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- 22441

John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

200 Berkeley Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116 (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

Salvatore Schiavone

Treasurer

200 Berkeley Street

Boston, Massachusetts 02116

(Name and address of agent for service) Registrant's telephone number, including area code: 617-543-9634

Date of fiscal year end:

December 31

Date of reporting period:

December 31, 2023


ITEM 1. REPORT TO STOCKHOLDERS


Annual report
John Hancock
Hedged Equity & Income Fund
Closed-end international equity
Ticker: HEQ
December 31, 2023

Managed distribution plan

The fund has adopted a managed distribution plan (Plan). Under the Plan, the fund currently makes quarterly distributions of an amount equal to $0.2500 per share, which will be paid quarterly until further notice. The fund may make additional distributions: (i) for purposes of not incurring federal income tax at the fund level of investment company taxable income and net capital gain, if any, not included in such regular distributions; and (ii) for purposes of not incurring federal excise tax on ordinary income and capital gain net income, if any, not included in such regular distributions.
The Plan provides that the Board of Trustees of the fund may amend the terms of the Plan or terminate the Plan at any time without prior notice to the fund’s shareholders. The Plan is subject to periodic review by the fund’s Board of Trustees.
You should not draw any conclusions about the fund’s investment performance from the amount of the fund’s distributions or from the terms of the fund’s Plan. The fund’s total return at net asset value (NAV) is presented in the "Financial highlights" section.
With each distribution that does not consist solely of net income, the fund will issue a notice to shareholders and an accompanying press release that will provide detailed information regarding the amount and composition of the distribution and other related information. The amounts and sources of distributions reported in the notice to shareholders are only estimates and are not provided for tax reporting purposes. The actual amounts and sources of the amounts for tax reporting purposes will depend upon the fund’s investment experience during the remainder of its fiscal year and may be subject to changes based on tax regulations. The fund will send you a Form 1099-DIV for the calendar year that will tell you how to report these distributions for federal income-tax purposes. The fund may, at times, distribute more than its net investment income and net realized capital gains; therefore, a portion of your distribution may result in a return of capital. A return of capital may occur, for example, when some or all of the money that you invested in the fund is paid back to you. A return of capital does not necessarily reflect the fund’s investment performance and should not be confused with "yield" or "income". 

A message to shareholders
Dear shareholder,
Global equities delivered robust gains during the 12 months ended December 31, 2023, as investors were encouraged by economic data and corporate earnings results that exceeded the depressed expectations in place at the start of the year. In addition, major central banks slowed the pace of interest rate increases as inflation waned. Late in the year, investors began to anticipate that the U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks would begin to cut rates in 2024, a favorable shift that propelled equities sharply higher in November and December.
Much of the return for the major world indexes came from a narrow group of mega-cap U.S. technology stocks. The European markets also outperformed, as the ongoing conflict in Ukraine had less of an impact on economic growth than investors had anticipated. On the other hand, the emerging markets lagged. Although a number of countries in the asset class posted strong returns, China’s sizable underperformance depressed headline index results. Canada also trailed its developed-market peers, largely due to a smaller representation of the growth stocks that led the markets higher in 2023.
In these uncertain times, your financial professional can assist with positioning your portfolio so that it’s sufficiently diversified to help meet your long-term objectives and to withstand the inevitable bouts of market volatility along the way.
On behalf of everyone at John Hancock Investment Management, I’d like to take this opportunity to welcome new shareholders and thank existing shareholders for the continued trust you’ve placed in us.
Sincerely,
Kristie M. Feinberg
Head of Wealth and Asset Management,
United States and Europe
Manulife Investment Management
President and CEO,
John Hancock Investment Management
This commentary reflects the CEO’s views as of this report’s period end and are subject to change at any time. Diversification does not guarantee investment returns and does not eliminate risk of loss. All investments entail risks, including the possible loss of principal. For more up-to-date information, you can visit our website at jhinvestments.com.


Your fund at a glance
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE

The fund seeks to provide total return with a focus on current income and gains and also consisting of long-term capital appreciation.
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS AS OF 12/31/2023 (%)

The MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI) tracks the performance of publicly traded large- and mid-cap stocks of companies in both developed and emerging markets.
It is not possible to invest directly in an index. Index figures do not reflect expenses, which would result in lower returns.
The performance data contained within this material represents past performance, which does not guarantee future results.
Investment returns and principal value will fluctuate and a shareholder may sustain losses. Further, the fund’s performance at net asset value (NAV) is different from the fund’s performance at closing market price because the closing market price is subject to the dynamics of secondary market trading. Market risk may increase when shares are purchased at a premium to NAV or sold at a discount to NAV. Current month-end performance may be higher or lower than the performance cited. The fund’s most recent performance can be found at jhinvestments.com or by calling 800-852-0218.
  ANNUAL REPORT  | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 2

PERFORMANCE HIGHLIGHTS OVER THE LAST TWELVE MONTHS

Equities rose on solid growth, easing inflation and moderating yields
Markets delivered strong gains, supported by resilient economic growth, consumer spending and labor markets as well as signs of slowing inflation that reversed a sharp climb in bond yields early in the period.
The fund’s equity strategy detracted from relative results
The fund had a positive absolute return at net asset value but underperformed its comparative index, the MSCI All Country World Index, due largely to an underweight to the information technology sector, an overweight to the utilities sector, and security selection in information technology, healthcare, and communication services sectors.
The fund’s beta hedge strategy also hurt performance
The fund’s hedging strategy, which is designed to reduce equity exposure by selling equity index futures, detracted from absolute results as global markets moved higher over the year.
SECTOR COMPOSITION AS OF 12/31/2023 (% of net assets)

3 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND  | ANNUAL REPORT  

Management’s discussion of fund performance
What factors affected global equity markets during the 12 months ended December 31, 2023?
Equities advanced in the first half of 2023 as economic growth, consumer spending and labor markets were surprisingly resilient against a backdrop of sweeping sanctions against Russia, a reshaping of global energy flows, and a banking crisis that rekindled fears of a global recession. Although major central banks continued to raise interest rates amid persistent inflation, declining energy prices helped reduce headline inflation in most countries. Stocks fell in the third quarter as market sentiment was dented by concerns about the health of China’s economy, increasing energy prices, and rising government bond yields amid the prospect of an extended period of high interest rates. In a potential step toward phasing out Japan’s ultra-easy monetary policy, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) allowed greater flexibility for government bond yields to fluctuate but ultimately held rates stable. Equities rebounded in the fourth quarter as the U.S. Federal Reserve surprised markets by signaling lower interest rates in 2024, sparking a rally that rippled across the globe and increasing speculation for sharp reductions in policy rates across developed markets in 2024.
TOP 10 HOLDINGS
AS OF 12/31/2023 (% of net assets)
Merck & Company, Inc. 1.9
TotalEnergies SE 1.8
Johnson & Johnson 1.8
Philip Morris International, Inc. 1.6
Pfizer, Inc. 1.2
Cisco Systems, Inc. 1.2
Rio Tinto PLC 1.2
The Home Depot, Inc. 1.1
AXA SA 1.1
Texas Instruments, Inc. 1.0
TOTAL 13.9
Cash and cash equivalents are not included.
COUNTRY COMPOSITION
AS OF 12/31/2023 (% of net assets)
United States 42.5
Japan 10.2
United Kingdom 9.9
France 5.8
Canada 3.9
South Korea 3.8
Switzerland 3.6
Germany 3.2
Spain 2.1
Australia 2.0
Other countries 13.0
TOTAL 100.0
  ANNUAL REPORT  | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 4

