

    5.150     11/15/41        700,000        752,261   

Celgene Corp., Senior Notes

    3.625     5/15/24        560,000        574,240   

Gilead Sciences Inc., Senior Notes

    5.650     12/1/41        100,000        119,744   

Gilead Sciences Inc., Senior Notes

    4.500     2/1/45        970,000        993,569   

Total Biotechnology

                            2,439,814   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   9


Table of Contents

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)

May 31, 2015

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  

Health Care Providers & Services — 0.5%

                               

Catholic Health Initiatives, Secured Bonds

    4.350     11/1/42      $ 60,000      $ 56,718   

Humana Inc., Senior Notes

    7.200     6/15/18        1,000,000        1,153,669   

Total Health Care Providers & Services

                            1,210,387   

Pharmaceuticals — 2.5%

                               

AbbVie Inc., Senior Notes

    4.400     11/6/42        450,000        438,684   

AbbVie Inc., Senior Subordinated Notes

    4.500     5/14/35        1,150,000        1,161,680   

AbbVie Inc., Senior Subordinated Notes

    4.700     5/14/45        700,000        714,470   

Actavis Funding SCS, Senior Notes

    4.550     3/15/35        790,000        785,723   

Actavis Funding SCS, Senior Notes

    4.750     3/15/45        180,000        178,952   

Pfizer Inc., Senior Notes

    7.200     3/15/39        560,000        795,912   

Wyeth, Notes

    5.950     4/1/37        1,100,000        1,354,997   

Zoetis Inc., Senior Notes

    4.700     2/1/43        270,000        266,630   

Total Pharmaceuticals

                            5,697,048   

Total Health Care

                            9,347,249   
Industrials — 4.1%                                

Aerospace & Defense — 0.4%

                               

Exelis Inc., Senior Notes

    5.550     10/1/21        885,000        995,459   

Air Freight & Logistics — 0.4%

                               

United Parcel Service Inc., Senior Notes

    6.200     1/15/38        700,000        905,346   

Airlines — 1.7%

                               

Air Canada, Pass-Through Trust, Secured Notes

    6.625     5/15/18        480,000        507,600  (a) 

American Airlines, Pass-Through Trust, Senior Secured Bonds

    5.600     1/15/22        486,218        506,883  (a) 

Delta Air Lines Inc., Pass-Through Certificates, Secured Notes

    8.021     2/10/24        141,353        163,969   

Delta Air Lines Inc., Pass-Through Certificates, Senior Secured Notes

    7.750     6/17/21        468,544        537,654   

United Airlines Inc., Pass-Through Certificates

    6.545     8/2/20        168,908        183,265   

United Airlines Inc., Pass-Through Certificates, Secured Notes

    9.750     7/15/18        118,719        129,701   

United Airlines Inc., Pass-Through Certificates, Secured Notes

    9.250     11/10/18        190,570        209,627   

United Airlines Inc., Pass-Through Certificates, Secured Notes

    6.250     10/11/21        231,215        247,400   

United Airlines Inc., Pass-Through Certificates, Senior Secured Notes

    10.400     5/1/18        55,147        60,662   

United Airlines Inc., Pass-Through Certificates, Senior Secured Notes

    7.250     5/10/21        605,759        701,166   

US Airways, Pass-Through Trust, Senior Secured Bonds

    5.900     4/1/26        525,887        594,252   

Total Airlines

                            3,842,179   

Commercial Services & Supplies — 0.8%

                               

Republic Services Inc., Senior Notes

    5.500     9/15/19        220,000        248,910   

Taylor Morrison Communities Inc./Monarch Communities Inc., Senior Notes

    5.250     4/15/21        900,000        909,000  (a) 

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

10    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


Table of Contents

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  

Commercial Services & Supplies — continued

                               

Waste Management Inc., Senior Notes

    7.750     5/15/32      $ 500,000      $ 730,468   

Total Commercial Services & Supplies

                            1,888,378   

Machinery — 0.3%

                               

Caterpillar Inc., Senior Notes

    4.750     5/15/64        360,000        374,649   

Valmont Industries Inc., Senior Notes

    6.625     4/20/20        180,000        209,653   

Total Machinery

                            584,302   

Road & Rail — 0.5%

                               

Burlington Northern Santa Fe LLC, Senior Notes

    4.900     4/1/44        760,000        828,886   

CSX Corp., Senior Notes

    3.950     5/1/50        300,000        278,577   

Florida East Coast Holdings Corp., Senior Notes

    9.750     5/1/20        70,000        67,025  (a) 

Total Road & Rail

                            1,174,488   

Total Industrials

                            9,390,152   
Information Technology — 1.2%                                

Communications Equipment — 0.7%

                               

Harris Corp., Senior Notes

    4.854     4/27/35        430,000        425,253   

Harris Corp., Senior Notes

    5.054     4/27/45        340,000        339,076   

QUALCOMM Inc., Senior Subordinated Notes

    4.800     5/20/45        910,000        909,779   

Total Communications Equipment

                            1,674,108   

Electronic Equipment, Instruments & Components — 0.2%

                               

Interface Security Systems Holdings Inc./Interface Security Systems LLC, Senior Secured Notes

    9.250     1/15/18        340,000        345,100   

IT Services — 0.0%

                               

First Data Corp., Senior Secured Notes

    6.750     11/1/20        91,000        97,370  (a)  

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment — 0.2%

                               

National Semiconductor Corp., Senior Notes

    6.600     6/15/17        360,000        400,297   

Software — 0.1%

                               

Activision Blizzard Inc., Senior Notes

    6.125     9/15/23        180,000        198,900  (a)  

Total Information Technology

                            2,715,775   
Materials — 4.3%                                

Chemicals — 0.2%

                               

Ecolab Inc., Senior Notes

    5.500     12/8/41        260,000        301,290   

Metals & Mining — 3.9%

                               

Alcoa Inc., Senior Notes

    5.125     10/1/24        520,000        557,700   

Barrick Gold Corp., Senior Notes

    5.250     4/1/42        1,200,000        1,118,135   

Freeport-McMoRan Inc., Senior Notes

    5.400     11/14/34        20,000        18,015   

Freeport-McMoRan Inc., Senior Notes

    5.450     3/15/43        210,000        183,697   

Glencore Finance Canada Ltd., Senior Bonds

    5.800     11/15/16        1,200,000        1,271,531  (a) 

Rio Tinto Finance USA Ltd., Senior Notes

    9.000     5/1/19        2,000,000        2,520,298   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   11


Table of Contents

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)

May 31, 2015

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  

Metals & Mining — continued

                               

Southern Copper Corp., Senior Notes

    5.375     4/16/20      $ 260,000      $ 287,560   

Steel Dynamics Inc., Senior Notes

    6.125     8/15/19        240,000        257,400   

Vale Overseas Ltd., Senior Notes

    6.875     11/21/36        2,100,000        2,075,619   

Vedanta Resources PLC, Senior Notes

    6.000     1/31/19        500,000        470,000  (a) 

Yamana Gold Inc., Senior Notes

    4.950     7/15/24        140,000        138,509   

Total Metals & Mining

                            8,898,464   

Paper & Forest Products — 0.2%

                               

Fibria Overseas Finance Ltd., Senior Notes

    5.250     5/12/24        510,000        529,176   

Total Materials

                            9,728,930   
Telecommunication Services — 9.2%                                

Diversified Telecommunication Services — 7.7%

                               

AT&T Inc., Global Notes

    5.600     5/15/18        1,500,000        1,664,082   

AT&T Inc., Senior Notes

    4.500     5/15/35        370,000        351,889   

AT&T Inc., Senior Notes

    5.550     8/15/41        440,000        467,655   

AT&T Inc., Senior Notes

    4.750     5/15/46        460,000        439,772   

British Telecommunications PLC, Bonds

    9.625     12/15/30        2,000,000        3,158,820   

Embarq Corp., Notes

    7.995     6/1/36        1,500,000        1,725,000   

Intelsat Jackson Holdings SA, Senior Bonds

    5.500     8/1/23        1,250,000        1,152,737   

Koninklijke KPN NV, Senior Notes

    8.375     10/1/30        330,000        469,041   

Telecom Italia Capital SA, Senior Notes

    7.175     6/18/19        610,000        693,113   

Telecom Italia SpA, Senior Notes

    5.303     5/30/24        830,000        866,312  (a) 

Telefonica Emisiones SAU, Senior Notes

    7.045     6/20/36        140,000        181,646   

Turk Telekomunikasyon AS, Senior Notes

    4.875     6/19/24        400,000        400,504  (a) 

Verizon Communications Inc., Senior Notes

    5.150     9/15/23        2,460,000        2,752,041   

Verizon Communications Inc., Senior Notes

    6.550     9/15/43        1,473,000        1,795,586   

Verizon Communications Inc., Senior Notes

    5.012     8/21/54        1,508,000        1,439,715   

Total Diversified Telecommunication Services

                            17,557,913   

Wireless Telecommunication Services — 1.5%

                               

