Schedule 14A Information
Proxy Statement Pursuant
to Section 14(A) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Amendment
No. )
Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [
]
Check the appropriate box:
[
] Preliminary Proxy Statement [
] Confidential, for Use of the Commission
[X] Definitive
Proxy Statement
Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[ ] Definitive Additional
Materials
[ ] Soliciting Material under Section 240.14a-12
FRANKLIN LIMITED DURATION INCOME TRUST
(Name of Registrant
as Specified in its Charter)
Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement,
other than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate
box):
[X] No fee required.
[ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange
Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.
(1) Title of each class
of securities to which transaction applies:
(2) Aggregate number
of securities to which transaction applies:
(3)
Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11
(set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
(4)
Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
(5)
Total fee paid:
[ ] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
[ ] Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous
filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
(1)
Amount Previously Paid:
(2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement
No.:
(3) Filing Party:
(4)
Date Filed:
Schedule 14A Information
Proxy Statement Pursuant
to Section 14(A) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Amendment
No. )
Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [
]
Check the appropriate box:
[
] Preliminary Proxy Statement [
] Confidential, for Use of the Commission
[X] Definitive
Proxy Statement
Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[ ] Definitive Additional
Materials
[ ] Soliciting Material under Section 240.14a-12
FRANKLIN LIMITED DURATION INCOME TRUST
(Name of Registrant
as Specified in its Charter)
Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement,
other than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate
box):
[X] No fee required.
[ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange
Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.
(1) Title of each class
of securities to which transaction applies:
(2) Aggregate number
of securities to which transaction applies:
(3)
Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11
(set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
(4)
Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
(5)
Total fee paid:
[ ] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
[ ] Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous
filing by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
(1)
Amount Previously Paid:
(2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement
No.:
(3) Filing Party:
(4)
Date Filed:

FRANKLIN LIMITED DURATION INCOME TRUST
IMPORTANT
SHAREHOLDER
INFORMATION
We
have
enclosed
important
information
about
the
Annual
Shareholders’
Meeting (the “Meeting”) of Franklin Limited
Duration
Income
Trust
(the
“Fund”)
scheduled
for
Thursday,
October
2,
2025,
at
12:00
p.m.,
Eastern time. These materials discuss the proposal to be voted on at the
Meeting, and contain the Notice of Meeting, proxy statement and proxy card. A proxy card is, in essence,
a ballot. When you vote your proxy, it tells us how you wish to vote on important issues relating to
the Fund. If you complete, sign and return the proxy card, we’ll vote it as you indicated. If you simply
sign, date and return the proxy card, but do not specify a vote on the proposal listed thereon, your
proxy will be voted FOR the election of the nominees to the position of Trustee (the
“Proposal”).
We urge you to spend a few minutes reviewing the Proposal in
the proxy statement. Then, please fill out and sign the proxy card and return it to us in the enclosed
postage-paid envelope so that we know how you would like to vote. When shareholders return their proxy
cards promptly, the Fund may be able to save money by not having to conduct additional mailings. Returning
your proxy card does not preclude you from attending the meeting or later changing your vote prior to
its being cast.
We are urging all shareholders to take advantage of voting by
mail, Internet or telephone (separate instructions are listed on the enclosed proxy card to vote by telephone
or through the Internet). Additionally, while we anticipate that the Meeting will occur as planned
on October 2, 2025, there is a possibility that the Meeting may be postponed or the location or approach
may need to be changed, including the possibility of holding a virtual meeting. Should this occur, we
will notify you by issuing a press release and filing an announcement with the Securities and Exchange
Commission as definitive additional soliciting material.
We welcome your comments.
If you have any questions, call Fund Information at (800) DIAL BEN/342-5236.
TELEPHONE AND INTERNET VOTING
For
your convenience, you may be able to vote by telephone or through the internet, 24 hours a day. If your
account is eligible, separate instructions are enclosed.
This page intentionally left blank.

FRANKLIN LIMITED DURATION INCOME TRUST
NOTICE OF 2025 ANNUAL
SHAREHOLDERS’ MEETING
The 2025 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting (the “Meeting”)
of Franklin Limited Duration Income Trust (the “Fund”) will be held at the Fund’s offices, 300
S.E. 2nd Street, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301-1923, on Thursday, October 2, 2025, at 12:00 p.m., Eastern
time.
During the Meeting, shareholders of the Fund will vote on the following proposal:
· The
election of Harris J. Ashton and Edith E. Holiday, Trustees of the Fund, to hold office for a three-year
term.
In addition, shareholders will vote on any other matters as may properly come
before the Meeting. The Board of Trustees of the Fund (the “Board”) has fixed August 4, 2025, as
the record date for the determination of shareholders entitled to vote at the Meeting.
By
Order of the Board of Trustees
Marc
De Oliveira
Vice President and Assistant Secretary
Dated:
August 25, 2025
Please sign and promptly return the proxy card or voting instruction
form in the enclosed self-addressed envelope regardless of the number of shares you own. If you have
any questions, call Fund Information at (800) DIAL BEN®/342-5236.
IMPORTANT
NOTICE REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIALS FOR THE ANNUAL
SHAREHOLDERS’ MEETING
TO BE HELD ON OCTOBER 2, 2025
The Fund’s Notice of Annual Shareholders’ Meeting, Proxy
Statement and form of Proxy are available on the Internet at https://vote.proxyonline.com/Franklin/docs/FLDIT2025.pdf.
The
form of Proxy on the Internet site cannot be used to cast your vote.
This
page
intentionally
left
blank.
FRANKLIN
LIMITED DURATION INCOME TRUST
PROXY STATEMENT
♦ INFORMATION
ABOUT
VOTING
Who
is
asking
for
my
vote?
The
Board of Trustees (the “Board” or the “Trustees”) of Franklin Limited Duration Income Trust (the
“Fund”), in connection with the Fund’s Annual Shareholders’ Meeting (the “Meeting”), has
requested your vote.
Who is eligible to vote?
Shareholders of record at the close of
business on August 4, 2025, are entitled
to be present
and to vote
at the Meeting
or any adjournment
of the Meeting.
Eligible
shareholders who intend to attend the Meeting in person will need to bring proof of share ownership,
such as a shareholder statement or a letter from a custodian or broker-dealer confirming ownership, as
of August 4, 2025, and a valid picture identification, such as a driver’s license or passport, for
admission to the Meeting.
Each common
share of beneficial
interest, without par
value (the “Common
Shares”) of record
is entitled to
one vote, and
each fractional Common
Share is entitled
to a proportional
fractional vote, on
the election of the nominees to the position of
Trustee (“Proposal”)
to be presented at the
Meeting. The Notice
of Meeting, the
proxy card, and
the proxy statement
were first
mailed to shareholders
of record on
or about August
25, 2025.
On what
issue am I being asked to vote?
You are being asked to vote on one Proposal:
• To
elect Harris J. Ashton and Edith E. Holiday to the position of Trustee for a three-year term.
How do
the Fund’s Trustees recommend that I vote?
The Trustees unanimously recommend that you vote FOR
the election of each of the Trustee nominees.
How do I ensure that my
vote is accurately recorded?
You may attend the Meeting and vote in person or you may complete and return the
enclosed proxy card. If you are eligible to vote by telephone or through the internet, separate instructions
are enclosed.
Proxy cards that are properly signed, dated and received at or prior to the Meeting
will be voted as specified. If you specify a vote for the Proposal, your proxy will be voted as you indicate.
If you simply sign, date and return the proxy card, but don’t specify a vote on the Proposal, your
shares will be voted FOR the election of the nominees for the Board.
May I revoke my proxy?
You may revoke your proxy at any time before it is voted by
forwarding a written revocation or a later-dated proxy to the Fund, which must be received by the Fund
at or prior to the Meeting, or by attending the Meeting and voting in person.
What
if my shares are held in a brokerage account?
If your shares are held
by your broker, then in order to vote in person at the Meeting, you will need to obtain a “Legal Proxy”
from your broker and present it to the Inspector of Election at the Meeting. Also, in order to revoke
your proxy, you may need to forward your written revocation or a later-dated proxy card to your broker
rather than to the Fund.
♦ PROPOSAL: ELECTION OF
TRUSTEES
How
are nominees selected?
The Board of the Fund has a Nominating Committee consisting of Harris J. Ashton,
Terrence J. Checki, Mary C. Choksi, Edith E. Holiday, J. Michael Luttig, Larry D. Thompson and Valerie
M. Williams, none of whom is an “interested person” of the Fund as defined in the Investment Company
Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). Trustees who are not interested persons of the Fund are
referred to as “Independent Trustees,” and Trustees who are interested persons of the Fund are referred
to as “Interested Trustees.” The Nominating Committee is responsible for selecting candidates to
serve as Trustees and recommending such candidates: (a) for selection and nomination as Independent Trustees
by the incumbent Independent Trustees and the full Board; and (b) for selection and nomination as Interested
Trustees by the full Board. In considering a candidate’s qualifications, the Nominating Committee generally
considers the potential candidate’s educational background, business or professional experience, and
reputation. In addition, the Nominating Committee has established as minimum qualifications for Board
membership as an Independent Trustee: (1) that such candidate be independent from relationships with
the Fund’s investment manager and other principal service providers both within the terms and the spirit
of the statutory independence requirements specified under the 1940 Act and the rules thereunder; (2)
that such candidate demonstrate an ability and willingness to make the considerable time commitment,
including personal attendance at Board meetings, believed necessary to his or her function as an effective
Board member; and (3) that such candidate have no continuing relationship as a director, officer or board
member of any U.S. registered investment company other than those within the Franklin Templeton fund
complex or a closed-end business development company primarily investing in non-public entities. The
Nominating Committee has not adopted any specific policy on the issue of diversity but will take this
into account, among other factors, in its consideration of new candidates to the Board.
Under
the Fund’s governing instruments, nominees must meet certain additional qualifications to qualify for
nomination and service as a Trustee. Nominees may be disqualified if they engaged in disabling conduct
outlined in the Fund’s Declaration of Trust. Nominees that are associated with other investment vehicles
and investment advisers may not be eligible for nomination and service as a Trustee if the Board finds
that such associations have conflicts of interest with the long-term best interests of the Fund, impede
the ability of the nominee to perform, or impede the free-flow of information from management. Nominees
that are acting in concert with control persons of other investment companies that are in violation of
Section 12(d)(1) of the 1940 Act shall be disqualified from nomination and service as a Trustee.