The fund underperformed versus its comparative index for the period. What led to these results?
Performance was negatively impacted by the fund’s equity and beta hedge strategies. Within the fund’s equity strategy, both security selection and sector allocation detracted from relative performance. In particular, an underweight allocation to the information technology sector and an overweight allocation to the utilities sector, both natural byproducts of the portfolio’s equity income focus, detracted the most. Security selection was weakest in the information technology, healthcare, and communication services sectors. On the positive side, security selection in the financials and utilities sectors contributed to relative performance.
The fund’s hedging strategies, which are designed to generate extra income and reduce equity exposure through selling futures on the major global stock indexes, detracted from absolute results as global markets increased over the year.
The primary relative detractors were an underweight exposure to U.S. graphic processing unit chipmaker NVIDIA Corp. and an overweight exposure to U.S. pharmaceutical developer Pfizer, Inc. The top relative contributors were our overweight exposures to U.S. alternative asset manager Ares Management Corp. and Swiss investment bank UBS Group AG, both in the financials sector.
MANAGED BY

Gregg R. Thomas, CFA
Roberto J. Isch, CFA
The views expressed in this report are exclusively those of Gregg R. Thomas, CFA, and Roberto J. Isch, CFA, Wellington Management Company LLP, and are subject to change. They are not meant as investment advice. Please note that the holdings discussed in this report may not have been held by the fund for the entire period. Portfolio composition is subject to review in accordance with the fund’s investment strategy and may vary in the future. Current and future portfolio holdings are subject to risk.
5 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND  | ANNUAL REPORT  

A look at performance
TOTAL RETURNS FOR THE PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2023

Average annual total returns (%) Cumulative total returns (%)
  1-Year 5-Year 10-Year 5-year 10-Year
At Net asset value 9.53 6.01 4.74 33.87 58.90
At Market price -3.21 5.08 4.63 28.10 57.29
MSCI ACWI 22.20 11.72 7.93 74.04 114.40
Performance figures assume all distributions have been reinvested.
The returns reflect past results and should not be considered indicative of future performance. Investment returns and principal value will fluctuate and a shareholder may sustain losses. Further, the fund’s performance at net asset value (NAV) is different from the fund’s performance at closing market price because the closing market price is subject to the dynamics of secondary market trading. Market risk may be augmented when shares are purchased at a premium to NAV or when shares need to be sold at a discount to NAV. Current month-end performance may be higher or lower than the performance cited. The fund’s most recent performance can be found at jhinvestments.com or by calling 800-852-0218.
The performance table above and the chart on the next page do not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the sale of fund shares. The fund’s performance results reflect any applicable fee waivers or expense reductions, without which the expenses would increase and results would have been less favorable.
  ANNUAL REPORT  | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 6

This chart shows what happened to a hypothetical $10,000 investment in John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund for the periods indicated, assuming all distributions were reinvested. For comparison, we’ve shown the same investment in the MSCI ACWI.
The MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI) tracks the performance of publicly traded large- and mid-cap stocks of companies in both developed and emerging markets.
It is not possible to invest directly in an index. Index figures do not reflect expenses, which would result in lower returns.
The returns reflect past results and should not be considered indicative of future performance.
7 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND  | ANNUAL REPORT  

Fund’s investments
AS OF 12-31-23
        Shares Value
Common stocks 96.9%         $136,707,728
(Cost $135,531,363)          
Communication services 3.6%     5,133,022
Diversified telecommunication services 1.7%      
AT&T, Inc.     25,571 429,081
BCE, Inc.     2,820 111,029
BT Group PLC     46,846 73,810
Koninklijke KPN NV     132,430 456,238
KT Corp.     3,152 84,044
Magyar Telekom Telecommunications PLC     14,958 29,419
Orange Polska SA     26,144 54,111
Orange SA     8,917 101,633
Proximus SADP     7,341 69,015
Spark New Zealand, Ltd.     16,435 53,805
Telefonica Brasil SA     8,971 98,542
Telenor ASA     8,144 93,466
Verizon Communications, Inc.     20,785 783,595
Entertainment 0.0%      
Avex, Inc.     3,020 29,263
DeNA Company, Ltd.     3,450 33,644
Interactive media and services 0.0%      
Baidu, Inc., Class A (A)     719 10,703
Media 0.9%      
Comcast Corp., Class A     1,694 74,282
Hakuhodo DY Holdings, Inc.     6,470 49,444
Megacable Holdings SAB de CV, Series CPO     17,889 39,874
Metropole Television SA     2,773 39,629
Nippon Television Holdings, Inc.     5,660 61,673
Omnicom Group, Inc.     2,527 218,611
RTL Group SA     1,350 52,139
Television Francaise 1 SA     6,381 50,293
TV Asahi Holdings Corp.     4,240 48,221
WPP PLC     62,618 598,120
Wireless telecommunication services 1.0%      
KDDI Corp.     19,492 618,257
MTN Group, Ltd.     6,729 42,445
Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri AS     275,294 523,324
Vodacom Group, Ltd.     35,389 205,312
Consumer discretionary 7.8%     11,000,834
Automobile components 0.9%      
Continental AG     778 66,077
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 8

        Shares Value
Consumer discretionary (continued)      
Automobile components (continued)      
Hankook Tire & Technology Company, Ltd. (A)     17,820 $626,317
Hyundai Mobis Company, Ltd.     510 93,439
NOK Corp.     2,155 28,641
Nokian Renkaat OYJ     5,024 45,914
Stanley Electric Company, Ltd.     3,538 66,375
Sumitomo Electric Industries, Ltd.     6,450 81,841
Sumitomo Rubber Industries, Ltd.     5,180 56,094
Tachi-S Company, Ltd.     2,370 30,152
Tokai Rika Company, Ltd.     2,710 41,657
Toyota Boshoku Corp.     1,030 16,287
TS Tech Company, Ltd.     3,710 44,779
Unipres Corp.     3,620 24,394
Valeo SE     4,260 65,841
Automobiles 2.0%      
Bayerische Motoren Werke AG     3,070 341,604
Dongfeng Motor Group Company, Ltd., H Shares     58,779 29,291
Great Wall Motor Company, Ltd., H Shares     38,683 50,286
Hero MotoCorp, Ltd.     3,433 170,912
Honda Motor Company, Ltd.     4,130 42,602
Isuzu Motors, Ltd.     78,611 1,007,767
Mercedes-Benz Group AG     1,017 70,171
Nissan Motor Company, Ltd.     22,180 86,722
Renault SA     1,699 69,489
Stellantis NV     2,411 56,491
Subaru Corp.     3,604 65,735
Toyota Motor Corp.     13,919 255,048
Yamaha Motor Company, Ltd.     65,673 584,382
Broadline retail 0.1%      
Alibaba Group Holding, Ltd.     5,653 54,453
ASKUL Corp.     3,590 54,604
Seria Company, Ltd.     2,910 54,278
Distributors 0.1%      
LKQ Corp.     3,813 182,223
Diversified consumer services 0.0%      
Benesse Holdings, Inc.     360 6,651
Hotels, restaurants and leisure 1.6%      
Darden Restaurants, Inc.     4,644 763,009
McDonald’s Corp.     1,339 397,027
OPAP SA     29,846 506,322
Sodexo SA     4,966 546,699
Household durables 1.0%      
Coway Company, Ltd. (A)     1,374 60,771
9 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

