DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund
Table of Contents

As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 2, 2015

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM N-CSR

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED

MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

 

Investment Company Act file number  811-22592

 

DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund

(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

 

333 South Grand Avenue, Suite 1800

Los Angeles, CA 90071

(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

 

Ronald R. Redell

President and Chief Executive Officer

c/o DoubleLine Capital LP

333 South Grand Avenue, Suite 1800

Los Angeles, CA 90071

(Name and address of agent for service)

 

(213) 633-8200

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code

 

Date of fiscal year end: September 30

 

Date of reporting period:  March 31, 2015


Table of Contents

Item 1. Reports to Stockholders.


Table of Contents

 

LOGO

 

Semi-Annual Report

March 31, 2015

DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund

NYSE: DBL

 

DoubleLine Capital LP  

333 S. Grand Avenue

18th Floor

Los Angeles, California
90071

 

doubleline.com

 

LOGO

 


Table of Contents
Table of Contents    

 

     Page  
  

Chairman’s Letter

     4   

Financial Markets Highlights

     5   

Management’s Discussion of Fund Performance

     6   

DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund Standardized Performance Summary

     8   

Schedule of Investments

     9   

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

     12   

Statement of Operations

     13   

Statements of Changes in Net Assets

     14   

Statement of Cash Flows

     15   

Financial Highlights

     16   

Notes to Financial Statements

     17   

Evaluation of Advisory Agreement by the Board of Trustees

     24   

Federal Tax Information

     27   

Additional Information Regarding the Fund’s Investment Activities

     27   

Information About Proxy Voting

     28   

Information About Portfolio Holdings

     28   

Householding — Important Notice Regarding Delivery of Shareholder Documents

     28   

Fund Certification

     28   

Proxy Results

     28   

Dividend Reinvestment Plan

     29   

Privacy Notice

     30   

 

  Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   3


Table of Contents
Chairman’s Letter  

March 31, 2015

 

LOGO

Dear Shareholder,

On behalf of the team at DoubleLine, I am pleased to deliver the Semi-Annual Report for the DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund (NYSE: DBL, the “Fund”) for the six-month period ended March 31, 2015. On the following pages, you will find specific information regarding the Fund’s operations and holdings. In addition, we discuss the Fund’s investment performance and the main drivers of that performance during the reporting period.

If you have any questions regarding the Fund, please don’t hesitate to call us at 877-DLine11 (877-354-6311), or visit our website www.doublelinefunds.com to hear our investment management team offer deeper insights and analysis on relevant capital market activity impacting investors today. We value the trust that you have placed with us, and we will continue to strive to offer thoughtful investment solutions to our shareholders.

Sincerely,

 

LOGO

Ronald R. Redell, CFA

Chairman of the Board of Trustees

DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund

May 1, 2015

 

4   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund     


Table of Contents
Financial Markets Highlights  

March 31, 2015

 

·   Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities (Agency MBS)

For the six-month period ended March 31, 2015, the Barclays U.S. MBS Index returned 2.86%; the Index’s duration shortened to 3.54 years. The U.S. Treasury (UST) curve flattened with longer term rates declining more than shorter term rates. 10-year UST yields declined by 57 basis points (bps), while 2-year yields declined by only 1 bp. As a result, 30-year mortgage collateral outperformed 15-year collateral during this time due to longer-term rates declining the most during the trailing six-month period. Current coupon spreads slightly widened from September month-end figures and though there was widening against 10-year UST yields for the month of January, spreads have tightened back to the range that we’ve seen for most of the last two quarters of the reporting period. Total gross Agency MBS issuance averaged about $95 billion monthly for the period, in line with increasing aggregate prepayment speeds across all three agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae).

 

·   Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities (Non-Agency MBS)

Non-Agency MBS performance has been stable during the six-month period ended March 31, 2015, with pricing and underlying fundamentals displaying little change over the period. Mortgage rates declined during the reporting period, from 4.12% in early October to 3.80% at the end of March. Despite the decline in rates, prepayments only increased slightly on legacy non-Agency MBS. Liquidation rates, severities and the pace of loan modifications remained range bound with only a few pockets of volatility. On a technical basis, non-Agency MBS continued to be well bid while supply has been showing up more unevenly. Large bid lists continue to be a factor in determining monthly trading volume, but the frequency of these lists has subsided coming into the new year.

 

·   Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS)

Over the six-month period ended March 31, 2015, new issue CMBS spreads were mixed stemming from uneven economic data including both fear and later contagion of European deflation, changes to Federal Reserve interest-rate forecasts and subsequent 10-year UST yield swings from a high of 2.43% to a low of 1.64%, ending the period at 1.92%. The Barclays U.S. CMBS Index returned 3.24%, underperforming the broader aggregate by 19 bps. Secondary market trading activity slowed given the uneven but relatively mild price movements as investors turned to holding for yield rather than looking to capture small price swings. For the period, 10-year AAA last cash flows (LCFs) remained unchanged at 85 bps over swaps, while the BBBs traded at 345bp, a 4bp widening. Total first quarter private label CMBS issuance finished the quarter at $24.7 billion, 15% higher than fourth quarter 2014 and 30% higher than first quarter 2014 equating to the second highest quarterly issuance since the end of the financial crisis, trailing only $26.3 billion in the third quarter 2014. The 2015 new issue calendar is on-pace to exceed that of 2014. $45 billion of deals was brought to market over the six-month period ended March 31, 2015, a $4 billion increase over the same period in 2014. Delinquency rates declined across four of the five major property types over the six-month reporting period, with industrial representing the lone outlier. The overall U.S. CMBS delinquency rate ended the first quarter at 5.58%, a 45bp improvement.

 

  Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   5


Table of Contents
Management’s Discussion of Fund Performance   March 31, 2015

 

The Doubleline Opportunistic Credit Fund’s underlying portfolio outperformed the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index return of 3.43% over the six-month period ended March 31, 2015 on both a market price and net asset value basis. With the decline in U.S. interest rates, longer duration assets generally outperformed shorter duration counterparts. Agency Residential MBS (RMBS) led the outperformance and contributed healthy price appreciation to the Fund. In particular, Agency inverse floating-rate securities performed relatively well due to their longer durations; additionally, inverse interest-only securities contributed high interest income due to persistently low LIBOR rates. CMBS also benefited from high coupon returns as well as modest price appreciation. Conversely, non-Agency RMBS, while still contributing positive returns to the Fund, lagged behind other sectors due to their shorter relative durations. The Fund continued to hold non-Agency securities that should benefit from strong coupon returns across the entire credit quality spectrum.

 

Period 9-30-14 through 3-31-15

     

Six-Months

(Not Annualized)

 

Market Price Return

        12.11%   

Net Asset Value (NAV) Return

        10.44%   

Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index

        3.43%   

For additional performance information, please refer to the “DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund’s Standardized Performance Summary.”

Opinions expressed herein are as of March 31, 2015 and are subject to change at any time, are not guaranteed and should not be considered investment advice. This report is for the information of shareholders of the Fund.

The views expressed herein (including any forward-looking statement) may not be relied upon as investment advice or as an indication of the Fund’s trading intent. Information included herein is not an indication of the Fund’s future portfolio composition. Securities and indices discussed are not recommendations and are presented as examples of issue selection or portfolio management processes. They have been picked for comparison or illustration purposes only. No security presented within is either offered for sale or purchase. DoubleLine reserves the right to change its investment perspective and outlook without notice as market conditions dictate or as additional information becomes available.

Investment strategies may not achieve the desired results due to implementation lag, other timing factors, portfolio management decision making, economic or market conditions or other unanticipated factors. The views and forecasts expressed in this material are subject to change without notice, may not come to pass and do not represent a recommendation or offer of any particular security, strategy, or investment. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

DoubleLine® is a registered trademark of DoubleLine Capital LP.

Shares of closed-end investment companies frequently trade at a discount to their net asset value, which may increase investors’ risk of loss. There are risks associated with an investment in the Fund. Investors should consider the Fund’s investment objective, risks, charges and expenses carefully before investing. An investment in the Fund should not constitute a complete investment program.

The Fund’s daily New York Stock Exchange closing prices, net asset values per share, as well as other information are available at http://www.doubleline.com/opp-credit-fund-overview.php or by calling the Funds’ shareholder servicing agent at (877) 354-6311.

This document is not an offer to sell securities or the solicitation of an offer to buy securities, nor shall there be any sale or offer of these securities, in any jurisdiction where such sale or offer is not permitted.

The Fund’s shares are only offered through broker/dealers on the secondary market. Unlike an open-end mutual fund, a closed-end fund offers a fixed number of shares for sale. After the initial public offering, shares are bought and sold in the secondary marketplace, and the market price of the shares is determined by supply and demand, not by net asset value (NAV), often at a lower price than the NAV. A closed-end fund is not required to buy its shares back from investors upon request.

Fund investing involves risk. Principal loss is possible.

Investments in debt securities typically decline in value when interest rates rise. This risk is usually greater for longer-term debt securities. Investments in asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities include additional risks that investors should be aware of including credit risk, prepayment risk, possible illiquidity and default, as well as increased susceptibility to adverse economic developments. The Fund may invest in foreign securities which involve greater volatility and political, economic and currency risks and differences in accounting methods. These risks are greater for investments in emerging markets. Investments in lower rated and non-rated securities present a greater risk of loss to principal and interest than higher rated securities. Investment strategies may not achieve the desired results due to implementation lag, other timing factors, portfolio management decision-making, economic or market conditions or other unanticipated factors. The Fund may use leverage or change its leverage without notice which may cause an increase or decrease in value of the portfolio securities to be magnified and the Fund to be more volatile than if leverage was not used.

In addition, the Fund may invest in other asset classes and investments such as, among others, REITs, credit default swaps, short sales, derivatives and smaller companies which include additional risks.

The Fund’s investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses must be considered carefully before investing. You can obtain the Fund’s most recent periodic reports and certain other regulatory filings by calling 1 (877) 354-6311/ 1 (877) DLINE11, or visiting www.doublelinefunds.com. You should read these reports and other filings carefully before investing.

The performance shown assumes the reinvestment of all dividends and distributions and does not reflect any reductions for taxes. Total return does not reflect broker commissions or sales charges in connection with the purchase or sale of Fund shares. Performance data quoted represents past performance; past performance does not guarantee future results. The investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate so that an investor’s shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than original cost. Current performance of the Fund may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. Performance data current to the most recent month-end may be obtained by calling (877) 354-6311 or by visiting http://www.doubleline.com/opp-credit-fund-overview.php.

This material may include statements that constitute “forward-looking statements” under the U.S. securities laws. Forward-looking statements include, among other things, projections, estimates, and information about possible or future results related to the Fund, market or regulatory developments. The views expressed herein are not guarantees of future performance or economic results and involve certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions that could cause actual outcomes and results to

 

6   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund     


Table of Contents
   

March 31, 2015

 

differ materially from the views expressed herein. The views expressed herein are subject to change at any time based upon economic, market, or other conditions and DoubleLine undertakes no obligation to update the views expressed herein. While we have gathered this information from sources believed to be reliable, DoubleLine cannot guarantee the accuracy of the information provided. Any discussions of specific securities should not be considered a recommendation to buy or sell those securities. For a complete list of Fund holdings, please refer to the Schedule of Investments provided in this report.

Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index—This index represents securities that are SEC-registered, taxable, and dollar denominated. The index covers the US investment grade fixed rate bond market, with index components for government and corporate securities, mortgage pass-through securities, and asset-backed securities. These major sectors are subdivided into more specific indices that are calculated and reported on a regular basis.

Barclays U.S. CMBS Index—This index measures the performance of investment grade commercial mortgage-backed securities, which are classes of securities that represent interests in pools of commercial mortgages.

Barclays U.S. MBS Index—This index measures the performance of investment grade fixed-rate mortgage-backed pass-through securities of the Government-Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs): Ginnie Mae (GNMA), Fannie Mae (FNMA), and Freddie Mac (FHLMC).

Basis Point—is equal to 1/100th of 1%, or 0.01%, and is used to denote the percentage change in a financial instrument.

Duration—A measure of the sensitivity of a price of a fixed income investment to a change in interest rates, expressed as a number of years.

Last Cash Flow (LCF)—The last revenue stream paid to a bond over a given period.

LIBOR—An indicative average interest rate at which a selection of banks known as the panel banks are prepared to lend one another unsecured funds on the London money market.

A direct investment cannot be made in an index. The performance of any index mentioned in this commentary has not been adjusted for ongoing management, distribution and operating expenses applicable to mutual fund investments.

Quasar Distributors, LLC provides filing administration for DoubleLine Capital LP.

 

  Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   7


Table of Contents
DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund Standardized Performance Summary  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

Period Ended 3-31-2015

    6-Months        1-Year       
 
 
Since Inception
Annualized
(1-27-12)
  
 
  

Total Return based on NAV

    10.44%        17.38%        10.51%   

Total Return based on Market Price

    12.11%        19.32%        9.54%   

Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index

    3.43%        5.72%        2.90%   

Performance data quoted represents past performance; past performance does not guarantee future results. Returns represent past performance and reflect changes in share prices, the reinvestment of all dividends and capital gains and the effects of compounding. The investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate so that an investor’s shares when redeemed may be worth more or less than the original bond cost. Current performance of the Fund may be lower or higher than the performance quoted. Performance reflects management fees and other fund expenses.