America Movil SAB de CV, Senior Notes

    4.375     7/16/42        800,000        777,184   

Rogers Communications Inc., Senior Notes

    6.800     8/15/18        1,000,000        1,154,509   

Sprint Communications Inc., Senior Notes

    9.000     11/15/18        280,000        321,650  (a) 

Sprint Corp., Senior Notes

    7.875     9/15/23        700,000        713,580   

Telefonica Europe BV, Senior Notes

    8.250     9/15/30        390,000        547,818   

Total Wireless Telecommunication Services

                            3,514,741   

Total Telecommunication Services

                            21,072,654   
Utilities — 7.0%                                

Electric Utilities — 5.6%

                               

Berkshire Hathaway Energy Co., Bonds

    6.125     4/1/36        1,000,000        1,216,356   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

12    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


Table of Contents

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  

Electric Utilities — continued

                               

Berkshire Hathaway Energy Co., Senior Notes

    5.750     4/1/18      $ 1,000,000      $ 1,113,764   

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric LLC, Senior Secured Bonds

    4.500     4/1/44        530,000        567,023   

Commonwealth Edison Co., First Mortgage Bonds

    5.800     3/15/18        600,000        670,983   

Commonwealth Edison Co., First Mortgage Bonds

    6.450     1/15/38        600,000        797,813   

FirstEnergy Corp., Notes

    7.375     11/15/31        3,040,000        3,834,565   

GenOn REMA LLC, Pass-Through Certificates

    9.681     7/2/26        2,000,000        2,170,000   

IPALCO Enterprises Inc., Senior Secured Notes

    7.250     4/1/16        1,030,000        1,078,925  (a) 

Pacific Gas & Electric Co., Senior Notes

    8.250     10/15/18        600,000        723,727   

Virginia Electric and Power Co., Senior Notes

    8.875     11/15/38        500,000        801,542   

Total Electric Utilities

                            12,974,698   

Gas Utilities — 0.8%

                               

Southern Natural Gas Co., Senior Notes

    8.000     3/1/32        1,500,000        1,833,143   

Independent Power and Renewable Electricity Producers — 0.6%

  

               

AES Corp., Senior Notes

    8.000     6/1/20        1,100,000        1,292,500   

Total Utilities

                            16,100,341   

Total Corporate Bonds & Notes (Cost — $192,761,098)

                            215,772,696   
Municipal Bonds — 0.5%                                

Alabama — 0.1%

                               

Jefferson County, AL, Sewer Revenue, Subordinated Lien Warrants

    6.000     10/1/42        310,000        345,709   

California — 0.1%

                               

University of California Revenue

    4.062     5/15/33        220,000        222,112   

Illinois — 0.3%

                               

Chicago, IL, GO, Taxable Project

    7.781     1/1/35        20,000        20,985   

Illinois State, GO, Build America Bonds-Taxable

    6.725     4/1/35        530,000        558,069   

Total Illinois

                            579,054   

Total Municipal Bonds (Cost — $1,143,794)

                            1,146,875   
Senior Loans — 0.3%                                
Industrials — 0.3%                                

Commercial Services & Supplies — 0.3%

                               

Nielsen Finance LLC, USD Term Loan B2 (Cost — $636,801)

    3.182     4/15/21        636,801        640,440  (d)(e)  
Sovereign Bonds — 0.9%                                

Colombia — 0.2%

                               

Republic of Colombia, Senior Bonds

    5.625     2/26/44        431,000        466,558   

Turkey — 0.7%

                               

Republic of Turkey, Senior Bonds

    4.250     4/14/26        720,000        699,444   

Republic of Turkey, Senior Notes

    4.875     4/16/43        840,000        803,779   

Total Turkey

                            1,503,223   

Total Sovereign Bonds (Cost — $1,895,884)

                            1,969,781   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   13


Table of Contents

Schedule of investments (unaudited) (cont’d)

May 31, 2015

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Security   Rate     Maturity
Date
    Face
Amount
    Value  
U.S. Government & Agency Obligations — 0.3%                                

U.S. Government Obligations — 0.3%

                               

U.S. Treasury Bonds

    2.500     2/15/45      $ 20,000      $ 18,544   

U.S. Treasury Notes

    2.125     5/15/25        780,000        782,376   

Total U.S. Government & Agency Obligations (Cost — $790,295)

  

                    800,920   
                   Shares         
Common Stocks — 0.7%                                
Financials — 0.7%                                

Banks — 0.7%

                               

Citigroup Inc. (Cost — $1,474,006)

                    29,728        1,607,690   
Preferred Stocks — 1.6%                                
Financials — 1.6%                                

Banks — 0.0%

                               

U.S. Bancorp

    5.150             3,585        89,625   

Capital Markets — 0.2%

                               

State Street Corp.

    5.900             16,755        440,154  (b)  

Consumer Finance — 1.2%

                               

GMAC Capital Trust I

    8.125             105,800        2,757,148  (b)  

Diversified Financial Services — 0.2%

                               

Citigroup Capital XIII

    7.875             17,525        455,475  (b)  

Total Preferred Stocks (Cost — $3,526,533)

                            3,742,402   

Total Investments — 98.5% (Cost — $202,228,411#)

                            225,680,804   

Other Assets in Excess of Liabilities — 1.5%

                            3,456,260   

Total Net Assets — 100.0%

                          $ 229,137,064   

 

(a) 

Security is exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. This security may be resold in transactions that are exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. This security has been deemed liquid pursuant to guidelines approved by the Board of Directors, unless otherwise noted.

 

(b) 

Variable rate security. Interest rate disclosed is as of the most recent information available.

 

(c) 

Security has no maturity date. The date shown represents the next call date.

 

(d) 

Interest rates disclosed represent the effective rates on senior loans. Ranges in interest rates are attributable to multiple contracts under the same loan.

 

(e) 

Senior loans may be considered restricted in that the Fund ordinarily is contractually obligated to receive approval from the agent bank and/or borrower prior to the disposition of a senior loan.

 

# Aggregate cost for federal income tax purposes is substantially the same.

 

Abbreviation used in this schedule:

GO   — General Obligation

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

14    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


Table of Contents

Statement of assets and liabilities (unaudited)

May 31, 2015

 

Assets:         

Investments, at value (Cost — $202,228,411)

   $ 225,680,804   

Cash

     1,268,930   

Interest and dividends receivable

     3,140,163   

Deposits with brokers for open futures contracts

     355,867   

Unrealized appreciation on forward foreign currency contracts

     291,730   

Deposits with brokers for centrally cleared swap contracts

     198,964   

Prepaid expenses

     17,087   

Total Assets

     230,953,545   
Liabilities:         

Payable for securities purchased

     1,140,000   

Unrealized depreciation on forward foreign currency contracts

     345,663   

Investment management fee payable

     126,383   

OTC swaps, at value (premiums received — $41,277)

     70,283   

Payable to broker — variation margin on open futures contracts

     58,703   

Payable to broker — variation margin on centrally cleared swaps

     14,265   

Payable for open OTC swap contracts

     5,549   

Accrued expenses

     55,635   

Total Liabilities

     1,816,481   
Total Net Assets    $ 229,137,064   
Net Assets:         

Par value ($0.001 par value; 10,769,985 shares issued and outstanding; 100,000,000 shares authorized)

   $ 10,770   

Paid-in capital in excess of par value

     205,213,656   

Undistributed net investment income

     1,747,654   

Accumulated net realized loss on investments, futures contracts, swap contracts and foreign currency transactions

     (980,012)   

Net unrealized appreciation on investments, futures contracts, swap contracts and foreign currencies

     23,144,996   
Total Net Assets    $ 229,137,064   
Shares Outstanding      10,769,985   
Net Asset Value      $21.28   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   15


Table of Contents

Statement of operations (unaudited)

For the Six Months Ended May 31, 2015

 

Investment Income:         

Interest

   $ 6,043,918   

Dividends

     157,091   

Total Investment Income

     6,201,009   
Expenses:         

Investment management fee (Note 2)

     752,232   

Excise tax (Note 1)

     108,644   

Audit and tax fees

     29,005   

Directors’ fees

     23,073   

Transfer agent fees

     18,326   

Shareholder reports

     14,508   

Legal fees

     12,715   

Fund accounting fees

     11,623   

Stock exchange listing fees

     10,596   

Insurance

     2,335   

Custody fees

     1,129   

Miscellaneous expenses

     6,254   

Total Expenses

     990,440   
Net Investment Income      5,210,569   
Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments, Futures Contracts,
Swap Contracts and Foreign Currency Transactions (Notes 1, 3 and 4):
        

Net Realized Gain (Loss) From:

        

Investment transactions

     764,799   

Futures contracts

     (831,929)   

Swap contracts

     (21,315)   

Foreign currency transactions

     537,178   

Net Realized Gain

     448,733   

Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) From:

        

Investments

     (2,902,320)   

Futures contracts

     113,702   

Swap contracts

     79,210   

Foreign currencies

     (192,751)   