        Shares Value
Consumer discretionary (continued)      
Household durables (continued)      
Crest Nicholson Holdings PLC     12,937 $35,772
De’ Longhi SpA     928 31,313
Garmin, Ltd.     507 65,170
Nikon Corp.     3,045 30,055
Rinnai Corp.     2,930 67,794
Sekisui House, Ltd.     47,795 1,059,434
Specialty retail 2.0%      
CECONOMY AG (A)     7,366 20,131
Industria de Diseno Textil SA     18,971 827,782
Kingfisher PLC     21,555 66,786
Mr. Price Group, Ltd.     12,689 108,895
The Home Depot, Inc.     4,538 1,572,644
Tractor Supply Company     677 145,575
Xebio Holdings Company, Ltd.     3,685 24,951
Textiles, apparel and luxury goods 0.1%      
Burberry Group PLC     3,358 60,568
Sanyo Shokai, Ltd.     760 12,750
The Swatch Group AG, Bearer Shares     389 105,843
Yue Yuen Industrial Holdings, Ltd.     18,971 21,026
Consumer staples 8.7%     12,256,100
Beverages 1.1%      
Cia Cervecerias Unidas SA, ADR     1,264 15,851
Coca-Cola Icecek AS     2,803 49,847
Embotelladora Andina SA, Series B, ADR     3,274 48,815
Keurig Dr. Pepper, Inc.     6,492 216,313
Kirin Holdings Company, Ltd.     5,420 79,350
PepsiCo, Inc.     2,094 355,645
Pernod Ricard SA     1,316 232,566
The Coca-Cola Company     8,100 477,333
Consumer staples distribution and retail 0.8%      
Atacadao SA     28,336 72,613
Carrefour SA     4,875 89,284
Clicks Group, Ltd.     33,093 593,118
J Sainsbury PLC     11,910 45,918
Sundrug Company, Ltd.     391 12,550
Tsuruha Holdings, Inc.     815 74,607
Walgreens Boots Alliance, Inc.     7,957 207,757
Food products 1.9%      
Archer-Daniels-Midland Company     2,777 200,555
Associated British Foods PLC     20,146 607,181
Astral Foods, Ltd.     3,499 28,039
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 10

        Shares Value
Consumer staples (continued)      
Food products (continued)      
Conagra Brands, Inc.     12,041 $345,095
General Mills, Inc.     1,262 82,207
Kellanova     5,356 299,454
Nestle SA     5,936 688,100
Perusahaan Perkebunan London Sumatra Indonesia Tbk PT     195,282 11,285
Thai Union Group PCL     100,912 44,284
The Kraft Heinz Company     7,204 266,404
Ulker Biskuvi Sanayi AS (A)     16,551 45,949
WH Group, Ltd. (B)     124,227 80,226
Household products 1.0%      
Colgate-Palmolive Company     3,806 303,376
Kimberly-Clark Corp.     402 48,847
The Procter & Gamble Company     7,438 1,089,965
Personal care products 1.2%      
Kenvue, Inc.     30,450 655,589
Unilever PLC     15,439 747,417
Unilever PLC, ADR     5,478 265,573
Tobacco 2.7%      
Altria Group, Inc.     14,846 598,888
British American Tobacco PLC     16,300 476,925
Japan Tobacco, Inc.     21,523 555,836
Philip Morris International, Inc.     23,845 2,243,338
Energy 9.0%     12,743,233
Energy equipment and services 0.2%      
Baker Hughes Company     4,432 151,486
Fugro NV (A)     2,288 43,869
John Wood Group PLC (A)     19,507 42,635
Trican Well Service, Ltd.     7,250 22,543
Oil, gas and consumable fuels 8.8%      
ARC Resources, Ltd.     2,729 40,511
BP PLC     35,318 209,367
Canadian Natural Resources, Ltd.     7,908 518,089
Chevron Corp.     5,765 859,907
Coal India, Ltd.     61,421 277,500
ConocoPhillips     3,436 398,817
Coterra Energy, Inc.     38,643 986,169
Diamondback Energy, Inc.     1,145 177,567
Enbridge, Inc.     25,870 931,285
Eni SpA     21,086 357,648
EOG Resources, Inc.     7,165 866,607
Equinor ASA     35,531 1,126,047
11 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

        Shares Value
Energy (continued)      
Oil, gas and consumable fuels (continued)      
Exxon Mobil Corp.     10,784 $1,078,184
Oil & Natural Gas Corp., Ltd.     44,993 111,017
Oil India, Ltd.     16,049 71,900
OMV AG     4,584 201,112
ORLEN SA     18,813 313,237
Phillips 66     1,435 191,056
Pioneer Natural Resources Company     200 44,976
Repsol SA     36,001 534,036
Shell PLC     11,433 374,249
TotalEnergies SE     37,647 2,559,957
Ultrapar Participacoes SA     4,701 25,502
Woodside Energy Group, Ltd.     8,384 177,042
Yankuang Energy Group Company, Ltd., H Shares     26,770 50,918
Financials 22.5%     31,688,092
Banks 8.9%      
ABN AMRO Bank NV (B)     6,926 104,157
AIB Group PLC     14,780 63,299
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA     12,944 117,975
Banco Bradesco SA, ADR     32,462 113,617
Banco do Brasil SA     4,961 56,553
Bank Mandiri Persero Tbk PT     416,954 163,795
Bank of America Corp.     24,276 817,373
Bank of Beijing Company, Ltd., Class A     105,600 67,440
Bank of Chengdu Company, Ltd., Class A     25,700 40,802
Bank of Ireland Group PLC     7,319 66,445
Bank of Jiangsu Company, Ltd., Class A     88,600 83,575
BNP Paribas SA     2,134 148,197
BPER Banca     20,710 69,436
CaixaBank SA     12,819 52,793
Canara Bank     10,487 55,010
CIMB Group Holdings BHD     50,945 64,862
Dah Sing Financial Holdings, Ltd.     8,765 17,954
DGB Financial Group, Inc. (A)     6,182 40,649
DNB Bank ASA     36,728 780,883
Erste Group Bank AG     2,771 112,239
FinecoBank SpA     55,160 829,836
HSBC Holdings PLC     84,140 680,689
Huntington Bancshares, Inc.     7,295 92,792
Industrial Bank of Korea (A)     51,559 473,905
ING Groep NV     8,206 123,045
JPMorgan Chase & Co.     8,252 1,403,665
Kasikornbank PCL     25,158 99,385
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 12

        Shares Value
Financials (continued)      
Banks (continued)      
Kasikornbank PCL, NVDR     1,593 $6,293
KB Financial Group, Inc.     2,759 115,110
M&T Bank Corp.     3,812 522,549
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc.     102,044 875,755
Mizuho Financial Group, Inc.     12,567 214,366
New York Community Bancorp, Inc.     17,924 183,363
Regions Financial Corp.     10,214 197,947
Resona Holdings, Inc.     13,630 69,095
Royal Bank of Canada     9,291 939,583
Sberbank of Russia PJSC, ADR (A)(C)     3,353 1,174
Security Bank Corp.     19,906 25,704
Shinhan Financial Group Company, Ltd.     6,351 196,904
Societe Generale SA     4,804 127,812
Standard Bank Group, Ltd.     5,688 64,848
Standard Chartered PLC     17,335 147,107
Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Holdings, Inc.     5,920 113,379
The Bank of Nova Scotia     16,803 817,926
The Tochigi Bank, Ltd.     7,490 16,419
Truist Financial Corp.     10,056 371,268
U.S. Bancorp     9,954 430,809
Unicaja Banco SA (B)     39,371 38,774
UniCredit SpA     7,916 215,550
VTB Bank PJSC, GDR (A)(C)     55,420 1,108
Wells Fargo & Company     3,275 161,196
Capital markets 4.1%      
Ares Management Corp., Class A     10,673 1,269,233
BlackRock, Inc.     595 483,021
CME Group, Inc.     2,118 446,051
Korea Investment Holdings Company, Ltd. (A)     12,248 580,108
Mirae Asset Securities Company, Ltd. (A)     100,362 592,659
Morgan Stanley     2,434 226,971
Nomura Holdings, Inc.     11,053 49,778
St. James’s Place PLC     5,354 46,581
The Blackstone Group, Inc.     3,915 512,552
The Carlyle Group, Inc.     1,616 65,755
The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.     551 212,559
UBS Group AG     39,963 1,241,313
Consumer finance 0.0%      
Vanquis Banking Group PLC     9,481 15,612
Financial services 0.4%      
Equitable Holdings, Inc.     4,205 140,027
Fidelity National Information Services, Inc.     1,123 67,459
13 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