 

8   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund     


Table of Contents
Schedule of Investments  DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT
    SECURITY DESCRIPTION   RATE     MATURITY     VALUE $  
  ASSET BACKED OBLIGATIONS 0.7%   
 

SoFi Professional Loan Program,

  

$ 4,146,860     

Series 2013-1R

    20.00% #^¥@      12/17/2043        2,631,597   
       

 

 

 
  Total Asset Backed Obligations
(Cost $3,818,014)
        2,631,597   
       

 

 

 
  COLLATERALIZED LOAN OBLIGATIONS 3.4%   

Apidos Ltd.,

  

  1,000,000     

Series 2014-19A-D

    3.96% #^      10/17/2026        975,129   
 

ARES Ltd.,

  

  1,000,000     

Series 2014-1A-SUB

    0.00% #^@      04/17/2026        811,016   
 

Babson Ltd.,

  

  500,000     

Series 2014-3A-D2

    4.69% #^      01/15/2026        504,550   
  750,000     

Series 2014-3A-E2

    6.79% #^      01/15/2026        751,855   
 

BlueMountain Ltd.,

  

  1,000,000     

Series 2012-2A-C

    3.01% #^      11/20/2024        989,552   
 

Brookside Mill Ltd.,

  

  1,000,000     

Series 2013-1A-D

    3.32% #^      04/17/2025        924,068   
 

Cent Ltd.,

  

  500,000     

Series 2014-22A-C

    3.98% #^      11/07/2026        487,224   
 

Finn Square Ltd.,

  

  250,000     

Series 2012-1A-C

    3.87% #^      12/24/2023        244,952   
 

GoldenTree Loan Opportunities Ltd.,

  

  2,000,000     

Series 2012-6A-D

    4.47% #^      04/17/2022        2,006,748   
 

Halcyon Loan Advisors Funding Ltd.,

  

  500,000     

Series 2014-3A-D

    3.91% #^      10/22/2025        453,686   
 

LCM LP,

  

  1,500,000     

Series 11A-INC

    15.37% #^@      04/19/2022        1,016,281   
  500,000     

Series 12A-D

    4.78% #^      10/19/2022        501,283   
 

Nautique Funding Ltd.,

  

  500,000     

Series 2006-1A-C

    1.98% #^      04/15/2020        487,065   
 

Octagon Investment Partners Ltd.,

  

  500,000     

Series 2014-1A-C

    3.90% #^      11/14/2026        484,449   
  1,000,000     

Series 2014-1A-D

    6.85% #^      11/14/2026        997,951   
 

Thacher Park Ltd.,

  

  500,000     

Series 2014-1A-D1

    3.78% #^      10/20/2026        480,752   
       

 

 

 
  Total Collateralized Loan Obligations
(Cost $12,660,556)
        12,116,561   
       

 

 

 
  NON-AGENCY COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE BACKED OBLIGATIONS 5.4%   

Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities, Inc.,

  

  450,000     

Series 2007-T26-AJ

    5.57% #      01/12/2045        465,719   
 

Citigroup Commercial Mortgage Trust,

  

  600,000     

Series 2015-GC27-D

    4.43% #^      02/10/2048        554,220   
  4,996,467     

Series 2015-GC27-XA

    1.45% # I/O      02/10/2048        531,769   
 

Commercial Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates,

  

  423,000     

Series 2014-CR21-C

    4.42% #      12/10/2047        442,613   
  500,000     

Series 2014-KYO-F

    3.68% #^      06/11/2027        499,361   
  1,127,250     

Series 2014-UBS4-E

    3.75% ^      08/10/2047        821,878   
  1,288,300     

Series 2014-UBS4-F

    3.75% ^      08/10/2047        826,444   
  2,415,590     

Series 2014-UBS4-G

    3.75% ^¥      08/10/2047        715,498   
  5,000     

Series 2014-UBS4-V

    0.00% #^¥      08/10/2047        —     
  550,000     

Series 2015-LC19-D

    2.87% ^      02/10/2048        453,613   
 

GS Mortgage Securities Corporation,

  

  500,000     

Series 2006-GG8-AJ

    5.62%        11/10/2039        511,949   
  500,000     

Series 2014-GC26-C

    4.66% #      11/10/2047        526,798   
 

JP Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corporation,

  

  35,237,606     

Series 2012-CBX-XA

    1.75% # I/O      06/15/2045        2,666,060   
 

JPMBB Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust,

  

  3,488,650     

Series 2014-C19-E

    4.00% #^      04/15/2047        2,785,338   
  1,938,200     

Series 2014-C19-F

    3.75% #^      04/15/2047        1,153,423   
  6,202,105     

Series 2014-C19-NR

    3.75% #^¥      04/15/2047        2,042,973   
  5,524,133     

Series 2014-C26-XA

    1.19% # I/O      01/15/2048        417,578   
  500,000     

Series 2015-C27-D

    3.85% #^      02/15/2048        442,988   
PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT
    SECURITY DESCRIPTION   RATE     MATURITY     VALUE $  
 

Morgan Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Trust,

  

$     500,000     

Series 2014-C15-D

    4.90% #^      04/15/2047        497,690   
  500,000     

Series 2014-C19-C

    4.00%        12/15/2047        499,207   
  500,000     

Series 2015-C20-D

    3.07% ^      02/15/2048        419,840   
 

Morgan Stanley Capital, Inc.,

  

  500,000     

Series 2007-IQ13-AJ

    5.44%        03/15/2044        509,145   
  525,000     

Series 2014-CPT-G

    3.56% #^      07/13/2029        504,462   
 

Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust,

  

  500,000     

Series 2007-C30-AJ

    5.41% #      12/15/2043        512,506   
  554,000     

Series 2007-C33-AJ

    5.96% #      02/15/2051        585,239   
       

 

 

 
  Total Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage Backed Obligations
(Cost $19,616,095)
         19,386,311   
       

 

 

 
  NON-AGENCY RESIDENTIAL COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS 47.6%   

Adjustable Rate Mortgage Trust,

  

  3,860,995     

Series 2006-1-2A1

    3.08% #      03/25/2036        2,890,619   
 

Banc of America Alternative Loan Trust,

  

  2,105,067     

Series 2005-8-2CB1

    6.00%        09/25/2035        1,958,676   
 

Banc of America Funding Corporation,

  

  3,081,746     

Series 2006-A-4A1

    2.65% #      02/20/2036        2,601,357   
 

BCAP LLC Trust,

  

  5,269,567     

Series 2010-RR6-2216

    5.64% #^      06/26/2036        4,317,299   
  2,373,669     

Series 2010-RR6-6A2

    9.30% #^      07/26/2037        2,218,382   
 

Chase Mortgage Finance Trust,

  

  3,768,563     

Series 2007-S1-A7

    6.00%        02/25/2037        3,266,828   
  3,382,912     

Series 2007-S3-1A5

    6.00%        05/25/2037        2,888,756   
 

ChaseFlex Trust,

  

  3,755,764     

Series 2007-1-1A1

    6.50%        02/25/2037        2,875,247   
 

Citicorp Mortgage Securities, Inc.,

  

  1,875,000     

Series 2006-2-1A14

    5.50%        04/25/2036        1,843,466   
 

Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc.,

  

  1,339,241     

Series 2006-8-A4

    19.18% # I/F^      10/25/2035        1,770,480   
  4,269,116     

Series 2010-9-3A7

    9.83% ^      01/25/2036        3,578,394   
  5,860,374     

Series 2010-9-4A3

    6.43% #^      09/25/2035        5,636,055   
 

CitiMortgage Alternative Loan Trust,

  

  5,121,205     

Series 2007-A4-IA6

    5.75%        04/25/2037        4,434,635   
  3,880,958     

Series 2007-A6-IA16

    6.00%        06/25/2037        3,461,531   
  2,620,448     

Series 2005-85CB-2A5

    1.27% #      02/25/2036        2,196,379   
  553,397     

Series 2005-85CB-2A6

    21.00% # I/F      02/25/2036        699,821   
 

Credit Suisse First Boston Mortgage Securities Corporation,

  

  4,281,856     

Series 2005-11-7A1

    6.00%        12/25/2035        3,741,824   
 

Credit Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates,

  

  5,243,315     

Series 2006-5-3A3

    6.50%        06/25/2036        3,202,103   
  1,541,292     

Series 2006-9-2A1

    5.50%        11/25/2036        1,502,303   
  1,533,220     

Series 2006-9-6A14

    6.00%        11/25/2036        1,482,350   
 

First Horizon Asset Securities, Inc.,

  

  2,221,209     

Series 2007-AR3-2A2

    2.68% #      11/25/2037        1,976,889   
 

GSAA Home Equity Trust,

  

  4,298,880     

Series 2007-8-A2

    0.52% #      08/25/2037        3,799,733   
 

IndyMac Mortgage Loan Trust,

  

  2,275,387     

Series 2005-AR1-2A1

    2.75% #      11/25/2035        2,054,891   
  3,698,900     

Series 2005-AR23-6A1

    4.36% #      11/25/2035        3,029,798   
 

JP Morgan Alternative Loan Trust,

  

  2,108,284     

Series 2006-S1-2A5

    5.50%        02/25/2021        2,054,516   
 

JP Morgan Resecuritization Trust,

  

  5,188,151     

Series 2011-1-1A10

    6.70% #^      12/26/2036        4,423,488   
  6,882,740     

Series 2011-1-2A10

    6.00% #^      06/26/2037        5,910,004   
 

Lehman Mortgage Trust,

  

  3,555,549     

Series 2007-10-1A1

    6.00%        01/25/2038        3,531,717   
  3,072,232     

Series 2007-4-1A3

    5.75%        05/25/2037        2,389,828   
 

Lehman XS Trust,

  

  2,341,120     

Series 2005-2-1A2

    0.87% #      08/25/2035        2,227,529   
 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.   Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   9


Table of Contents
Schedule of Investments  DoubleLineOpportunistic Credit Fund  (Cont.)  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT
    SECURITY DESCRIPTION   RATE     MATURITY     VALUE $  
 

MASTR Asset Securitization Trust,

  

$ 2,121,331     

Series 2007-2-A3

    6.25%        01/25/2038        1,926,277   
 

Nomura Resecuritization Trust,

  

  5,023,133     

Series 2010-2RA-A2

    5.50% ^      01/26/2036        4,739,249   
 

RBSGC Structured Trust,

  

  2,864,096     

Series 2008-B-A1

    6.00% ^      06/25/2037        2,549,865   
 

Residential Accredit Loans, Inc.,

  

  2,912,366     

Series 2005-AS14-3A1

    6.00%        09/25/2035        2,690,135   
  4,465,046     

Series 2005-QS13-2A3

    5.75%        09/25/2035        4,063,991   
  3,151,239     

Series 2006-QS10-A1

    6.00%        08/25/2036        2,672,922   
  3,777,898     

Series 2006-QS6-1A5

    5.75%        06/25/2036        3,125,187   
  6,500,467     

Series 2006-QS7-A3

    6.00%        06/25/2036        5,648,854   
  1,688,694     

Series 2007-QS1-1A1

    6.00%        01/25/2037        1,449,946   
  6,734,149     

Series 2007-QS3-A1

    6.50%        02/25/2037        5,567,680   
  2,853,975     

Series 2007-QS6-A1

    0.50% #      04/25/2037        1,858,117   
  3,021,477     

Series 2007-QS6-A102

    5.75%        04/25/2037        2,504,170   
  650,149     

Series 2007-QS6-A2

    54.14% # I/F      04/25/2037        1,455,958   
 

Residential Asset Securitization Trust,

  

  2,150,011     

Series 2006-A6-1A12

    6.93% # I/F I/O      07/25/2036        690,800   
  2,125,849     

Series 2006-A6-1A9

    6.00%        07/25/2036        1,251,058   
  5,839,533     

Series 2007-A2-1A2

    6.00%        04/25/2037        5,064,101   
  3,230,886     

Series 2007-A7-A1

    6.00%        07/25/2037        2,386,349   
  1,791,883     

Series 2007-A8-1A3

    6.00%        08/25/2037        1,504,001   
 

Residential Funding Mortgage Securities Trust,

  

  3,756,153     

Series 2006-S5-A9

    6.00%        06/25/2036        3,479,009   
  2,069,206     

Series 2007-S2-A4

    6.00%        02/25/2037        1,869,847   
  2,496,079     

Series 2007-S6-1A10

    6.00%        06/25/2037        2,203,744   
 

Springleaf Mortgage Loan Trust,

  

  5,000,000     

Series 2013-2A-B2

    6.00% #^      12/25/2065        5,125,158   
 

Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust,

  

  3,114,717     

Series 2006-1-2A2

    2.41% #      02/25/2036        2,710,673   
 

Structured Asset Securities Corporation,

  

  6,541,000     

Series 2005-11H-A3

    5.50%        06/25/2035        6,329,055   
 

Washington Mutual Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates,

  

  5,757,280     

Series 2006-8-A4

    4.82% #      10/25/2036        4,187,696   
 

Wells Fargo Alternative Loan Trust,

  

  6,239,132     

Series 2007-PA3-2A1

    6.00%        07/25/2037        6,079,151   
       

 

 

 
Total Non-Agency Residential Collateralized Mortgage Obligations
(Cost $159,368,327)
       171,097,891   
       

 

 

 
  US GOVERNMENT / AGENCY MORTGAGE BACKED OBLIGATIONS 62.0%   

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation,

  

  1,615,803     

Series 3211-SI

    26.90% # I/F I/O      09/15/2036        1,306,659   
  3,282,972     

Series 3236-ES

    6.52% # I/F I/O      11/15/2036        693,536   
  2,323,275     

Series 3256-S

    6.51% # I/F I/O      12/15/2036        472,833   
  1,707,487     

Series 3292-SD

    5.92% # I/F I/O      03/15/2037        272,326   
  13,502,172     

Series 3297-BI

    6.58% # I/F I/O      04/15/2037        2,758,163   
  9,814,172     

Series 3311-BI

    6.58% # I/F I/O      05/15/2037        1,774,824   
  9,732,147     

Series 3311-IA

    6.23% # I/F I/O      05/15/2037        1,712,936   
  3,086,026     

Series 3314-SH

    6.22% # I/F I/O      11/15/2036        394,164   
  714,555     

Series 3317-DS

    14.55% # I/F      05/15/2037        924,398   
  2,772,966     

Series 3330-KS

    6.37% # I/F I/O      06/15/2037        423,633   
  1,142,509     

Series 3339-AI

    6.37% # I/F I/O      07/15/2037        147,204   
  6,533,226     

Series 3339-TI

    5.96% # I/F I/O      07/15/2037        1,194,548   
  3,630,441     

Series 3374-SD

    6.27% # I/F I/O      10/15/2037        515,503   
  2,179,428     

Series 3382-SU

    6.12% # I/F I/O      11/15/2037        286,965   
  11,733,368     

Series 3404-SA

    5.82% # I/F I/O      01/15/2038        2,114,951   
  1,764,673     

Series 3423-GS

    5.47% # I/F I/O      03/15/2038        181,493   
  10,343,807     

Series 3435-S

    5.80% # I/F I/O      04/15/2038        1,747,602   
  2,316,129     

Series 3508-PS

    6.47% # I/F I/O      02/15/2039        373,429   
  3,261,307     

Series 3725-CS

    5.82% # I/F I/O      05/15/2040        492,940   
  8,717,048     

Series 3728-SV

    4.27% # I/F I/O      09/15/2040        953,257   
  24,056,210     

Series 3736-SN

    5.87% # I/F I/O      10/15/2040        4,588,253   
  9,089,466     

Series 3753-SB

    5.82% # I/F I/O       11/15/2040        1,834,968   
  10,855,999     

Series 3780-SM

    6.32% # I/F I/O      12/15/2040        2,171,943   
  4,431,684     

Series 3815-ST

    5.67% # I/F I/O      02/15/2041        666,980   
  1,174,966     

Series 3905-SC

    21.89% # I/F      08/15/2041        2,238,290   
PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT
    SECURITY DESCRIPTION   RATE     MATURITY     VALUE $  
 

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, (Cont.)