Change in Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

     (2,902,159)   
Net Loss on Investments, Futures Contracts, Swap Contracts and Foreign Currency Transactions      (2,453,426)   
Increase in Net Assets from Operations    $ 2,757,143   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

16    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


Table of Contents

Statements of changes in net assets

 

For the Six Months Ended May 31, 2015 (unaudited)
and the Year Ended November 30, 2014
   2015      2014  
Operations:                  

Net investment income

   $ 5,210,569       $ 10,932,640   

Net realized gain

     448,733         617,636   

Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation)

     (2,902,159)         5,668,527   

Increase in Net Assets from Operations

     2,757,143         17,218,803   
Distributions to Shareholders From (Note 1):                  

Net investment income

     (6,459,639)         (12,230,725)   

Net realized gains

             (4,018,067)   

Decrease in Net Assets from Distributions to Shareholders

     (6,459,639)         (16,248,792)   
Fund Share Transactions:                  

Reinvestment of distributions (6,344 and 0 shares issued, respectively)

     133,374           

Increase in Net Assets from Fund Share Transactions

     133,374           

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

     (3,569,122)         970,011   
Net Assets:                  

Beginning of period

     232,706,186         231,736,175   

End of period*

   $ 229,137,064       $ 232,706,186   

*Includes undistributed net investment income of:

     $1,747,654         $2,996,724   

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   17


Table of Contents

Financial highlights

 

For a share of capital stock outstanding throughout each year ended November 30, unless otherwise noted:  
     20151,2     20141     20131     20121     20111     20101  
Net asset value, beginning of period     $21.62        $21.53        $22.67        $20.64        $21.35        $20.58   
Income (loss) from operations:            

Net investment income

    0.48        1.02        1.03        1.09        1.15        1.17   

Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)

    (0.22)        0.58        (0.90)        2.33        (0.57)        0.85   

Total income from operations

    0.26        1.60        0.13        3.42        0.58        2.02   
Less distributions from:            

Net investment income

    (0.60) 3      (1.14)        (0.94)        (1.25)        (1.07)        (1.17)   

Net realized gains

           (0.37)        (0.33)        (0.14)        (0.22)        (0.08)   

Total distributions

    (0.60)        (1.51)        (1.27)        (1.39)        (1.29)        (1.25)   
Net asset value, end of period     $21.28        $21.62        $21.53        $22.67        $20.64        $21.35   
Market price, end of period     $21.00        $20.87        $19.59        $23.69        $21.55        $20.79   

Total return, based on NAV4,5

    1.21     7.70     0.63     17.12     2.96     10.28

Total return, based on Market Price6

    3.53     14.69     (12.18)     17.28     10.40     12.52
Net assets, end of period (000s)     $229,137        $232,706        $231,736        $243,472        $220,354        $227,337   
Ratios to average net assets:            

Gross expenses

    0.86 %7      0.80     0.84     0.78     0.80     0.81

Net expenses

    0.86 7      0.80        0.84        0.78        0.80        0.81   

Net investment income

    4.50 7      4.69        4.69        5.01        5.43        5.60   
Portfolio turnover rate     26     38     68     82     49     31

 

1 

Per share amounts have been calculated using the average shares method.

 

2 

For the six months ended May 31, 2015 (unaudited).

 

3 

The actual source of the Fund’s current fiscal year distributions may be from net investment income, return of capital or a combination of both. Shareholders will be informed of the tax characteristics of the distributions after the close of the fiscal year.

 

4 

Performance figures may reflect compensating balance arrangements, fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements. In the absence of compensating balance arrangements, fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements, the total return would have been lower. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.

 

5 

The total return calculation assumes that distributions are reinvested at NAV. Prior to January 1, 2012, the total return calculation assumed the reinvestment of all distributions in accordance with the Fund’s dividend reinvestment plan. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.

 

6 

The total return calculation assumes that distributions are reinvested in accordance with the Fund’s dividend reinvestment plan. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Total returns for periods of less than one year are not annualized.

 

7 

Annualized.

 

See Notes to Financial Statements.

 

18    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


Table of Contents

Notes to financial statements (unaudited)

 

1. Organization and significant accounting policies

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. (the “Fund”) was incorporated in Maryland on April 24, 2009 and is registered as a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). The Fund’s primary investment objective is to provide current income and then to liquidate and distribute substantially all of the Fund’s net assets to stockholders on or about December 2, 2024. As a secondary investment objective, the Fund will seek capital appreciation. There can be no assurance the Fund will achieve its investment objectives.

The following are significant accounting policies consistently followed by the Fund and are in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”). Estimates and assumptions are required to be made regarding assets, liabilities and changes in net assets resulting from operations when financial statements are prepared. Changes in the economic environment, financial markets and any other parameters used in determining these estimates could cause actual results to differ. Subsequent events have been evaluated through the date the financial statements were issued.

(a) Investment valuation. The valuations for fixed income securities (which may include, but are not limited to, corporate, government, municipal, mortgage-backed, collateralized mortgage obligations and asset-backed securities) and certain derivative instruments are typically the prices supplied by independent third party pricing services, which may use market prices or broker/dealer quotations or a variety of valuation techniques and methodologies. The independent third party pricing services use inputs that are observable such as issuer details, interest rates, yield curves, prepayment speeds, credit risks/spreads, default rates and quoted prices for similar securities. Short-term fixed income securities that will mature in 60 days or less are valued at amortized cost, unless it is determined that using this method would not reflect an investment’s fair value. Futures contracts are valued daily at the settlement price established by the board of trade or exchange on which they are traded. Equity securities for which market quotations are available are valued at the last reported sales price or official closing price on the primary market or exchange on which they trade. When the Fund holds securities or other assets that are denominated in a foreign currency, the Fund will normally use the currency exchange rates as of 4:00 p.m. (Eastern Time). If independent third party pricing services are unable to supply prices for a portfolio investment, or if the prices supplied are deemed by the manager to be unreliable, the market price may be determined by the manager using quotations from one or more broker/dealers or at the transaction price if the security has recently been purchased and no value has yet been obtained from a pricing service or pricing broker. When reliable prices are not readily available, such as when the value of a security has been significantly affected by events after the close of the exchange or market on which the security is principally traded, but before the Fund calculates its net asset value, the Fund values these securities as determined in accordance with procedures approved by the Fund’s Board of Directors.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   19


Table of Contents

Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)

 

The Board of Directors is responsible for the valuation process and has delegated the supervision of the daily valuation process to the Legg Mason North Atlantic Fund Valuation Committee (formerly, Legg Mason North American Fund Valuation Committee) (the “Valuation Committee”). The Valuation Committee, pursuant to the policies adopted by the Board of Directors, is responsible for making fair value determinations, evaluating the effectiveness of the Fund’s pricing policies, and reporting to the Board of Directors. When determining the reliability of third party pricing information for investments owned by the Fund, the Valuation Committee, among other things, conducts due diligence reviews of pricing vendors, monitors the daily change in prices and reviews transactions among market participants.

The Valuation Committee will consider pricing methodologies it deems relevant and appropriate when making fair value determinations. Examples of possible methodologies include, but are not limited to, multiple of earnings; discount from market of a similar freely traded security; discounted cash-flow analysis; book value or a multiple thereof; risk premium/yield analysis; yield to maturity; and/or fundamental investment analysis. The Valuation Committee will also consider factors it deems relevant and appropriate in light of the facts and circumstances. Examples of possible factors include, but are not limited to, the type of security; the issuer’s financial statements; the purchase price of the security; the discount from market value of unrestricted securities of the same class at the time of purchase; analysts’ research and observations from financial institutions; information regarding any transactions or offers with respect to the security; the existence of merger proposals or tender offers affecting the security; the price and extent of public trading in similar securities of the issuer or comparable companies; and the existence of a shelf registration for restricted securities.

For each portfolio security that has been fair valued pursuant to the policies adopted by the Board of Directors, the fair value price is compared against the last available and next available market quotations. The Valuation Committee reviews the results of such back testing monthly and fair valuation occurrences are reported to the Board of Directors quarterly.

The Fund uses valuation techniques to measure fair value that are consistent with the market approach and/or income approach, depending on the type of security and the particular circumstance. The market approach uses prices and other relevant information generated by market transactions involving identical or comparable securities. The income approach uses valuation techniques to discount estimated future cash flows to present value.

GAAP establishes a disclosure hierarchy that categorizes the inputs to valuation techniques used to value assets and liabilities at measurement date. These inputs are summarized in the three broad levels listed below:

 

Ÿ  

Level 1 — quoted prices in active markets for identical investments

 

Ÿ  

Level 2 — other significant observable inputs (including quoted prices for similar investments, interest rates, prepayment speeds, credit risk, etc.)

 

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Ÿ  

Level 3 — significant unobservable inputs (including the Fund’s own assumptions in determining the fair value of investments)

The inputs or methodologies used to value securities are not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with investing in those securities.