When
the Board has or expects to have a vacancy, the Nominating Committee receives and reviews information
on individuals qualified to be recommended to the full Board as nominees for election as Trustees, including
any recommendations by “Qualifying Fund Shareholders” (as defined below). Such individuals are evaluated
based upon the criteria described above. To date, the Nominating Committee has been able to identify,
and expects to continue to be able to identify, from its own resources an ample number of qualified candidates.
The Nominating Committee will, however, review recommendations from Qualifying Fund Shareholders to fill
vacancies on the Board if these recommendations are submitted timely in writing and addressed to the
Nominating Committee at the Fund’s offices and are presented with appropriate background material concerning
the candidate that demonstrates his or her ability to serve as a Trustee, including as an Independent
Trustee, of the Fund. A Qualifying Fund Shareholder is a shareholder who: (i) has continuously owned
of record, or beneficially through a financial intermediary, shares of the
Fund having a net asset value of not less than two hundred and fifty thousand
dollars ($250,000) during the twenty-four month period prior to submitting the recommendation; and (ii)
provides a written notice to the Nominating Committee containing the following information: (a) the name
and address of the Qualifying Fund Shareholder making the recommendation; (b) the number of shares of
the Fund that are owned of record and beneficially by such Qualifying Fund Shareholder and the length
of time that such shares have been so owned by the Qualifying Fund Shareholder; (c) a description of
all arrangements and understandings between such Qualifying Fund Shareholder and any other person or
persons (naming such person or persons) pursuant to which the recommendation is being made; (d) the name,
age, date of birth, business address and residence address of the person or persons being recommended;
(e) such other information regarding each person recommended by such Qualifying Fund Shareholder as would
be required to be included in a proxy statement filed pursuant to the proxy rules of the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) had the nominee been nominated by the Board; (f) whether the Qualifying
Fund Shareholder making the recommendation believes the person recommended would or would not be an “interested
person” of the Fund, as defined in the 1940 Act; and (g) the written and signed consent of each person
recommended to serve as a Trustee of the Fund if so nominated and elected/appointed. In addition, the
Qualifying Fund Shareholder must promptly provide any other information reasonably requested by the Fund.
The Nominating Committee may amend these procedures from time to time, including the procedures relating
to the evaluation of nominees and the process for submitting recommendations to the Nominating Committee.
The
Board has adopted
and approved a
formal written charter
for the Nominating
Committee. A copy
of the charter
is attached as “Exhibit A” to this proxy statement.
What
is
the
background
of
the
Fund’s
nominees
and
the
current
members
of
the
Board?
The
Board is divided into three classes, each class having a term of three years. Each year the term of office
of one class expires. This year, the terms of two Trustees expire. Harris J. Ashton and
Edith E. Holiday have each been nominated for three-year terms, set to expire at the 2028 Annual
Shareholders’ Meeting. These terms continue, however, until their successors are duly elected and qualified
or until a Trustee’s resignation, retirement, death or removal, whichever is earlier. The Fund’s
nominees are currently members of the Board and have been previously elected by shareholders. In addition,
all of the Fund’s nominees and other Trustees are also directors and/or trustees of other investment
companies within the Franklin Templeton fund complex.
The Interested
Trustees of the Fund hold director and/or officer positions with Franklin Resources, Inc. (“Resources”)
and its affiliates. Resources is a publicly traded company whose common shares are listed on the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE: BEN). As of June 30, 2025, Rupert H. Johnson, Jr. beneficially owned approximately
20% of the common shares of Resources. The shares
deemed to be
beneficially owned
by Rupert H.
Johnson, Jr. include
certain shares held
by a private
charitable foundation or
by his spouse,
of which he
disclaims beneficial ownership.
Resources, a global
investment management organization
operating as Franklin
Templeton, is
primarily engaged, through
its various subsidiaries,
in providing investment
management, share distribution,
transfer agent and
administrative services to
a family of
investment companies.
Rupert
H. Johnson, Jr., Trustee of the Fund, is the uncle of Gregory E. Johnson, Chairman of the Board, Trustee
and Senior Vice President of the Fund.
Each of the Fund’s nominees is currently
available and has consented to serve as a Trustee of the Fund if elected. If any of the nominees should
become unavailable, the persons named as proxies in the proxy card will vote in their discretion for
another person or persons who may be nominated as Trustees.
In addition to personal
qualities, such as integrity, in considering candidates for the Board, the Nominating Committee seeks
to find persons of good reputation whose experience and background evidence that such person has the
ability to comprehend, discuss and critically analyze materials and issues presented in
exercising
judgments and reaching informed conclusions relevant to the fulfillment of a Trustee’s duties and fiduciary
obligations. Information on the business activities of the Fund’s nominees and other Trustees during
the past five years and beyond appears below and it is believed that the specific background of each
nominee and Trustee evidences such ability and makes it appropriate for him or her to serve on the Board.
As indicated below, Harris J. Ashton has served as a chief executive officer of a New York Stock Exchange
listed public corporation; Larry D. Thompson and Edith E. Holiday each have legal backgrounds, including
high-level legal positions with departments of the U.S. government; J. Michael Luttig has 15 years of
judicial experience as a Federal Appeals Court Judge and 11 years of experience as Executive Vice President
and General Counsel of a major public company; Mary C. Choksi has an extensive background in asset management,
including founding an investment management firm; Terrence J. Checki has served as a senior executive
of a Federal Reserve Bank and has vast experience evaluating economic forces and their impacts on markets,
including emerging markets; Valerie M. Williams has served as director of various companies
and was a regional assurance managing partner at Ernst & Young LLP; and Rupert H. Johnson,
Jr. and Gregory E. Johnson are both high-ranking executive officers of Resources.
Listed
below, for each nominee and Trustee, is his or her name, year of birth and address, as well as position
and length of service with the Fund, a brief description of recent professional experience, the number
of portfolios in the Franklin Templeton fund complex that he or she oversees, and other directorships
held.
Nominees
for Independent Trustee to serve until the 2028 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting
| | | | |
Name,
Year of Birth and Address | Position | Length of Time Served | Number of Portfolios in Fund Complex Overseen by Board Member* | Other Directorships Held During at Least the Past 5 Years |
| | | | |
Harris
J. Ashton (1932) One Franklin Parkway San Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Trustee | Since
2003 | 115 | Bar-S Foods (meat packing company) (1981-2010). |
Principal
Occupation During at Least the Past 5 Years:
Director of various companies; and formerly,
Director, RBC Holdings, Inc. (bank holding company) (until 2002); and President, Chief Executive Officer
and Chairman of the Board, General Host Corporation (nursery and craft centers) (until 1998). |
| | | | |
Edith E. Holiday (1952) One Franklin Parkway San
Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Lead Independent
Trustee | Trustee since 2005
and Lead Independent Trustee since 2019 | 115 | Hess Corporation (exploration of oil and
gas) (1993-present); Santander Holdings USA (holding company) (2019-present); and formerly, Santander Consumer
USA Holdings, Inc. (consumer finance) (2016-2023), Canadian National Railway (railroad) (2001-2021),
White Mountains Insurance Group, Ltd. (holding company) (2004-2021), RTI International Metals, Inc. (manufacture
and distribution of titanium) (1999-2015) and H.J. Heinz Company (processed foods and allied products)
(1994-2013). |
Principal Occupation During at Least the
Past 5 Years:
Director or Trustee of various companies and trusts; and formerly, Assistant to the President
of the United States and Secretary of the Cabinet (1990-1993); General Counsel to the United States Treasury
Department (1989-1990); and Counselor to the Secretary and Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs and
Public Liaison-United States Treasury Department (1988-1989). |
Independent
Trustees serving until the 2027 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting
| | | | |
Name, Year of Birth and
Address | Position | Length of Time Served | Number of Portfolios in Fund Complex Overseen by Board Member* | Other Directorships Held During at Least the Past 5 Years |
| | | | |
J. Michael Luttig (1954) One Franklin Parkway San
Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Trustee | Since
2009 | 115 | Boeing
Capital Corporation (aircraft financing) (2006-2010). |
Principal Occupation During
at Least the Past 5 Years:
Counselor and Special Advisor to the CEO and Board of Directors
of The Coca-Cola Company (beverage company) (2021-present); and formerly, Counselor and Senior
Advisor to the Chairman, CEO, and Board of Directors, of The Boeing Company (aerospace company), and
member of the Executive Council (2019-2020); Executive Vice President, General Counsel and member of
the Executive Council, The Boeing Company (2006-2019); and Federal Appeals Court Judge, United States
Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (1991-2006). |
| | | | |
Valerie
M. Williams (1956) One Franklin Parkway San Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Trustee | Since
2021 | 107 | Omnicom
Group, Inc. (advertising and marketing communications services) (2016-present), DTE Energy Co. (gas and
electric utility) (2018-present), Devon Energy Corporation (exploration and production of oil and gas)
(2021-present); and formerly, WPX Energy, Inc. (exploration and production of oil and
gas) (2018-2021). |
Principal Occupation During at Least the
Past 5 Years:
Director of various companies; and formerly, Regional Assurance
Managing Partner, Ernst & Young LLP (public accounting) (2005-2016) and various roles of increasing
responsibility at Ernst & Young (1981-2005). |
Interested
Trustee serving until the 2027 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting
| | | | |
**Gregory
E. Johnson (1961) One Franklin Parkway San Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Chairman of the Board, Trustee and Senior Vice President | Chairman of the Board and Senior Vice President since 2023
and Trustee since 2013 | 124 | None |
Principal
Occupation During at Least the Past 5 Years:
Executive Chairman, Chairman of the Board
and Director, Franklin Resources, Inc.; officer and/or director or trustee, as the case may be, of some
of the other subsidiaries of Franklin Resources, Inc. and of certain funds in the Franklin Templeton
fund complex; Vice Chairman, Investment Company Institute; and formerly, Chief Executive Officer
(2013-2020) and President (1994-2015) Franklin Resources, Inc. |
Independent Trustees serving until the 2026 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting
| | | | |
Name, Year of Birth and Address | Position | Length of Time Served | Number of Portfolios in Fund Complex Overseen by Board Member* | Other Directorships Held During at Least the Past 5 Years |
| | | | |
Terrence J. Checki (1945) One Franklin Parkway San Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Trustee | Since
2017 | 115 | Hess
Corporation (exploration of oil and gas) (2014-present). |
Principal Occupation During
at Least the Past 5 Years:
Member of the Council on Foreign Relations (1996-present);
Member of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations (1999-present); member of the board of trustees
of the Economic Club of New York (2013-present); member of the board of trustees of the Foreign Policy
Association (2005-present); member of the board of directors of Council of the Americas (2007-present)
and the Tallberg Foundation (2018-present); and formerly, Executive Vice President
of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Head of its Emerging Markets and Internal Affairs Group and
Member of Management Committee (1995-2014); and Visiting Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations (2014). |
| | | | |
Mary C. Choksi (1950) One Franklin Parkway San
Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Trustee | Since
2014 | 115 | Omnicom
Group Inc. (advertising and marketing communications services) (2011-present) and White Mountains Insurance
Group, Ltd. (holding company) (2017-present); and formerly, Avis Budget Group
Inc. (car rental) (2007-2020). |
Principal Occupation During
at Least the Past 5 Years:
Director of various companies; and formerly, Founder and Senior
Advisor, Strategic Investment Group (investment management group) (2015-2017); Founding Partner and Senior
Managing Director, Strategic Investment Group (1987-2015); Founding Partner and Managing Director, Emerging
Markets Management LLC (investment management firm) (1987-2011); and Loan Officer/Senior Loan Officer/Senior
Pension Investment Officer, World Bank Group (international financial institution) (1977-1987). |
| | | | |
Larry D. Thompson (1945) One Franklin Parkway San
Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Trustee | Since
2007 | 115 | Graham
Holdings Company (education and media organization) (2011-2021); The Southern Company (energy company)
(2014-2020; previously 2010-2012) and Cbeyond, Inc. (business communications provider) (2010-2012). |
Principal Occupation During at Least the Past 5 Years:
Director
of various companies; Counsel, Finch McCranie, LLP (law firm) (2015-present); John A. Sibley Professor
of Corporate and Business Law, University of Georgia School of Law (2015-present; previously 2011-2012);
and formerly,
Independent Compliance Monitor and Auditor, Volkswagen AG (manufacturer of automobiles and commercial
vehicles) (2017-2020); Executive Vice President - Government Affairs, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary,
PepsiCo, Inc. (consumer products) (2012-2014); Senior Vice President - Government Affairs, General Counsel
and Secretary, PepsiCo, Inc. (2004-2011); Senior Fellow of The Brookings Institution (2003-2004); Visiting
Professor, University of Georgia School of Law (2004); and Deputy Attorney General, U.S. Department of
Justice (2001-2003). |
Interested Trustee serving until the 2026 Annual
Shareholders’ Meeting
| | | | |
***Rupert H. Johnson, Jr. (1940) One Franklin Parkway San
Mateo, CA 94403-1906
| Trustee | Since
2003 | 115 | None |
Principal
Occupation During at Least the Past 5 Years: Director (Vice Chairman), Franklin Resources,
Inc.; Director, Franklin Advisers, Inc.; and officer and/or director or trustee, as the case may be,
of some of the other subsidiaries of Franklin Resources, Inc. and of certain funds in the Franklin Templeton
fund complex. |
*We base the number of portfolios on each separate series
of the U.S. registered investment companies within the Franklin Templeton fund complex. These portfolios
have a common investment manager or affiliated investment managers.