  

$ 3,367,388     

Series 3924-SJ

    5.82% # I/F I/O      09/15/2041        478,763   
  7,151,486     

Series 3997-LZ

    3.50%       02/15/2042        7,500,969   
  1,012,774     

Series 4011-S

    7.22% # I/F      03/15/2042        1,034,147   
  6,858,942     

Series 4064-SA

    5.82% # I/F I/O      06/15/2042        1,570,849   
  4,128,504     

Series 4155-GS

    5.25% # I/F      01/15/2033        4,011,027   
  16,439,667     

Series 4217-CS

    5.06% # I/F       06/15/2043        14,881,491   
  6,158,663     

Series 4225-BS

    11.41% # I/F       12/15/2040        6,743,302   
  10,431,334     

Series 4291-MS

    5.72% # I/F I/O      01/15/2054        1,745,658   
  19,603,541     

Series 4302-GS

    5.97% # I/F I/O      02/15/2044        3,951,309   
  2,929,129     

Series 4370-CS

    8.34% # I/F      09/15/2041        3,164,567   
 

Federal National Mortgage Association,

  

  1,589,960     

Series 2005-104-SI

    6.53% # I/F I/O      12/25/2033        123,116   
  670,690     

Series 2005-72-WS

    6.58% # I/F I/O      08/25/2035        116,653   
  6,484,012     

Series 2005-90-SP

    6.58% # I/F I/O      09/25/2035        1,103,699   
  3,016,639     

Series 2006-117-SQ

    6.38% # I/F I/O      12/25/2036        460,422   
  1,776,886     

Series 2006-119-HS

    6.48% # I/F I/O      12/25/2036        278,477   
  13,629,549     

Series 2006-123-CI

    6.57% # I/F I/O      01/25/2037        2,783,031   
  5,157,700     

Series 2006-60-YI

    6.40% # I/F I/O      07/25/2036        1,225,542   
  6,446,184     

Series 2007-15-BI

    6.53% # I/F I/O      03/25/2037        1,265,331   
  3,323,681     

Series 2007-20-S

    6.57% # I/F I/O      03/25/2037        481,104   
  1,710,969     

Series 2007-21-SD

    6.31% # I/F I/O      03/25/2037        229,935   
  2,541,815     

Series 2007-30-IE

    6.57% # I/F I/O      04/25/2037        621,873   
  8,048,789     

Series 2007-32-SA

    5.93% # I/F I/O      04/25/2037        1,286,784   
  3,752,765     

Series 2007-40-SA

    5.93% # I/F I/O      05/25/2037        508,154   
  1,715,441     

Series 2007-48-SE

    5.93% # I/F I/O      05/25/2037        234,635   
  2,454,530     

Series 2007-64-LI

    6.39% # I/F I/O      07/25/2037        385,315   
  1,862,345     

Series 2007-68-SA

    6.48% # I/F I/O      07/25/2037        247,913   
  16,365,049     

Series 2007-75-PI

    6.37% # I/F I/O      08/25/2037        3,338,306   
  10,230,809     

Series 2008-33-SA

    5.83% # I/F I/O      04/25/2038        1,620,504   
  7,507,353     

Series 2008-42-SC

    5.73% # I/F I/O      05/25/2038        1,183,302   
  1,778,200     

Series 2008-5-GS

    6.08% # I/F I/O      02/25/2038        289,407   
  6,290,077     

Series 2008-62-SD

    5.88% # I/F I/O      07/25/2038        874,160   
  4,126,375     

Series 2008-68-SB

    5.93% # I/F I/O      08/25/2038        565,452   
  2,003,627     

Series 2009-111-SE

    6.08% # I/F I/O      01/25/2040        245,553   
  2,877,253     

Series 2009-12-CI

    6.43% # I/F I/O      03/25/2036        589,200   
  2,606,630     

Series 2009-26-SM

    6.18% # I/F I/O      08/25/2038        194,031   
  2,150,226     

Series 2009-47-SA

    5.93% # I/F I/O      07/25/2039        265,655   
  1,419,283     

Series 2009-48-WS

    5.78% # I/F I/O      07/25/2039        166,309   
  913,383     

Series 2009-67-SA

    4.98% # I/F I/O      07/25/2037        81,307   
  2,542,442     

Series 2009-87-SA

    5.83% # I/F I/O      11/25/2049        349,034   
  3,657,544     

Series 2009-91-SD

    5.98% # I/F I/O      11/25/2039        426,971   
  332,945     

Series 2010-109-BS

    53.11% # I/F       10/25/2040        1,367,171   
  1,394,931     

Series 2010-115-SD

    6.43% # I/F I/O      11/25/2039        193,274   
  2,760,215     

Series 2010-11-SC

    4.63% # I/F I/O      02/25/2040        264,027   
  6,938,328     

Series 2010-134-SE

    6.48% # I/F I/O      12/25/2025        1,072,267   
  15,873,610     

Series 2010-142-SC

    6.43% # I/F I/O      12/25/2040        3,477,051   
  7,211,678     

Series 2010-150-MS

    6.36% # I/F I/O      01/25/2041        1,325,809   
  3,414,713     

Series 2010-15-SL

    4.78% # I/F I/O      03/25/2040        406,672   
  1,519,414     

Series 2010-19-SA

    5.23% # I/F I/O      03/25/2050        143,894   
  3,307,679     

Series 2010-31-SB

    4.83% # I/F I/O      04/25/2040        359,609   
  4,754,772     

Series 2010-39-SL

    5.50% # I/F I/O      05/25/2040        654,979   
  3,019,915     

Series 2010-40-EI

    4.50% I/O      05/25/2024        104,675   
  2,288,042     

Series 2010-8-US

    4.63% # I/F I/O      02/25/2040        208,051   
  3,034,326     

Series 2010-9-GS

    4.58% # I/F I/O      02/25/2040        256,440   
  4,878,927     

Series 2011-114-S

    5.83% # I/F I/O      09/25/2039        828,222   
  3,277,091     

Series 2011-146-US

    6.76% # I/F      01/25/2042        3,313,165   
  157,371     

Series 2011-40-SA

    9.57% # I/F      09/25/2040        203,014   
  3,019,614     

Series 2011-55-BZ

    3.50%        06/25/2041        3,174,943   
  3,415,974     

Series 2011-58-SA

    6.38% # I/F I/O      07/25/2041        602,313   
  3,531,561     

Series 2011-5-PS

    6.23% # I/F I/O      11/25/2040        363,016   
  4,524,118     

Series 2012-22-AZ

    4.00%       03/25/2042        4,877,522   
  3,686,015     

Series 2012-29-SG

    5.83% # I/F I/O      04/25/2042        577,766   
  245,114     

Series 2012-55-SC

    6.69% # I/F      05/25/2042        246,868   
  2,351,148     

Series 2012-82-SC

    7.22% # I/F      08/25/2042        2,318,088   
  1,536,954     

Series 2013-115-NS

    11.54% # I/F      11/25/2043        1,622,779   
  8,245,369     

Series 2013-17-MS

    5.19% # I/F       03/25/2043        7,772,121   
  4,134,825     

Series 2013-18-BS

    5.19% # I/F       03/25/2043        4,112,706   
  2,810,322     

Series 2013-41-SC

    5.74% # I/F      05/25/2043        2,674,340   
  5,257,836     

Series 2013-51-SH

    5.74% # I/F       05/25/2033        5,328,131   
  13,953,070     

Series 2013-55-KS

    5.74% # I/F       06/25/2043        13,016,087   
  3,543,659     

Series 2013-61-ZN

    3.00%       06/25/2033        3,468,896   
  13,108,830     

Series 2013-83-US

    4.83% # I/F       08/25/2043        12,941,300   
  1,025,261     

Series 374-19

    6.50% I/O      09/25/2036        205,887   
 

 

10   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund      The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.


Table of Contents
   

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT
    SECURITY DESCRIPTION   RATE     MATURITY     VALUE $  
 

Government National Mortgage Association,

  

$ 2,309,064     

Series 2009-104-SD

    6.17% # I/F I/O      11/16/2039        373,268   
  1,218,167     

Series 2010-98-IA

    5.89% # I/O      03/20/2039        89,092   
  5,214,877     

Series 2011-56-BS

    5.92% # I/F I/O      11/16/2036        343,887   
  7,113,967     

Series 2011-56-KS

    5.92% # I/F I/O      08/16/2036        575,445   
  3,284,743     

Series 2011-69-SB

    5.17% # I/F I/O      05/20/2041        434,819   
  10,000,000     

Series 2011-70-WS

    9.35% # I/F       12/20/2040        11,699,535   
  5,144,763     

Series 2011-71-SG

    5.22% # I/F I/O      05/20/2041        791,604   
  5,867,939     

Series 2011-72-AS

    5.20% # I/F I/O      05/20/2041        735,306   
  6,772,783     

Series 2011-89-SA

    5.27% # I/F I/O      06/20/2041        994,471   
  2,784,564     

Series 2012-34-LI

    6.00% # I/F I/O      12/16/2039        616,532   
  8,388,672     

Series 2013-119-TZ

    3.00%       08/20/2043        8,015,225   
  11,797,922     

Series 2013-188-MS

    5.37% # I/F I/O      12/16/2043        1,919,746   
  58,981,198     

Series 2013-39-HS

    4.57% # I/F I/O      03/20/2041        9,254,917   
  18,705,779     

Series 2014-39-SK

    6.02% # I/F I/O      03/20/2044        3,431,865   
  20,421,730     

Series 2014-59-DS

    6.07% # I/F I/O      04/16/2044        3,770,464   
  12,241,580     

Series 2014-63-SD

    5.37% # I/F I/O      04/20/2044        2,500,753   
  20,188,669     

Series 2014-69-ST

    5.92% # I/F I/O      12/16/2039        2,800,613   
       

 

 

 
  Total US Government / Agency Mortgage Backed Obligations
(Cost $205,316,845)
         222,693,680   
       

 

 

 
    
SHARES
  SECURITY DESCRIPTION RATE   MATURITY VALUE $  
  SHORT TERM INVESTMENTS 1.1%   
  1,327,230   

BlackRock Institutional Liquidity Funds FedFund Portfolio

  0.03% ¨    1,327,230   
  1,327,231   

Fidelity Institutional Government Portfolio

  0.01% ¨    1,327,231   
  1,327,231   

Morgan Stanley Institutional Liquidity Fund Government Portfolio

  0.04% ¨    1,327,231   
        

 

 

 
  Total Short Term Investments
(Cost $3,981,692)
    3,981,692   
        

 

 

 
  Total Investments 120.2%
(Cost $404,761,529)
    431,907,732   
  Liabilities in Excess of Other Assets (20.2)%     (72,697,833
        

 

 

 
  NET ASSETS 100.0%   $ 359,209,899   
        

 

 

 

 

SECURITY TYPE BREAKDOWN as a % of Net Assets:

US Government / Agency Mortgage Backed Obligations

  62.0%   

Non-Agency Residential Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

  47.6%   

Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage Backed Obligations

  5.4%   

Collateralized Loan Obligations

  3.4%   

Short Term Investments

  1.1%   

Asset Backed Obligations

  0.7%   

Other Assets and Liabilities

  (20.2)%   
    

 

 

 
  100.0%   
    

 

 

 
 
^ Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be resold in transactions exempt from registration to qualified institutional buyers. These securities are determined to be liquid by the Adviser, unless otherwise noted, under procedures established by the Fund’s Board of Trustees. At March 31, 2015, the value of these securities amounted to $66,734,260 or 18.6% of net assets.

 

¥ Illiquid security. At March 31, 2015, the value of these securities amounted to $5,390,068 or 1.5% of net assets.

 

@ Security pays interest at rates that represent residual cashflows available after more senior tranches have been paid. The interest rate disclosed reflects the estimated rate in effect as of March 31, 2015.

 

# Variable rate security. Rate disclosed as of March 31, 2015.

 

I/O Interest only security

 

I/F Inverse floating rate security whose interest rate moves in the opposite direction of reference interest rates

 

All or partial amount transferred for the benefit of the counterparty as collateral for reverse repurchase agreements.