The following is a summary of the inputs used in valuing the Fund’s assets and liabilities carried at fair value:

 

ASSETS  
Description   Quoted Prices
(Level 1)
    Other Significant
Observable Inputs
(Level 2)
    Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
    Total  
Long-term investments†:                                

Corporate bonds & notes:

                               

Industrials

         $ 6,055,573      $ 3,334,579      $ 9,390,152   

Utilities

           13,930,341        2,170,000        16,100,341   

Other corporate bonds & notes

           190,282,203               190,282,203   

Municipal bonds

           1,146,875               1,146,875   

Senior loans

           640,440               640,440   

Sovereign bonds

           1,969,781               1,969,781   

U.S. government & agency obligations

           800,920               800,920   

Common stocks

  $ 1,607,690                      1,607,690   

Preferred stocks

    3,742,402                      3,742,402   
Total investments   $ 5,350,092      $ 214,826,133      $ 5,504,579      $ 225,680,804   
Other financial instruments:                                

Futures contracts

  $ 70,408                    $ 70,408   

Forward foreign currency contracts

         $ 291,730               291,730   

Centrally cleared interest rate swaps

           77,794               77,794   
Total other financial instruments   $ 70,408      $ 369,524             $ 439,932   
Total   $ 5,420,500      $ 215,195,657      $ 5,504,579      $ 226,120,736   
LIABILITIES  
Description   Quoted Prices
(Level 1)
    Other Significant
Observable Inputs
(Level 2)
    Significant
Unobservable
Inputs
(Level 3)
    Total  
Other financial instruments:                                

Futures contracts

  $ 372,660                    $ 372,660   

Forward foreign currency contracts

         $ 345,663               345,663   

OTC credit default swaps on corporate issues — buy protection‡

           70,283               70,283   
Total   $ 372,660      $ 415,946             $ 788,606   

 

See Schedule of Investments for additional detailed categorizations.

 

Values include any premiums paid or received with respect to swap contracts.

 

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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)

 

The following is a reconciliation of investments in which significant unobservable inputs (Level 3) were used in determining fair value:

 

    Corporate Bonds & Notes        
Investments in Securities   Industrials     Utilities     Total  
Balance as of November 30, 2014                     
Accrued premiums/discounts                     
Realized gain (loss)                     
Change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation)                     
Purchases                     
Sales                     
Transfers into Level 31   $ 3,334,579      $ 2,170,000      $ 5,504,579   
Transfers out of Level 3                     
Balance as of May 31, 2015   $ 3,334,579      $ 2,170,000      $ 5,504,579   
Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) for investments in securities still held at May 31, 2015                     

The Fund’s policy is to recognize transfers between levels as of the end of the reporting period.

 

1

Transferred into Level 3 as a result of the unavailability of a quoted price in an active market for an identical investment or the unavailability of other significant observable inputs.

(b) Repurchase agreements. The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements with institutions that its investment adviser has determined are creditworthy. Each repurchase agreement is recorded at cost. Under the terms of a typical repurchase agreement, the Fund acquires a debt security subject to an obligation of the seller to repurchase, and of the Fund to resell, the security at an agreed-upon price and time, thereby determining the yield during the Fund’s holding period. When entering into repurchase agreements, it is the Fund’s policy that its custodian or a third party custodian, acting on the Fund’s behalf, take possession of the underlying collateral securities, the market value of which, at all times, at least equals the principal amount of the repurchase transaction, including accrued interest. To the extent that any repurchase transaction maturity exceeds one business day, the value of the collateral is marked-to-market and measured against the value of the agreement in an effort to ensure the adequacy of the collateral. If the counterparty defaults, the Fund generally has the right to use the collateral to satisfy the terms of the repurchase transaction. However, if the market value of the collateral declines during the period in which the Fund seeks to assert its rights or if bankruptcy proceedings are commenced with respect to the seller of the security, realization of the collateral by the Fund may be delayed or limited.

(c) Futures contracts. The Fund uses futures contracts generally to gain exposure to, or hedge against, changes in interest rates or gain exposure to, or hedge against, changes in certain asset classes. A futures contract represents a commitment for the future purchase or sale of an asset at a specified price on a specified date.

Upon entering into a futures contract, the Fund is required to deposit cash or cash equivalents with a broker in an amount equal to a certain percentage of the contract amount. This is known as the ‘‘initial margin’’ and subsequent payments (‘‘variation margin’’) are

 

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made or received by the Fund each day, depending on the daily fluctuation in the value of the contract. For certain futures, including foreign denominated futures, variation margin is not settled daily, but is recorded as a net variation margin payable or receivable. The daily changes in contract value are recorded as unrealized gains or losses in the Statement of Operations and the Fund recognizes a realized gain or loss when the contract is closed.

Futures contracts involve, to varying degrees, risk of loss in excess of the amounts reflected in the financial statements. In addition, there is the risk that the Fund may not be able to enter into a closing transaction because of an illiquid secondary market.

(d) Forward foreign currency contracts. The Fund enters into forward foreign currency contracts to hedge against, or manage exposure to, foreign issuers or markets. The Fund may also enter into a forward foreign currency contract to hedge against foreign currency exchange rate risk on its non-U.S. dollar denominated securities or to facilitate settlement of a foreign currency denominated portfolio transaction. A forward foreign currency contract is an agreement between two parties to buy and sell a currency at a set price with delivery and settlement at a future date. The contract is marked-to-market daily and the change in value is recorded by the Fund as an unrealized gain or loss. When a forward foreign currency contract is closed, through either delivery or offset by entering into another forward foreign currency contract, the Fund recognizes a realized gain or loss equal to the difference between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value of the contract at the time it is closed.

Forward foreign currency contracts involve elements of market risk in excess of the amounts reflected on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. The Fund bears the risk of an unfavorable change in the foreign exchange rate underlying the forward foreign currency contract. Risks may also arise upon entering into these contracts from the potential inability of the counterparties to meet the terms of their contracts.

(e) Swap agreements. The Fund invests in swaps for the purpose of managing its exposure to interest rate, credit or market risk, or for other purposes, including to increase the Fund’s return. The use of swaps involves risks that are different from those associated with other portfolio transactions. Swap agreements are privately negotiated in the over-the-counter market (“OTC Swaps”) or may be executed on a registered exchange (“Centrally Cleared Swaps”). Unlike Centrally Cleared Swaps, the Fund has credit exposure to the counterparties of OTC Swaps.

Swap contracts are marked-to-market daily and changes in value are recorded as unrealized appreciation (depreciation). The daily change in valuation of Centrally Cleared Swaps, if any, is recorded as a receivable or payable for variation margin on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Gains or losses are realized upon termination of the swap agreement. Collateral, in the form of restricted cash or securities, may be required to be held in segregated accounts with the Fund’s custodian in compliance with the terms of the swap contracts. Securities posted as collateral for swap contracts are identified in the Schedule of Investments and restricted cash, if any, is identified on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

 

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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)

 

Risks may exceed amounts recorded in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. These risks include changes in the returns of the underlying instruments, failure of the counterparties to perform under the contracts’ terms, and the possible lack of liquidity with respect to the swap agreements.

OTC swap payments received or made at the beginning of the measurement period are reflected as a premium or deposit, respectively, on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. These upfront payments are amortized over the life of the swap and are recognized as realized gain or loss in the Statement of Operations. Net periodic payments received or paid by the Fund are recognized as a realized gain or loss in the Statement of Operations.

The Fund’s maximum exposure in the event of a defined credit event on a credit default swap to sell protection is the notional amount. As of May 31, 2015, the Fund did not hold any credit default swaps to sell protection.

For average notional amounts of swaps held during the six months ended May 31, 2015, see Note 4.

Credit default swaps

The Fund enters into credit default swap (“CDS”) contracts for investment purposes, to manage its credit risk or to add leverage. CDS agreements involve one party making a stream of payments to another party in exchange for the right to receive a specified return in the event of a default by a third party, typically corporate or sovereign issuers, on a specified obligation, or in the event of a write-down, principal shortfall, interest shortfall or default of all or part of the referenced entities comprising a credit index. The Fund may use a CDS to provide protection against defaults of the issuers (i.e., to reduce risk where the Fund has exposure to an issuer) or to take an active long or short position with respect to the likelihood of a particular issuer’s default. As a seller of protection, the Fund generally receives an upfront payment or a stream of payments throughout the term of the swap provided that there is no credit event. If the Fund is a seller of protection and a credit event occurs, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement, the maximum potential amount of future payments (undiscounted) that the Fund could be required to make under a credit default swap agreement would be an amount equal to the notional amount of the agreement. These amounts of potential payments will be partially offset by any recovery of values from the respective referenced obligations. As a seller of protection, the Fund effectively adds leverage to its portfolio because, in addition to its total net assets, the Fund is subject to investment exposure on the notional amount of the swap. As a buyer of protection, the Fund generally receives an amount up to the notional value of the swap if a credit event occurs.

