Eaton Vance Floating-Rate Income Trust
Supplement to Statement
of Additional Information (“SAI”) dated September 28, 2020
Eaton Vance Senior Income Trust
Supplement to SAI dated October 27,
2020
Eaton Vance Enhanced Equity Income Fund
Supplement to SAI dated January 22, 2021
Eaton Vance Tax-Managed Diversified Equity
Income Fund
Eaton Vance Tax-Managed Global Diversified
Equity Income Fund
Supplement to SAIs
dated February 19, 2021
Eaton Vance Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income
Fund
Supplement to SAI
dated February 22, 2021
Eaton Vance Senior Floating-Rate Trust
Supplement to SAI dated February 23, 2021
Eaton Vance Municipal Income Trust
Supplement to SAI
dated March 25, 2021
Eaton Vance Enhanced Equity Income Fund
II
Supplement to SAI
dated April 22, 2021
Eaton Vance Tax-Managed Buy-Write Opportunities
Fund
Supplement to SAI
dated April 23, 2021
Eaton Vance Tax-Advantaged Global Dividend
Opportunities Fund
Eaton Vance Tax-Managed Global Buy-Write
Opportunities Fund
Supplement to SAIs
dated June 28, 2021
Eaton Vance National Municipal Opportunities
Trust
Eaton Vance Tax-Managed Buy-Write Income
Fund
Supplement to SAIs
dated July 22, 2021
1. The following replaces corresponding disclosure under the heading
“POTENTIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST”:
As a diversified global financial services firm, Morgan Stanley
engages in a broad spectrum of activities, including financial advisory services, investment management activities, lending, commercial
banking, sponsoring and managing private investment funds, engaging in broker-dealer transactions and principal securities, commodities
and foreign exchange transactions, research publication and other activities. In the ordinary course of its business, Morgan Stanley is
a full-service investment banking and financial services firm and therefore engages in activities where Morgan Stanley’s interests
or the interests of its clients may conflict with the interests of a Fund or Portfolio, if applicable, (collectively for the purposes
of this section, “Fund” or “Funds”). Morgan Stanley advises clients and sponsors, manages or advises other investment
funds and investment programs, accounts and businesses (collectively, together with the Morgan Stanley funds, any new or successor funds,
programs, accounts or businesses (other than funds, programs, accounts or businesses sponsored, managed, or advised by former direct or
indirect subsidiaries of Eaton Vance Corp. (“Eaton Vance Investment Accounts”)), the ‘‘MS Investment Accounts,
and, together with the Eaton Vance Investment Accounts, the “Affiliated Investment Accounts’’) with a wide variety of
investment objectives that in some instances may overlap or conflict with a Fund’s investment objectives and present conflicts of
interest. In addition, Morgan Stanley or the investment adviser may also from time to time create new or successor Affiliated Investment
Accounts that may compete with a Fund and present similar conflicts of interest. The discussion below enumerates certain actual, apparent
and potential conflicts of interest. There is no assurance that conflicts of interest will be resolved in favor of Fund shareholders and,
in fact, they may not be. Conflicts of interest not described below may also exist.
The discussions below
with respect to actual, apparent and potential conflicts of interest also may be applicable to or arise from the MS Investment Accounts
whether or not specifically identified.
Material Non-public and Other Information. It is expected
that confidential or material non-public information regarding an investment or potential investment opportunity may become available
to the investment adviser. If such information becomes available, the investment adviser may be precluded (including by applicable law
or internal policies or procedures) from pursuing an investment or disposition opportunity with respect to such investment or investment
opportunity. The investment adviser may also from time to time be subject to contractual ‘‘stand-still’’ obligations
and/or confidentiality obligations that may restrict its ability to trade in certain investments on a Fund’s behalf. In addition,
the investment adviser may be precluded from disclosing such information to an investment team, even in circumstances in which the information
would be beneficial if disclosed. Therefore, the investment team may not be provided access to material non-public information in the
possession of Morgan Stanley that might be relevant to an investment decision to be made on behalf of a Fund, and the investment team
may initiate a transaction or sell an investment that, if such information had been known to it, may not have been undertaken. In addition,
certain members of the investment team may be recused from certain investment-related discussions so that such members do not receive
information that would limit their ability to perform functions of their employment with the investment adviser or its affiliates unrelated
to that of a Fund. Furthermore, access to certain parts of Morgan Stanley may be subject to third party confidentiality obligations and
to information barriers established by Morgan Stanley in order to manage potential conflicts of interest and regulatory restrictions,
including without limitation joint transaction restrictions pursuant to the 1940 Act. Accordingly, the investment adviser’s ability
to source investments from other business units within Morgan Stanley may be limited and there can be no assurance that the investment
adviser will be able to source any investments from any one or more parts of the Morgan Stanley network.