 

¨ Seven-day yield as of March 31, 2015

 

Reverse Repurchase Agreements                  
Counterparty Rate Trade Date   Maturity
Date
  Principal   Principal & Interest  

JP Morgan Securities LLC

  0.82%     03/13/2015        04/09/2015      $ 22,874,000      $ 22,883,954   

RBC Capital Markets LLC

  0.88%     02/17/2015        05/18/2015        14,741,000        14,756,494   

Goldman Sachs

  0.98%     03/26/2015        04/28/2015        14,852,000        14,854,426   

Bank of America Merrill Lynch

  0.72%     03/24/2015        04/23/2015        11,368,000        11,369,819   

JP Morgan Securities LLC

  0.58%     03/19/2015        04/17/2015        6,696,000        6,697,393   

Bank of America Merrill Lynch

  0.77%     03/24/2015        04/23/2015        4,066,000        4,066,695   
       

 

 

   

 

 

 
        $ 74,597,000      $ 74,628,781   
       

 

 

   

 

 

 

The weighted average daily balance of reverse repurchase agreements during the reporting period ended March 31, 2015 was $78,670,808, at a weighted average interest rate of 0.82%. Total market value of underlying collateral (refer to the Schedule of Investments for positions transferred for the benefit of the counterparty as collateral) for open reverse repurchase agreements at March 31, 2015 was $98,464,740.

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements. Semi-Annual Report March 31, 2015 11


Table of Contents
Statement of Assets and Liabilities  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

ASSETS

 

Investments in Securities, at Value*

  $ 427,926,040   

Short Term Investments*

    3,981,692   

Interest and Dividends Receivable

    2,617,027   

Total Assets

    434,524,759   

LIABILITIES

 

Payable for Reverse Repurchase Agreements

    74,597,000   

Investment Advisory Fees Payable

    366,069   

Administration, Fund Accounting and Custodian Fees Payable

    234,028   

Accrued Expenses

    84,034   

Interest Payable for Reverse Repurchase Agreements

    31,781   

Transfer Agent Expenses Payable

    1,948   

Total Liabilities

    75,314,860   

Net Assets

  $ 359,209,899   

NET ASSETS CONSIST OF:

 

Capital Stock ($0.00001 par value)

  $ 148   

Additional Paid-in Capital

    352,443,950   

Undistributed (Accumulated) Net Investment Income (Loss) (See Note 5)

    (25,770

Accumulated Net Realized Gain (Loss) on Investments

    (20,354,632

Net Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on Investments

    27,146,203   

Net Assets

  $ 359,209,899   

*Identified Cost:

       

Investments in Securities

  $ 400,779,837   

Short Term Investments

  $ 3,981,692   

Shares Outstanding and Net Asset Value Per Share:

 

Shares Outstanding (unlimited authorized)

    14,791,833   

Net Asset Value per Share

  $ 24.28   

 

12   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund      The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.


Table of Contents
Statement of Operations  

(Unaudited)

For the Period Ended March 31, 2015

 

INVESTMENT INCOME

 

Income:

       

Interest

  $ 19,616,487   

Total Investment Income

    19,616,487   

Expenses:

       

Investment Advisory Fees

    2,139,545   

Administration, Fund Accounting and Custodian Fees

    355,179   

Interest Expense

    331,366   

Professional Fees

    61,428   

Trustees’ Fees and Expenses

    41,592   

Shareholder Reporting Expenses

    32,727   

Registration Fees

    12,584   

Insurance Expenses

    7,431   

Miscellaneous Expenses

    6,835   

Transfer Agent Expenses

    2,689   

Total Expenses

    2,991,376   

Net Investment Income (Loss)

    16,625,111   

REALIZED & UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS)

 

Net Realized Gain (Loss) on Investments

    3,352,254   

Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on Investments

    14,911,502   

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

    18,263,756   

NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM OPERATIONS

  $ 34,888,867   

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.   Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   13


Table of Contents
Statements of Changes in Net Assets  

March 31, 2015

 

    Period Ended
March 31, 2015
(Unaudited)
    Year Ended
September 30, 2014
 

OPERATIONS

   

Net Investment Income (Loss)

  $ 16,625,111      $ 27,051,528   

Net Realized Gain (Loss) on Investments

    3,352,254        (2,972,451

Net Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) on Investments

    14,911,502        12,077,718   

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

    34,888,867        36,156,795   

DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS

   

From Net Investment Income

    (22,000,171     (29,570,366

Total Distributions to Shareholders

    (22,000,171     (29,570,366

NET SHARE TRANSACTIONS

   

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Net Share Transactions

    639,444        436,374   

Total Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

  $ 13,528,140      $ 7,022,803   

NET ASSETS

   

Beginning of Period

  $ 345,681,759      $ 338,658,956   

End of Period

  $ 359,209,899      $ 345,681,759   

Undistributed (Accumulated) Net Investment Income (Loss) (See Note 5)

  $ (25,770   $ 5,349,290   

 

14   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund      The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.


Table of Contents
Statement of Cash Flows  

(Unaudited)

For the Period Ended March 31, 2015

 

CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY (USED IN) OPERATING ACTIVITIES

 

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

  $ 34,888,867   

Adjustments to Reconcile the Change in Net Assets from Operations to Net Cash Provided By (Used In) Operating activities:

       

Purchases of Long Term Investments

    (13,967,630

Proceeds from Disposition of Long Term Investments

    38,089,946   

Net (Purchases of) Proceeds from Disposition of Short Term Investments

    (447,312

Net Amortization (Accretion) of Premiums/Discounts

    (2,591,176

Net Realized (Gain) Loss on Investments

    (3,352,254

Net Change in Unrealized (Appreciation) Depreciation on Investments

    (14,911,502

(Increase) Decrease in:

       

Interest and Dividends Receivable

    14,023   

Prepaid Expenses and Other Assets

    13,878   

Increase (Decrease) in:

       

Payable for Investments Purchased

    (2,438,127

Investment Advisory Fees Payable

    8,333   

Interest Payable for Reverse Repurchase Agreements

    (39,241

Accrued Expenses

    (39,216

Administration, Fund Accounting and Custodian Fees Payable

    55,334   

Transfer Agent Fees Payable

    804   

Net Cash Provided By (Used In) Operating Activities

    35,284,727   

CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY (USED IN) FINANCING ACTIVITIES

 

Cash Dividends Paid to Common Stockholders

    (21,360,727

Purchases of Reverse Repurchase Agreements

    357,753,000   

Proceeds from Reverse Repurchase Agreements

    (371,677,000

Net Cash Provided By (Used In) Financing Activities

    (35,284,727

NET CHANGE IN CASH

 

Cash at Beginning of Period

    —     

Cash at End of Period

  $ —     

SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW AND NON-CASH INFORMATION

 

Additional Paid-in Capital from Dividend Reinvestment

  $ 639,444   

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.   Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   15


Table of Contents
Financial Highlights  

March 31, 2015

 

    Period Ended
March 31, 2015
(Unaudited)
    Year Ended
September 30, 2014
    Year Ended
September 30, 2013
    Period Ended
September 30, 20121
 

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

  $ 23.41      $ 22.97      $ 24.87      $ 23.83 2 

Income (Loss) from Investment Operations:

       

Net Investment Income (Loss)3

    1.13        1.83        1.63        1.18   

Net Gain (Loss) on Investments (Realized and Unrealized)

    1.23        0.61        (1.05     1.06   

Total from Investment Operations

    2.36        2.44        0.58        2.24   

Less Distributions:

       

Distributions from Net Investment Income

    (1.49     (2.00     (2.48     (1.20

Total Distributions

    (1.49     (2.00     (2.48     (1.20

Net Asset Value, End of Period

  $ 24.28      $ 23.41      $ 22.97      $ 24.87  

Market Price, End of Period

  $ 24.85      $ 23.60      $ 22.88      $ 27.07   

Total Return on Net Asset Value4

    10.44% 7      11.12%        2.24%        9.48% 7 

Total Return on Market Price5

    12.11% 7      12.46%        (6.60)%        13.43%7   

Supplemental Data:

       

Net Assets, End of Period (000’s)

  $ 359,210      $ 345,682      $ 338,659      $ 366,104   

Ratios to Average Net Assets:

                               

Expenses, including interest expense

    1.71% 6      1.67%        1.40%        1.30% 6 

Expenses, excluding interest expense

    1.52% 6      1.49%        1.36%        1.30% 6 

Net Investment Income (Loss)

    9.51% 6      7.90%        6.70%        7.13% 6 

Portfolio Turnover Rate

    6% 7      22%        17%        11% 7 

 

1  The Fund commenced operations on January 27, 2012.
2  Net Asset Value, beginning of period, reflects a deduction of $1.17 per share of sales load and offering expenses from the initial public offering price of $25.00 per share.
3  Calculated based on average shares outstanding during the period.
4  Total return on Net Asset Value is computed based upon the Net Asset Value of common stock on the first business day and the closing Net Asset Value on the last business day of the period. Dividends and distributions are assumed to be reinvested at the prices obtained under the Fund’s dividend reinvestment plan.
5  Total return on Market Price is computed based upon the New York Stock Exchange market price of the Fund’s shares and excludes the effect of brokerage commissions. Dividends and distributions are assumed to be reinvested at the prices obtained under the Fund’s dividend reinvestment plan.
6  Annualized.
7  Not Annualized.

 

 

16   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund      The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.


Table of Contents
Notes to Financial Statements  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

1.  Organization

DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund (the “Fund”) was formed as a closed-end management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”) and classified as a non-diversified management investment company. The Fund was organized as a Massachusetts business trust on July 22, 2011 and commenced operations on January 27, 2012. The Fund is listed on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) under the symbol “DBL”. The Fund’s investment objective is to seek high total investment return by providing a high level of current income and the potential for capital appreciation.

During the period of this report, the Fund became classified as a diversified management investment company. Diversified status means that at least 75 per cent of the value of its total assets is represented by cash and cash items (including receivables), Government securities, securities of other investment companies, and other securities for the purposes of this calculation limited in respect of any one issuer to an amount not greater in value than 5 per cent of the value of the total assets of such management company and to not more than 10 per cent of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer.

2.  Significant Accounting Policies

The Fund is an investment company that applies the accounting and reporting guidance issued in Topic 946, “Financial Services—Investment Companies”, by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”). The following is a summary of the significant accounting policies of the Fund. These policies are in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“US GAAP”).

A. Security Valuation. The Fund has adopted US GAAP fair value accounting standards which establish a definition of fair value and set out a hierarchy for measuring fair value. These standards require additional disclosures about the various inputs and valuation techniques used to develop the measurements of fair value and a discussion of changes in valuation techniques and related inputs during the period. These inputs are summarized in the three broad levels listed below:

 

    Level 1—Unadjusted quoted market prices in active markets for identical securities

 

    Level 2—Quoted prices for identical or similar assets in markets that are not active, or inputs derived from observable market data

 

    Level 3—Significant unobservable inputs (including the reporting entity’s estimates and assumptions)

Assets and liabilities may be transferred between levels. The Fund uses end of period timing recognition to account for any transfers.

Market values for domestic and foreign fixed income securities are normally determined on the basis of valuations provided by independent pricing services. Vendors typically value such securities based on one or more inputs described in the following table which is not intended to be a complete list. The table provides examples of inputs that are commonly relevant for valuing particular classes of fixed income securities in which the Fund is authorized to invest. However, these classifications are not exclusive, and any of the inputs may be used to value any other class of fixed-income securities. Securities that use similar valuation techniques and inputs as described in the following table are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy. To the extent the significant inputs are unobservable, the values would be categorized as Level 3.

 

Fixed-income class       Examples of Standard Inputs

All

    Benchmark yields, transactions, bids, offers, quotations from dealers and trading systems, new issues, spreads and other relationships observed in the markets among comparable securities; and proprietary pricing models such as yield measures calculated using factors such as cash flows, financial or collateral performance and other reference data (collectively referred to as “standard inputs”)

Corporate bonds and notes; convertible securities

    Standard inputs and underlying equity of the issuer

US bonds and notes of government and government agencies

    Standard inputs

Residential and commercial mortgage-backed obligations; asset-backed obligations (including collateralized loan obligations)

    Standard inputs and cash flows, prepayment information, default rates, delinquency and loss assumptions, collateral characteristics, credit enhancements and specific deal information, trustee reports

Investments in registered open-end management investment companies will be valued based upon the net asset value (“NAV”) of such investments and are categorized as Level 1 of the fair value hierarchy. Investments in private investment funds typically will be valued based upon the NAVs of such investments and are categorized as Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy. As of March 31, 2015, the Fund did not hold any investments in private investment funds.

The Fund may enter into reverse repurchase agreements. In a reverse repurchase agreement, the Fund sells to a financial institution a security that it holds with an agreement to repurchase the same security at an agreed-upon price and date. A reverse repurchase agreement involves the risk that the market value of the security may decline below the repurchase price of the security. The Fund will segregate assets determined to be liquid by the Adviser or otherwise cover its obligations under reverse repurchase agreements. Due to the short term nature of the reverse repurchase agreements, face value approximates fair value at March 31, 2015.

 

  Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   17


Table of Contents
Notes to Financial Statements  (Cont.)  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

Securities may be fair valued in accordance with the fair valuation procedures approved by the Board of Trustees (the “Board”). The Valuation Committee is generally responsible for overseeing the day to day valuation processes and reports periodically to the Board. The Valuation Committee and the Pricing Group are authorized to make all necessary determinations of the fair values of portfolio securities and other assets for which market quotations are not readily available or if it is deemed that the prices obtained from brokers and dealers or independent pricing services are deemed to be unreliable indicators of market or fair value.

The following is a summary of the fair valuations according to the inputs used to value the Fund’s investments as of March 31, 20151:

 

Category           

Investments in Securities

    

Level 1

    

Money Market Funds

     $ 3,981,692   

Total Level 1

       3,981,692   

Level 2

    

US Government / Agency Mortgage Backed Obligations

       222,693,680   

Non-Agency Residential Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

       150,592,790   

Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage Backed Obligations

       16,627,840   

Collateralized Loan Obligations

       12,116,561   

Total Level 2

       402,030,871   

Level 3

    

Non-Agency Residential Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

       20,505,101   

Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage Backed Obligations

       2,758,471   

Asset Backed Obligations

       2,631,597   

Total Level 3

       25,895,169   

Total

     $ 431,907,732   

Certain of the Fund’s assets/liabilities are held at face value, which approximates fair value for financial statement purposes. The following is a summary of such assets/liabilities as of March 31, 2015.