Implied spreads are the theoretical prices a lender receives for credit default protection. When spreads rise, market perceived credit risk rises and when spreads fall, market perceived credit risk falls. The implied credit spread of a particular referenced entity reflects the cost of buying/selling protection and may include upfront payments required to enter into the agreement. Wider credit spreads and decreasing market values, when compared to

 

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the notional amount of the swap, represent a deterioration of the referenced entity’s credit soundness and a greater likelihood or risk of default or other credit event occurring as defined under the terms of the agreement. Credit spreads utilized in determining the period end market value of credit default swap agreements on corporate or sovereign issues are disclosed in the Notes to Financial Statements and serve as an indicator of the current status of the payment/performance risk and represent the likelihood or risk of default for credit derivatives. For credit default swap agreements on asset-backed securities and credit indices, the quoted market prices and resulting values, particularly in relation to the notional amount of the contract as well as the annual payment rate, serve as an indication of the current status of the payment/performance risk.

The Fund’s maximum risk of loss from counterparty risk, as the protection buyer, is the fair value of the contract (this risk is mitigated by the posting of collateral by the counterparty to the Fund to cover the Fund’s exposure to the counterparty). As the protection seller, the Fund’s maximum risk is the notional amount of the contract. Credit default swaps are considered to have credit risk-related contingent features since they require payment by the protection seller to the protection buyer upon the occurrence of a defined credit event.

Entering into a CDS agreement involves, to varying degrees, elements of credit, market and documentation risk in excess of the related amounts recognized on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Such risks involve the possibility that there will be no liquid market for these agreements, that the counterparty to the agreement may default on its obligation to perform or disagree as to the meaning of the contractual terms in the agreement, and that there will be unfavorable changes in net interest rates.

Interest rate swaps

The Fund enters into interest rate swap contracts to manage its exposure to interest rate risk. Interest rate swaps are agreements between two parties to exchange cash flows based on a notional principal amount. The Fund may elect to pay a fixed rate and receive a floating rate, or receive a fixed rate and pay a floating rate, on a notional principal amount. Interest rate swaps are marked-to-market daily based upon quotations from market makers and the change, if any, is recorded as an unrealized gain or loss in the Statement of Operations. When a swap contract is terminated early, the Fund records a realized gain or loss equal to the difference between the original cost and the settlement amount of the closing transaction.

The risks of interest rate swaps include changes in market conditions that will affect the value of the contract or changes in the present value of the future cash flow streams and the possible inability of the counterparty to fulfill its obligations under the agreement. The Fund’s maximum risk of loss from counterparty credit risk is the discounted net value of the cash flows to be received from the counterparty over the contract’s remaining life, to the extent that that amount is positive. This risk is mitigated by the posting of collateral by the counterparty to the Fund to cover the Fund’s exposure to the counterparty.

 

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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)

 

Total return swaps

The Fund enters into total return swaps for investment purposes. Total return swaps are agreements to exchange the return generated by one instrument for the return generated by another instrument. For example, the agreement to pay a predetermined or fixed interest rate in exchange for a market-linked return based on a notional amount. To the extent the total return of a referenced index or instrument exceeds the offsetting interest obligation, the Fund will receive a payment from the counterparty. To the extent it is less, the Fund will make a payment to the counterparty.

(f) Loan participations. The Fund may invest in loans arranged through private negotiation between one or more financial institutions. The Fund’s investment in any such loan may be in the form of a participation in or an assignment of the loan. In connection with purchasing participations, the Fund generally will have no right to enforce compliance by the borrower with the terms of the loan agreement related to the loan, or any rights of off-set against the borrower and the Fund may not benefit directly from any collateral supporting the loan in which it has purchased the participation.

The Fund assumes the credit risk of the borrower, the lender that is selling the participation and any other persons interpositioned between the Fund and the borrower. In the event of the insolvency of the lender selling the participation, the Fund may be treated as a general creditor of the lender and may not benefit from any off-set between the lender and the borrower.

(g) Credit and market risk. The Fund invests in high-yield instruments that are subject to certain credit and market risks. The yields of high-yield obligations reflect, among other things, perceived credit and market risks. The Fund’s investments in securities rated below investment grade typically involve risks not associated with higher rated securities including, among others, greater risk related to timely and ultimate payment of interest and principal, greater market price volatility and less liquid secondary market trading.

(h) Foreign investment risks. The Fund’s investments in foreign securities may involve risks not present in domestic investments. Since securities may be denominated in foreign currencies, may require settlement in foreign currencies or pay interest or dividends in foreign currencies, changes in the relationship of these foreign currencies to the U.S. dollar can significantly affect the value of the investments and earnings of the Fund. Foreign investments may also subject the Fund to foreign government exchange restrictions, expropriation, taxation or other political, social or economic developments, all of which affect the market and/or credit risk of the investments.

(i) Counterparty risk and credit-risk-related contingent features of derivative instruments. The Fund may invest in certain securities or engage in other transactions, where the Fund is exposed to counterparty credit risk in addition to broader market risks. The Fund may invest in securities of issuers, which may also be considered counterparties as trading partners in other transactions. This may increase the risk of loss in the event of default or bankruptcy by the counterparty or if the counterparty otherwise fails to meet its

 

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contractual obligations. The Fund’s investment manager attempts to mitigate counterparty risk by (i) periodically assessing the creditworthiness of its trading partners, (ii) monitoring and/or limiting the amount of its net exposure to each individual counterparty based on its assessment and (iii) requiring collateral from the counterparty for certain transactions. Market events and changes in overall economic conditions may impact the assessment of such counterparty risk by the investment manager. In addition, declines in the values of underlying collateral received may expose the Fund to increased risk of loss.

The Fund has entered into master agreements with certain of its derivative counterparties that provide for general obligations, representations, agreements, collateral, events of default or termination and credit related contingent features. The credit related contingent features include, but are not limited to, a percentage decrease in the Fund’s net assets or NAV over a specified period of time. If these credit related contingent features were triggered, the derivatives counterparty could terminate the positions and demand payment or require additional collateral.

Collateral requirements differ by type of derivative. Collateral or margin requirements are set by the broker or exchange clearing house for exchange traded derivatives while collateral terms are contract specific for over-the-counter traded derivatives. Cash collateral that has been pledged to cover obligations of the Fund under derivative contracts, if any, will be reported separately in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Securities pledged as collateral, if any, for the same purpose are noted in the Schedule of Investments.

Absent an event of default by the counterparty or a termination of the agreement, the terms of the master agreements do not result in an offset of reported amounts of financial assets and financial liabilities in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities across transactions between the Fund and the applicable counterparty. The enforceability of the right to offset may vary by jurisdiction.

As of May 31, 2015, the Fund held forward foreign currency contracts and OTC credit default swaps with credit related contingent features which had a liability position of $415,946. If a contingent feature in the master agreements would have been triggered, the Fund would have been required to pay this amount to its derivatives counterparties.

(j) Foreign currency translation. Investment securities and other assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollar amounts based upon prevailing exchange rates on the date of valuation. Purchases and sales of investment securities and income and expense items denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollar amounts based upon prevailing exchange rates on the respective dates of such transactions.

The Fund does not isolate that portion of the results of operations resulting from fluctuations in foreign exchange rates on investments from the fluctuations arising from changes in market prices of securities held. Such fluctuations are included with the net realized and unrealized gain or loss on investments.

 

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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)

 

Net realized foreign exchange gains or losses arise from sales of foreign currencies, including gains and losses on forward foreign currency contracts, currency gains or losses realized between the trade and settlement dates on securities transactions, and the difference between the amounts of dividends, interest, and foreign withholding taxes recorded on the Fund’s books and the U.S. dollar equivalent of the amounts actually received or paid. Net unrealized foreign exchange gains and losses arise from changes in the values of assets and liabilities, other than investments in securities, on the date of valuation, resulting from changes in exchange rates.

Foreign security and currency transactions may involve certain considerations and risks not typically associated with those of U.S. dollar denominated transactions as a result of, among other factors, the possibility of lower levels of governmental supervision and regulation of foreign securities markets and the possibility of political or economic instability.

(k) Security transactions and investment income. Security transactions are accounted for on a trade date basis. Interest income, adjusted for amortization of premium and accretion of discount, is recorded on the accrual basis. Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Foreign dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date or as soon as practicable after the Fund determines the existence of a dividend declaration after exercising reasonable due diligence. The cost of investments sold is determined by use of the specific identification method. To the extent any issuer defaults or a credit event occurs that impacts the issuer, the Fund may halt any additional interest income accruals and consider the realizability of interest accrued up to the date of default or credit event.

(l) Distributions to shareholders. Distributions from net investment income of the Fund, if any, are declared quarterly and paid on a monthly basis. The actual source of the Fund’s monthly distributions may be from net investment income, return of capital or a combination of both. Shareholders will be informed of the tax characteristics of the distributions after the close of the fiscal year. Distributions of net realized gains, if any, are declared at least annually. Distributions to shareholders of the Fund are recorded on the ex-dividend date and are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from GAAP.

(m) Compensating balance arrangements. The Fund has an arrangement with its custodian bank whereby a portion of the custodian’s fees is paid indirectly by credits earned on the Fund’s cash on deposit with the bank.