        Shares Value
Financials (continued)      
Financial services (continued)      
FirstRand, Ltd.     93,816 $376,388
Insurance 8.8%      
Admiral Group PLC     8,458 289,166
Ageas SA/NV     1,830 79,551
Allianz SE     2,782 743,465
American Financial Group, Inc.     1,363 162,047
American International Group, Inc.     3,128 211,922
Assicurazioni Generali SpA     7,190 151,907
Aviva PLC     26,246 145,230
AXA SA     46,633 1,522,868
Caixa Seguridade Participacoes SA     26,265 69,798
China Reinsurance Group Corp., H Shares     506,252 29,492
Chubb, Ltd.     647 146,222
CNA Financial Corp.     8,925 377,617
Dai-ichi Life Holdings, Inc.     4,675 99,170
Fairfax Financial Holdings, Ltd.     629 580,324
Fidelity National Financial, Inc.     12,369 631,066
Legal & General Group PLC     140,654 449,486
MetLife, Inc.     4,382 289,782
MS&AD Insurance Group Holdings, Inc.     3,010 118,350
Muenchener Rueckversicherungs-Gesellschaft AG     590 244,740
NN Group NV     2,484 98,170
Old Mutual, Ltd.     91,031 64,782
Phoenix Group Holdings PLC     74,032 504,094
PICC Property & Casualty Company, Ltd., H Shares     440,000 523,608
Samsung Life Insurance Company, Ltd.     10,005 535,260
Sanlam, Ltd.     25,365 101,177
Sun Life Financial, Inc.     10,952 567,995
Suncorp Group, Ltd.     67,589 640,025
T&D Holdings, Inc.     8,485 134,703
Talanx AG     14,728 1,052,540
Tokio Marine Holdings, Inc.     34,169 850,841
Tongyang Life Insurance Company, Ltd. (A)     4,127 14,487
Tryg A/S     16,928 368,391
Zurich Insurance Group AG     1,152 602,297
Mortgage real estate investment trusts 0.3%      
Annaly Capital Management, Inc.     18,949 367,042
Health care 9.1%     12,803,196
Biotechnology 0.7%      
AbbVie, Inc.     3,946 611,512
Amgen, Inc.     520 149,770
Gilead Sciences, Inc.     3,251 263,364
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 14

        Shares Value
Health care (continued)      
Health care equipment and supplies 0.3%      
Koninklijke Philips NV (A)     5,897 $138,003
Medtronic PLC     2,893 238,325
Paramount Bed Holdings Company, Ltd.     1,510 29,617
Health care providers and services 0.3%      
Alfresa Holdings Corp.     2,850 48,382
BML, Inc.     1,420 30,166
CVS Health Corp.     1,677 132,416
Fresenius SE & Company KGaA     3,270 101,355
Netcare, Ltd.     59,910 46,588
Pharmaceuticals 7.8%      
Almirall SA     4,833 44,997
AstraZeneca PLC     5,920 798,548
AstraZeneca PLC, ADR     3,541 238,486
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company     9,899 507,918
Eisai Company, Ltd.     560 27,883
Genomma Lab Internacional SAB de CV, Class B     60,153 50,089
GSK PLC     11,282 208,369
Johnson & Johnson     15,914 2,494,360
Kissei Pharmaceutical Company, Ltd.     960 20,993
Merck & Company, Inc.     24,061 2,623,112
Novartis AG     12,373 1,249,803
Ono Pharmaceutical Company, Ltd.     3,410 60,662
Pfizer, Inc.     60,016 1,727,861
Roche Holding AG     2,684 780,221
Sandoz Group AG (A)     532 17,117
Sanofi SA     773 76,815
Takeda Pharmaceutical Company, Ltd.     3,015 86,464
Industrials 9.8%     13,762,205
Aerospace and defense 2.0%      
Austal, Ltd.     23,072 31,880
Babcock International Group PLC     9,756 49,049
BAE Systems PLC     80,300 1,136,582
General Dynamics Corp.     1,106 287,195
L3Harris Technologies, Inc.     853 179,659
Lockheed Martin Corp.     2,142 970,840
RTX Corp.     1,291 108,625
Air freight and logistics 0.8%      
bpost SA     3,353 17,286
Nippon Express Holdings, Inc.     10,591 600,933
United Parcel Service, Inc., Class B     2,644 415,716
Yamato Holdings Company, Ltd.     4,860 89,684
15 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

        Shares Value
Industrials (continued)      
Building products 0.9%      
AGC, Inc.     15,284 $566,492
Cie de Saint-Gobain SA     1,857 136,949
Johnson Controls International PLC     10,624 612,367
Commercial services and supplies 0.1%      
Aeon Delight Company, Ltd.     1,639 41,353
Prosegur Cia de Seguridad SA     14,768 28,690
Construction and engineering 1.2%      
ACS Actividades de Construccion y Servicios SA     13,188 585,743
Bouygues SA     12,677 478,293
Chiyoda Corp. (A)     4,795 11,572
Gamuda BHD     567,170 566,446
Implenia AG     312 11,325
JGC Holdings Corp.     4,715 54,265
Electrical equipment 0.2%      
Cosel Company, Ltd.     3,110 30,256
Emerson Electric Company     2,866 278,948
Ushio, Inc.     2,040 29,252
Zumtobel Group AG     1,814 12,582
Ground transportation 0.1%      
ALD SA (B)     6,942 49,567
Canadian National Railway Company     1,241 155,985
Industrial conglomerates 0.9%      
3M Company     2,431 265,757
CK Hutchison Holdings, Ltd.     13,910 74,733
Honeywell International, Inc.     642 134,634
Siemens AG     3,931 737,492
Machinery 2.1%      
Amada Company, Ltd.     4,790 49,792
Daimler Truck Holding AG     3,121 117,237
Deere & Company     1,398 559,018
Doosan Bobcat, Inc.     16,851 656,402
Duerr AG     1,572 37,067
Hino Motors, Ltd. (A)     8,750 28,655
Hisaka Works, Ltd.     2,040 13,329
Kone OYJ, B Shares     1,455 72,781
Kubota Corp.     7,660 114,961
Makino Milling Machine Company, Ltd.     622 25,827
Makita Corp.     2,617 71,982
OKUMA Corp.     611 26,244
OSG Corp.     3,570 51,061
PACCAR, Inc.     6,632 647,615
SKF AB, B Shares     6,581 131,887
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 16