The investment adviser may restrict its investment decisions and
activities on behalf of the Funds in various circumstances, including because of applicable regulatory requirements or information held
by the investment adviser or Morgan Stanley. The investment adviser might not engage in transactions or other activities for, or enforce
certain rights in favor of, a Fund due to Morgan Stanley’s activities outside the Funds. In instances where trading of an investment
is restricted, the investment adviser may not be able to purchase or sell such investment on behalf of a Fund, resulting in the Fund’s
inability to participate in certain desirable transactions. This inability to buy or sell an investment could have an adverse effect on
a Fund’s portfolio due to, among other things, changes in an investment’s value during the period its trading is restricted.
Also, in situations where the investment adviser is required to aggregate its positions with those of other Morgan Stanley business units
for position limit calculations, the investment adviser may have to refrain from making investments due to the positions held by other
Morgan Stanley business units or their clients. There may be other situations where the investment adviser refrains from making an investment
due to additional disclosure obligations, regulatory requirements, policies, and reputational risk, or the investment adviser may limit
purchases or sales of securities in respect of which Morgan Stanley is engaged in an underwriting or other distribution capacity.
Morgan Stanley has established certain information barriers and
other policies to address the sharing of information between different businesses within Morgan Stanley. As a result of information barriers,
the investment adviser generally will not have access, or will have limited access, to certain information and personnel in other areas
of Morgan Stanley and generally will not manage the Funds with the benefit of the information held by such other areas. Morgan Stanley,
due to its access to and knowledge of funds, markets and securities based on its prime brokerage and other businesses, may make decisions
based on information or take (or refrain from taking) actions with respect to interests in investments of the kind held (directly or indirectly)
by the Funds in a manner that may be adverse to the Funds, and will not have any obligation or other duty to share information with the
investment adviser.
In limited circumstances, however, including for purposes of managing
business and reputational risk, and subject to policies and procedures and any applicable regulations, Morgan Stanley personnel, including
personnel of the investment adviser, on one side of an information barrier may have access to information and personnel on the other
side of the information barrier through “wall crossings.” The investment adviser faces conflicts of interest in determining
whether to engage in such wall crossings. Information obtained in connection with such wall crossings may limit or restrict the ability
of the investment adviser to engage in or otherwise effect transactions on behalf of the Funds (including purchasing or selling securities
that the investment adviser may otherwise have purchased or sold for a Fund in the absence of a wall crossing). In managing conflicts
of interest that arise because of the foregoing, the investment adviser generally will be subject to fiduciary requirements. The investment
adviser may also implement internal information barriers or ethical walls, and the conflicts described herein with respect to information
barriers and otherwise with respect to Morgan Stanley and the investment adviser will also apply internally within the investment adviser.
As a result, a Fund may not be permitted to transact in (e.g., dispose of a security in whole or in part) during periods when it otherwise
would have been able to do so, which could adversely affect a Fund. Other investors in the security that are not subject to such restrictions
may be able to transact in the security during such periods. There may also be circumstances in which, as a result of information held
by certain portfolio management teams in the investment adviser, the investment adviser limits an activity or transaction for a Fund,
including if the Fund is managed by a portfolio management team other than the team holding such information.