(n) Federal and other taxes. It is the Fund’s policy to comply with the federal income and excise tax requirements of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the “Code”), as amended, applicable to regulated investment companies. Accordingly, the Fund intends to distribute its taxable income and net realized gains, if any, to shareholders in accordance with timing requirements imposed by the Code. Therefore, no federal or state income tax provision is required in the Fund’s financial statements. However, due to the timing of when distributions are made by the Fund, the Fund may be subject to an excise tax of 4% of the amount by which 98% of the Fund’s annual taxable income and 98.2% of net realized gains

 

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exceed the distributions from such taxable income and realized gains for the calendar year. The Fund paid $108,644 of Federal excise taxes attributable to calendar year 2014 in March 2015.

Management has analyzed the Fund’s tax positions taken on income tax returns for all open tax years and has concluded that as of May 31, 2015, no provision for income tax is required in the Fund’s financial statements. The Fund’s federal and state income and federal excise tax returns for tax years for which the applicable statutes of limitations have not expired are subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service and state departments of revenue.

Under the applicable foreign tax laws, a withholding tax may be imposed on interest, dividends and capital gains at various rates.

(o) Reclassification. GAAP requires that certain components of net assets be reclassified to reflect permanent differences between financial and tax reporting. These reclassifications have no effect on net assets or net asset value per share.

2. Investment management agreement and other transactions with affiliates

Legg Mason Partners Fund Advisor, LLC (“LMPFA”) is the Fund’s investment manager. Western Asset Management Company (“Western Asset”), Western Asset Management Company Pte. Ltd. (“Western Singapore”), Western Asset Management Company Ltd (“Western Japan”) and Western Asset Management Company Limited (“Western Asset Limited”) are the Fund’s subadvisers. LMPFA, Western Asset, Western Singapore, Western Japan and Western Asset Limited are wholly-owned subsidiaries of Legg Mason, Inc. (“Legg Mason”).

LMPFA provides administrative and certain oversight services to the Fund. The Fund pays LMPFA an investment management fee, calculated daily and paid monthly, at an annual rate of 0.65% of the Fund’s average daily net assets.

LMPFA delegates to Western Asset the day-to-day portfolio management of the Fund. Western Singapore, Western Japan and Western Asset Limited provide certain advisory services to the Fund relating to currency transactions and investment in non-U.S. dollar denominated debt securities. For its services, LMPFA pays Western Asset 70% of the net management fee it receives from the Fund. In turn, Western Asset pays Western Singapore, Western Japan and Western Asset Limited a fee for their services at no additional expense to the Fund. Each of Western Singapore, Western Japan and Western Asset Limited receives a fee from Western Asset, payable monthly, in an amount equal to 70% of the Fund’s fee paid to LMPFA by the Fund related to the Fund’s assets that Western Asset allocates to Western Singapore, Western Japan and Western Asset Limited, respectively, to manage.

All officers and one Director of the Fund are employees of Legg Mason or its affiliates and do not receive compensation from the Fund.

 

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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)

 

3. Investments

During the six months ended May 31, 2015, the aggregate cost of purchases and proceeds from sales of investments (excluding short-term investments) and U.S Government & Agency Obligations were as follows:

 

        Investments        U.S. Government &
Agency Obligations
 
Purchases      $ 41,405,321         $ 17,683,904   
Sales        42,715,567           16,896,667   

At May 31, 2015, the aggregate gross unrealized appreciation and depreciation of investments for federal income tax purposes were substantially as follows:

 

Gross unrealized appreciation      $ 24,356,020   
Gross unrealized depreciation        (903,627)   
Net unrealized appreciation      $ 23,452,393   

At May 31, 2015, the Fund had the following open futures contracts:

 

     Number of
Contracts
    Expiration
Date
    Basis
Value
    Market
Value
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 
Contracts to Buy:                                        
U.S. Treasury 5-Year Notes     21        9/15      $ 2,501,365      $ 2,514,258      $ 12,893   
U.S. Treasury Ultra Long-Term Bonds     17        9/15        2,667,266        2,724,781        57,515   
                                      70,408   
Contracts to Sell:                                        
U.S. Treasury 10-Year Notes     106        9/15        13,414,835        13,534,875        (120,040)   
U.S. Treasury Long-Term Bonds     61        9/15        9,240,505        9,493,125        (252,620)   
                                      (372,660)   
Net unrealized depreciation on open futures contracts              $ (302,252)   

At May 31, 2015, the Fund had the following open forward foreign currency contracts:

 

Currency
Purchased
    Currency
Sold
    Counterparty   Settlement
Date
    Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
 
BRL     7,340,000      USD     2,279,008      Bank of America N.A.     7/16/15      $ (10,782)   
BRL     7,150,000      USD     2,293,872      Bank of America N.A.     7/16/15        (84,361)   
USD     2,339,660      BRL     7,150,000      Bank of America N.A.     7/16/15        130,148   
USD     687,563      BRL     2,040,000      Bank of America N.A.     7/16/15        57,157   
USD     455,871      BRL     1,360,000      Bank of America N.A.     7/16/15        35,600   
USD     5,314,520      EUR     4,970,000      Bank of America N.A.     7/16/15        (147,277)   
USD     1,172,822      EUR     1,070,000      Bank of America N.A.     7/16/15        (3,058)   
USD     1,776,144      JPY     211,780,000      Bank of America N.A.     7/16/15        68,825   
INR     71,560,000      USD     1,130,624      Citibank N.A.     7/16/15        (19,996)   
INR     143,010,000      USD     2,263,300      Citibank N.A.     7/16/15        (43,751)   
USD     985,588      EUR     930,000      Citibank N.A.     7/16/15        (36,438)   
Total                                   $ (53,933)   

 

30    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


Table of Contents

Abbreviations used in this table:

BRL   — Brazilian Real
EUR   — Euro
INR   — Indian Rupee
JPY   — Japanese Yen
USD   — United States Dollar

At May 31, 2015, the Fund had the following open swap contracts:

 

CENTRALLY CLEARED INTEREST RATE SWAPS  
Swap Counterparty   Notional
Amount
    Termination
Date
    Payments
Made by
the Fund†
  Payments
Received by
the Fund†
    Upfront
Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Appreciation
 
BNP Paribas   $ 2,192,000        2/15/41      2.442% semi-annually     3-Month LIBOR      $ (10,191)      $ 77,794   

 

OTC CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS ON CORPORATE ISSUES — BUY PROTECTION1  
Swap Counterparty
(Reference Entity)
  Notional
Amount 2
    Termination
Date
    Implied
Credit
Spread at
May 31,
20153
  Periodic
Payments
Made by
the Fund†
  Market
Value
    Upfront
Premiums
Paid
(Received)
    Unrealized
Depreciation
 
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., 5.250%, due 12/15/16)   $ 780,000        3/20/19      0.281%   1.000% quarterly   $ (21,084)      $ (16,909)      $ (4,175)   
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP,
3.950%, due 9/1/22)
    1,100,000        12/20/18      0.352%   1.000% quarterly     (25,110)        (7,063)        (18,047)   
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (PPG Industries Inc.,
6.650%, due 3/15/18)
    856,423        3/20/19      0.252%   1.000% quarterly     (24,089)        (17,305)        (6,784)   
Total   $ 2,736,423                      $ (70,283)      $ (41,277)      $ (29,006)   

 

1 

If the Fund is a buyer of protection and a credit event occurs, as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement, the Fund will either (i) receive from the seller of protection an amount equal to the notional amount of the swap and deliver the referenced obligation or the underlying securities comprising the referenced index or (ii) receive a net settlement amount in the form of cash or securities equal to the notional amount of the swap less the recovery value of the referenced obligation or the underlying securities comprising the referenced index.

 

2 

The maximum potential amount the Fund could be required to pay as a seller of credit protection or receive as a buyer of credit protection if a credit event occurs as defined under the terms of that particular swap agreement.

 

3 

Implied credit spreads, utilized in determining the market value of credit default swap agreements on corporate or sovereign issues as of period end serve as an indicator of the current status of the payment/performance risk and represent the likelihood or risk of default for the credit derivative. The implied credit spread of a particular referenced entity reflects the cost of buying/selling protection and may include upfront payments required to be made to enter into the agreement. Wider credit spreads represent a deterioration of the referenced entity’s credit soundness and a greater likelihood or risk of default or other credit event occurring as defined under the terms of the agreement. A credit spread identified as “Defaulted” indicates a credit event has occurred for the referenced entity or obligation.

 

Percentage shown is an annual percentage rate.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   31


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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)

 

4. Derivative instruments and hedging activities

Below is a table, grouped by derivative type, that provides information about the fair value and the location of derivatives within the Statement of Assets and Liabilities at May 31, 2015.