 

Other Financial Instruments

    

Level 1

     $ —     

Level 2

    

Reverse Repurchase Agreements

       74,597,000   

Total Level 2

       74,597,000   

Level 3

       —     

Total

     $ 74,597,000   

See the Schedule of Investments for further disaggregation of investment categories.

 

1 There were no transfers into and out of Level 1 during the period ended March 31, 2015.

 

18   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund     


Table of Contents
   

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

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

 

     Balance as of
9/30/2014
    Net Realized
Gain (Loss)
    Net Change in
Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)4
    Net Accretion
(Amortization)
    Purchases1     Sales2     Transfers Into
Level  33
    Transfers Out
of Level 33
    Balance as of
3/31/2015
    Net Change in
Unrealized
Appreciation
(Depreciation)
on securities
held at
3/31/20154
 

Investments in Securities

                   

Non-Agency Residential Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

  $ 18,373,436      $ 94,763      $ (411,462   $ 159,879      $ —        $ (261,380   $ 2,549,865      $ —        $ 20,505,101      $ (411,462

Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage Backed Obligations

    2,962,298        —          (203,827     —          —          —          —          —          2,758,471        (203,827

Asset Backed Obligations

    3,514,879        —          (914,293     31,011        —          —          —          —          2,631,597        (914,293
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total

  $ 24,850,613      $ 94,763      $ (1,529,582   $ 190,890      $ —        $ (261,380   $ 2,549,865      $ —        $ 25,895,169      $ (1,529,582
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

1  Purchases include all purchases of securities and payups.

 

2  Sales include all sales of securities, maturities, and paydowns.

 

3  Transfers between Level 2 and Level 3 were due to a change in observable and/or unobservable inputs.

 

4  Any difference between net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) and net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities held at March 31, 2015 may be due to a security that was not held or categorized as Level 3 at either period end.

The following is a summary of quantitative information about Level 3 Fair Value Measurements:

 

   Fair Value as
of 3/31/2015 *
  Valuation Techniques Unobservable
Input
Input Values   Impact to valuation from
an increase to input

Non-Agency Residential Collateralized Mortgage Obligations

   $ 20,505,101       Market Comparables    Market Quotes      $63.48-$101.41       Significant changes in the market quotes would result in direct and proportional changes in the fair value of the security

Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage Backed Obligations

     2,758,471       Market Comparables    Yields      0.00-15.69%       Increase in yields would result in the decrease in the fair value of the security

Asset Backed Obligations

     2,631,597       Market Comparables    Market Quotes      $63.46       Significant changes in the market quotes would result in direct and proportional changes in the fair value of the security

 

* Level 3 securities are typically valued by pricing vendors. The appropriateness of fair values for these securities is monitored on an ongoing basis by the Adviser, which may include back testing, results of vendor due diligence, unchanged price review and consideration of market and/or sector events.

B. Federal Income Taxes. The Fund has elected to be taxed as a “regulated investment company” and intends to distribute substantially all of its taxable income to its shareholders and otherwise comply with the provisions of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment companies. Therefore, no provision for federal income taxes has been made.

The Fund may be subject to a nondeductible 4% excise tax calculated as a percentage of certain undistributed amounts of net investment income and net capital gains.

The Fund has followed the authoritative guidance on accounting for and disclosure of uncertainty in tax positions, which requires the Fund to determine whether a tax position is more likely than not to be sustained upon examination, including resolution of any related appeals or litigation processes, based on the technical merits of the position. The Fund has determined that there was no effect on the financial statements from following this authoritative guidance. In the normal course of business, the Fund is subject to examination by federal, state and local jurisdictions, where applicable, for tax years for which applicable statutes of limitations have not expired. The Fund identifies its major tax jurisdictions as U.S. Federal, the State of Massachusetts and the State of California.

C. Security Transactions, Investment Income. Investment securities transactions are accounted for on trade date. Gains and losses realized on sales of securities are determined on a specific identification basis. Interest income is recorded on an accrual basis. Discounts/premiums on debt securities purchased are accreted/amortized over the life of the respective securities using the effective interest method except for certain deep discount bonds where management does not expect the par value above the bond’s cost to be fully realized. Dividend income and corporate action transactions, if any, are recorded on the ex-date. Non-cash dividends included in dividend income, if any, are recorded at the fair market value of securities received. Paydown gains and losses on mortgage-related and other asset-backed securities are recorded as components of interest income on the Statement of Operations.

D. Dividends and Distributions to Shareholders. Dividends from net investment income will be declared and paid monthly. The Fund will distribute any net realized long or short-term capital gains at least annually. Distributions are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations which may differ from US GAAP. Permanent book and tax basis differences relating to shareholder distributions will result in reclassifications between paid-in capital, undistributed net investment income (loss), and/or undistributed (accumulated) realized gain (loss). Undistributed net investment income or loss may include temporary book and tax basis differences which will reverse in a subsequent period. Any taxable income or capital gain remaining at fiscal year end is distributed in the following year.

 

  Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   19


Table of Contents
Notes to Financial Statements  (Cont.)  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

E. Use of Estimates. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with US GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, as well as the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

F. Share Valuation. The NAV per share of the Fund is calculated by dividing the sum of the value of the securities held by the Fund, plus cash and other assets, minus all liabilities (including estimated accrued expenses) by the total number of shares outstanding, rounded to the nearest cent. The Fund’s NAV will not be calculated on the days on which the NYSE is closed for trading or on holidays when the principal U.S. bond markets are closed, such as Columbus Day and Veterans Day.

G. Guarantees and Indemnifications. Under the Fund’s organizational documents, each Trustee and officer of the Fund is indemnified, to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, against certain liabilities that may arise out of performance of their duties to the Fund. Additionally, in the normal course of business, the Fund enters into contracts that contain a variety of indemnification clauses. The Fund’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may be made against the Fund that have not yet occurred. However, the Fund has not had prior claims or losses pursuant to these contracts.

3.  Related Party Transactions

DoubleLine Capital LP (the “Adviser”) provides the Fund with investment management services under an Investment Management Agreement (the “Agreement”). Under the Agreement, the Adviser manages the investment of the assets of the Fund, places orders for the purchase and sale of its portfolio securities and is responsible for providing certain resources to assist with the day-to-day management of the Fund’s business affairs. As compensation for its services, the Adviser is entitled to a monthly fee at the annual rate of 1.00% of the average daily total managed assets of the Fund. Total managed assets means the total assets of the Fund (including assets attributable to any reverse repurchase agreements, dollar roll transactions or similar transactions, borrowings, and/or preferred shares that may be outstanding) minus accrued liabilities (other than liabilities in respect of reverse repurchase agreements, dollar roll transactions or similar transactions, and borrowings). An affiliate of the Adviser owns 5,625 shares of the Fund. The Adviser has arrangements with DoubleLine Group LP to provide personnel and other resources to the Fund.

4.  Purchases and Sales of Securities

For the period ended March 31, 2015, purchases and sales of investments, excluding short term investments, were $13,967,630 and $38,089,946, respectively. There were no transactions in U.S. Government securities (defined as U.S. Treasury bills, notes and bonds) during the period.

5.  Income Tax Information and Distributions to Shareholders

The tax character of distributions for the Fund were as follows:

 

         Period Ended
March 31, 2015
     Year Ended
September 30, 2014
 

Distributions Paid From:

       

Ordinary Income

     $ 22,000,171       $ 29,570,366   

Total Distributions Paid

     $ 22,000,171       $ 29,570,366   

The amount and character of tax-basis distributions and composition of net assets, including undistributed (accumulated) net investment income (loss), are finalized at fiscal year-end; accordingly, tax-basis balances have not been determined as of the date of this report.

The Fund designated as long-term capital gain dividend, pursuant to Internal Revenue Code Section 852(b)(3), the amount necessary to reduce the earnings and profits of the Fund related to net capital gain to zero for the tax year ended September 30, 2014.

The cost basis of investments for federal income tax purposes as of March 31, 2015 was as follows:

 

Tax Cost of Investments

     $ 404,815,028   

Gross Tax Unrealized Appreciation

       36,921,059   

Gross Tax Unrealized Depreciation

       (9,828,355

Net Tax Unrealized Appreciation

     $ 27,092,704   

As of September 30, 2014, the components of accumulated earnings (losses) for income tax purposes were as follows:

 

Net Tax Unrealized Appreciation

     $ 12,181,202   

Undistributed Ordinary Income

       5,402,789   

Total Distributable Earnings

       5,402,789   

Other Accumulated Losses

       (23,706,886

Total Accumulated Losses

     $ (6,122,895

 

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As of September 30, 2014, the following capital loss carryforward was available:

 

Capital Loss
Carryforward
     Expires  
$ 15,379,230         Indefinite   

The Fund may elect to defer to the first day of the next taxable year all or part of any late-year ordinary loss or post-October capital loss. As of September 30, 2014, the Fund deferred, on a tax basis, qualified late year losses of $8,327,656.

Additionally, US GAAP require that certain components of net assets relating to permanent differences be reclassified between financial and tax reporting. These reclassifications have no effect on net assets or NAV per share. The permanent differences primarily relate to paydown losses. For the year ended September 30, 2014, the following table shows the reclassifications made:

 

Undistributed
Net
Investment
Income
     Accumulated
Net Realized
Loss
     Paid In
Capital
 
$ 5,978,816       $ (5,978,816    $ —     

6.  Share Transactions

Transactions in the Fund’s shares were as follows:

 

         Period Ended
March 31, 2015
     Year Ended
September 30, 2014
 
         Shares      Amount      Shares      Amount  

Reinvested Dividends

       26,782       $ 639,444         18,827       $ 436,374   

Beginning Shares

       14,765,051            14,746,224      

Ending Shares

       14,791,833                  14,765,051            

7.  Trustees’ Fees

Trustees who are not affiliated with the Adviser and its affiliates received, as a group, fees of $41,592 from the Fund during the period ended March 31, 2015. These trustees may elect to defer the cash payment of part or all of their compensation. These deferred amounts, which remain as liabilities of the Fund, are treated as if invested in shares of the Fund or other funds managed by the Adviser and its affiliates. These amounts represent general, unsecured liabilities of the Fund and vary according to the total returns of the selected funds. Trustees’ Fees and Expenses in the Fund’s Statement of Operations includes $41,520 in current fees (either paid in cash or deferred) and an increase of $72 in the value of the deferred amounts. Certain trustees and officers of the Fund are also officers of the Adviser; such trustees and officers are not compensated by the Fund.

8.  Principal Risks

Below are summaries of some, but not all, of the principal risks of investing in the Fund, each of which could adversely affect the Fund’s net asset value, market price, yield, and total return. The Fund’s prospectus provided additional information regarding these and other risks of investing in the Fund at the time of the initial public offering of the Fund’s shares.

 

  market discount risk:  The price of the Fund’s common shares of beneficial interest will fluctuate with market conditions and other factors. Shares of closed-end management investment companies frequently trade at a discount from their net asset value.

 

  issuer risk:  The value of securities may decline for a number of reasons that directly relate to the issuer, such as its financial strength, management performance, financial leverage and reduced demand for the issuer’s goods and services, as well as the historical and prospective earnings of the issuer and the value of its assets.

 

  investment and market risk:  An investment in the Fund is subject to the risk of loss. The value of the Fund’s securities and financial assets may move up or down, sometimes rapidly and unpredictably. Further, the value of securities held by the Fund may decline in value due to factors affecting securities markets generally or particular industries. Securities markets may, in response to governmental actions or intervention, economic or market developments, or other external factors, experience periods of high volatility and reduced liquidity. Certain securities may be difficult to value during such periods. These risks may be heightened for fixed income securities due to the current historically low interest rate environment.

 

 

collateralized debt obligations risk:  The risks of an investment in a collateralized debt obligation (“CDO”) depend largely on the quality and type of the collateral and the tranche of the CDO in which a Fund invests. In addition to the risks associated with debt instruments (e.g., interest rate risk and credit risk), CDOs carry additional risks including, but not limited to: (i) the possibility that distributions from collateral securities will not be adequate to make interest or other payments; (ii) the quality of the collateral may decline in value or default; (iii) the possibility that the Fund may

 

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Notes to Financial Statements  (Cont.)  

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  invest in CDOs that are subordinate to other classes; and (iv) the complex structure of the security may not be fully understood at the time of investment and may produce disputes with the issuer or unexpected investment results.

 

  convertible securities risk:  The risks of investing in convertible bonds and securities include the risk that the issuer may default in the payment of principal and/or interest and the risk that the value of the investment may decline if interest rates rise. Such events may reduce the Fund’s distributable income and the value of the Fund’s shares.

 

  credit risk:  Credit risk is the risk that one or more of the Fund’s investments in debt securities or other instruments will decline in price, or fail to pay interest, liquidation value or principal when due, because the issuer of the obligation or the issuer of a reference security experiences an actual or perceived decline in its financial status.

 

  mortgage-backed securities risk:  The risk that borrowers may default on their mortgage obligations or the guarantees underlying the mortgage-backed securities will default and that, during periods of falling interest rates, mortgage-backed securities will be called or prepaid, which may result in the Fund having to reinvest proceeds in other investments at a lower interest rate. During periods of rising interest rates, the average life of a mortgage-backed security may extend, which may lock in a below-market interest rate, increase the security’s duration, and reduce the value of the security.

 

  sovereign debt obligations risk:  Investments in countries’ government debt obligations involve special risks. The issuer or governmental entity that controls the repayment of sovereign debt may not be able or willing to repay the principal and/or interest when due in accordance with the terms of such debt.