Investments by Morgan Stanley and its Affiliated Investment
Accounts. In serving in multiple capacities to Affiliated Investment Accounts, Morgan Stanley, including the investment adviser and
its investment teams, may have obligations to other clients or investors in Affiliated Investment Accounts, the fulfillment of which may
not be in the best interests of a Fund or its shareholders. A Fund’s investment objectives may overlap with the investment objectives
of certain Affiliated Investment Accounts. As a result, the members of an investment team may face conflicts in the allocation of investment
opportunities among a Fund and other investment funds, programs, accounts and businesses advised by or affiliated with the investment
adviser. Certain Affiliated Investment Accounts may provide for higher management or incentive fees or greater expense reimbursements
or overhead allocations, all of which may contribute to this conflict of interest and create an incentive for the investment adviser to
favor such other accounts.
Morgan Stanley currently invests and plans to continue to invest
on its own behalf and on behalf of its Affiliated Investment Accounts in a wide variety of investment opportunities globally. Morgan Stanley
and its Affiliated Investment Accounts, to the extent consistent with applicable law and policies and procedures, will be permitted to
invest in investment opportunities without making such opportunities available to a Fund beforehand. Subject to the foregoing, Morgan
Stanley may offer investments that fall into the investment objectives of an Affiliated Investment Account to such account or make such
investment on its own behalf, even though such investment also falls within a Fund’s investment objectives. A Fund may invest in
opportunities that Morgan Stanley and/or one or more Affiliated Investment Accounts has declined, and vice versa. All of the foregoing
may reduce the number of investment opportunities available to a Fund and may create conflicts of interest in allocating investment opportunities.
Investors should note that the conflicts inherent in making such allocation decisions may not always be resolved to a Fund’s advantage.
There can be no assurance that a Fund will have an opportunity to participate in certain opportunities that fall within their investment
objectives.
To seek to reduce potential conflicts of interest and to attempt
to allocate such investment opportunities in a fair and equitable manner, the investment adviser has implemented allocation policies and
procedures. These policies and procedures are intended to give all clients of the investment adviser, including the Funds, fair access
to investment opportunities consistent with the requirements of organizational documents, investment strategies, applicable laws and regulations,
and the fiduciary duties of the investment adviser. Each client of the investment adviser that is subject to the allocation policies and
procedures, including each Fund, is assigned an investment team and portfolio manager(s) by the investment adviser. The investment team
and portfolio managers review investment opportunities and will decide with respect to the allocation of each opportunity considering
various factors and in accordance with the allocation policies and procedures. The allocation policies and procedures are subject to change.
Investors should note that the conflicts inherent in making such allocation decisions may not always be resolved to the advantage of a
Fund.
It is possible that Morgan Stanley or an Affiliated Investment
Account, including another Eaton Vance fund, will invest in or advise a company that is or becomes a competitor of a company of which
a Fund holds an investment. Such investment could create a conflict between the Fund, on the one hand, and Morgan Stanley or the Affiliated
Investment Account, on the other hand. In such a situation, Morgan Stanley may also have a conflict in the allocation of its own resources
to the portfolio investment. Furthermore, certain Affiliated Investment Accounts will be focused primarily on investing in other funds
which may have strategies that overlap and/or directly conflict and compete with a Fund.
In addition, certain investment professionals who are involved
in a Fund’s activities remain responsible for the investment activities of other Affiliated Investment Accounts managed by the investment
adviser and its affiliates, and they will devote time to the management of such investments and other newly created Affiliated Investment
Accounts (whether in the form of funds, separate accounts or other vehicles), as well as their own investments. In addition, in connection
with the management of investments for other Affiliated Investment Accounts, members of Morgan Stanley and its affiliates may serve on
the boards of directors of or advise companies which may compete with a Fund’s portfolio investments. Moreover, these Affiliated
Investment Accounts managed by Morgan Stanley and its affiliates may pursue investment opportunities that may also be suitable for a Fund.
It should be noted that Morgan Stanley may, directly or indirectly,
make large investments in certain of its Affiliated Investment Accounts, and accordingly Morgan Stanley’s investment in a Fund
may not be a determining factor in the outcome of any of the foregoing conflicts. Nothing herein restricts or in any way limits the activities
of Morgan Stanley, including its ability to buy or sell interests in, or provide financing to, equity and/or debt instruments, funds
or portfolio companies, for its own accounts or for the accounts of Affiliated Investment Accounts or other investment funds or clients
in accordance with applicable law.