        Shares Value
Industrials (continued)      
Machinery (continued)      
Stanley Black & Decker, Inc.     2,029 $199,045
Sumitomo Heavy Industries, Ltd.     2,250 56,554
Tadano, Ltd.     3,590 29,909
THK Company, Ltd.     3,630 70,934
Tsubakimoto Chain Company     500 14,313
Passenger airlines 0.1%      
easyJet PLC (A)     12,693 82,343
Japan Airlines Company, Ltd.     2,640 51,863
Professional services 0.8%      
Adecco Group AG     2,229 109,474
Bureau Veritas SA     26,389 667,635
Hays PLC     37,864 52,694
Pagegroup PLC     7,609 47,248
Paychex, Inc.     2,090 248,940
SThree PLC     4,134 21,914
Trading companies and distributors 0.4%      
Mitsui & Company, Ltd.     1,327 49,715
Sumitomo Corp.     20,052 436,365
Travis Perkins PLC     4,652 49,028
Transportation infrastructure 0.2%      
Atlas Arteria, Ltd.     55,935 220,223
Information technology 10.9%     15,397,964
Communications equipment 1.3%      
Cisco Systems, Inc.     34,080 1,721,722
Nokia OYJ     19,670 66,995
Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson, B Shares     15,450 97,230
Electronic equipment, instruments and components 0.7%      
Alps Alpine Company, Ltd.     4,330 37,638
Amano Corp.     15,622 369,837
Corning, Inc.     6,428 195,733
E Ink Holdings, Inc.     11,683 74,807
Foxconn Technology Company, Ltd.     19,710 34,051
Hon Hai Precision Industry Company, Ltd.     16,204 55,130
Maxell, Ltd.     3,390 37,431
Nippon Chemi-Con Corp. (A)     2,510 23,293
PAX Global Technology, Ltd.     23,114 17,905
Sunny Optical Technology Group Company, Ltd.     6,170 56,091
IT services 1.9%      
Accenture PLC, Class A     580 203,528
IBM Corp.     5,164 844,572
Infosys, Ltd.     10,169 188,203
17 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

        Shares Value
Information technology (continued)      
IT services (continued)      
Obic Company, Ltd.     313 $53,853
Otsuka Corp.     15,980 657,656
Samsung SDS Company, Ltd. (A)     4,303 565,880
SCSK Corp.     5,055 100,081
Semiconductors and semiconductor equipment 4.0%      
ams AG (A)     23,145 58,341
Analog Devices, Inc.     3,191 633,605
ASMPT, Ltd.     5,399 51,483
Broadcom, Inc.     1,038 1,158,668
Globalwafers Company, Ltd.     27,998 534,316
Intel Corp.     1,306 65,627
Microchip Technology, Inc.     1,006 90,721
Miraial Company, Ltd.     1,540 15,622
NVIDIA Corp.     453 224,335
NXP Semiconductors NV     860 197,525
Qualcomm, Inc.     3,922 567,239
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd.     34,000 651,832
Texas Instruments, Inc.     8,477 1,444,989
Software 1.2%      
Shanghai Baosight Software Company, Ltd., Class B     202,300 428,918
The Sage Group PLC     65,871 983,375
TOTVS SA     11,226 77,856
Trend Micro, Inc.     4,513 240,859
Technology hardware, storage and peripherals 1.8%      
Apple, Inc.     1,283 247,016
Canon, Inc.     43,495 1,115,808
Catcher Technology Company, Ltd.     8,178 51,640
Chicony Electronics Company, Ltd.     18,051 102,860
HP, Inc.     19,657 591,479
Lenovo Group, Ltd.     43,933 61,482
Quadient SA     2,139 45,469
Samsung Electronics Company, Ltd.     1,037 62,943
Seagate Technology Holdings PLC     2,243 191,485
Wiwynn Corp.     1,703 100,835
Materials 4.8%     6,832,015
Chemicals 1.2%      
BASF SE     6,359 342,414
Celanese Corp.     816 126,782
China BlueChemical, Ltd., H Shares     61,962 15,634
Evonik Industries AG     3,972 81,144
International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc.     2,655 214,975
KH Neochem Company, Ltd.     2,450 39,331
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 18

        Shares Value
Materials (continued)      
Chemicals (continued)      
LyondellBasell Industries NV, Class A     2,716 $258,237
Mitsubishi Gas Chemical Company, Inc.     4,670 74,558
Nissan Chemical Corp.     2,289 89,131
PPG Industries, Inc.     996 148,952
Yara International ASA     8,986 319,242
Construction materials 0.3%      
Heidelberg Materials AG     1,659 148,295
Holcim, Ltd. (A)     1,131 88,830
Imerys SA     1,010 31,847
Semen Indonesia Persero Tbk PT     101,959 42,375
Taiheiyo Cement Corp.     2,120 43,597
Vicat SACA     902 32,760
Containers and packaging 0.3%      
Amcor PLC, CHESS Depositary Interest     50,314 487,485
Nampak, Ltd. (A)     555 5,643
Metals and mining 2.8%      
African Rainbow Minerals, Ltd.     7,817 85,417
Anglo American Platinum, Ltd.     1,298 68,128
Anglo American PLC     2,497 62,492
Barrick Gold Corp.     4,883 88,222
Barrick Gold Corp. (New York Stock Exchange)     9,658 174,713
BHP Group, Ltd.     20,692 706,934
Centamin PLC     30,961 39,318
Centerra Gold, Inc.     6,261 37,376
Dowa Holdings Company, Ltd.     1,630 59,411
Endeavour Mining PLC     1,977 44,417
Fortescue, Ltd.     11,570 228,130
Fresnillo PLC     5,552 42,039
Maruichi Steel Tube, Ltd.     1,590 41,273
Neturen Company, Ltd.     2,980 20,290
Norsk Hydro ASA     2,083 14,001
OceanaGold Corp.     15,854 30,391
Rio Tinto PLC     21,672 1,611,986
Rio Tinto PLC, ADR     4,082 303,946
Rio Tinto, Ltd.     2,617 242,328
Zijin Mining Group Company, Ltd., H Shares     31,920 52,035
Paper and forest products 0.2%      
Mondi PLC     4,385 85,791
UPM-Kymmene OYJ     5,359 202,145
19 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

        Shares Value
Real estate 3.1%     $4,341,001
Diversified REITs 0.6%      
Land Securities Group PLC     5,136 46,093
Stockland     141,999 430,631
The British Land Company PLC     7,496 38,108
WP Carey, Inc.     3,929 254,638
Health care REITs 0.1%      
Welltower, Inc.     1,097 98,916
Hotel and resort REITs 0.1%      
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc.     8,015 156,052
Office REITs 0.4%      
Nippon Building Fund, Inc.     135 584,399
Real estate management and development 0.1%      
CK Asset Holdings, Ltd.     12,804 64,264
Daito Trust Construction Company, Ltd.     498 57,642
Mitsubishi Estate Company, Ltd.     5,700 78,136
Retail REITs 0.1%      
Simon Property Group, Inc.     1,427 203,547
Specialized REITs 1.7%      
Crown Castle, Inc.     9,963 1,147,638
Digital Realty Trust, Inc.     606 81,555
Gaming and Leisure Properties, Inc.     5,668 279,716
Iron Mountain, Inc.     8,767 613,515
Weyerhaeuser Company     5,929 206,151
Utilities 7.6%     10,750,066
Electric utilities 4.7%      
American Electric Power Company, Inc.     3,785 307,418
Avangrid, Inc.     3,426 111,037
CEZ AS     4,239 181,697
Duke Energy Corp.     12,839 1,245,897
Edison International     8,824 630,828
Exelon Corp.     25,822 927,010
Iberdrola SA     51,940 681,286
NextEra Energy, Inc.     2,231 135,511
NRG Energy, Inc.     11,340 586,278
Power Grid Corp. of India, Ltd.     202,160 574,486
PPL Corp.     5,555 150,541
SSE PLC     23,935 565,009
Terna - Rete Elettrica Nazionale     40,727 339,771
The Southern Company     2,093 146,761
Gas utilities 0.8%      
AltaGas, Ltd.     26,623 558,961
APA Group     9,154 53,272
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 20