 

ASSET DERIVATIVES1  
      Interest
Rate Risk
     Foreign
Exchange Risk
     Total  
Futures contracts2    $ 70,408               $ 70,408   
Centrally cleared swap contracts3      77,794                 77,794   
Forward foreign currency contracts            $ 291,730         291,730   
Total    $ 148,202       $ 291,730       $ 439,932   

 

LIABILITY DERIVATIVES1  
      Interest
Rate Risk
     Foreign
Exchange Risk
     Credit
Risk
     Total  
Futures contracts2    $ 372,660                       $ 372,660   
OTC swap contracts4                    $ 70,283         70,283   
Forward foreign currency contracts            $ 345,663                 345,663   
Total    $ 372,660       $ 345,663       $ 70,283       $ 788,606   

 

1 

Generally, the balance sheet location for asset derivatives is receivables/net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) and for liability derivatives is payables/net unrealized appreciation (depreciation).

 

2 

Includes cumulative appreciation (depreciation) of futures contracts as reported in the footnotes. Only variation margin is reported within the receivables and/or payables on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

 

3 

Includes cumulative appreciation (depreciation) of centrally cleared swap contracts as reported in the footnotes. Only variation margin is reported within the receivables and/or payables on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

 

4 

Values include premiums paid (received) on swap contracts which are shown separately in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

The following tables provide information about the effect of derivatives and hedging activities on the Fund’s Statement of Operations for the six months ended May 31, 2015. The first table provides additional detail about the amounts and sources of gains (losses) realized on derivatives during the period. The second table provides additional information about the change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) resulting from the Fund’s derivatives and hedging activities during the period.

 

AMOUNT OF REALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON DERIVATIVES RECOGNIZED  
     Interest
Rate Risk
    Foreign
Exchange Risk
    Credit
Risk
    Equity
Risk
    Total  
Futures contracts   $ (831,929)                           $ (831,929)   
Swap contracts     25,849             $ (2,803)      $ (44,361)        (21,315)   
Forward foreign currency contracts1          $ 537,178                      537,178   
Total   $ (806,080)      $ 537,178      $ (2,803)      $ (44,361)      $ (316,066)   

 

1

Net realized gain (loss) from forward foreign currency contracts is reported in net realized gain (loss) from foreign currency transactions in the Statement of Operations.

 

32    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


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CHANGE IN UNREALIZED APPRECIATION (DEPRECIATION) ON DERIVATIVES RECOGNIZED  
      Interest
Rate Risk
     Foreign
Exchange Risk
     Credit
Risk
     Total  
Futures contracts    $ 113,702                       $ 113,702   
Swap contracts      77,794               $ 1,416         79,210   
Forward foreign currency contracts1            $ (192,751)                 (192,751)   
Total    $ 191,496       $ (192,751)       $ 1,416       $ 161   

 

1

The change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) from forward foreign currency contracts is reported in the change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) from foreign currencies in the Statement of Operations.

 

        Average Market
Value
 
Futures contracts (to buy)      $ 3,531,328   
Futures contracts (to sell)        28,781,969   
Forward foreign currency contracts (to buy)        4,438,504   
Forward foreign currency contracts (to sell)        6,664,573   
        Average Notional
Balance
 
Interest rate swap contracts      $ 2,488,857   
Credit default swap contracts (to buy protection)        2,893,566   
Total return swap contracts1        685,711   

 

1 

At May 31, 2015, there were no open positions held in this derivative.

The following table presents by financial instrument, the Fund’s derivative assets net of the related collateral received by the Fund at May 31, 2015:

 

      Gross Amount of Derivative
Assets in the Statement of
Assets and Liabilities1
     Collateral
Received
     Net
Amount
 
Forward foreign currency contracts    $ 291,730               $ 291,730   

The following table presents by financial instrument, the Fund’s derivative liabilities net of the related collateral pledged by the Fund at May 31, 2015:

 

      Gross Amount of Derivative
Liabilities in the Statement  of
Assets and Liabilities1
     Collateral
Pledged2,3
     Net
Amount
 
Futures contracts4    $ 58,703       $ (58,703)           
Centrally cleared swap contracts4      14,265         (14,265)           
OTC swap contracts      70,283               $ 70,283   
Forward foreign currency contracts      345,663                 345,663   
Total    $ 488,914       $ (72,968)       $ 415,946   

 

1 

Absent an event of default or early termination, derivative assets and liabilities are presented gross and not offset in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

 

2 

Gross amounts are not offset in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

 

3 

In some instances, the actual collateral received and/or pledged may be more than the amount shown here due to overcollateralization.

 

4 

Amount represents the current day’s variation margin as reported in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. It differs from the cumulative appreciation (depreciation) presented in the previous table.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report   33


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Notes to financial statements (unaudited) (cont’d)

 

5. Distributions subsequent to May 31, 2015

The following distributions have been declared by the Fund’s Board of Directors and are payable subsequent to the period end of this report:

 

Record Date      Payable Date        Amount  
6/19/15        6/26/15         $ 0.1000   
7/24/15        7/31/15         $ 0.1000   
8/21/15        8/28/15         $ 0.1000   

6. Deferred capital losses

As of May 31, 2015, the Fund had deferred capital losses of $421,439, which have no expiration date, that will be available to offset future taxable capital gains.

 

34    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. 2015 Semi-Annual Report


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Additional shareholder information (unaudited)

 

Results of annual meeting of shareholders

The Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. was held on March 27, 2015 for the purpose of considering and voting upon the election of Directors. The following table provides information concerning the matter voted upon at the Meeting:

Election of directors

 

Nominees    Votes For      Votes Withheld  
Robert D. Agdern      9,334,574         185,863   
Eileen A. Kamerick      9,326,969         193,468   
Riordan Roett      9,288,765         231,672   

At May 31, 2015, in addition to Robert D. Agdern, Eileen A. Kamerick and Riordan Roett, the other Directors of the Fund were as follows:

Carol L. Colman

Daniel P. Cronin

Paolo M. Cucchi

Kenneth D. Fuller

Leslie H. Gelb

William R. Hutchinson

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.   35


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Dividend reinvestment plan (unaudited)

 

Unless you elect to receive distributions in cash (i.e., opt-out), all dividends, including any capital gain dividends, on your Common Stock will be automatically reinvested by American Stock Transfer & Trust Company LLC, as agent for the stockholders (the “Plan Agent”), in additional shares of Common Stock under the Fund’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the “Plan”). You may elect not to participate in the Plan by contacting the Plan Agent. If you do not participate, you will receive all cash distributions paid by check mailed directly to you by American Stock Transfer & Trust Company LLC, as dividend paying agent.

If you participate in the Plan, the number of shares of Common Stock you will receive will be determined as follows:

(1) If the market price of the Common Stock on the record date (or, if the record date is not a NYSE trading day, the immediately preceding trading day) for determining stockholders eligible to receive the relevant dividend or distribution (the “determination date”) is equal to or exceeds 98% of the net asset value per share of the Common Stock, the Fund will issue new Common Stock at a price equal to the greater of (a) 98% of the net asset value per share at the close of trading on the NYSE on the determination date or (b) 95% of the market price per share of the Common Stock on the determination date.

(2) If 98% of the net asset value per share of the Common Stock exceeds the market price of the Common Stock on the determination date, the Plan Agent will receive the dividend or distribution in cash and will buy Common Stock in the open market, on the NYSE or elsewhere, for your account as soon as practicable commencing on the trading day following the determination date and terminating no later than the earlier of (a) 30 days after the dividend or distribution payment date, or (b) the record date for the next succeeding dividend or distribution to be made to the stockholders; except when necessary to comply with applicable provisions of the federal securities laws. If during this period: (i) the market price rises so that it equals or exceeds 98% of the net asset value per share of the Common Stock at the close of trading on the NYSE on the determination date before the Plan Agent has completed the open market purchases or (ii) if the Plan Agent is unable to invest the full amount eligible to be reinvested in open market purchases, the Plan Agent will cease purchasing Common Stock in the open market and the Fund shall issue the remaining Common Stock at a price per share equal to the greater of (a) 98% of the net asset value per share at the close of trading on the Exchange on the determination date or (b) 95% of the then current market price per share.

Common Stock in your account will be held by the Plan Agent in non-certificated form. Any proxy you receive will include all shares of Common Stock you have received under the Plan.

You may withdraw from the Plan (i.e., opt-out) by notifying the Plan Agent in writing at 6201 15th Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 11219 or by calling the Plan Agent at 1-888-888-0151. Such withdrawal will be effective immediately if notice is received by the

 

36    Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.


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Plan Agent not less than ten business days prior to any dividend or distribution record date; otherwise such withdrawal will be effective as soon as practicable after the Plan Agent’s investment of the most recently declared dividend or distribution on the Common Stock. The Plan may be terminated by the Fund upon notice in writing mailed to stockholders at least 30 days prior to the record date for the payment of any dividend or distribution by the Fund for which the termination is to be effective. Upon any termination, you will be sent a certificate or certificates for the full number of shares of Common Stock held for you under the Plan and cash for any fractional share of Common Stock. You may elect to notify the Plan Agent in advance of such termination to have the Plan Agent sell part or all of your Common Stock on your behalf. You will be charged a service charge and the Plan Agent is authorized to deduct brokerage charges actually incurred for this transaction from the proceeds.