Different clients of the investment adviser, including a Fund,
may invest in different classes of securities of the same issuer, depending on the respective clients’ investment objectives and
policies. As a result, the investment adviser and its affiliates, at times, will seek to satisfy fiduciary obligations to certain clients
owning one class of securities of a particular issuer by pursuing or enforcing rights on behalf of those clients with respect to such
class of securities, and those activities may have an adverse effect on another client which owns a different class of securities of such
issuer. For example, if one client holds debt securities of an issuer and another client holds equity securities of the same issuer, if
the issuer experiences financial or operational challenges, the investment adviser and its affiliates may seek a liquidation of the issuer
on behalf of the client that holds the debt securities, whereas the client holding the equity securities may benefit from a reorganization
of the issuer. Thus, in such situations, the actions taken by the investment adviser or its affiliates on behalf of one client can negatively
impact securities held by another client. These conflicts also exist as between the investment adviser’s clients, including the
Funds, and the Affiliated Investment Accounts managed by Morgan Stanley.
The investment adviser and its affiliates may give advice and recommend
securities to other clients which may differ from advice given to, or securities recommended or bought for, a Fund even though such other
clients’ investment objectives may be similar to those of the Fund.
The investment adviser and its affiliates manage long and short
portfolios. The simultaneous management of long and short portfolios creates conflicts of interest in portfolio management and trading
in that opposite directional positions may be taken in client accounts, including client accounts managed by the same investment team,
and creates risks such as: (i) the risk that short sale activity could adversely affect the market value of long positions in one or more
portfolios (and vice versa) and (ii) the risks associated with the trading desk receiving opposing orders in the same security simultaneously.
The investment adviser and its affiliates have adopted policies and procedures that are reasonably designed to mitigate these conflicts.
In certain circumstances, the investment adviser invests on behalf of itself in securities and other instruments that would be appropriate
for, held by, or may fall within the investment guidelines of its clients, including a Fund. At times, the investment adviser may give
advice or take action for its own accounts that differs from, conflicts with, or is adverse to advice given or action taken for any client.
From time to time, conflicts also arise due to the fact that certain
securities or instruments may be held in some client accounts, including a Fund, but not in others, or that client accounts may have different
levels of holdings in certain securities or instruments. . In addition, due to differences in the investment strategies or restrictions
among client accounts, the investment adviser may take action with respect to one account that differs from the action taken with respect
to another account. In some cases, a client account may compensate the investment adviser based on the performance of the securities held
by that account. The existence of such a performance based fee may create additional conflicts of interest for the investment adviser
in the allocation of management time, resources and investment opportunities. The investment adviser has adopted several policies and
procedures designed to address these potential conflicts including a code of ethics and policies that govern the investment adviser’s
trading practices, including, among other things, the aggregation and allocation of trades among clients, brokerage allocations, cross
trades and best execution.
In addition, at times an investment adviser investment team will
give advice or take action with respect to the investments of one or more clients that is not given or taken with respect to other clients
with similar investment programs, objectives, and strategies. Accordingly, clients with similar strategies will not always hold the same
securities or instruments or achieve the same performance. The investment adviser’s investment teams also advise clients with conflicting
programs, objectives or strategies. These conflicts also exist as between the investment adviser’s clients, including the Funds,
and the Affiliated Investment Accounts managed by Morgan Stanley.
The investment adviser maintains separate trading desks by investment
team and generally based on asset class, including two trading desks trading equity securities. These trading desks operate independently
of one another. The two equity trading desks do not share information. The separate equity trading desks may result in one desk competing
against the other desk when implementing buy and sell transactions, possibly causing certain accounts to pay more or receive less for
a security than other accounts. In addition, Morgan Stanley and its affiliates maintain separate trading desks that operate independently
of each other and do not share trading information with the investment adviser. These trading desks may compete against the investment
adviser trading desks when implementing buy and sell transactions, possibly causing certain Affiliated Investment Accounts to pay more
or receive less for a security than other Affiliated Investment Accounts.