        Shares Value
Utilities (continued)      
Gas utilities (continued)      
Atmos Energy Corp.     4,444 $515,060
Independent power and renewable electricity producers 0.1%      
Ratch Group PCL     161,458 148,893
Multi-utilities 2.0%      
Dominion Energy, Inc.     5,122 240,734
Engie SA     64,514 1,136,498
National Grid PLC     87,969 1,185,058
Sempra     3,500 261,555
Water utilities 0.0%      
Cia de Saneamento Basico do Estado de Sao Paulo     4,327 66,505
Preferred securities 0.8%         $1,180,832
(Cost $914,930)          
Consumer discretionary 0.7%     971,115
Automobiles 0.7%      
Bayerische Motoren Werke AG   1,201 119,503
Hyundai Motor Company   4,931 433,698
Hyundai Motor Company, 2nd Preferred   3,339 295,644
Volkswagen AG   992 122,270
Consumer staples 0.1%     82,292
Household products 0.1%      
Henkel AG & Company KGaA   1,023 82,292
Energy 0.0%     73,815
Oil, gas and consumable fuels 0.0%      
Raizen SA   89,000 73,815
Materials 0.0%     53,610
Chemicals 0.0%      
FUCHS SE   1,205 53,610
Exchange-traded funds 0.1%         $115,655
(Cost $110,231)          
iShares Core MSCI EAFE ETF       1,644 115,655
Closed-end funds 0.0%         $18,981
(Cost $8,650)          
Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (A)       890 18,981
    
        Par value^ Value
Escrow certificates 0.0%         $0
(Cost $194)          
Texas Competitive Electric Holdings Company LLC (A)(C)       500,000 0
21 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

        Par value^ Value
Short-term investments 0.2%         $300,000
(Cost $300,000)          
Repurchase agreement 0.2%         300,000
Goldman Sachs Tri-Party Repurchase Agreement dated 12-29-23 at 5.300% to be repurchased at $300,177 on 1-2-24, collateralized by $315,400 U.S. Treasury Notes, 2.000% - 3.000% due 10-31-25 to 11-15-26 (valued at $306,015)       300,000 300,000
    
Total investments (Cost $136,865,368) 98.0%     $138,323,196
Other assets and liabilities, net 2.0%       2,812,702
Total net assets 100.0%         $141,135,898
    
The percentage shown for each investment category is the total value of the category as a percentage of the net assets of the fund unless otherwise indicated.
^All par values are denominated in U.S. dollars unless otherwise indicated.
Security Abbreviations and Legend
ADR American Depositary Receipt
GDR Global Depositary Receipt
NVDR Non-Voting Depositary Receipt
(A) Non-income producing security.
(B) These securities are exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. Such securities may be resold, normally to qualified institutional buyers, in transactions exempt from registration.
(C) Security is valued using significant unobservable inputs and is classified as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy. Refer to Note 2 to the financial statements.
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 22

DERIVATIVES
FUTURES
Open contracts Number of
contracts
Position Expiration
date
Notional
basis^
Notional
value^
Unrealized
appreciation
(depreciation)
S&P 500 E-Mini Index Futures 30 Long Mar 2024 $6,962,302 $7,230,000 $267,698
Euro STOXX 50 Index Futures 292 Short Mar 2024 (14,761,417) (14,644,517) 116,900
FTSE 100 Index Futures 79 Short Mar 2024 (7,630,990) (7,810,591) (179,601)
MSCI EAFE Index Futures 41 Short Mar 2024 (4,453,871) (4,617,420) (163,549)
MSCI Emerging Markets Index Futures 32 Short Mar 2024 (1,581,487) (1,653,920) (72,433)
TOPIX Index Futures 31 Short Mar 2024 (5,225,510) (5,201,844) 23,666
            $(7,319)
^ Notional basis refers to the contractual amount agreed upon at inception of open contracts; notional value represents the current value of the open contract.
FORWARD FOREIGN CURRENCY CONTRACTS
Contract to buy Contract to sell Counterparty (OTC) Contractual
settlement
date
Unrealized
appreciation
Unrealized
depreciation
USD 2,534,432 CAD 3,435,000 GSI 3/20/2024 $(60,655)
USD 3,121,301 CHF 2,720,000 BNP 3/20/2024 (138,178)
USD 10,956,453 EUR 9,955,000 DB 3/20/2024 (67,160)
USD 9,549,041 GBP 7,483,000 MSI 3/20/2024 $7,226
USD 5,952,665 JPY 856,200,000 MSI 3/21/2024 (192,238)
USD 2,557,227 NOK 26,800,000 MSI 3/20/2024 (85,083)
            $7,226 $(543,314)
    
Derivatives Currency Abbreviations
CAD Canadian Dollar
CHF Swiss Franc
EUR Euro
GBP Pound Sterling
JPY Japanese Yen
NOK Norwegian Krone
USD U.S. Dollar
    
Derivatives Abbreviations
BNP BNP Paribas
DB Deutsche Bank AG
GSI Goldman Sachs International
MSI Morgan Stanley & Co. International PLC
OTC Over-the-counter
At 12-31-23, the aggregate cost of investments for federal income tax purposes was $136,672,056. Net unrealized appreciation aggregated to $1,107,733, of which $9,767,087 related to gross unrealized appreciation and $8,659,354 related to gross unrealized depreciation.
See Notes to financial statements regarding investment transactions and other derivatives information.
23 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Financial statements
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES 12-31-23

Assets  
Unaffiliated investments, at value (Cost $136,865,368) $138,323,196
Unrealized appreciation on forward foreign currency contracts 7,226
Cash 73,309
Foreign currency, at value (Cost $42,080) 39,716
Collateral held at broker for futures contracts 2,192,324
Collateral segregated at custodian for OTC derivative contracts 600,000
Dividends and interest receivable 645,852
Receivable for investments sold 534,276
Other assets 2,579
Total assets 142,418,478
Liabilities  
Unrealized depreciation on forward foreign currency contracts 543,314
Payable for futures variation margin 36,821
Foreign capital gains tax payable 38,516
Payable for investments purchased 574,503
Payable to affiliates  
Accounting and legal services fees 5,068
Other liabilities and accrued expenses 84,358
Total liabilities 1,282,580
Net assets $141,135,898
Net assets consist of  
Paid-in capital $159,585,761
Total distributable earnings (loss) (18,449,863)
Net assets $141,135,898
 
Net asset value per share  
Based on 12,151,242 shares of beneficial interest outstanding - unlimited number of shares authorized with $0.01 par value $11.61
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund 24

STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS For the year ended 12-31-23

Investment income  
Dividends $8,587,350
Interest 183,295
Less foreign taxes withheld (763,996)
Total investment income 8,006,649
Expenses  
Investment management fees 1,337,188
Accounting and legal services fees 30,808
Transfer agent fees 15,063
Trustees’ fees 44,714
Custodian fees 84,008
Printing and postage 95,174
Professional fees 88,517
Stock exchange listing fees 23,750
Other 18,470
Total expenses 1,737,692
Less expense reductions (10,214)
Net expenses 1,727,478
Net investment income 6,279,171
Realized and unrealized gain (loss)  
Net realized gain (loss) on  
Unaffiliated investments and foreign currency transactions 1,793,9441
Futures contracts (2,094,834)
Forward foreign currency contracts 93,766
  (207,124)
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of  
Unaffiliated investments and translation of assets and liabilities in foreign currencies 6,126,106
Futures contracts (373,612)
Forward foreign currency contracts (280,465)
  5,472,029
Net realized and unrealized gain 5,264,905
Increase in net assets from operations $11,544,076
    