**Gregory E. Johnson is considered to be
an interested person of the Fund under the federal securities laws due to his position as an officer,
director and shareholder of Resources, which is the parent company of the Fund’s investment manager.
***Rupert
H. Johnson, Jr. is considered to be an interested person of the Fund under the federal securities laws
due to his position as an officer, director and major shareholder of Resources, which is the parent company
of the Fund's investment manager.
Note 1: Rupert H. Johnson, Jr. is the uncle
of Gregory E. Johnson
The
following tables provide the dollar range of equity securities beneficially owned by the Board members
on August
4, 2025.
Independent Trustees
| | |
Name of Board Member | Dollar Range of Equity Securities in the Fund | Aggregate
Dollar Range of Equity Securities in All Funds Overseen by the Board Member in the Franklin Templeton
Fund Complex |
Harris
J. Ashton | None | Over $100,000 |
Terrence J. Checki | None | Over $100,000 |
Mary
C. Choksi | None | Over $100,000 |
Edith E. Holiday | None | Over $100,000 |
J. Michael Luttig | None | Over $100,000 |
Larry D. Thompson | $1 - $10,000 | Over $100,000 |
Valerie M. Williams | None | Over $100,000 |
Interested Trustees
| | |
Name of Board Member | Dollar Range of Equity
Securities in the Fund | Aggregate
Dollar Range of Equity Securities in All Funds Overseen by the Board Member in the Franklin Templeton
Fund Complex |
Gregory E. Johnson | None | Over $100,000 |
Rupert H. Johnson, Jr. | None | Over $100,000 |
Board
members historically have followed a policy of having substantial investments in one or more of the funds
in Franklin Templeton, as is consistent with their individual financial goals. In February 1998, this
policy was formalized through adoption of a requirement that each Board member invest one-third of the
fees received for serving as a trustee of a Franklin fund (excluding committee fees) in shares of one
or more Franklin funds (which may include the Fund) until the value of such investments equals or exceeds
five times the annual retainer and regular Board meeting fees paid to such Board member.
Investments
in the name of family members or entities controlled by a Board member constitute fund holdings of such
Board member for purposes of this policy, and a three-year phase-in period applies to such investment
requirements for newly elected Board members. In implementing such policy, a Board member’s holdings
existing on February 27, 1998, were valued as of such date with subsequent investments valued at cost.
How
often
do
the
Trustees
meet
and
what
are
they
paid?
The
role of the Trustees is to provide general oversight of the Fund’s business, and to ensure that the
Fund is operated for the benefit of all shareholders. The Trustees anticipate meeting at least eight
times during the current fiscal year to review the operations of the Fund and the Fund’s investment
performance. The Trustees also oversee the services furnished to the Fund by Franklin Advisers, Inc.,
the Fund’s investment manager (the “Investment Manager”), and various other service providers.
The
Fund’s
Independent
Trustees
also serve as independent Board members of 22
registered
investment companies in the Franklin
Templeton
fund
complex.
Each
Independent
Trustee
currently
is
paid
an
annual
retainer
fee of $304,000, together with a $7,000 per meeting
fee
for
attendance
at
each regularly
scheduled
Board
meeting,
a
portion
of
which
is
allocated
to
the
Fund.
To
the
extent
held,
compensation
may
also
be
paid
for
attendance
at
specially
held
Board
meetings.
The
Fund’s
Lead
Independent
Trustee
is
paid
an
annual
supplemental
retainer
of
$40,000
for
service,
a
portion
of
which
is
allocated
to
the
Fund.
Trustees
who
serve
on
the
Audit
Committee
of
the
Fund
and
such
other
funds
are
paid a $10,000 annual retainer fee, together with a $3,000 fee per Audit Committee
meeting
in
which they participate, a portion of which is allocated
to
the
Fund.
The
chairman
of
the
Audit
Committee
of
the
Fund
and
such
other
funds,
currently
Terrence J. Checki, receives a fee of $50,000
per
year,
a
portion
of
which
is
allocated
to
the
Fund,
in lieu of the Audit Committee member retainer fee. Independent
Trustees
are
also
reimbursed
for
expenses
incurred
in
connection
with
attending
Board
and
Audit
Committee
meetings,
educational
conferences,
seminars
and
meetings.
During
the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024, there were eight meetings of the Board, eight meetings of the
Audit Committee and one meeting of the Nominating Committee. Each Trustee then in office attended at
least 75% of the aggregate of the total number of meetings of the Board and the total number of meetings
held by all committees of the Board on which the Trustee served.
The Fund does not currently
have a formal policy regarding Trustees’ attendance at annual shareholders’ meetings. None of the
Trustees attended the Fund’s last annual shareholders’ meeting held on October 3, 2024.
Certain
Interested Trustees and officers of the Fund are shareholders of Resources and may receive indirect remuneration
due to their participation in the management fees and other fees received by the Investment Manager and
its affiliates from the funds in the Franklin Templeton fund complex. The Investment Manager or its
affiliates pay the salaries and expenses of the officers. No pension or retirement benefits are accrued
as part of Fund expenses.
The table below indicates the total fees paid to the Independent
Trustees by the Fund individually and by all of the funds in Franklin Templeton. These Trustees also
serve as directors or trustees of other funds in Franklin Templeton, many of which hold meetings at different
dates and times. The Trustees and the Fund’s management believe that having the same individuals serving
on the boards of many of the funds in Franklin Templeton enhances the ability of each fund to obtain,
at a relatively modest cost to each separate fund, the services of high-caliber, experienced and knowledgeable
Independent Trustees who can bring their experience and talents to, and effectively oversee the management
of, several funds.
| | | |
Name
of Trustee | Aggregate Compensation From the Fund
(1) | Total Compensation from Franklin Templeton Fund Complex (2) | Number
of Boards within Franklin Templeton Fund Complex on which Director Serves (3) |
Harris J. Ashton | $366.79 | $630,000 | 34 |
Terrence
J. Checki | $444.80 | $725,000 | 34 |
Mary C. Choksi | $404.08 | $667,000 | 34 |
Edith
E. Holiday | $447.83 | $760,000 | 34 |
J.
Michael Luttig | $394.99 | $673,000 | 34 |
Larry
D. Thompson | $407.00 | $670,000 | 34 |
Valerie M. Williams | $361.04 | $675,000 | 27 |
(1) Compensation received for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2024.
(2) Compensation received for the calendar year
ended December 31, 2024.
(3)
We base the number of boards
on the number of U.S. registered investment companies in the Franklin Templeton fund complex. This number
does not include the total number of series or funds within each investment company for which the Board
members are responsible.
Who
are the Executive
Officers of the
Fund?
Officers of the Fund are appointed
by
the
Trustees
and
serve
at
the
pleasure
of
the
Board.