Investments by Separate Investment
Departments. The entities and individuals that provide investment-related services for the Fund and certain other Eaton Vance Investment
Accounts (the “Eaton Vance Investment Department”) may be different from the entities and individuals that provide investment-related
services to MS Investment Accounts (the “MS Investment Department and, together with the Eaton Vance Investment Department, the
“Investment Departments”). Although Morgan Stanley has implemented information barriers between the Investment Departments
in accordance with internal policies and procedures, each Investment Department may engage in discussions and share information and resources
with the other Investment Department on certain investment-related matters. The sharing of information and resources between the Investment
Departments is designed to further increase the knowledge and effectiveness of each Investment Department. Because each Investment Department
generally makes investment decisions and executes trades independently of the other, the quality and price of execution, and the performance
of investments and accounts, can be expected to vary. In addition, each Investment Department may use different trading systems and technology
and may employ differing investment and trading strategies. As a result, a MS Investment Account could trade in advance of the Fund (and
vice versa), might complete trades more quickly and efficiently than the Fund, and/or achieve different execution than the Fund on the
same or similar investments made contemporaneously, even when the Investment Departments shared research and viewpoints that led to that
investment decision. Any sharing of information or resources between the Investment Department servicing the Fund and the MS Investment
Department may result, from time to time, in the Fund simultaneously or contemporaneously seeking to engage in the same or similar transactions
as an account serviced by the other Investment Department and for which there are limited buyers or sellers on specific securities, which
could result in less favorable execution for the Fund than such account. The Eaton Vance Investment Department will not knowingly or intentionally
cause the Fund to engage in a cross trade with an account serviced by the MS Investment Department, however, subject to applicable law
and internal policies and procedures, the Fund may conduct cross trades with other accounts serviced by the Eaton Vance Investment Department.
Although the Eaton Vance Investment Department may aggregate the Fund’s trades with trades of other accounts serviced by the Eaton
Vance Investment Department, subject to applicable law and internal policies and procedures, there will be no aggregation or coordination
of trades with accounts serviced by the MS Investment Department, even when both Investment Departments are seeking to acquire or dispose
of the same investments contemporaneously.
Payments to Broker-Dealers and Other Financial Intermediaries.
The investment adviser and/or EVD may pay compensation, out of their own funds and not as an expense of the Funds, to certain financial
intermediaries (which may include affiliates of the investment adviser and EVD), including recordkeepers and administrators of various
deferred compensation plans, in connection with the sale, distribution, marketing and retention of shares of the Funds and/or shareholder
servicing. For example, the investment adviser or EVD may pay additional compensation to a financial intermediary for, among other things,
promoting the sale and distribution of Fund shares, providing access to various programs, mutual fund platforms or preferred or recommended
mutual fund lists that may be offered by a financial intermediary, granting EVD access to a financial intermediary’s financial advisors
and consultants, providing assistance in the ongoing education and training of a financial intermediary’s financial personnel, furnishing
marketing support, maintaining share balances and/or for sub-accounting, recordkeeping, administrative, shareholder or transaction processing
services. Such payments are in addition to any distribution fees, shareholder servicing fees and/or transfer agency fees that may be payable
by the Funds. The additional payments may be based on various factors, including level of sales (based on gross or net sales or some specified
minimum sales or some other similar criteria related to sales of the Funds and/or some or all other Eaton Vance funds), amount of assets
invested by the financial intermediary’s customers (which could include current or aged assets of the Funds and/or some or all other
Eaton Vance funds), a Fund’s advisory fee, some other agreed upon amount or other measures as determined from time to time by the
investment adviser and/or EVD. The amount of these payments may be different for different financial intermediaries.
The prospect of receiving, or the receipt of, additional compensation,
as described above, by financial intermediaries may provide such financial intermediaries and their financial advisors and other salespersons
with an incentive to favor sales of shares of the Funds over other investment options with respect to which these financial intermediaries
do not receive additional compensation (or receive lower levels of additional compensation). These payment arrangements, however, will
not change the price that an investor pays for shares of the Funds or the amount that the Funds receive to invest on behalf of an investor.