 

  loan risk:  Investments in loans are in many cases subject to the risks associated with below-investment grade securities. Investments in loans are also subject to special risks, including, among others, the risk that (i) if the Fund holds a loan through another financial institution, or relies on a financial institution to administer the loan, the Fund’s receipt of principal and interest on the loan is subject to the credit risk of that financial institution; (ii) loans in which the Fund invests typically pay interest at floating rates, and the borrower may have the ability to change or adjust the interest rate on a loan or under circumstances that would be unfavorable to the Fund; (iii) it is possible that any collateral securing a loan may be insufficient or unavailable to the Fund; (iv) investments in highly leveraged loans or loans of stressed, distressed, or defaulted issuers may be subject to significant credit and liquidity risk; (v) transactions in loans may settle on a delayed basis, and the Fund potentially may not receive the proceeds from the sale of a loan for a substantial period of time after the sale; and (vi) loans may be difficult to value and may be illiquid, which may adversely affect an investment in the Fund.

 

  inverse floaters and related securities risk:  Investments in inverse floaters, residual interest tender option bonds and similar instruments expose the Fund to the same risks as investments in debt securities and derivatives, as well as other risks, including those associated with leverage and increased volatility. An investment in these securities typically will involve greater risk than an investment in a fixed rate security. Distributions on inverse floaters, residual interest tender option bonds and similar instruments will typically bear an inverse relationship to short term interest rates and typically will be reduced or, potentially, eliminated as interest rates rise.

 

  high yield risk (“junk bonds”):  Securities of below investment grade quality are regarded as having predominantly speculative characteristics with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and to repay principal when due, and are commonly referred to as “high yield” securities or “junk bonds.” High yield securities involve a greater risk of default and their prices are generally more volatile and sensitive to actual or perceived negative developments than are the prices of higher grade securities.

 

  interest rate risk:  Interest rate risk is the risk that debt obligations and other instruments in the Fund’s portfolio will decline in value because of increases in market interest rates.

 

  foreign (non-U.S.) investment risk:  The Fund’s investments in and exposure to foreign securities involve special risks. For example, the value of these investments may decline in response to unfavorable political and legal developments, unreliable or untimely information or economic and financial instability. Foreign securities may experience more rapid and extreme changes in value than investments in securities of U.S. issuers. Investing in securities of issuers based or doing business in emerging markets entails all of the risks of investing in securities of foreign issuers, but to a heightened degree.

 

  foreign currency risk:  The Fund’s investments in or exposure to foreign currencies or in securities or instruments that trade, or receive revenues, in foreign currencies are subject to the risk that those currencies will decline in value relative to the U.S. dollar or, in the case of hedging positions (if used), that the U.S. dollar will decline in value relative to the currency being hedged.

 

  emerging markets risk:  Investing in emerging market countries involves substantial risk due to the potential to have limited information compared to what may be available or required by more developed countries; higher brokerage costs; different accounting, auditing and financial reporting standards; the potential for less developed legal systems and thinner trading markets as compared to those in developed countries; currency blockages or transfer restrictions; an emerging market country’s dependence on revenue from particular commodities or international aid; and expropriation, nationalization or other adverse political or economic developments.

 

  credit default swaps risk:  Credit default swaps involve greater risks than investing in the reference obligation directly as well as liquidity risk, counterparty risk and credit risk. A buyer will lose its investment and recover nothing should no event of default occur. When the Fund acts as a seller of a credit default swap, it is exposed to many of the same risks of leverage described herein since if an event of default occurs the seller must pay the buyer the full notional value of the reference obligation.

 

 

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  leverage risk:  Leverage is a speculative technique that may expose the Fund to greater risk and increased costs. When leverage is used, the net asset value and market price of the Fund’s shares and the Fund’s investment return will likely be more volatile.

 

  derivatives risk:  Derivatives are subject to a number of risks applicable to other investments, such as liquidity risk, issuer risk, credit risk, interest rate risk, leverage risk, counterparty risk, management risk and, if applicable, smaller company risk. They also involve the risk of mispricing or improper valuation, the risk of unfavorable or ambiguous documentation, and the risk that changes in the value of a derivative may not correlate perfectly with an underlying asset, currency, interest rate or index.

 

  counterparty risk:  The Fund will be subject to credit risk with respect to the counterparties to the derivative contracts (whether a clearing corporation in the case of exchange-traded instruments or another third party in the case of over-the-counter instruments) and other instruments entered into directly by the Fund.

9.  Offsetting Assets and Liabilities

The Fund is subject to various Master Netting Arrangements, which govern the terms of certain transactions with select counterparties. The Master Netting Arrangements allow the Fund to close out and net its total exposure to a counterparty in the event of a default with respect to all the transactions governed under a single agreement with a counterparty. The Master Netting Arrangements also specify collateral posting arrangements at pre-arranged exposure levels. Under the Master Netting Arrangements, collateral is routinely transferred if the total net exposure to certain transactions (net of existing collateral already in place) governed under the relevant Master Netting Arrangement with a counterparty in a given account exceeds a specified threshold depending on the counterparty and the type of Master Netting Arrangement.

As of March 31, 2015, the Fund held the following instruments that were subject to offsetting on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities:

 

Liabilities:                     Gross Amounts not offset in the Statement of
Assets and Liabilities
       
Description   Gross Amounts of
Recognized Liabilities
    Gross amounts offset in the Statement
of Assets and Liabilities
    Net amounts presented in the
Statement of Assets and
Liabilities
    Financial Instruments     Cash Collateral
Pledged
    Net Amount  

Reverse Repurchase Agreements

  $ 74,597,000      $      $ 74,597,000      $ 74,597,000      $      $   
 

 

 

 
  $ 74,597,000      $      $ 74,597,000      $ 74,597,000      $      $   
 

 

 

 

10.  Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements

In June 2014, the FASB issued ASU No. 2014-11, Repurchase-to-Maturity Transactions, Repurchase Financings, and Disclosures. ASU No. 2014-11 requires repurchase-to-maturity transactions and repurchase agreements executed as repurchase financings to be accounted for as secured borrowings. In addition, ASU No. 2014-11 eliminates sale accounting for repurchase-to-maturity transactions and supersedes the guidance under which a transfer of a financial asset and a contemporaneous repurchase financing could be accounted for on a combined basis as a forward agreement. The new disclosure requires disclosures for transactions economically similar to repurchase agreements when the transferor retains substantially all of the exposure to the economic return of the transferred financials assets throughout the term of the transactions. Lastly, the update expands disclosures about the nature of collateral pledged in repurchase agreements and similar transactions accounted for as secured borrowings. ASU No. 2014-11 requires disclosures to make financial statements that are prepared under US GAAP more comparable to those prepared under International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”). New disclosures are required for annual reporting periods beginning on or after December 15, 2014, and interim periods within those annual periods.

Management is currently evaluating the implications of these changes and their impact on the financial statements.

11.  Subsequent Events

In preparing these financial statements, the Fund has evaluated events and transactions for potential recognition or disclosure through the date the financial statements were issued. The Fund has determined there are no subsequent events that would need to be disclosed in the Fund’s financial statements.

 

Semi-Annual Report March 31, 2015 23


Table of Contents
Evaluation of Advisory Agreement by the Boards of Trustees  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund

DoubleLine Core Fixed Income Fund

DoubleLine Emerging Markets Fixed Income Fund

DoubleLine Multi-Asset Growth Fund

DoubleLine Low Duration Bond Fund

DoubleLine Floating Rate Fund

DoubleLine Shiller Enhanced CAPE®

DoubleLine Equities Growth Fund

DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund

DoubleLine Income Solutions Fund

At the February 26, 2015 meeting (the “Meeting”) of the Board of Trustees of DoubleLine Funds Trust (“DFT”), DoubleLine Equity Funds (“DEF”), DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund (“DBL”), and DoubleLine Income Solutions Fund (“DSL” which, together with DBL, are the “Closed-End Funds” and, together with DFT, DEF, and DBL, are the “Trusts”), including in respect of each of DFT’s and DEF’s series of shares of beneficial interest (each, an “Open-End Fund” and, collectively with the Closed-End Funds, the “Funds”), the Board of Trustees, including the Trustees who are not “interested persons” (as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended) of the Trusts (“Independent Trustees”) voting separately, approved the renewal of the Investment Advisory and Management Agreements (the “DFT Advisory Agreements”) between DoubleLine Capital LP (“DoubleLine Capital” or an “Adviser”) and DFT, in respect of the DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund, the DoubleLine Core Fixed Income Fund, the DoubleLine Emerging Markets Fixed Income Fund, the DoubleLine Multi-Asset Growth Fund, the DoubleLine Low Duration Bond Fund, the DoubleLine Floating Rate Fund, and DoubleLine Shiller Enhanced CAPE® (the “DFT Reviewed Funds”) for an additional one-year period, the Investment Management Agreement (the “DEF Advisory Agreement”) between DoubleLine Equity LP (“DoubleLine Equity” or an “Adviser”) and DEF, in respect of the DoubleLine Equities Growth Fund for an additional one-year period, the Investment Management Agreement (the “DBL Advisory Agreement”) between DoubleLine Capital and DBL for an additional one-year period, and the Investment Management Agreement (the “DSL Advisory Agreement”) between DoubleLine Capital and DSL for an additional one-year period.

The Trustees meet over the course of the year with investment advisory personnel from the Advisers and regularly review detailed information, presented both orally and in writing, regarding the investment program, performance and operations of each Fund. The Trustees’ determination to approve the continuance of the Advisory Agreements was made on the basis of each Trustee’s business judgment after an evaluation of all of the information provided to the Trustees, both at the February 26, 2015 meeting and at prior meetings. This summary describes a number, but not necessarily all, of the most important factors considered by the Board and the Independent Trustees. Individual Trustees may have given different weights to certain factors and assigned various degrees of materiality to information received in connection with the approval process. No single factor was determined to be decisive. In all of their deliberations, the Board of Trustees and the Independent Trustees were advised by counsel to the Funds and the Independent Trustees.

The Trustees considered the nature, extent, and quality of the services provided and expected to be provided by DoubleLine, including the expertise and experience of its investment personnel. In this regard, the Trustees considered that DoubleLine provides a full investment program for each of the Funds, and noted DoubleLine’s representation that it seeks to provide attractive returns with a strong emphasis on risk management. The Board considered the difficulty of managing debt-related funds, noting that managing such funds requires a portfolio management team to balance a number of factors, which may include, among others, varying maturities, prepayments, collateral management, counterparty management, pay-downs, credit events, workouts and net new issuances.

The Trustees reviewed reports (the “Strategic Insight Reports”) provided by Strategic Insight (“Strategic Insight”), an Asset International Company, that compared the Funds’ management fee rates, total expense ratios (Class I shares, where applicable), and performance records (Class I shares, where applicable) for the one-year and, where applicable, three-year periods ending December 31, 2014 against a group of each Fund’s peer funds. The Trustees noted in particular that the DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund, the DoubleLine Core Fixed Income Fund, the DoubleLine Emerging Markets Fixed Income Fund, the DoubleLine Low Duration Bond Fund, the DoubleLine Floating Rate Fund and DoubleLine Shiller Enhanced CAPE® generally had experienced favorable relative investment results since their inception dates. The Trustees considered DoubleLine’s explanation that, although the DoubleLine Multi-Asset Growth Fund’s performance record was in the third and fourth quartiles of its peer funds over the one- and three-year periods ending December 31, 2014, DoubleLine believed that the relative underperformance was the result, in part, of DoubleLine’s focus on limiting downside risk in that Fund. In this regard, the Trustees noted DoubleLine’s assertion that the DoubleLine Multi-Asset Growth Fund’s portfolio had a greater allocation to fixed-income instruments as compared to that of a number of other funds included in the Fund’s peer group and that this contributed, in part, to the relative underperformance of the Fund versus its peer funds. The Trustees also considered information presented by DoubleLine showing that the DoubleLine Multi-Asset Growth Fund had outperformed its blended benchmark since inception and had done so with lower annualized volatility. The Trustees also noted that the Adviser had presented information regarding enhancements it had made in an attempt to improve the DoubleLine Multi-Asset Growth Fund’s performance. With respect to the DoubleLine Equities Growth Fund, the Trustees noted DoubleLine’s explanation of the contributors to that Fund’s relative underperformance over the one-year period ended December 31, 2014 could be partially attributed to cash held by the Fund during the initial ramp up of its investment portfolio. They also noted that although the Fund still had a relatively short operating history, it had performed in the first and second quartile of its peer funds over the three-month and six-month periods ending December 31, 2014, respectively.

The Trustees reviewed the Closed-End Funds’ performance records based on their net asset values. They noted that DBL had performed near the top of its peers shown in the Strategic Insight Report for the one-year period ended December 31, 2014. The Trustees noted that DSL had performed in the third quartile of its peer funds for the one-year period ending December 31, 2014, but that its net asset value performance had outperformed its benchmark

 

24   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund     


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March 31, 2015

 

index for the period. They discussed DoubleLine’s explanation that the relative underperformance of the Fund was partially attributable to its investments in emerging market high yield corporate debt instruments, which had detracted from performance during the period.

The Trustees considered that DoubleLine provides a variety of other services to the Funds in addition to investment advisory services, including, among others, a number of back-office services, valuation services, compliance services, certain forms of information technology services (such as internal reporting), assistance with accounting and distribution services and supervision and monitoring of the Funds’ other service providers. The Trustees reviewed DoubleLine’s ongoing efforts to keep the Trustees informed about matters relevant to the Trusts and their shareholders. The Trustees also considered the nature, extent, and structure of the Funds’ compliance program, including the policies and procedures of the Funds and their various service providers (including the Advisers). The Trustees considered the quality of those non-investment advisory services and determined that their quality supported the renewal of the Funds’ arrangements with DoubleLine.

The Trustees also considered DoubleLine’s reports, provided at the Board’s regular meetings, that it had continued to hire additional resources, including investment personnel, to support each Adviser’s ability to provide services. The Trustees concluded that it appeared that DoubleLine continued to have sufficient quality and depth of personnel, resources, and investment methods.