Listed
below,
for
each
Executive
Officer,
are
his
or
her
name,
year
of
birth,
address,
a
brief
description
of
his
or
her
recent
professional
experience,
and
his
or
her
position
and
length
of
service
with
the
Fund:
| | |
Name, Year of Birth
and Address | Position | Length of Time Served |
| | |
Gregory E. Johnson1
(1961) One Franklin Parkway San Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Chairman
of the Board, Trustee and Senior Vice President | Chairman
of the Board and Senior Vice President since 2023 and
Trustee since 2013 |
Principal Occupation During at Least the
Past 5 Years:
Executive Chairman, Chairman of the Board and Director, Franklin Resources, Inc.;
officer and/or director or trustee, as the case may be, of some of the other subsidiaries of Franklin
Resources, Inc. and of certain funds in the Franklin Templeton fund complex; Vice Chairman, Investment
Company Institute; and formerly, Chief Executive Officer (2013-2020) and President (1994-2015)
Franklin Resources, Inc. |
| | |
Bjorn A. Davis (1965) 100 First Stamford Place Stamford,
CT 06902 | Chief Compliance Officer | Since
2024 |
Principal Occupation During at Least the Past 5 Years:
Vice
President, Franklin Templeton Global Regulatory Compliance US Advisory Services; Chief Compliance Officer,
Franklin Advisers, Inc., Franklin Mutual Advisers LLC, Franklin Templeton Institutional LLC, Templeton
Investment Counsel LLC and Templeton Global Advisors Limited (since 2023); formerly,
Director, Franklin Templeton Global Regulatory Compliance; Chief Compliance Officer, K2 Advisors, LLC
and K2/D&S Management Co., LLC (2011 - 2023). |
| | |
Sonal Desai, Ph.D. (1963) One
Franklin Parkway San Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | President
and Chief Executive Officer - Investment Management | Since
2018 |
Principal Occupation During at Least the Past 5 Years:
Director
and Executive Vice President, Franklin Advisers, Inc.; Executive Vice President, Franklin Templeton Institutional,
LLC; and officer of certain funds in the Franklin Templeton fund complex. |
| | |
Susan
Kerr (1949) 280 Park Avenue New York, NY 10017 | Vice
President - AML Compliance | Since 2021 |
Principal
Occupation During at Least the Past 5 Years:
Senior Compliance Analyst,
Franklin Templeton; Chief Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer, Legg Mason & Co., or its affiliates;
Anti Money Laundering Compliance Officer; Senior Compliance Officer, Franklin Distributors, LLC; and
officer of certain funds in the Franklin Templeton fund complex. |
| | |
Christopher
Kings (1974) One
Franklin Parkway San Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Chief
Executive Officer - Finance and Administration | Since
2024 |
Principal Occupation During at Least the Past 5 Years:
Senior
Vice President, Franklin Templeton Services, LLC; and officer of certain funds in the Franklin Templeton
fund complex. |
| | |
Name, Year of Birth
and Address | Position | Length of Time Served |
| | |
Navid J. Tofigh (1972) One
Franklin Parkway San Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Vice
President and Secretary | Vice President since 2015 and
Secretary since 2023 |
Principal Occupation During at Least the
Past 5 Years:
Senior Associate General Counsel, Franklin Templeton; and
officer of certain funds in the Franklin Templeton fund complex. |
| | |
Jeffrey W. White (1971) One Franklin Parkway San
Mateo, CA 94403-1906 | Chief Financial Officer, Chief
Accounting Officer and Treasurer | Since
2024 |
Principal Occupation During at Least the Past 5 Years:
Chief Financial Officer,
Chief Accounting Officer & Treasurer and officer of certain funds in the Franklin Templeton fund
complex; and formerly, Director and Assistant Treasurer within Franklin Templeton
Global Fund Tax and Fund Administration and Financial Reporting (2017-2023). |
1.
Gregory E. Johnson is considered to be an interested person of the Fund under the federal securities
laws due to his position as an officer, director and shareholder of Franklin Resources, Inc. (Resources),
which is the parent company of the Fund's investment manager.
Note: Officer information
is current as of the date of this proxy statement. It is possible that after this date, information
about officers may change.
♦ ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION
ABOUT
THE
FUND
The
Investment Manager. The Investment Manager is Franklin Advisers, Inc., a California
corporation, whose principal address is One Franklin Parkway, San Mateo, CA 94403. The Investment Manager
is a wholly owned subsidiary of Resources.
The Administrator. The administrator of the Fund is Franklin
Templeton Services, LLC (“FT Services”), whose principal address is also One Franklin Parkway, San
Mateo, CA 94403. Under an agreement with the Investment Manager, FT Services performs certain administrative
functions, such as portfolio recordkeeping, for the Fund. FT Services is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary
of Resources.
The Transfer Agent. The transfer agent, registrar and dividend disbursement
agent for the Fund is Equiniti Trust Company, LLC, 6201 15th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
11219.
The Custodian. The custodian for the Fund is JPMorgan Chase Bank, 270
Park Avenue, New York, New York 10017-2070.
Reports to Shareholders and Financial Statements.
The
Fund’s latest audited financial statements and annual report for the fiscal year ended December 31,
2024, are available free of charge. To obtain a copy, visit the Fund’s website at www.franklintempleton.com,
or call toll-free (800) DIAL BEN/342-5236 or forward a written request to Franklin Templeton Investor
Services, LLC, P.O. Box 997151, Sacramento, CA 95899-9983.
Principal
Shareholders. As of August 4, 2025, the Fund had 40,405,374 Common Shares outstanding. The
Fund’s Common Shares are listed on the NYSE American (symbol: FTF). From time to time, the number of
shares held in “street name” accounts of various securities dealers for the benefit of their clients
may exceed 5% of the total shares outstanding. To the knowledge of the Fund’s management and/or based
on public filings, as of August 4, 2025, there were no other entities holding beneficially or of record
more than 5% of the Fund’s outstanding Common Shares, except as shown in the following tables:
Amount and Nature Percent Outstanding
Name
and Address of Beneficial Ownership Common Shares
First Trust Portfolios L.P. 3,756,2241 9.30%
First
Trust Advisors L.P.
The
Charger Corporation
120 East Liberty Drive
Suite
400
Wheaton, Illinois 60187
1. The
nature of beneficial ownership is shared dispositive power, as reported on Schedule 13G/A, filed with
the SEC on January 17, 2024.
In addition, to the knowledge of the Fund’s
management, as of August 4, 2025, no Trustee of the Fund owned 1% or more of the outstanding Common Shares
of the Fund, and the Officers and Trustees of the Fund owned, as a group, less than 1% of the outstanding
Common Shares.
Contacting the Board. If a shareholder wishes to send a communication
to the Board, such correspondence should be in writing and addressed to the Board at the Fund’s offices,
One Franklin Parkway, San Mateo, CA 94403. The correspondence will then be given to the Board for its
review and consideration.
♦ AUDIT COMMITTEE
The
Board has a standing Audit Committee currently consisting of Messrs. Checki, Luttig, and Thompson and
Mses. Choksi and Holiday, all of whom are Independent Trustees and also are considered to be “independent”
as that term is defined by NYSE American’s listing standards.
The Fund’s Audit Committee
is responsible for the appointment, compensation and retention of the Fund’s independent registered
public accounting firm (“auditors”), including evaluating their independence, recommending the selection
of the Fund’s auditors to the full Board, and meeting with such auditors to consider and review matters
relating to the Fund’s financial reports and internal auditing.
Selection of Auditors. The Audit Committee
and the Board have selected the firm of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (“PwC”) as auditors of the Fund
for the current fiscal year. Representatives of PwC are not expected to be present at the Meeting, but
will have the opportunity to make a statement if they wish, and will be available should any matter arise
requiring their presence.
Audit Fees. The aggregate fees paid to PwC for professional services rendered
by PwC for the audit of the Fund’s annual financial statements or for services that are normally provided
by PwC in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements were $120,478 for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 2023, and $125,429 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024.
Audit-Related
Fees. There were no aggregate fees paid to PwC for assurance and related services rendered
by PwC to the Fund that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit of the Fund’s financial
statements and are not reported under “Audit Fees” above for the fiscal years ended December 31,
2023, and December 31, 2024.
Tax Fees. The aggregate fees paid to PwC for professional
services rendered by PwC to the Fund for tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning were $0 for the
fiscal year ended December 31, 2023, and $10,000 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024. These
services consisted of (i) review or preparation of U.S. federal, state, local and excise tax returns;
(ii) U.S. federal, state and local tax planning, advice and assistance regarding statutory, regulatory
or administrative developments, and (iii) tax advice regarding tax qualification matters and/or treatment
of various financial instruments held or proposed to be acquired or held.
There
were no fees paid to PwC for professional services rendered by PwC to the Investment Manager and any
entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with the Investment Manager that provides ongoing
services to the Fund for tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning for the fiscal years ended December
31, 2023, and December 31, 2024.
All Other Fees. There were no fees paid to PwC for products and services
rendered by PwC to the Fund not reported in previous paragraphs for the fiscal years ended December 31,
2023, and December 31, 2024.
There were no fees paid to PwC for products
and services rendered by PwC to the Investment Manager and any entity controlling, controlled by or under
common control with the Investment Manager that provides ongoing services to the Fund other than services
reported in previous paragraphs for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2023, and December 31, 2024.
Aggregate
Non-Audit Fees. The aggregate non-audit fees of $190,800 for the fiscal year ended December
31, 2023, and $471,950 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024, were paid to PwC for services rendered
by PwC to the Fund and the Investment Manager and any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common
control with the Investment Manager that provides ongoing services to the Fund.
Audit Committee Pre-Approval
Policies and Procedures. As of the date of this proxy statement, the Audit Committee has not adopted
written pre-approval policies and procedures within the meaning of Rule 2-01(c)(7)(i) of Regulation
S-X. As a result, the services described above that are subject to Audit Committee pre-approval and provided
by PwC must be directly pre-approved by the Audit Committee or by a designated member of the Audit Committee
pursuant to delegated authority.
Audit Committee Charter. The
Board has adopted and approved a revised formal written charter for the Audit Committee, which sets forth
the Audit Committee’s responsibilities. A copy
of the charter
is attached as “Exhibit B” to this proxy statement.
As
required by the charter, the Audit Committee reviewed the Fund’s audited financial statements and met
with management, as well as with PwC, the Fund’s independent auditors, to discuss the financial statements
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024.
Audit Committee Report. The Audit Committee
received
the
written
disclosures
and
the
letter
from
PwC
required
by
applicable
requirements
of
the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (“PCAOB”) regarding
PwC’s
communications
with
the
Audit
Committee
concerning
independence.
The
Audit
Committee
also
received
the
report
of
PwC
regarding
the
result
of
their
audit.
In
connection
with
their review of the financial statements and PwC’s report, the members of the Audit Committee discussed
with a representative of PwC, PwC’s independence, as well as the matters required to be discussed by
the applicable requirements of the PCAOB and the SEC, including, but not limited to the following: PwC’s
responsibilities in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards; PwC’s responsibilities for
information prepared by management
that
accompanies
the
Fund’s
audited
financial statements and any procedures
performed and the results;
the
initial
selection
of,
and
whether
there
were
any
changes
in,
significant
accounting
policies
or
their
application;
management’s
judgments
and
accounting
estimates;
whether
there were any
significant
audit
adjustments;
whether
there were any disagreements
with
management;
whether
there
was
any
consultation
with
other
accountants;
whether
there
were
any
major
issues
discussed
with
management
prior
to
the
PwC’s
retention;
whether
PwC
encountered
any
difficulties
in
dealing
with
management
in
performing
the
audit;
and
PwC’s
judgments
about
the
quality
of
the
Fund’s
accounting
principles.