Investors may wish to take such payment arrangements into account when considering and evaluating any recommendations relating to Fund
shares and should review carefully any disclosures provided by financial intermediaries as to their compensation. In addition, in certain
circumstances, the investment adviser may restrict, limit or reduce the amount of a Fund's investment, or restrict the type of governance
or voting rights it acquires or exercises, where the Fund (potentially together with Morgan Stanley) exceeds a certain ownership interest,
or possesses certain degrees of voting or control or has other interests.
Morgan Stanley Trading and Principal Investing Activities.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, Morgan Stanley will generally conduct its sales and trading businesses, publish research
and analysis, and render investment advice without regard for a Fund’s holdings, although these activities could have an adverse
impact on the value of one or more of the Fund’s investments, or could cause Morgan Stanley to have an interest in one or more portfolio
investments that is different from, and potentially adverse to that of a Fund. Furthermore, from time to time, the investment adviser
or its affiliates may invest “seed” capital in a Fund, typically to enable the Fund to commence investment operations and/or
achieve sufficient scale. The investment adviser and its affiliates may hedge such seed capital exposure by investing in derivatives or
other instruments expected to produce offsetting exposure. Such hedging transactions, if any, would occur outside of a Fund.
Morgan Stanley’s sales and trading, financing and principal
investing businesses (whether or not specifically identified as such, and including Morgan Stanley’s trading and principal investing
businesses) will not be required to offer any investment opportunities to a Fund. These businesses may encompass, among other things,
principal trading activities as well as principal investing.
Morgan Stanley’s sales and trading, financing and principal
investing businesses have acquired or invested in, and in the future may acquire or invest in, minority and/or majority control positions
in equity or debt instruments of diverse public and/or private companies. Such activities may put Morgan Stanley in a position to exercise
contractual, voting or creditor rights, or management or other control with respect to securities or loans of portfolio investments or
other issuers, and in these instances Morgan Stanley may, in its discretion and subject to applicable law, act to protect its own interests
or interests of clients, and not a Fund’s interests.
Subject to the limitations of applicable law, a Fund may purchase
from or sell assets to, or make investments in, companies in which Morgan Stanley has or may acquire an interest, including as an owner,
creditor or counterparty.
Morgan Stanley’s Investment Banking and Other Commercial
Activities. Morgan Stanley advises clients on a variety of mergers, acquisitions, restructuring, bankruptcy and financing transactions.
Morgan Stanley may act as an advisor to clients, including other investment funds that may compete with a Fund and with respect to investments
that a Fund may hold. Morgan Stanley may give advice and take action with respect to any of its clients or proprietary accounts that may
differ from the advice given, or may involve an action of a different timing or nature than the action taken, by a Fund. Morgan Stanley
may give advice and provide recommendations to persons competing with a Fund and/or any of a Fund’s investments that are contrary
to the Fund’s best interests and/or the best interests of any of its investments.
Morgan Stanley could be engaged in financial advising, whether
on the buy-side or sell-side, or in financing or lending assignments that could result in Morgan Stanley’s determining in its discretion
or being required to act exclusively on behalf of one or more third parties, which could limit a Fund’s ability to transact with
respect to one or more existing or potential investments. Morgan Stanley may have relationships with third-party funds, companies or investors
who may have invested in or may look to invest in portfolio companies, and there could be conflicts between a Fund’s best interests,
on the one hand, and the interests of a Morgan Stanley client or counterparty, on the other hand.
To the extent that Morgan Stanley advises creditor or debtor companies
in the financial restructuring of companies either prior to or after filing for protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code
or similar laws in other jurisdictions, the investment adviser’s flexibility in making investments in such restructurings on a Fund’s
behalf may be limited.
Morgan Stanley could provide investment banking services to competitors
of portfolio companies, as well as to private equity and/or private credit funds; such activities may present Morgan Stanley with a conflict
of interest vis-a-vis a Fund’s investment and may also result in a conflict in respect of the allocation of investment banking resources
to portfolio companies.