There is no service charge for reinvestment of your dividends or distributions in Common Stock. However, all participants will pay a pro rata share of brokerage commissions incurred by the Plan Agent when it makes open market purchases. Because all dividends and distributions will be automatically reinvested in additional shares of Common Stock, this allows you to add to your investment through dollar cost averaging, which may lower the average cost of your Common Stock over time. Dollar cost averaging is a technique for lowering the average cost per share over time if the Fund’s net asset value declines. While dollar cost averaging has definite advantages, it cannot assure profit or protect against loss in declining markets.

Automatically reinvesting dividends and distributions does not mean that you do not have to pay income taxes due upon receiving dividends and distributions. Investors will be subject to income tax on amounts reinvested under the Plan.

The Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate the Plan if, in the judgment of the Board of Directors, the change is warranted. There is no direct service charge to participants in the Plan; however, the Fund reserves the right to amend the Plan to include a service charge payable by the participants. Additional information about the Plan and your account may be obtained from the Plan Agent at 1-888-888-0151.

 

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.   37


Table of Contents

Western Asset

Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

Directors

Robert D. Agdern

Carol L. Colman

Daniel P. Cronin

Paolo M. Cucchi

Kenneth D. Fuller

Chairman

Leslie H. Gelb

William R. Hutchinson

Eileen A. Kamerick

Riordan Roett

Officers

Kenneth D. Fuller

President and Chief Executive Officer

Richard F. Sennett

Principal Financial Officer

Ted P. Becker

Chief Compliance Officer

Vanessa A. Williams

Identity Theft Prevention Officer

Robert I. Frenkel

Secretary and Chief Legal Officer

Thomas C. Mandia

Assistant Secretary

Steven Frank

Treasurer

Jeanne M. Kelly

Senior Vice President

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

620 Eighth Avenue 49th Floor New York, NY 10018

Investment manager

Legg Mason Partners Fund Advisor, LLC

Subadvisers

Western Asset Management Company

Western Asset Management Company Limited

Western Asset Management Company Ltd

Western Asset Management Company Pte. Ltd.

Custodian

State Street Bank and Trust Company

1 Lincoln Street Boston, MA 02111

Transfer agent

American Stock Transfer & Trust Company 6201 15th Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11219

Independent registered public accounting firm

KPMG LLP 345 Park Avenue New York, NY 10154

Legal counsel

Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP 425 Lexington Avenue New York, NY 10017

New York Stock Exchange Symbol

IGI


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Legg Mason Funds Privacy and Security Notice

 

Your Privacy and the Security of Your Personal Information is Very Important to the Legg Mason Funds

This Privacy and Security Notice (the “Privacy Notice”) addresses the Legg Mason Funds’ privacy and data protection practices with respect to nonpublic personal information the Funds receive. The Legg Mason Funds include any funds sold by the Funds’ distributor, Legg Mason Investor Services, LLC, as well as Legg Mason-sponsored closed-end funds and certain closed-ends funds managed or sub-advised by Legg Mason or its affiliates. The provisions of this Privacy Notice apply to your information both while you are a shareholder and after you are no longer invested with the Funds.

The Type of Nonpublic Personal Information the Funds Collect About You

The Funds collect and maintain nonpublic personal information about you in connection with your shareholder account. Such information may include, but is not limited to:

 

Ÿ  

Personal information included on applications or other forms;

 

Ÿ  

Account balances, transactions, and mutual fund holdings and positions;

 

Ÿ  

Online account access user IDs, passwords, security challenge question responses; and

 

Ÿ  

Information received from consumer reporting agencies regarding credit history and creditworthiness (such as the amount of an individual’s total debt, payment history, etc.).

How the Funds Use Nonpublic Personal Information About You

The Funds do not sell or share your nonpublic personal information with third parties or with affiliates for their marketing purposes, or with other financial institutions or affiliates for joint marketing purposes, unless you have authorized the Funds to do so. The Funds do not disclose any nonpublic personal information about you except as may be required to perform transactions or services you have authorized or as permitted or required by law. The Funds may disclose information about you to:

 

Ÿ  

Employees, agents, and affiliates on a “need to know” basis to enable the Funds to conduct ordinary business or comply with obligations to government regulators;

 

Ÿ  

Service providers, including the Funds’ affiliates, who assist the Funds as part of the ordinary course of business (such as printing, mailing services, or processing or servicing your account with us) or otherwise perform services on the Funds’ behalf, including companies that may perform marketing services solely for the Funds;

 

Ÿ  

The Funds’ representatives such as legal counsel, accountants and auditors; and

 

Ÿ  

Fiduciaries or representatives acting on your behalf, such as an IRA custodian or trustee of a grantor trust.

 

NOT PART OF THE SEMI-ANNUAL REPORT


Table of Contents

Legg Mason Funds Privacy and Security Notice (cont’d)

 

Except as otherwise permitted by applicable law, companies acting on the Funds’ behalf are contractually obligated to keep nonpublic personal information the Funds provide to them confidential and to use the information the Funds share only to provide the services the Funds ask them to perform.

The Funds may disclose nonpublic personal information about you when necessary to enforce their rights or protect against fraud, or as permitted or required by applicable law, such as in connection with a law enforcement or regulatory request, subpoena, or similar legal process. In the event of a corporate action or in the event a Fund service provider changes, the Funds may be required to disclose your nonpublic personal information to third parties. While it is the Funds’ practice to obtain protections for disclosed information in these types of transactions, the Funds cannot guarantee their privacy policy will remain unchanged.

Keeping You Informed of the Funds’ Privacy and Security Practices

The Funds will notify you annually of their privacy policy as required by federal law. While the Funds reserve the right to modify this policy at any time they will notify you promptly if this privacy policy changes.

The Funds’ Security Practices

The Funds maintain appropriate physical, electronic and procedural safeguards designed to guard your nonpublic personal information. The Funds’ internal data security policies restrict access to your nonpublic personal information to authorized employees, who may use your nonpublic personal information for Fund business purposes only.

Although the Funds strive to protect your nonpublic personal information, they cannot ensure or warrant the security of any information you provide or transmit to them, and you do so at your own risk. In the event of a breach of the confidentiality or security of your nonpublic personal information, the Funds will attempt to notify you as necessary so you can take appropriate protective steps. If you have consented to the Funds using electronic communications or electronic delivery of statements, they may notify you under such circumstances using the most current email address you have on record with them.

In order for the Funds to provide effective service to you, keeping your account information accurate is very important. If you believe that your account information is incomplete, not accurate or not current, or if you have questions about the Funds’ privacy practices, write the Funds using the contact information on your account statements, email the Funds by clicking on the Contact Us section of the Funds’ website at www.leggmason.com, or contact the Fund at 1-888-777-0102.

 

NOT PART OF THE SEMI-ANNUAL REPORT


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Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

620 Eighth Avenue

49th Floor

New York, NY 10018

Notice is hereby given in accordance with Section 23(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, that from time to time the Fund may purchase at market price shares of its common stock in the open market.

The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. The Fund’s Forms N-Q are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. The Fund’s Forms N-Q may be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C., and information on the operation of the Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. To obtain information on Form N-Q from the Fund, shareholders can call 1-888-777-0102.

Information on how the Fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the prior 12-month period ended June 30th of each year and a description of the policies and procedures that the Fund uses to determine how to vote proxies related to portfolio transactions are available (1) without charge, upon request, by calling 1-888-777-0102, (2) on the Fund’s website at www.lmcef.com and (3) on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.

This report is transmitted to the shareholders of Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc. for their information. This is not a prospectus, circular or representation intended for use in the purchase of shares of the Fund or any securities mentioned in this report.

American Stock

Transfer & Trust Company

6201 15th Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11219

 

WASX012742 7/15 SR15-2524


Table of Contents
ITEM 2. CODE OF ETHICS.

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 3. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT.

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 4. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES.

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 5. AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS.

Not Applicable.

 

ITEM 6. SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS.

Included herein under Item 1.

 

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

Not applicable.

 

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

Not Applicable.

 

ITEM 9. PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS.

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 10. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.

Not applicable.

 

ITEM 11. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

 

  (a) The registrant’s principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded that the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a- 3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”)) are effective as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report that includes the disclosure required by this paragraph, based on their evaluation of the disclosure controls and procedures required by Rule 30a-3(b) under the 1940 Act and 15d-15(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

 

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


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ITEM 12. EXHIBITS.

(a) (1) Not applicable.

Exhibit 99.CODE ETH

(a) (2) Certifications pursuant to section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 attached hereto.

Exhibit 99.CERT

(b) Certifications pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 attached hereto.

Exhibit 99.906CERT


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SIGNATURES

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

Western Asset Investment Grade Defined Opportunity Trust Inc.

 

By:  

/s/ Kenneth D. Fuller

  Kenneth D. Fuller
  Chief Executive Officer
Date:   July 24, 2015

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

 

By:  

/s/ Kenneth D. Fuller

  Kenneth D. Fuller
  Chief Executive Officer
Date:   July 24, 2015
By:  

/s/ Richard F. Sennett

  Richard F. Sennett
  Principal Financial Officer
Date:   July 24, 2015