Based
on its review and discussions with management and PwC, the Audit Committee did not become aware of any
material misstatements or omissions in the Fund’s financial statements.
Accordingly,
the Audit Committee recommended to the Board that the audited financial statements for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2024, be included in the Fund’s Form N-CSR filed with the SEC.
AUDIT
COMMITTEE
Terrence J. Checki (Chairman)
Mary C. Choksi
Edith E. Holiday
J. Michael Luttig
Larry
D. Thompson
♦
ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION ABOUT THE BOARD
Board Role in Risk Oversight. The Board, as a whole,
considers risk management issues as part of its general oversight responsibilities throughout the year
at regular Board meetings, through regular reports that have been developed by management, in consultation
with the Board and its counsel. These reports address certain investment, valuation and compliance matters.
The Board also may receive special written reports or presentations on a variety of risk issues, either
upon the Board’s request or upon the Investment Manager’s initiative. In addition, the Audit Committee
of the Board meets regularly with the Investment Manager’s internal audit group to review reports on
their examinations of functions and processes within Franklin Templeton that affect the Fund.
With
respect to investment risk, the Board receives regular written reports describing and analyzing the investment
performance of the Fund. In addition, the portfolio managers of the Fund meet regularly with the Board
to discuss portfolio performance, including investment risk. To the extent that the Fund changes a particular
investment strategy that could have a material impact on the Fund’s risk profile, the Board generally
is consulted with respect to such change. To the extent that the Fund invests in certain complex securities,
including derivatives, the Board receives periodic reports containing information about exposure of the
Fund to such instruments. In addition, the Investment Manager’s investment risk personnel meet regularly
with the Board to discuss a variety of issues, including the impact on the Fund of the investment in
particular securities or instruments, such as derivatives.
With respect to valuation,
the Investment Manager provides periodic reports to the Board that enable the Board to oversee the Investment
Manager, as the Board’s Valuation Designee, in monitoring and assessing material risks associated with
fair valuation determinations, including material conflicts of interest. In addition, the Board reviews
the Investment Manager’s performance of an annual valuation risk assessment under which the Investment
Manager seeks to identify and enumerate material valuation risks which are or may be impactful to the
Fund including, but not limited to (1) the types of investments held (or intended to be held) by the
Fund, giving consideration to those investments’ characteristics; (2) potential market or sector shocks
or dislocations which may affect the ongoing valuation operations; and (3) the extent to which each fair
value methodology uses unobservable inputs. The Investment Manager reports any material changes to the
risk assessment, along with appropriate actions designed to manage such risks, to the Board.
With
respect to compliance risks, the Board receives regular compliance reports prepared by the Investment
Manager’s compliance group and meets regularly with the Fund’s Chief Compliance Officer (“CCO”)
to discuss compliance issues, including compliance risks. As required under SEC rules, the Independent
Trustees meet at least quarterly in executive session with the CCO, and the CCO prepares and presents
an
annual written compliance report to the Board. The Board adopts compliance policies
and procedures for the Fund and approves such procedures for the Fund’s service providers. The compliance
policies and procedures are specifically designed to detect and prevent violations of the federal securities
laws.
The Investment Manager periodically provides an enterprise risk management presentation
to the Board to describe the way in which risk is managed on a complex-wide level. Such presentation
covers such areas as investment risk, reputational risk, personnel risk, cybersecurity risk and business
continuity risk.
Board Structure. Seventy-five percent or more of Board members are Independent
Trustees who are not deemed to be “interested persons” by reason of their relationship with the Fund’s
management or otherwise as provided under the 1940 Act. While the Chairman of the Board is an interested
person, the Board is also served by a Lead Independent Trustee. The Lead Independent Trustee, together
with independent counsel, reviews proposed agendas for Board meetings and generally acts as a liaison
with Fund management with respect to questions and issues raised by the Independent Trustees. The Lead
Independent Trustee also presides at separate meetings of Independent Trustees held in advance of each
scheduled Board meeting where various matters, including those being considered at such Board meeting,
are discussed. It is believed such structure and activities assure that proper consideration is given
at Board meetings to matters deemed important to the Fund and its shareholders.
♦ FURTHER INFORMATION
ABOUT
VOTING
AND
THE
MEETING
Solicitation
of
Proxies.
Your
vote is being solicited by the Board. The cost of soliciting these proxies, including the fees of any
proxy soliciting agent, is borne by the Fund. The Fund reimburses brokerage firms and others for their
reasonable expenses in forwarding proxy materials to the beneficial owners and soliciting them to execute
their proxies. In addition, the Fund may retain a professional proxy solicitation firm to assist with
any necessary solicitation of proxies. The Fund expects that the solicitation would be primarily by mail,
but may also be conducted via telephone, facsimile, electronic or other means of communication. If the
Fund does not receive your proxy by a certain time, you may receive a telephone call from a proxy soliciting
agent asking you to vote. If professional proxy solicitors are retained, it is expected that soliciting
fees would be approximately $5,000, plus expenses. The Fund does not reimburse Trustees and officers
of the Fund, or regular employees and agents of the Investment Manager, involved in the solicitation
of proxies. The Fund intends to pay all costs associated with the solicitation and the Meeting.
Application
of Control Share Provisions. Effective August 1, 2022, the Fund became
automatically subject to newly enacted control share acquisition provisions within the Delaware Statutory Trust
Act (the “Control Share Provisions”). In general, the Control Share Provisions limit the ability
of holders of “control beneficial interests” to vote their shares of a fund above various threshold
levels that start at 10% unless the other shareholders of such fund vote to reinstate those rights. “Control
beneficial interests” are aggregated to include the holdings of related parties and shares acquired
before the effective date of the Control Share Provisions. A fund’s board of trustees may exempt acquisitions
from the application of the Control Share Provisions.
The Control Share Provisions
require shareholders to disclose any control share acquisition to the Fund within 10 days of such acquisition
and, upon request, to provide any related information that the Fund’s Board reasonably believes is
necessary or desirable.
Voting by Broker-Dealers. The Fund expects that, before the Meeting,
broker-dealer firms holding shares of the Fund in “street name” for their customers will request
voting instructions from their customers and beneficial owners. If these instructions are not received
by the date specified in the broker-dealer firms’ proxy solicitation materials, the Fund understands
that current NYSE rules permit the broker-dealers to vote on the Proposal to be considered at the Meeting
on behalf of their customers and beneficial owners. Certain broker-dealers may exercise discretion over
shares held in their name for which no instructions are received by voting those shares in the same proportion
as they vote shares for which they received instructions.
Quorum.
A
majority of the shares entitled to vote at the meeting – present in person or represented by proxy
– constitutes a quorum at the Meeting. The shares over which broker-dealers have discretionary voting
power, the shares that represent “broker non-votes” (i.e., shares held by brokers or nominees as
to which (i) instructions have not been received from the beneficial owners or persons entitled to vote
and (ii) the broker or nominee does not have discretionary voting power on a particular matter), and
the shares whose proxies reflect an abstention or withhold authority on any item are all counted as shares
present and entitled to vote for purposes of determining whether the required quorum of shares exists.
However, because the Proposal is the only matter currently expected to be presented at the Meeting, the
Fund does not anticipate that there will be any broker non-votes or abstentions.
Required Vote. Provided
that a quorum is present, Trustees must be elected by not less than a plurality of the votes cast of
the shares entitled to vote thereon. This means that the Trustee nominees receiving the largest number
of votes will be elected to fill the available positions, and a nominee may be elected even if he or
she received the affirmative vote of less than a majority of the outstanding shares of the Fund voting. All
voting rights are non-cumulative, which means that the holders of more than 50% of the shares voting
for the election of Trustees can elect 100% of such Trustees standing for election if they choose to
do so.
Abstentions and broker non-votes, if any, will be treated as votes present at
the Meeting, but will not be treated as votes cast. Abstentions and broker non-votes, therefore, will
not be counted for purposes of obtaining approval of the Proposal.
Adjournment. Whether or not a quorum
is present at the Meeting, the Meeting may be adjourned from time to time for any reason whatsoever by
vote of the holders of shares entitled to vote holding not less than a majority of the shares present
in person or by proxy at the Meeting, or by the Chair of the Board, the President of the Fund in the
absence of the Chair, or any Vice President of the Fund or other authorized officer of the Fund, in the
absence of the President. The persons named as proxies will vote in their discretion on questions of
adjournment those shares for which proxies have been received. If the Meeting is adjourned, notice need
not be given, unless a new record date of the adjourned Meeting is fixed. At any adjourned Meeting, the
Fund may transact any business which might have been transacted at the original Meeting.
With
respect to adjournments, the Fund or its officers, as applicable, will adhere to the guidelines provided
in the Statement on Adjournment of Investment Company Shareholder Meetings and Withdrawal of Proposed
Rule 20a-4 and Amendment to Rule 20a-1, Investment Company Act Release No. 7659 (Feb. 6, 1973), and weigh
carefully the decision whether to adjourn a shareholder meeting for the purpose of soliciting shareholders
to obtain additional proxies. In any such case, the persons named as proxies and/or the officers of the
Fund will consider whether an adjournment and additional solicitation is reasonable and in the interest
of shareholders, or whether such procedures would constitute an abuse of office.
Shareholder Proposals.
The Fund anticipates that its next annual shareholders’ meeting will be held on or about October 1,
2026. Shareholder proposals to be presented at the next annual shareholders’ meeting must be received
at the Fund’s offices, One Franklin Parkway, San Mateo, California 94403, Attention: Secretary, no
later than April 27, 2026, in order to be considered for inclusion in the Fund’s proxy statement and
proxy card relating to that meeting and presented at that meeting.
A shareholder
of the Fund who has not submitted a written proposal for inclusion in the Fund’s proxy statement by
April 27, 2026, as described above, may nonetheless present a proposal at the Fund’s 2026 Annual Shareholders’
Meeting if such shareholder notifies the Fund of such proposal in writing at the Fund’s offices not
earlier than May 4, 2026 and not later than June 3, 2026. If a shareholder fails to give notice within
these dates, then the matter shall not be eligible for consideration at the shareholders’ meeting.
If, notwithstanding the effect of the foregoing notice provisions, a shareholder proposal is acted upon
at the 2026 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting, the persons designated as proxy holders for proxies
solicited by the Board for the 2026 Annual Shareholders’ Meeting may exercise
discretionary voting power with respect to any shareholder proposal not received by the Fund at the Fund’s
offices by July 11, 2026. A shareholder proposal may be presented at the 2026 Annual Shareholders’
Meeting only if such proposal concerns a matter that may be properly brought before the meeting under
applicable federal proxy rules and state law.