The Trustees considered the advisory fees and total expense ratios borne by the Funds. In that regard, the Trustees noted that the Strategic Insight Reports showed the gross advisory and net management fees paid by the DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund were below the median of its peers, and that the gross advisory and net management fees paid by the DoubleLine Core Fixed Income Fund were below or slightly below the median of its peers. The Trustees noted that the gross advisory and net management fees paid by the DoubleLine Multi-Asset Growth Fund and the DoubleLine Emerging Markets Fixed Income Fund were higher than the Funds’ respective expense group medians, but that their net operating expenses were near the median of their respective peer groups. The Trustees observed that the gross advisory and net management fees paid by each of the DoubleLine Low Duration Bond Fund and the DoubleLine Floating Rate Fund were each below its peer group median. The Trustees also noted that the gross advisory fee for DoubleLine Shiller Enhanced CAPE® was slightly above its peer group median, but that that Fund’s net total expense ratio was at the median of the Fund’s peer group. The Trustees noted that the net management fees for the DoubleLine Equities Growth Fund were the lowest of the peer funds included in the Strategic Insight Reports. The Trustees also noted that DoubleLine Equities Growth Fund’s gross advisory fees and net total expense ratio were above the median of its peer group, but that the Fund’s net total expense ratio was still lower than a number of the Fund’s peer funds. The Trustees also observed that the Adviser continues to waive a substantial amount of the fees associated with the DoubleLine Equities Growth Fund, which contributed to the low net management fee figures that were included in the Strategic Insight Reports.

The Trustees discussed the management fees and expense ratios of the Closed-End Funds as presented in the Strategic Insight Reports. They noted that DBL’s management fee and total net expense ratio were, respectively, higher than the median of DBL’s peer funds. The Trustees considered DoubleLine’s representation that DBL invests more heavily in mortgage- and other asset-backed securities compared to a number of the peers that were included in the peer group and the Trustees considered information DoubleLine presented regarding the additional complexity of managing those investments. The Trustees noted that DSL’s management fee was the highest in its peer group and that DSL’s net operating expense ratio (excluding investment related expenses) was among the highest of its peers. In this regard, the Trustees considered DoubleLine’s explanation that the Adviser had attempted to set its management fees at inception at rates that reflect the experience and expertise the Adviser brings to managing the Funds.

The Trustees also took into account that each Closed-End Fund employed leverage during the period ended December 31, 2014. The Trustees noted that the use of such leverage increases total assets and thus the absolute amount of fees received by the Adviser under those Advisory Agreements (because the fees are calculated based on total managed assets, including assets attributable to reverse repurchase agreements and other forms of leverage outstanding). In this regard, the Trustees took into account that the Adviser has a financial incentive for DBL and DSL to continue to use leverage, which may create a conflict of interest between the Adviser, on the one hand, and each of the Fund’s common shareholders, on the other. The Trustees considered information provided to them throughout the year by the Adviser as to why each Fund’s use of leverage continues to be appropriate and in the best interests of each Fund’s common shareholders.

The Trustees considered information relating to the fees charged by DoubleLine to clients other than the Funds, including institutional separate accounts and mutual funds for which DoubleLine serves as sub-adviser, where the Adviser employs investment strategies substantially similar to one or more of the Funds’ principal investment strategies. The Trustees took into account DoubleLine’s representation that certain large institutional separate accounts and funds sub-advised by DoubleLine are subject to fee schedules that differ from, including some that are lower than, the rates paid by the Funds. The Trustees considered that DoubleLine had also explained that administrative, compliance, operational, legal, and other burdens of providing investment advice to mutual funds exceed in many respects those required to provide advisory services to non-mutual fund clients, such as institutional accounts for retirement or pension plans, which may have differing contractual requirements. The Trustees also took into account DoubleLine’s representation that there are substantially greater legal and other responsibilities and risks to DoubleLine in managing public mutual funds than in managing private accounts or in sub-advising mutual funds sponsored by others, and that the services and resources required of DoubleLine when it sub-advises mutual funds sponsored by others generally are less than in the case of the Funds because many of the operational and compliance responsibilities related to the advisory function are retained by the primary adviser. The Trustees concluded that the fees paid by each Fund to DoubleLine were generally reasonable in light of the services provided, the quality of the portfolio management teams, and each Fund’s performance to date.

The Trustees reviewed financial information for DoubleLine, including information as to the Adviser’s profitability with respect to the Funds. The Trustees also reviewed information concerning the profitability to DoubleLine of its service arrangements with the Funds and took into account both the direct and indirect benefits to the Adviser from managing the Funds. The Trustees noted other benefits received by DoubleLine and its affiliates as a result of

 

  Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   25


Table of Contents
Evaluation of Advisory Agreement by the Boards of Trustees  (cont.)  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

DoubleLine’s relationship with the Funds, including possible ancillary benefits to DoubleLine’s institutional investment management business due to the reputation and market penetration of the Funds. In evaluating the Adviser’s profitability, the Trustees considered that the Adviser presented profitability information that was reduced by certain distributions made to the Adviser’s employee owners that may be comparable to the ordinary compensation expense incurred by investment advisers that are not closely-held by their employees. The Trustees considered DoubleLine’s compensation practices and considered DoubleLine’s representation that those compensation and incentive policies and practices enable DoubleLine to retain, motivate, and attract highly qualified and experienced employees. The Trustees also considered the potential benefits that DoubleLine receives in respect of certain research received by DoubleLine due to the amounts of brokerage commissions paid by the DoubleLine funds and noted DoubleLine’s representation that those arrangements are only in place with respect to a small number of Funds and that their use is limited. The Trustees considered the profitability of the Advisers both before and after certain distribution and shareholder servicing payments made by the Advisers and they reviewed the Advisers’ profit margins both before and after such costs. The Trustees also took into account DoubleLine’s representation that it was continuing to invest in its business to maintain its ability to provide high quality services for the Funds. In so doing, the Board considered DoubleLine’s need to invest in technology, infrastructure and staff to continue to provide services and accommodate rapidly changing regulatory requirements.

The Trustees discussed with DoubleLine whether economies of scale would likely be realized as the Funds grow and whether a reduction in the advisory fees paid by the Funds by means of breakpoints would be appropriate. The Trustees considered DoubleLine’s statement that it did not believe that implementation of breakpoints or fee reductions would be appropriate at this time, for a number of reasons. The Trustees noted DoubleLine’s approach to advisory fees which was to set a fee from a Fund’s inception at a rate that reflected reasonably foreseeable economies of scale. The Trustees noted DoubleLine’s assertion that that approach has facilitated the Funds’ asset raising efforts and allowed the Funds from their inception to compete with peer funds with larger asset bases. The Trustees considered DoubleLine’s representation that each of the DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund, the DoubleLine Core Fixed Income Fund, the DoubleLine Low Duration Bond Fund and the DoubleLine Floating Rate Fund already pay net management fees that are approximately at or below their peer medians. The Trustees noted DoubleLine’s view that, although DoubleLine’s profitability was higher in respect of certain Funds as compared to the other Funds based on the expense allocation methodology used, those Funds’ profitability was reasonable nonetheless. The Trustees also noted that DoubleLine’s rapid growth and significant changes to the regulatory environment required DoubleLine to re-invest significantly in its business. After considering the information provided, the Trustees concluded that the profitability of the Funds to DoubleLine did not appear excessive or such as to preclude renewal of the Advisory Agreements and that, for the reasons noted, it did not appear that implementation of breakpoints for any of the Funds would be appropriate at this time, although the Trustees would continue to consider the topic over time.

The Trustees noted that due to tax rules applicable to companies seeking to qualify as regulated investment companies, DoubleLine Multi-Asset Growth Fund made certain investments through a subsidiary organized as a Cayman islands exempted company (the “Subsidiary”) in order to obtain certain desired investment exposure without eliminating its ability to qualify as a regulated investment company under the Internal Revenue Code. The Trustees considered the advisory arrangements for the Subsidiary generally in the same manner as they had considered the advisory arrangements for DoubleLine Multi-Asset Growth Fund.

On the basis of these considerations as well as others and in the exercise of their business judgment, the Trustees determined that they were satisfied with the nature, extent and the quality of the services provided to each Fund under its Advisory Agreement; that it appeared that the management fees paid by each Fund to DoubleLine was generally within the range of management fees paid by its peer funds, and with respect to some Funds lower than the median management fees paid by their peer funds, and generally reasonable in light of the quality of the portfolio management teams and each Fund’s performance to date; that the fees paid by each Fund did not appear inconsistent with the fee schedules charged to DoubleLine’s other clients (where applicable) in light of the nature of the services provided and the risks borne by DoubleLine; that the profitability of each Fund to DoubleLine did not appear excessive or such as to preclude renewal of a Fund’s Advisory Agreement; and that, for the reasons noted by DoubleLine, and that it would be appropriate to approve each Advisory Agreement for an additional one-year period.

 

 

26   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund     


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Federal Tax Information  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2014, certain dividends paid by the Fund may be subject to a maximum tax rate of 15% (20% for taxpayers with taxable income greater than $400,000 for single individuals and $450,000 for married couples filing jointly), as provided for by the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 and the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012. The percentage of dividends declared from ordinary income designated as qualified dividend income was as follows:

 

Qualified Dividend Income

       0.00%   

For corporate shareholders, the percent of ordinary income distributions qualifying for the corporate dividends received deduction for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2014 was as follows:

 

Dividends Received Deduction

       0.00%   

The percentage of taxable ordinary income distributions that are designated as short-term capital gain distributions under Internal Revenue Section 871(k)(2)(c) for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2014 was as follows:

 

Qualified Short-term Gains

       0.00%   

The percentage of taxable ordinary income distributions that are designated as interest related dividends under Internal Revenue Section 871(k)(1)(c) for the Fund was as follows:

 

Qualified Interest Income

       99.98%   

Shareholders are advised to consult their own tax adviser with respect to the tax consequences of their investment in the Fund.

Additional Information Regarding the Fund’s Investment Activities

Investments in Pools of Loans: The Fund may invest in pools of loans through mortgage- or other asset-backed securities, where a trust or other entity issues interests in the loans, some of which interests may be senior to others. Alternatively, the Fund may invest directly in pools of loans, itself or with other clients of the Adviser. The Fund’s direct investments in pools of loans present risks that may differ from the Fund’s investments in mortgage- and other asset-backed securities. For example, if it were to invest directly in such a pool without any co-investors, the Fund would incur all losses incurred on the loans acquired in the pool. However, if the Fund were to invest in a senior tranche of a mortgage- or other asset-backed security, it might have a more limited exposure to losses on the loans. In connection with the Fund’s direct purchase of certain loan portfolios, the Fund will incur costs, which may include the costs of various diligence-related services. The diligence-related services the Fund may require in connection with such investments may include, without limitation, loan file review, underwriting documentation review, and site visits. The Adviser would typically rely on information and analyses furnished as part of these diligence-related services in determining whether to invest in a particular loan portfolio. The costs associated with investments in a pool of loans may be significant and will reduce the performance contribution of such investments.

Affiliated Investments: The Adviser is, and may be in the future, affiliated with certain large financial institutions (“affiliates”) that hold interests in an entity that are of a different class or type than the class or type of interest held by the Fund. Conflicts may arise in cases where the Fund and affiliates invest in different parts of an issuer’s capital structure, such as when an affiliate holds securities in an entity that are senior or junior to the securities held by the Fund, which could mean that the affiliate will be entitled to different payments or other rights, or that in a workout or other distressed scenario the interests of the affiliate might be adverse to those of the Fund and the affiliate and the Fund might have disparate investment outcomes. For example, an affiliate may acquire a loan, loan participation, or a loan assignment of a particular borrower in which one or more Funds have an equity investment. In negotiating the terms and conditions of any such investments, or any subsequent amendments or waivers, the Adviser may find that its own interests, the interests of an affiliate, and/or the interests of the Fund could conflict. The Adviser may seek to avoid such conflicts in certain circumstances when investing on behalf of its clients, including the Fund, and, as a result, the Adviser may choose not to make certain investments on behalf of the Fund and/or its other clients. Those foregone investment opportunities may adversely affect the Fund’s performance if similarly attractive opportunities are not available or cannot be identified.

 

  Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   27


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Information About Proxy Voting  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

Information about how the Fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities held during the most recent 12 month period ended June 30 is available no later than the following August 31st without charge, upon request, by calling 877-DLine11 (877-354-6311) and on the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (the “SEC”) website at www.sec.gov.

A description of the Fund’s proxy voting policies and procedures is available (i) without charge, upon request, by calling 877-DLine11 (877-354-6311); and (ii) on the commission’s website at www.sec.gov.

Information About Portfolio Holdings

The Fund intends to disclose its portfolio holdings on a quarterly basis by posting the holdings on the Fund’s website. The disclosure will be made by posting the Annual, Semi-Annual and Form N-Q regulatory filings on the Fund’s website.

The Fund is required to file its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for its first and third fiscal quarters on Form N-Q. The Fund’s Forms N-Q are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. You can also review and obtain copies of the Forms N-Q at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, DC (information on the operation of Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330).

Householding — Important Notice Regarding Delivery of Shareholder Documents

In an effort to conserve resources, the Fund intends to reduce the number of duplicate Annual and Semi-Annual Reports you receive by sending only one copy of each to addresses where we reasonably believe two or more accounts are from the same family. If you would like to discontinue householding of your accounts, please call toll-free 877-DLine11 (877-354-6311) to request individual copies of these documents. We will begin sending individual copies thirty days after receiving your request to stop householding.

Fund Certification

The Fund is listed for trading on the NYSE and has filed with the NYSE its annual chief executive officer certification regarding compliance with the NYSE’s listing standards. The Fund filed with the SEC the certification of its chief executive officer and principal financial officer required by section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

Proxy Results

The Annual Meeting of Shareholders was held on February 27, 2015 for shareholders of record as of the close of business on December 22, 2014 to re-elect Raymond B. Woolson and Ronald R. Redell, both Class III trustee nominees, for the Fund. The nominee Raymond B. Woolson was elected with 12,445,469, affirmative votes and 157,913 votes withheld. The nominee Ronald R. Redell was elected with 12,460,541 affirmative votes and 142,841 votes withheld. For the Fund, Trustees whose terms of office continued after the Annual Meeting of Shareholders because they were not up for re-election are Joseph J. Ciprari and John C. Salter.