To the extent permitted by applicable law, Morgan Stanley may provide
a broad range of financial services to companies in which a Fund invests, including strategic and financial advisory services, interim
acquisition financing and other lending and underwriting or placement of securities, and Morgan Stanley generally will be paid fees (that
may include warrants or other securities) for such services. Morgan Stanley will not share any of the foregoing interest, fees and other
compensation received by it (including, for the avoidance of doubt, amounts received by the investment adviser) with a Fund, and any advisory
fees payable will not be reduced thereby.
Morgan Stanley may be engaged to act as a financial advisor to
a company in connection with the sale of such company, or subsidiaries or divisions thereof, may represent potential buyers of businesses
through its mergers and acquisition activities and may provide lending and other related financing services in connection with such transactions.
Morgan Stanley’s compensation for such activities is usually based upon realized consideration and is usually contingent, in substantial
part, upon the closing of the transaction. Under these circumstances, a Fund may be precluded from participating in a transaction with
or relating to the company being sold or participating in any financing activity related to merger or acquisition.
The involvement or presence of Morgan Stanley in the investment
banking and other commercial activities described above (or the financial markets more broadly) may restrict or otherwise limit investment
opportunities that may otherwise be available to the Funds. For example, issuers may hire and compensate Morgan Stanley to provide
underwriting, financial advisory, placement agency, brokerage services or other services and, because of limitations imposed by applicable
law and regulation, a Fund may be prohibited from buying or selling securities issued by those issuers or participating in related
transactions or otherwise limited in its ability to engage in such investments.
Morgan Stanley’s Marketing Activities. Morgan Stanley
is engaged in the business of underwriting, syndicating, brokering, administering, servicing, arranging and advising on the distribution
of a wide variety of securities and other investments in which a Fund may invest. Subject to the restrictions of the 1940 Act, including
Sections 10(f) and 17(e) thereof, a Fund may invest in transactions in which Morgan Stanley acts as underwriter, placement agent, syndicator,
broker, administrative agent, servicer, advisor, arranger or structuring agent and receives fees or other compensation from the sponsors
of such products or securities. Any fees earned by Morgan Stanley in such capacity will not be shared with the investment adviser or the
Funds. Certain conflicts of interest, in addition to the receipt of fees or other compensation, would be inherent in these transactions.
Moreover, the interests of one of Morgan Stanley’s clients with respect to an issuer of securities in which a Fund has an investment
may be adverse to the investment adviser’s or a Fund’s best interests. In conducting the foregoing activities, Morgan Stanley
will be acting for its other clients and will have no obligation to act in the investment adviser’s or a Fund’s best interests.
Client Relationships. Morgan Stanley has existing and potential
relationships with a significant number of corporations, institutions and individuals. In providing services to its clients, Morgan Stanley
may face conflicts of interest with respect to activities recommended to or performed for such clients, on the one hand, and a Fund, its
shareholders or the entities in which the Fund invests, on the other hand. In addition, these client relationships may present conflicts
of interest in determining whether to offer certain investment opportunities to a Fund.
In acting as principal or in providing advisory and other services
to its other clients, Morgan Stanley may engage in or recommend activities with respect to a particular matter that conflict with or are
different from activities engaged in or recommended by the investment adviser on a Fund’s behalf.
Principal Investments. To the extent permitted by applicable
law, there may be situations in which a Fund’s interests may conflict with the interests of one or more general accounts of Morgan
Stanley and its affiliates or accounts managed by Morgan Stanley or its affiliates. This may occur because these accounts hold public
and private debt and equity securities of many issuers which may be or become portfolio companies, or from whom portfolio companies may
be acquired.