In addition to the requirements set forth
above, a shareholder must comply with the following (which is qualified in its entirety by the Fund’s
governing instruments):
1. A
shareholder intending to present a proposal must (i) be entitled to vote at the meeting; (ii) comply
with the notice procedures set forth in this proxy statement and in the Fund’s By-Laws; and (iii) have
been a shareholder of record, with proof of such ownership or holding reasonably satisfactory to the
Fund to be provided by such record owner or nominee holder, at the time the shareholder’s notice was
received by the secretary of the Fund.
2. Each
notice given by a shareholder regarding nominations for the election of a Trustee shall set forth (i)
the name, age, business address and, if known, residence address of each nominee proposed in such notice;
(ii) the principal occupation or employment of each such nominee; (iii) the number of shares of the
Fund which are beneficially owned by each such nominee; (iv) whether such shareholder believes each such
nominee is or will be an “interested person” of the Fund (as defined in the 1940 Act); (v) the written
and signed consent of each such nominee, to be named as a nominee and to serve as a Trustee if elected;
(vi) all such other information regarding each such nominee as would have been required to be included
in a proxy statement filed pursuant to the proxy rules of the SEC had each such nominee been nominated
by the Board; and (vii) requirement to complete, execute, and return to the Fund within five business
days of receipt, the Fund’s form of trustee questionnaire and any supplemental information reasonably
requested by the Trust. In addition, the shareholder making such nomination shall promptly provide any
other information reasonably requested by the Fund. A notice regarding a nomination for the election
of a Trustee must provide the information listed herein for each person or persons to be nominated, together
with any persons to be designated as a proposed substitute nominee in the event that a proposed nominee
is unwilling or unable to serve, including by reason of any disqualification.
3. Each notice given by a shareholder regarding business proposals
shall set forth in writing as to each matter: (i) a brief description of the business desired to be
brought before the meeting and the reasons for conducting such business at the meeting; (ii) the name
and address, as they appear on the Trust’s books, of the shareholder proposing such business; (iii)
the number of shares of the Fund which are beneficially owned by the shareholder; (iv) any material interest
of the shareholder in such business; (v) all such other information regarding each such matter that
would have been required to be included in a proxy statement filed pursuant to the proxy rules of the
SEC had each such matter been proposed by the Trustees of the Trust. If the shareholder fails to provide
such written verification or written update within such period, the information as to which written verification
or a written update was requested may be deemed not to have been provided in accordance with the Fund’s
By-Laws.
For purposes of the requirements directly above, shares “beneficially
owned” shall mean all shares that such person is deemed to beneficially own pursuant to Rules 13d-3
and 13d-5 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and which the shareholder has the right to acquire
pursuant to any agreement or upon exercise of conversion rights or warrants, or otherwise (including
any derivative or short positions, profit interests, options or similar rights, and borrowed or loaned
shares).
Submission of a proposal or nomination by a shareholder does not guarantee that
the proposal or nomination will be included in the Fund’s proxy statement or presented at the meeting.
No business other than the matters described above is expected to come before
the Meeting, but should any other matter requiring a vote of shareholders arise, including any question
as to an adjournment or postponement of the Meeting, the persons named on the enclosed proxy card will
vote on such matters in accordance with the views of management.
By
Order
of
the
Board,
Marc De Oliveira
Vice
President and Assistant Secretary
Dated: August 25, 2025
EXHIBIT A
FRANKLIN FUNDS BOARDS
NOMINATING AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE CHARTER
This
Charter has been adopted by each Board (each, a “Board”) of Directors/Trustees of the various Franklin
Trusts1 and each of their respective series (each,
a “Fund”) to govern its Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (each, a “Committee”),
which shall have the purposes, goals, responsibilities, authority and specific powers described herein.
I.
The Committee.
The Committee
is a committee of, and established by, the Board of Directors/Trustees of the Fund (the “Board”).
The Committee consists of such number of members as set by the Board from time to time and its members
shall be selected by the Board. The Committee shall be comprised entirely of “independent members.”
For purposes of this Charter, independent members shall mean members who are not “interested persons”
of the Fund (“Disinterested Board members” or “Independent Board members”) as defined in Section
2(a)(19) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). A member of the Committee
shall be selected by the Board of Trustees to serve as the Committee’s chairperson. The Committee may
delegate any portion of its authority to a subcommittee comprised solely of its members.
II. Board
Size, Composition and Nominations.
1. The
Committee shall periodically review the size and composition of the Board and shall make recommendations
to the full Board concerning (a) the necessity of adding one or more Independent Board members or conducting
a shareholder vote to comply with the Fund Governance Policy provisions relating to Board composition,
(b) the desirability of increasing or decreasing the size of the Board based on the workload of the Board,
or (c) adding individuals as Independent Board members with differing backgrounds or skill sets in order
to provide an appropriate mix of perspectives, diversity, knowledge and experience on the Board. The
Committee shall establish processes for developing candidates for Independent Board members and for conducting
searches with respect thereto, and shall recommend to the independent trustees and the full Board (i)
a slate of Independent Board members to be elected at Fund shareholders meetings, or (ii) nominees to
fill Independent Board member vacancies on the Board of Trustees, where and when appropriate.
2. The Committee shall evaluate candidates’ qualifications for Board membership
and the independence of such candidates from the Fund’s investment managers and other principal service
providers, consistent with the requirements of the Fund Governance Policy, based on information provided
in response to a comprehensive questionnaire prepared by counsel to elicit the relevant information.
Persons selected must be independent in terms of both the letter and the spirit of the 1940 Act. The
Committee shall also consider the effect of any relationships beyond those delineated in the 1940 Act
that might impair independence, such as, business, financial or family relationships with investment
managers, employees or service providers of the Fund.
3. The
Committee also shall evaluate candidates’ qualifications and make recommendations for “interested”
members on the Board to the full Board.
(1)The Franklin Trusts are
listed at Appendix A.
4. The Committee may adopt from time to time specific, minimum qualifications
that the Committee believes a candidate must meet before being considered as a candidate for Board membership
and consider and recommend to the independent trustees or the Board, as appropriate, procedures for implementing
changes required by statute, regulatory bodies and case law relating to nominating committees and the
nomination, election or solicitation process with regard to election of trustees.
5.
The Committee shall review shareholder recommendations for nominations to fill vacancies on the Board
if such recommendations are submitted in writing and addressed to the Committee at the Fund’s offices.
The Committee shall adopt, by resolution, a policy regarding its procedures for considering candidates
for the Board, including any recommended by shareholders.
III. Committee
Nominations and Functions.
1. The
Committee shall make recommendations to the full Board for independent trustee membership on committees
of the Board.
2. The Committee shall review as necessary
the responsibilities of any committees of the Board, whether there is a continuing need for each committee,
whether there is a need for additional committees of the Board, and whether committees should be combined
or reorganized. The Committee shall make recommendations for any such action to the independent trustees
or the full Board, as appropriate.
3. The Committee shall periodically
assess the membership, scope of activities and charters of all Board committees to confirm that they
comply with the Fund Governance Policy, to the extent applicable.
IV. Corporate
Governance.
1. The
Committee shall review proposed changes in, and where appropriate propose changes with respect to, the
Fund’s governing instruments, including, but not limited to, its declaration of trust and bylaws, as
such documents relate to corporate governance matters.
2. The
Committee shall ensure that the provisions of the Fund Governance Standards found in Rule 0-1(a)(7) under
the 1940 Act, as contained in the Fund Governance Policy, are met by the Board. The Committee shall periodically
review the Fund Governance Policy and other policies relating to the operation of the Board and recommend
any appropriate changes to the full Board.
3. The Committee shall initiate
consideration, and otherwise be available to consider, issues relating to the respective roles entrusted
to the Fund’s adviser, the Fund, the Board of Trustees and the independent trustees.
4.
The Committee shall monitor the continued independence of Independent Board members and evaluate any
circumstances that may arise through the submission of an annual questionnaire intended for this purpose
or that are otherwise brought to the Committee’s attention.
5. The
Committee shall oversee an annual evaluation by all Board members of Board effectiveness and the adequacy
of the Board’s adherence to industry corporate governance best practices. This evaluation shall include
a consideration of the effectiveness of the committee structure of the Board and the number of Funds
on whose Boards each Trustee serves, and to make recommendations to the Board with respect to any changes
to such process. The Committee shall recommend to the Board or its committees the implementation of proposed
enhancements resulting from the annual evaluation.
6. The
Committee shall periodically review, at such times as determined to be appropriate by the Committee or
when requested by the Disinterested Board members, the compensation of the Independent Board members
(including the compensation of the Chair of the Board and of each committee thereof) and to make recommendations
to the Independent Board members regarding such compensation.
7. The Committee shall evaluate any proposed board memberships of an Independent
Board member to confirm that no conflict exists with the Independent Board member’s current service
on the Board.
8. The Committee shall facilitate educational
and training programs for Independent Board members as needs arise.
9. The
Committee shall review persons who are under consideration to act as legal counsel to the Disinterested
Board members and their qualifications to serve or continue to serve as “independent legal counsel”
under applicable Securities and Exchange Commission rules, and shall make recommendations to the independent
trustees with regard thereto. The Committee shall monitor the performance of legal counsel employed by
the Fund and by the Disinterested Board members.
V. Other
Powers and Responsibilities.
1. The
Committee shall meet at least once each year or more frequently in open or executive sessions. The Committee
may invite members of management, counsel, advisers and others to attend its meetings as it deems appropriate.
The Committee shall have separate sessions with management and others, as and when it deems appropriate.
2. The Committee shall have the resources and authority appropriate
to discharge its responsibilities, including authority to retain special counsel and other experts or
consultants at the expense of the Fund.
3. The Committee shall report
its activities to the Board and make such recommendations as the Committee may deem necessary or appropriate.
4. A majority of the members of the Committee shall constitute
a quorum for the transaction of business at any meeting of the Committee. The action of a majority of
the members of the Committee present at a meeting at which a quorum is present shall be the action of
the Committee. The Committee may meet in person or by telephonic or electronic means, and the Committee
may act by written consent, to the extent permitted by law and by the Fund’s by-laws. In the event
of any inconsistency between this Charter and the Fund’s organizational documents, the provisions of
the Fund’s organizational documents shall be given precedence.
5. The
Committee shall review this Charter at least annually and recommend any changes to the full Board.