 
1 Net of foreign capital gains taxes of $96,048.
25 JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS  

  Year ended
12-31-23
Year ended
12-31-22
Increase (decrease) in net assets    
From operations    
Net investment income $6,279,171 $6,802,074
Net realized gain (loss) (207,124) 3,675,689
Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) 5,472,029 (12,196,389)
Increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations 11,544,076 (1,718,626)
Distributions to shareholders    
From earnings (6,559,517) (9,282,645)
From tax return of capital (6,634,123) (4,899,088)
Total distributions (13,193,640) (14,181,733)
Fund share transactions    
Issued pursuant to Dividend Reinvestment Plan 85,767 81,403
Repurchased (830,615)
Total from fund share transactions (744,848) 81,403
Total decrease (2,394,412) (15,818,956)
Net assets    
Beginning of year 143,530,310 159,349,266
End of year $141,135,898 $143,530,310
Share activity    
Shares outstanding    
Beginning of year 12,231,087 12,223,813
Issued pursuant to Dividend Reinvestment Plan 7,458 7,274
Shares repurchased (87,303)
End of year 12,151,242 12,231,087
SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund 26

Financial highlights
Period ended 12-31-23 12-31-22 12-31-21 12-31-20 12-31-19
Per share operating performance          
Net asset value, beginning of period $11.73 $13.04 $12.76 $14.85 $14.46
Net investment income1 0.51 0.56 0.53 0.39 0.59
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments 0.44 (0.71) 0.91 (1.15) 1.30
Total from investment operations 0.95 (0.15) 1.44 (0.76) 1.89
Less distributions          
From net investment income (0.54) (0.76) (0.62) (0.42) (0.67)
From tax return of capital (0.54) (0.40) (0.54) (0.91) (0.83)
Total distributions (1.08) (1.16) (1.16) (1.33) (1.50)
Anti-dilutive impact of repurchase plan 0.012
Net asset value, end of period $11.61 $11.73 $13.04 $12.76 $14.85
Per share market value, end of period $10.05 $11.50 $13.00 $11.44 $14.91
Total return at net asset value (%)3,4 9.53 (0.96) 11.69 (2.99) 13.89
Total return at market value (%)3 (3.21) (2.68) 24.20 (13.37) 26.41
Ratios and supplemental data          
Net assets, end of period (in millions) $141 $144 $159 $156 $182
Ratios (as a percentage of average net assets):          
Expenses before reductions 1.23 1.17 1.17 1.18 1.15
Expenses including reductions 1.23 1.16 1.16 1.18 1.14
Net investment income 4.46 4.52 3.98 3.14 3.97
Portfolio turnover (%) 124 163 120 117 125
    
1 Based on average daily shares outstanding.
2 The repurchase plan was completed at an average repurchase price of $9.51 for 87,303 shares for the period ended 12-31-23.
3 Total return based on net asset value reflects changes in the fund’s net asset value during each period. Total return based on market value reflects changes in market value. Each figure assumes that distributions from income, capital gains and tax return of capital, if any, were reinvested.
4 Total returns would have been lower had certain expenses not been reduced during the applicable periods.
27 JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund | ANNUAL REPORT SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Notes to financial statements
Note 1Organization
John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund (the fund) is a closed-end management investment company organized as a Massachusetts business trust and registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the 1940 Act).
Note 2Significant accounting policies
The financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (US GAAP), which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions as of the date of the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates and those differences could be significant. The fund qualifies as an investment company under Topic 946 of Accounting Standards Codification of US GAAP.
Events or transactions occurring after the end of the fiscal period through the date that the financial statements were issued have been evaluated in the preparation of the financial statements. The following summarizes the significant accounting policies of the fund:
Security valuation. Investments are stated at value as of the scheduled close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), normally at 4:00 P.M., Eastern Time. In case of emergency or other disruption resulting in the NYSE not opening for trading or the NYSE closing at a time other than the regularly scheduled close, the net asset value (NAV) may be determined as of the regularly scheduled close of the NYSE pursuant to the Valuation Policies and Procedures of the Advisor, John Hancock Investment Management LLC.
In order to value the securities, the fund uses the following valuation techniques: Equity securities, including exchange-traded or closed-end funds, are typically valued at the last sale price or official closing price on the exchange or principal market where the security trades. In the event there were no sales during the day or closing prices are not available, the securities are valued using the last available bid price. Debt obligations are typically valued based on evaluated prices provided by an independent pricing vendor.  Independent pricing vendors utilize matrix pricing, which takes into account factors such as institutional-size trading in similar groups of securities, yield, quality, coupon rate, maturity, type of issue, trading characteristics and other market data, as well as broker supplied prices. Futures contracts whose settlement prices are determined as of the close of the NYSE are typically valued based on the settlement price while other futures contracts are typically valued at the last traded price on the exchange on which they trade. Foreign equity index futures that trade in the electronic trading market subsequent to the close of regular trading may be valued at the last traded price in the electronic trading market as of 4:00 P.M. ET, or may be fair valued based on fair value adjustment factors provided by an independent pricing vendor in order to adjust for events that may occur between the close of foreign exchanges or markets and the close of the NYSE. Forward foreign currency contracts are valued at the prevailing forward rates which are based on foreign currency exchange spot rates and forward points supplied by an independent pricing vendor. Foreign securities and currencies are valued in U.S. dollars based on foreign currency exchange rates supplied by an independent pricing vendor.
In certain instances, the Pricing Committee of the Advisor may determine to value equity securities using prices obtained from another exchange or market if trading on the exchange or market on which prices are typically obtained did not open for trading as scheduled, or if trading closed earlier than scheduled, and trading occurred as normal on another exchange or market.
Other portfolio securities and assets, for which reliable market quotations are not readily available, are valued at fair value as determined in good faith by the Pricing Committee following procedures established by the Advisor and adopted by the Board of Trustees. The frequency with which these fair valuation procedures are used cannot be predicted and fair value of securities may differ significantly from the value that would have been used had a ready market for such securities existed. Trading in foreign securities may be completed before the scheduled daily close of trading on the NYSE. Significant events at the issuer or market level may affect the values of securities between the time when the valuation of the securities is generally determined and the close of the NYSE. If a
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund 28