Transactions with Portfolio Companies of Affiliated Investment
Accounts. The companies in which a Fund may invest may be counterparties to or participants in agreements, transactions or other
arrangements with portfolio companies or other entities of portfolio investments of Affiliated Investment Accounts (for example, a company
in which a Fund invests may retain a company in which an Affiliated Investment Account invests to provide services or may acquire an
asset from such company or vice versa). Certain of these agreements, transactions and arrangements involve fees, servicing payments,
rebates and/or other benefits to Morgan Stanley or its affiliates. For example, portfolio entities may, including at the encouragement
of Morgan Stanley, enter into agreements regarding group procurement and/or vendor discounts. Morgan Stanley and its affiliates may also
participate in these agreements and may realize better pricing or discounts as a result of the participation of portfolio entities. To
the extent permitted by applicable law, certain of these agreements may provide for commissions or similar payments and/or discounts
or rebates to be paid to a portfolio entity of an Affiliated Investment Account, and such payments or discounts or rebates may also be
made directly to Morgan Stanley or its affiliates. Under these arrangements, a particular portfolio company or other entity may benefit
to a greater degree than the other participants, and the funds, investment vehicles and accounts (which may or may not include a Fund)
that own an interest in such entity will receive a greater relative benefit from the arrangements than the Eaton Vance funds, investment
vehicles or accounts that do not own an interest therein. Fees and compensation received by portfolio companies of Affiliated Investment
Accounts in relation to the foregoing will not be shared with a Fund or offset advisory fees payable.
Investments in Portfolio Investments of Other Funds. To
the extent permitted by applicable law, when a Fund invests in certain companies or other entities, other funds affiliated with the investment
adviser may have made or may be making an investment in such companies or other entities. Other funds that have been or may be managed
by the investment adviser may invest in the companies or other entities in which a Fund has made an investment. Under such circumstances,
a Fund and such other funds may have conflicts of interest (e.g., over the terms, exit strategies and related matters, including the exercise
of remedies of their respective investments). If the interests held by a Fund are different from (or take priority over) those held by
such other funds, the investment adviser may be required to make a selection at the time of conflicts between the interests held by such
other funds and the interests held by a Fund.
Allocation of Expenses. Expenses may be incurred that are
attributable to a Fund and one or more other Affiliated Investment Accounts (including in connection with issuers in which a Fund and
such other Affiliated Investment Accounts have overlapping investments). The allocation of such expenses among such entities raises potential
conflicts of interest. The investment adviser and its affiliates intend to allocate such common expenses among a Fund and any such other
Affiliated Investment Accounts on a pro rata basis or in such other manner as the investment adviser deems to be fair and equitable or
in such other manner as may be required by applicable law.
Temporary Investments. To more efficiently invest short-term
cash balances held by a Fund, the investment adviser may invest such balances on an overnight “sweep” basis in shares of one
or more money market funds or other short-term vehicles. It is anticipated that the investment adviser to these money market funds or
other short-term vehicles may be the investment adviser (or an affiliate) to the extent permitted by applicable law, including Rule 12d1-1
under the 1940 Act. The Fund may invest in Eaton Vance Cash Reserves Fund, LLC (Cash Reserves Fund), an affiliated investment company
managed by Eaton Vance, for this purpose. Eaton Vance does not currently receive a fee for advisory services provided to Cash Reserves
Fund.
Transactions with Affiliates. The investment adviser and
any investment sub-adviser might purchase securities from underwriters or placement agents in which a Morgan Stanley affiliate is a member
of a syndicate or selling group, as a result of which an affiliate might benefit from the purchase through receipt of a fee or otherwise.
Neither the investment adviser nor any investment sub-adviser will purchase securities on behalf of a Fund from an affiliate that is acting
as a manager of a syndicate or selling group. Purchases by the investment adviser on behalf of a Fund from an affiliate acting as a placement
agent must meet the requirements of applicable law. Furthermore, Morgan Stanley may face conflicts of interest when the Funds use service
providers affiliated with Morgan Stanley because Morgan Stanley receives greater overall fees when they are used.
General Process for Potential Conflicts. All of the transactions
described above involve the potential for conflicts of interest between the investment adviser, related persons of the investment adviser
and/or their clients. The Advisers Act, the 1940 Act and ERISA impose certain requirements designed to decrease the possibility of conflicts
of interest between an investment adviser and its clients. In some cases, transactions may be permitted subject to fulfillment of certain
conditions. Certain other transactions may be prohibited. In addition, the investment adviser has instituted policies and procedures designed
to prevent conflicts of interest from arising and, when they do arise, to ensure that it effects transactions for clients in a manner
that is consistent with its fiduciary duty to its clients and in accordance with applicable law. The investment adviser seeks to ensure
that potential or actual conflicts of interest are appropriately resolved taking into consideration the overriding best interests of the
client.
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