 

28   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund     


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Dividend Reinvestment Plan  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

Unless the registered owner of Common Shares elects to receive cash by contacting U.S. Bancorp Fund Services, LLC (the “Plan Administrator”), all dividends, capital gains and returns of capital, if any, declared on Common Shares will be automatically reinvested by the Plan Administrator for shareholders in the Fund’s Automatic Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the “Plan”), in additional Common Shares. Common Shareholders who elect not to participate in the Plan will receive all dividends and other distributions payable in cash directly to the shareholder of record (or, if the Common Shares are held in street or other nominee name, then to such nominee) by the Plan Administrator as dividend disbursing agent. Participation in the Plan is completely voluntary and may be terminated or resumed at any time without penalty by providing notice in writing to the Plan Administrator at least 5 days prior to the dividend/distribution record date; otherwise such termination or resumption will be effective with respect to any subsequently declared dividend or other distribution.

Whenever the Fund declares an income dividend, a capital gain distribution or other distribution (collectively referred to as “dividends”) payable either in shares or cash, non-participants in the Plan will receive cash and participants in the Plan will receive a number of Common Shares, determined in accordance with the following provisions. The Common Shares will be acquired by the Plan Administrator for the participants’ accounts, depending upon the circumstances described below, either (i) through receipt of additional unissued but authorized Common Shares from the Fund (“Newly Issued Common Shares”) or (ii) by purchase of outstanding Common Shares on the open market (“Open- Market Purchases”) on the New York Stock Exchange or elsewhere. If, on the payment date for any Dividend, the market price per Common Share plus estimated brokerage trading fees is equal to or greater than the NAV per Common Share (such condition is referred to here as “market premium”), the Plan Administrator shall receive Newly Issued Common Shares, including fractions of shares from the Fund for each Plan participant’s account. The number of Newly Issued Common Shares to be credited to each participant’s account will be determined by dividing the dollar amount of the Dividend by the NAV per Common Share on the date of issuance; provided that, if the NAV per Common Share is less than or equal to 95% of the current market value on the date of issuance, the dollar amount of the Dividend will be divided by 95% of the market price per Common Share on the date of issuance for purposes of determining the number of shares issuable under the Plan. If, on the payment date for any Dividend, the NAV per Common Share is greater than the market value plus estimated brokerage trading fees (such condition being referred to here as a “market discount”), the Plan Administrator will seek to invest the Dividend amount in Common Shares acquired on behalf of the participants in Open-Market Purchases.

In the event of a market discount on the payment date for any Dividend, the Plan Administrator will have until the last business day before the next date on which the Common Shares trade on an “ex-dividend” basis or in no event more than 30 days after the record date for such Dividend, whichever is sooner (the “Last Purchase Date”), to invest the Dividend amount in Common Shares acquired in Open-Market Purchases. It is contemplated that the Fund will pay monthly Dividends. If, before the Plan Administrator has completed its Open-Market Purchases, the market price per Common Share exceeds the NAV per Common Share, the average per Common Share purchase price paid by the Plan Administrator may exceed the NAV of the Common Shares, resulting in the acquisition of fewer Common Shares than if the Dividend had been paid in Newly Issued Common Shares on the Dividend payment date. If the Plan Administrator is unable to invest the full Dividend amount in Open-Market Purchases during the purchase period or if the market discount shifts to a market premium during the purchase period, the Plan Administrator may cease making Open-Market Purchases and may instead receive the Newly Issued Common Shares from the Fund for each participant’s account, in respect of the uninvested portion of the Dividend, at the NAV per Common Share at the close of business on the Last Purchase Date provided that, if the NAV is less than or equal to 95% of the then current market price per Common Share, the dollar amount of the Dividend will be divided by 95% of the market price on the date of issuance for purposes of determining the number of shares issuable under the Plan.

The Plan Administrator maintains all registered shareholders’ accounts in the Plan and furnishes written confirmation of all transactions in the accounts, including information needed by shareholders for tax records. Common Shares in the account of each Plan participant will be held by the Plan Administrator in non-certificated form in the name of the Plan participant, and each shareholder proxy will include those shares purchased or received pursuant to the Plan. The Plan Administrator will forward all proxy solicitation materials to participants and vote proxies for shares held under the Plan in accordance with the instructions of the participants.

In the case of Common Shares owned by a beneficial owner but registered with the Plan Administrator in the name of a nominee, such as a bank, a broker or other financial intermediary (each, a “Nominee”), the Plan Administrator will administer the Plan on the basis of the number of Common Shares certified from time to time by the Nominee as participating in the Plan. The Plan Administrator will not take instructions or elections from a beneficial owner whose Common Shares are registered with the Plan Administrator in the name of a Nominee. If a beneficial owner’s Common Shares are held through a Nominee and are not registered with the Plan Administrator as participating in the Plan, neither the beneficial owner nor the Nominee will be participants in or have distributions reinvested under the Plan with respect to those Common Shares. If a beneficial owner of Common Shares held in the name of a Nominee wishes to participate in the Plan, and the Shareholder’s Nominee is unable or unwilling to become a registered shareholder and a Plan participant with respect to those Common Shares on the beneficial owner’s behalf, the beneficial owner may request that the Nominee arrange to have all or a portion of his or her Common Shares registered with the Plan Administrator in the beneficial owner’s name so that the beneficial owner may be enrolled as a participant in the Plan with respect to those Common Shares. Please contact your Nominee for details or for other possible alternatives. Participants whose shares are registered with the Plan Administrator in the name of one Nominee may not be able to transfer the shares to another firm or Nominee and continue to participate in the Plan.

There will be no brokerage charges with respect to Common Shares issued directly by the Fund as a result of dividends payable either in Common Shares or in cash. However, each participant will pay a pro rata share of brokerage trading fees incurred in connection with Open-Market Purchases. The automatic reinvestment of Dividends will not relieve participants of any federal, state or local income tax that may be payable (or required to be withheld) on such Dividends. Participants that request a sale of Common Shares through the Plan Administrator are subject to brokerage commissions.

The Fund reserves the right to amend or terminate the Plan. There is no direct service charge to participants with regard to purchases in the Plan; however, the Fund reserves the right to amend the Plan to include a service charge payable by the participants.

All correspondence, questions, or requests for additional information concerning the Plan should be directed to the Plan Administrator by calling toll-free (877) DLine11 (877-354-6311) or by writing to U.S. Bancorp Fund Services, LLC at P.O. Box 701, Milwaukee, WI 53201. Be sure to include your name, address, daytime phone number, Social Security or tax I.D. number and a reference to DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund on all correspondence.

 

  Semi-Annual Report   March 31, 2015   29


Table of Contents
Privacy Notice  

(Unaudited)

March 31, 2015

 

What Does DoubleLine Do With Your Personal Information?

Financial companies choose how they share your personal information. This notice provides information about how we collect, share, and protect your personal information, and how you might choose to limit our ability to share certain information about you. Please read this notice carefully.

All financial companies need to share customers’ personal information to run their everyday businesses. Accordingly, information, confidential and proprietary, plays an important role in the success of our business. However, we recognize that you have entrusted us with your personal and financial data, and we recognize our obligation to keep this information secure. Maintaining your privacy is important to us, and we hold ourselves to a high standard in its safekeeping and use. Most importantly, DoubleLine does not sell its customers’ non-public personal information to any third parties. DoubleLine uses its customers’ non-public personal information primarily to complete financial transactions that its customers request or to make its customers aware of other financial products and services offered by a DoubleLine affiliated company.

DoubleLine may collect non-public information about you from the following sources:

 

  Information we receive about you on applications or other forms;
  Information you may give us orally;
  Information about your transactions with us or others;
  Information you submit to us in correspondence, including emails or other electronic communications; and
  Information about any bank account you use for transfers between your bank account and any Fund account, including information provided when effecting wire transfers.

The types of personal information DoubleLine collects and shares depend on the product or service you have with us. This information may include:

 

  Social Security Number;
  account balances;
  transaction or loss history;
  assets;
  investment experience;
  account transactions;
  risk tolerance.

DoubleLine does not disclose any non-public personal information about our customers or former customers without the customer’s authorization, except that we may disclose the information listed above, as follows:

 

  to provide information to nonaffiliated third parties in connection with our performance of the services we have agreed to provide you. For example, it might be necessary to do so in order to process transactions and maintain accounts.
  DoubleLine will release any of the non-public information listed above about a customer if directed to do so by that customer or if DoubleLine is authorized by law to do so, such as in the case of a court order, legal investigation, or other properly executed governmental request.
  to alert a customer to other financial products and services offered by DoubleLine or an affiliate, DoubleLine may share information with an affiliate, including companies using the DoubleLine name. Such products and services may include, for example, other investment products offered by a DoubleLine company. If you prefer that we not disclose non-public personal information about you to our affiliates for this purpose, you may direct us not to make such disclosures (other than disclosures permitted by law) by calling 877-DLine11 (877-354-6311). If you limit this sharing and you have a joint account, your decision will be applied to all owners of the account.

We have procedures designed to limit access to your personal account information to those agents and vendors who need to know that information to provide products and services to you. Your information is not provided by us to nonaffiliated third parties for marketing purposes. We seek to maintain physical, electronic, and procedural safeguards to guard your non-public personal information.

Information Collected from Websites. Websites maintained by DoubleLine or its service providers may use a variety of technologies to collect information that help DoubleLine and its service providers understand how the website is used. Information collected from your web browser (including small files stored on your device that are commonly referred to as “cookies”) allow the websites to recognize your web browser and help to personalize and improve your user experience and enhance navigation of the website. You can change your cookie preferences by changing the setting on your web browser to delete or reject cookies. If you delete or reject cookies, some website pages may not function properly. Certain portions of doublelinefunds.com are maintained or controlled by third parties, each of which has privacy policies which may differ, in some cases significantly, from the privacy policies described in this notice. Please contact your DoubleLine representative if you would like to receive more information about the privacy policies of third parties.

As required by federal law, DoubleLine will notify customers of DoubleLine’s Privacy Policy annually. DoubleLine reserves the right to modify this policy at any time, but in the event that there is a change, DoubleLine will promptly inform its customers of that change.

 

 

30   DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund     


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DoubleLine Capital LP  

333 South Grand Avenue

18th Floor

Los Angeles, CA 90071

 

doubleline.com

    

fundinfo@doubleline.com

1. 213. 633. 8200

 

LOGO

 

 

 

Investment Adviser:

DoubleLine Capital LP

333 South Grand Avenue

18th Floor

Los Angeles, CA 90071

Administrator and Transfer Agent:

U.S. Bancorp Fund Services, LLC

P.O. Box 701

Milwaukee, WI 53201

Custodian:

U.S. Bank, N.A.

1555 North River Center Drive Suite 302

Milwaukee, WI 53212

Independent Registered

Public Accounting Firm:

Deloitte & Touche LLP

695 Town Center Drive Ste 1200

Costa Mesa, CA 92626

Legal Counsel:

Ropes & Gray LLP

Prudential Tower

800 Boylston Street

Boston, MA 02199

Contact Information:

doubleline.com

fundinfo@doubleline.com

1-877-DLine11 or

1-877-354-6311

DL-SEMI-DBL

 

LOGO


Table of Contents

Item 2. Code of Ethics.

Not applicable for semi-annual reports.

Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Expert.

Not applicable for semi-annual reports.

Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services.

Not applicable for semi-annual reports.

Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants.

Not applicable for semi-annual reports.

Item 6. Investments.

 

(a) Schedule of Investments is included as part of the report to shareholders filed under Item 1 of this Form.

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

Not applicable for semi-annual reports.

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

Not applicable for semi-annual reports.

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

There were no purchases made by or on behalf of the Registrant or any “affiliated purchaser,” as defined in Rule 10b-18(a)(3) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, of shares of the Registrant’s equity securities that are registered by the Registrant pursuant to Section 12 of the Exchange Act made in the period covered by this report.

 

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

There have been no material changes to the procedures by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the registrant’s board of trustees.

Item 11. Controls and Procedures.

 

(a) The Registrant’s President and Treasurer have reviewed the Registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “Act”)) as of a date within 90 days of the filing of this report, as required by Rule 30a-3(b) under the Act and Rules 13a-15(b) or 15d-15(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Based on their review, such officers have concluded that the disclosure controls and procedures are effective in ensuring that information required to be disclosed in this report is appropriately recorded, processed, summarized and reported and made known to them by others within the Registrant and by the Registrant’s service provider.

 

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

Item 12. Exhibits.

 

(a) (1) Any code of ethics or amendment thereto, that is the subject of the disclosure required by Item 2, to the extent that the registrant intends to satisfy Item 2 requirements through filing an exhibit. Not applicable.

(2) A separate certification for each principal executive and principal financial officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. Filed herewith.

(3) Any written solicitation to purchase securities under Rule 23c-1 under the Act sent or given during the period covered by the report by or on behalf of the registrant to 10 or more persons. Not applicable.

 

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

 

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SIGNATURES

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

 

(Registrant)               DoubleLine Opportunistic Credit Fund                                                                       
By (Signature and Title)*           Ronald R. Redell                                                    
          Ronald R. Redell, President and Chief Executive Officer   
Date                                     5/28/2015                                                                                                             

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

 

By (Signature and Title)*         Ronald R. Redell                                                      
          Ronald R. Redell, President and Chief Executive Officer   
Date                       5/28/2015                                                                                                                        

 

By (Signature and Title)*                   Susan Nichols                                                                                     
 

        Susan Nichols, Treasurer and Principal Financial and

Accounting Officer

  
Date                       5/28/2015                                                                                                                          

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

 

3