ADDITIONAL STATEMENT FOR CLOSED-END FUNDS ONLY
The Committee shall comply with any rules of any stock exchange, if any, applicable
to nominating committees of closed-end funds whose shares are registered thereon.
EXHIBIT B
FRANKLIN TEMPLETON
AUDIT
COMMITTEE CHARTER
I. The
Committee.
The Audit Committee (“Committee”) is a committee of, and
established by, the Board of Directors/Trustees of the Fund (the “Board”).1
The Committee shall consist of such number of members as set by the Board from time to time, but in no
event fewer than three (NYSE-listed Funds only), and its members shall be selected by
the Board. The Committee shall be comprised entirely of members who satisfy the requirements for independence
set out in Rule 10A-3(b)(1) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “1934 Act”) (“Disinterested
Board members”).2 Each member of the Committee must be financially literate,
as such qualification is interpreted by the Board in its business judgment, or must become financially
literate within a reasonable period of time after his or her appointment to the Committee. At least one
member of the Committee must be an “audit committee financial expert,” as determined by the Board
and as defined in Item 3(b) of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) Form N-CSR. The Committee
will make recommendations to the Board for its approval with respect to such audit committee financial
expert determinations at least annually.
If a Committee member of an NYSE-listed
Fund simultaneously serves on the audit committee of more than three public companies, the Board must
determine that such simultaneous service would not impair the ability of such member to effectively serve
on the Fund’s Committee. When a member serves on multiple boards in the same fund complex, such service
will be counted as one board for these purposes (NYSE-listed Funds only).
II. Purposes of the Committee.
The
function of the Committee is to assist Board oversight of the Fund’s financial statements and accounting
and auditing processes, which shall include being directly responsible for the appointment, compensation,
retention and oversight of the work of the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm (“auditors”)
engaged (including resolution of disagreements between management and the auditors regarding financial
reporting) for the purpose of preparing or issuing an audit report or performing other audit, review
or attest services for the Fund. It is management’s responsibility to prepare the Fund’s financial
statements in
(1)This
document serves as the Charter for the Committee of certain U.S. registered investment companies within
Franklin Templeton, and each series thereof as applicable (a “Fund”), including the Franklin, Templeton
and New Jersey/Alternative Strategies Funds, as well as Franklin Templeton ETF Trust, Franklin ETF Trust,
Franklin Templeton Trust, Legg Mason ETF Investment Trust, and Legg Mason ETF Investment Trust II. Exchange-listed
Funds and their principal exchanges are included on Appendix A.
(2)Each
member of the Committee may not, other than in his or her capacity as a member of the Committee, the
Board, or any other Board committee: (A) accept directly or indirectly any consulting, advisory, or
other compensatory fee from the Fund or any subsidiary thereof, provided that, unless the rules of the
applicable national securities exchange or national securities association provide otherwise, compensatory
fees do not include the receipt of fixed amounts of compensation under a retirement plan (including deferred
compensation) for prior service with the Fund (provided that such compensation is not contingent in any
way on continued service); or (B) be an “interested person” of the Fund as defined in section 2(a)(19)
of the Investment Company Act of 1940.
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) and to maintain
appropriate systems for accounting and internal controls. It is the auditors’ responsibility to express
an opinion on the Fund’s financial statements, to plan and carry out an audit in accordance with the
standards of the SEC and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (“PCAOB”) and to report directly
to the Committee. It is not the duty of the Committee to plan or conduct audits or to determine that
the Fund’s financial statements are complete and in accordance with GAAP.
Consistent
with such allocation of functions, the purposes of the Committee are:
(a) To oversee the Fund’s accounting and financial reporting policies and practices
and its internal controls, and to obtain, where it deems appropriate, reports on internal controls of
service providers to the Fund;
(b)
To oversee or, as appropriate, assist Board oversight of the quality, objectivity and integrity of the
Fund’s financial statements and the independent audit thereof;
(c)
To oversee or, as appropriate, assist Board oversight of the Fund’s compliance with legal and regulatory
requirements (primarily as they relate to the Fund’s accounting and financial reporting, internal control
over financial reporting and independent audits);
(d)
To approve prior to appointment the engagement of the Fund’s auditors and, in connection therewith,
to review and evaluate the auditors’ qualifications, independence and performance, taking into account
the opinions of management;
(e) To act as a liaison
between the Fund’s auditors and the Board;
(f) to prepare, or authorize
the preparation of, the disclosure required by Item 407(d)(3)(i) of Regulation S-K (the “Audit Committee
Report”) for inclusion in the Fund’s annual proxy statement (NYSE- and NYSE American-listed
Funds only); and
(g)
To consider such other matters as it deems appropriate in carrying out its purpose and any other matters
that may be assigned to it by the Board.
In addition, the Committee
shall serve as the Fund’s Qualified Legal Compliance Committee (“QLCC”) pursuant to Section 205
of the SEC’s Standards of Professional Conduct for Attorneys Appearing and Practicing before the Commission
in the Representation of an Issuer (the “Standards”). In this capacity, the Committee is required
to adopt and maintain written procedures for the confidential receipt, retention and consideration of
any report of evidence of a material violation. “Evidence of a material violation” means credible
evidence, based upon which it would be unreasonable, under the circumstances, for a prudent and competent
attorney not to conclude that it is reasonably likely that a material violation of an applicable U.S.
federal or state securities law, a material breach of fiduciary (or similar) duty to the Fund arising
under U.S. federal or state law, or a similar material violation of any U.S. federal or state law has
occurred, is ongoing, or is about to occur.
III. Powers
and Duties.
The Committee shall have
the following powers and duties to carry out its purposes:
(a)
To select the auditors, subject to approval both by the Board and by a separate vote of the Disinterested
Board members, and, in connection therewith, to evaluate the independence and qualifications of the auditors
in accordance with applicable federal securities laws and regulations and the rules and standards of
the PCAOB.
(b) To be directly
responsible for approving the services to be provided by, and the compensation of, the auditors, including:
(i) pre-approval
of all audit and audit related services;
(ii) pre-approval of all non-audit related services to be provided
to the Fund by the auditors;
(iii) pre-approval
of all non-audit related services to be provided by the auditors to the Fund’s investment adviser3
or to any entity that controls, is controlled by or is under common control with the Fund’s investment
adviser and that provides ongoing services to the Fund where the non-audit services relate directly to
the operations or financial reporting of the Fund; and
(iv) if deemed necessary or appropriate, as an alternative to Committee
pre-approval of services to be provided by the auditors, as required by paragraphs (ii) and (iii) above:
(A) establishment
by the Committee of policies and procedures to pre-approve such services, provided the policies and procedures
are detailed as to the particular service and the Committee is informed of each service and such policies
and procedures do not include delegation of audit committee responsibilities, as contemplated under the
1934 Act), to management; or
(B) delegation by the Committee to one or more designated members
of the Committee who are Disinterested Board members of authority to pre-approve such services, provided
the Committee is informed of the decisions of any member pursuant to such delegated authority no later
than its next scheduled meeting;
subject, in the case of (ii) through (iv), to any waivers,
exceptions or exemptions that may be available under applicable law or rules.
(c) To meet with the auditors, including private meetings, as necessary to (i) review
the arrangements for and scope of the annual audit and any special audits; (ii) discuss any matters
or concerns relating to the Fund’s financial statements, including any recorded and/or unrecorded adjustments
to such statements recommended by the auditors, or other results of audits; (iii) consider the auditors’
comments with respect to the Fund’s financial, accounting and reporting policies, procedures and internal
controls and management’s responses thereto; and (iv) to review the form of opinion the auditors propose
to render.
(d) To meet to review and discuss the
Fund’s annual audited financial statements, as well as the Fund’s annual shareholder report or a
written summary of such report, with management and the auditors.
(e)
To meet to review and discuss the Fund’s annual audited financial statements with management and the
auditors, including reviewing the Fund’s disclosures under “Management’s Discussion of Fund Performance”
(“MDFP”) in its annual shareholder report (NYSE-listed Funds only). To meet to review
and discuss the Fund’s semi-annual financial statements with management, including reviewing the Fund’s
MDFP disclosures in its semi-annual shareholder report, as applicable (NYSE-listed Funds only).
Such meetings may be telephonic.
(f)
To consider the effect upon the Fund of any changes in accounting principles or practices proposed by
management or the auditors.
(3) For
these purposes, an investment adviser does not include an unaffiliated sub-adviser whose role is primarily
portfolio management and is sub-contracted or overseen by another investment adviser.
(g) To receive and
consider reports from the auditors:
(i) as required by generally accepted accounting standards, including
Auditing Standard (“AS”) No. 1301 (Communications with Audit Committees);
(ii) annually and by update
as required by SEC Regulation S-X, regarding:
(A) all critical accounting policies and practices of the Fund
to be used;
(B) all
alternative treatments within GAAP for policies and practices related to material items that have been
discussed with management of the Fund, including ramifications of the use of such alternative disclosures
and treatments, and the treatment preferred by the auditors;
(C) other material written communications between the auditors
and management of the Fund, such as any management letter or schedule of unadjusted differences; and
(D) all
non-audit services provided to any entity in an investment company complex, as defined in SEC Regulation
S-X, that were not pre-approved by the Committee pursuant to SEC Regulation S-X;
(iii) at least annually regarding
the auditors’ internal quality-control procedures; and
(iv) at least annually regarding any material issues raised by
the most recent internal quality-control review, or peer review, of the auditors, or by any inquiry or
investigation by governmental or professional authorities, within the preceding five years, respecting
one or more independent audits carried out by the auditors, and any steps taken to deal with any such
issues.
(h) To review (i) major
issues regarding accounting principles and financial statement presentations, including any significant
changes in the Fund’s selection or application of accounting principles, and major issues as to the
adequacy of the Fund’s internal controls and any special audit steps adopted in light of material control
deficiencies; and (ii) analyses prepared by management and/or the auditors setting forth significant
financial reporting issues and judgments made in connection with the preparation of the financial statements,
including analyses of the effects of alternative GAAP methods on the financial statements.
(i) In considering the independence of the auditors:
(i) at least annually to
receive from the auditors a formal written statement, and other reports as necessary, describing all
relationships between the auditors and the Fund, the Fund’s investment adviser and service providers,
and other entities advised or serviced by, including any entities controlling, controlled by or under
common control with, the investment adviser or any other service providers to the Fund that, in the auditors’
judgment, could be thought to bear upon the auditors’ independence;
(ii) to receive and consider,
if applicable, periodic reports from the auditors regarding whether the provision of non-audit services
(including tax services) is compatible with maintaining the auditors’ independence;
(iii) to request from the
auditors a written affirmation that they are independent auditors under the federal securities laws and
standards adopted by the PCAOB; and
(iv) to
discuss with the auditors any disclosed relationships or services that may impact the objectivity, impartial
judgment, and independence of the auditors and for taking, or recommending that the Board take, appropriate
action to oversee the independence of the auditors.
(j)
To require that the auditors regularly provide timely information to the Committee with respect to new
rules and pronouncements by applicable regulatory and accounting standards agencies, along with an explanation
of how such developments may affect the Fund’s financial statements and accounting principles and practices.
(k) To review the effect of regulatory
and accounting initiatives, as well as off-balance sheet structures, on the financial statements of the
Fund.
(l) To consider any reports of audit
problems or difficulties that may have arisen during the course of the audit, including any limitations
of the scope of the audit, and management’s response thereto.
(m)
To review communications from the Fund’s Chief Executive Officer – Finance and Administration, and
Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer concerning (i) all significant deficiencies and
material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal controls over financial reporting which are
reasonably likely to adversely affect the Fund’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial
information; and (ii) any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees
who have a significant role in the Fund’s internal controls over financial reporting, and to review
requested communications from management for any other purposes the Committee deems appropriate.
(n) In connection with the preparation of the Audit Committee
Report (NYSE and NYSE American-listed Funds only):
(i) to review and discuss
the audited financial statements of the Fund with management;
(ii) to discuss with the
auditors the matters required to be discussed by the applicable requirements of the PCAOB and the SEC;
(iii) to
receive the written disclosures and the letter(s) from the auditors required by applicable requirements
of the PCAOB regarding the auditor’s communications with the Committee concerning independence (referred
to in paragraph (h) above), and discuss with the auditors the auditor’s independence; and
(iv) based
on the review and discussions referred to in paragraphs (i) through (iii) above, to recommend to the
Board that the audited financial statements be included in the Fund’s annual report on Form N-CSR for
the last fiscal year for filing with the SEC.
(o)
To review and discuss, as appropriate, the Fund’s earnings press releases (including the type and presentation
of information to be included therein, paying particular attention to any use of “pro forma,” or
“adjusted” non-GAAP, information), as well as any financial information and earnings guidance provided
to analysts and rating agencies. (NYSE-listed Funds only)
(p) To review and discuss the Fund’s processes with respect to risk assessment
and risk management.
(q) To set clear policies relating to the
hiring by entities within Franklin Templeton of employees or former employees of the auditors.
(r) To evaluate, as either part of the
full Board or as a Committee, its performance at least annually.
(s) To review potential
conflict of interest situations where appropriate in connection with the Fund’s ongoing review of all
related party transactions.
(t) To inform the
chief legal officer (“CLO”) and chief executive officer (“CEO”) of the Fund (or the equivalents
thereof) of any report of evidence of a material violation by the Fund, its officers, directors/trustees,
employees (if any), or agents (collectively, “affiliates”). In connection therewith, the Committee
shall:
(i) determine
whether an investigation is necessary regarding any report of evidence of a material violation by the
Fund or its affiliates;
(ii) if the Committee determines such an investigation is necessary
or appropriate, (A) notify the Board; (B) initiate an investigation, which may be conducted by either
the CLO or by outside attorneys; and (C) retain such additional expert personnel as the Committee deems
necessary to assist in the investigation;
(iii) at the conclusion of any such investigation, (A) recommend
by a majority vote, that the Fund implement an appropriate response (as defined in Section 205.2(b)
of the Standards) to evidence of a material violation, and (B) inform the CLO and the CEO and the Board
of the results of such investigation and the appropriate remedial measures to be adopted;
(iv) acting
by majority vote, take all other appropriate action, including the authority to notify the SEC in the
event the Fund fails in any material respect to implement an appropriate response that the Committee
has recommended the Fund to take; and
(v) otherwise respond to evidence of a material violation.
IV. Other
Functions and Procedures of the Committee.
(a)
The Committee shall meet at least twice each year or more frequently, in open or executive sessions,
as may be necessary to fulfill its responsibilities. The Committee shall meet as frequently as circumstances
require with (i) the auditors as provided in III(c), above; and (ii) management’s internal audit
department to review and discuss internal audit functions and reports. The Committee may invite members
of management, the auditors, counsel, advisers and others to attend its meetings as it deems appropriate.
The Committee shall meet separately, periodically, with management and with the auditors.
(b) The Committee shall establish procedures for (i) the receipt, retention and
treatment of complaints received by the Fund or the Fund’s adviser regarding accounting, internal accounting
controls, or accounting matters relating to the Fund; and (ii) the confidential, anonymous submission
by employees of the Fund or Franklin Resources, Inc. and its subsidiaries of concerns regarding questionable
accounting or auditing matters.
(c)
The Committee shall have the authority to engage special or independent counsel, experts and other advisers
as and when it determines necessary to carry out its duties.
(d)
The Fund must provide for appropriate funding, as determined by the Committee in its capacity as a Committee
of the Board, for payment of (i) compensation to any auditors engaged for the purpose of preparing or
issuing an audit report or performing other audit, review or attest services for the Fund; (ii) compensation
to any advisers employed by the Committee (under paragraph (c) above); and (iii) ordinary administrative
expenses of the Committee that are necessary or appropriate in carrying out its duties.
(e) The Committee
shall have unrestricted access to the Fund’s management and management of the Fund’s adviser, including,
but not limited to, their chief executive officer(s), chief financial officer(s), internal auditors and
any other executives and financial officers.
(f)
The Committee shall report its activities to the Board, including any issues that arise with respect
to the quality or integrity of the Fund’s financial statements, the Fund’s compliance with legal
or regulatory requirements, or the qualifications, performance and independence of the Fund’s auditors,
and make such recommendations as the Committee may deem necessary or appropriate.
(g) The Committee shall review and assess the adequacy of this Charter annually,
or more frequently if it chooses, and recommend any changes to the Board. The Board shall adopt and approve
this Charter and may amend it on its own motion.
(h)
The Committee shall meet jointly with the Audit Committees of the other Funds within the Franklin Templeton
Fund complex as may be appropriate, including to attend presentations and review proposals and other
matters of common concern to all such Audit Committees.
(i)
Pursuant to delegated authority from the Board, and at the request of the applicable investment manager
of the Fund (the “Investment Manager”), the Committee, or an appointed delegate of the Committee
as applicable, shall provide proxy voting instructions as a representative of the Fund to the Investment
Manager in certain situations where the Investment Manager has identified a material conflict of interest
between the Investment Manager or one of its affiliates and an issuer (i.e., the Committee or its
appointed delegate will approve or disapprove the Investment Manager’s voting recommendation).
(j) To the extent applicable to the Fund, the Committee shall
comply with such other rules of the applicable national securities exchanges and the SEC applicable to
exchange-listed funds, as such may be adopted and amended from time to time. (Exchange-listed Funds
only)
Appendix A
Amended
as of November 26, 2024
EXCHANGE-LISTED FUNDS
Funds
listed on New York Stock Exchange LLC (“NYSE-listed Funds”)
Franklin Universal Trust
Templeton
Dragon Fund, Inc.
Templeton Emerging Markets
Fund
Templeton Emerging Markets Income Fund
Fund
listed on NYSE American LLC (“NYSE American-listed Fund”)
Franklin Limited Duration Income Trust
Funds
listed on NYSE Arca, Inc.
Franklin ETF Trust
Franklin Short Duration U.S. Government ETF
Franklin Templeton ETF Trust
Franklin
FTSE Asia ex Japan ETF
Franklin FTSE Australia
ETF
Franklin FTSE Brazil ETF
Franklin FTSE Canada ETF
Franklin FTSE China ETF
Franklin
FTSE Europe ETF
Franklin FTSE Eurozone
ETF
Franklin FTSE Germany ETF
Franklin FTSE Hong Kong ETF
Franklin
FTSE India ETF
Franklin FTSE Japan ETF
Franklin FTSE Japan Hedged ETF
Franklin FTSE Latin America ETF
Franklin
FTSE Mexico ETF
Franklin FTSE Saudi Arabia
ETF
Franklin FTSE South Korea ETF
Franklin FTSE Switzerland ETF
Franklin
FTSE Taiwan ETF
Franklin FTSE United Kingdom
ETF
Franklin Dynamic Municipal Bond ETF
Franklin Emerging Market Core Dividend Tilt Index ETF
Franklin Income Equity Focus ETF
Franklin Income Focus ETF
Franklin
International Core Dividend Tilt Index ETF
Franklin
International Dividend Multiplier Index ETF
Franklin
Investment Grade Corporate ETF
Franklin Municipal Green
Bond ETF
Franklin Systematic Style Premia ETF
Franklin Ultra Short Bond ETF
Franklin U.S. Core Bond ETF
Franklin
U.S. Core Dividend Tilt Index ETF
Franklin
U.S. Dividend Multiplier Index ETF
Franklin
U.S. Equity Index ETF
Franklin U.S. Treasury
Bond ETF
Funds listed on Cboe BZX Exchange, Inc.
Franklin Templeton ETF Trust
Franklin
Disruptive Commerce ETF
Franklin Exponential Data
ETF
Franklin Focused Growth ETF
Franklin Genomic Advancements ETF
Franklin
High Yield Corporate ETF
Franklin Intelligent Machines
ETF
Franklin International Aggregate Bond
ETF
Franklin Senior Loan ETF
Franklin U.S. Large Cap Multifactor Index ETF
Franklin
U.S. Mid Cap Multifactor Index ETF
Franklin
U.S. Small Cap Multifactor Index ETF
Legg Mason
ETF Investment Trust
Franklin International
Low Volatility High Dividend Index ETF
Funds listed on The Nasdaq
Stock Market LLC
Franklin Templeton ETF
Trust
BrandywineGLOBAL – Dynamic US Large
Cap Value ETF
BrandywineGLOBAL – U.S. Fixed Income
ETF
ClearBridge Sustainable Infrastructure
ETF
Martin Currie Sustainable International Equity ETF
Western Asset Bond ETF
Legg Mason
ETF Investment Trust
ClearBridge Dividend Strategy
ESG ETF
(to be renamed
Franklin ClearBridge Enhanced Income ETF)
ClearBridge
Large Cap Growth ESG ETF
Franklin U.S. Low Volatility
High Dividend Index ETF
Royce Quant Small-Cap Quality
Value ETF
Western Asset Short Duration Income ETF
Western Asset Total Return ETF
FLDIT PROXY 07/25