significant event occurs, these securities may be fair valued, as determined in good faith by the Pricing Committee, following procedures established by the Advisor and adopted by the Board of Trustees. The Advisor uses fair value adjustment factors provided by an independent pricing vendor to value certain foreign securities in order to adjust for events that may occur between the close of foreign exchanges or markets and the close of the NYSE.
The fund uses a three tier hierarchy to prioritize the pricing assumptions, referred to as inputs, used in valuation techniques to measure fair value. Level 1 includes securities valued using quoted prices in active markets for identical securities, including registered investment companies. Level 2 includes securities valued using other significant observable inputs. Observable inputs may include quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speeds and credit risk. Prices for securities valued using these inputs are received from independent pricing vendors and brokers and are based on an evaluation of the inputs described. Level 3 includes securities valued using significant unobservable inputs when market prices are not readily available or reliable, including the Advisor’s assumptions in determining the fair value of investments. Factors used in determining value may include market or issuer specific events or trends, changes in interest rates and credit quality. The inputs or methodology used for valuing securities are not necessarily an indication of the risks associated with investing in those securities. Changes in valuation techniques and related inputs may result in transfers into or out of an assigned level within the disclosure hierarchy.
The following is a summary of the values by input classification of the fund’s investments as of December 31, 2023, by major security category or type:
  Total
value at
12-31-23
Level 1
quoted
price
Level 2
significant
observable
inputs
Level 3
significant
unobservable
inputs
Investments in securities:        
Assets        
Common stocks        
Communication services $5,133,022 $1,656,472 $3,476,550
Consumer discretionary 11,000,834 3,125,648 7,875,186
Consumer staples 12,256,100 7,721,005 4,535,095
Energy 12,743,233 6,267,197 6,476,036
Financials 31,688,092 12,809,733 18,876,077 $2,282
Health care 12,803,196 9,037,213 3,765,983
Industrials 13,762,205 5,064,344 8,697,861
Information technology 15,397,964 8,378,244 7,019,720
Materials 6,832,015 1,428,011 5,404,004
Real estate 4,341,001 3,041,728 1,299,273
Utilities 10,750,066 5,817,591 4,932,475
Preferred securities        
Consumer discretionary 971,115 971,115
Consumer staples 82,292 82,292
Energy 73,815 73,815
Materials 53,610 53,610
Exchange-traded funds 115,655 115,655
Closed-end funds 18,981 18,981
Escrow certificates
Short-term investments 300,000 300,000
Total investments in securities $138,323,196 $64,555,637 $73,765,277 $2,282
29 JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund | ANNUAL REPORT  

  Total
value at
12-31-23
Level 1
quoted
price
Level 2
significant
observable
inputs
Level 3
significant
unobservable
inputs
Derivatives:        
Assets        
Futures $408,264 $408,264
Forward foreign currency contracts 7,226 $7,226
Liabilities        
Futures (415,583) (415,583)
Forward foreign currency contracts (543,314) (543,314)
Level 3 includes securities valued at $0. Refer to Fund’s investments.
Repurchase agreements. The fund may enter into repurchase agreements. When the fund enters into a repurchase agreement, it receives collateral that is held in a segregated account by the fund’s custodian, or for tri-party repurchase agreements, collateral is held at a third-party custodian bank in a segregated account for the benefit of the fund. The collateral amount is marked-to-market and monitored on a daily basis to ensure that the collateral held is in an amount not less than the principal amount of the repurchase agreement plus any accrued interest. Collateral received by the fund for repurchase agreements is disclosed in the Fund’s investments as part of the caption related to the repurchase agreement.
Repurchase agreements are typically governed by the terms and conditions of the Master Repurchase Agreement and/or Global Master Repurchase Agreement (collectively, MRA). Upon an event of default, the non-defaulting party may close out all transactions traded under the MRA and net amounts owed. Absent an event of default, assets and liabilities resulting from repurchase agreements are not offset in the Statement of assets and liabilities. In the event of a default by the counterparty, realization of the collateral proceeds could be delayed, during which time the collateral value may decline or the counterparty may have insufficient assets to pay claims resulting from close-out of the transactions.
Real estate investment trusts. The fund may invest in real estate investment trusts (REITs). Distributions from REITs may be recorded as income and subsequently characterized by the REIT at the end of their fiscal year as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain. As a result, the fund will estimate the components of distributions from these securities. Such estimates are revised when the actual components of the distributions are known.
Security transactions and related investment income. Investment security transactions are accounted for on a trade date plus one basis for daily NAV calculations. However, for financial reporting purposes, investment transactions are reported on trade date. Interest income is accrued as earned. Dividend income is recorded on ex-date, except for dividends of certain foreign securities where the dividend may not be known until after the ex-date. In those cases, dividend income, net of withholding taxes, is recorded when the fund becomes aware of the dividends. Non-cash dividends, if any, are recorded at the fair market value of the securities received. Distributions received on securities that represent a tax return of capital and/or capital gain, if any, are recorded as a reduction of cost of investments and/or as a realized gain, if amounts are estimable. Gains and losses on securities sold are determined on the basis of identified cost and may include proceeds from litigation.
Foreign investing. Assets, including investments, and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollar values each day at the prevailing exchange rate. Purchases and sales of securities, income and expenses are translated into U.S. dollars at the prevailing exchange rate on the date of the transaction. The effect of changes in foreign currency exchange rates on the value of securities is reflected as a component of the realized and unrealized gains (losses) on investments. Foreign investments are subject to a decline in the value of a foreign currency versus the U.S. dollar, which reduces the dollar value of securities denominated in that currency.
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund 30

Funds that invest internationally generally carry more risk than funds that invest strictly in U.S. securities. These risks are heightened for investments in emerging markets. Risks can result from differences in economic and political conditions, regulations, market practices (including higher transaction costs), accounting standards and other factors.
Foreign taxes. The fund may be subject to withholding tax on income, capital gains or repatriations imposed by certain countries, a portion of which may be recoverable. Foreign taxes are accrued based upon the fund’s understanding of the tax rules and rates that exist in the foreign markets in which it invests. Taxes are accrued based on gains realized by the fund as a result of certain foreign security sales. In certain circumstances, estimated taxes are accrued based on unrealized appreciation of such securities. Investment income is recorded net of foreign withholding taxes.
Overdrafts. Pursuant to the custodian agreement, the fund’s custodian may, in its discretion, advance funds to the fund to make properly authorized payments. When such payments result in an overdraft, the fund is obligated to repay the custodian for any overdraft, including any costs or expenses associated with the overdraft. The custodian may have a lien, security interest or security entitlement in any fund property that is not otherwise segregated or pledged, to the maximum extent permitted by law, to the extent of any overdraft.
Expenses. Within the John Hancock group of funds complex, expenses that are directly attributable to an individual fund are allocated to such fund. Expenses that are not readily attributable to a specific fund are allocated among all funds in an equitable manner, taking into consideration, among other things, the nature and type of expense and the fund’s relative net assets. Expense estimates are accrued in the period to which they relate and adjustments are made when actual amounts are known.
Federal income taxes. The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company by complying with the applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code and will not be subject to federal income tax on taxable income that is distributed to shareholders. Therefore, no federal income tax provision is required.
For federal income tax purposes, as of December 31, 2023, the fund has a short-term capital loss carryforward of $14,646,101 and a long-term capital loss carryforward of $4,881,265 available to offset future net realized capital gains. These carryforwards do not expire.
As of December 31, 2023, the fund had no uncertain tax positions that would require financial statement recognition, derecognition or disclosure. The fund’s federal tax returns are subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service for a period of three years.
Managed distribution plan. The fund has adopted a managed distribution plan (Plan). As of June 30, 2023, under the current Plan, the fund makes quarterly distributions of an amount equal to $0.2500 per share, effective with the September 29, 2023 distribution, which will be paid quarterly until further notice.The previous quarterly distribution was $0.2900 per share.
Distributions under the Plan may consist of net investment income, net realized capital gains and, to the extent necessary, return of capital. Return of capital distributions may be necessary when the fund’s net investment income and net capital gains are insufficient to meet the minimum distribution. In addition, the fund may also make additional distributions for the purpose of not incurring federal income and excise taxes.
The Board of Trustees may terminate or reduce the amount paid under the Plan at any time. The termination or reduction may have an adverse effect on the market price of the fund’s shares. 
Distribution of income and gains. Distributions to shareholders from net investment income and net realized gains, if any, are recorded on the ex-date. The fund generally declares and pays dividends quarterly pursuant to the Managed Distribution Plan described above. Capital gain distributions, if any, are typically distributed annually.
31 JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund | ANNUAL REPORT  

The tax character of distributions for the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022 was as follows:
  December 31, 2023 December 31, 2022
Ordinary income $6,559,517 $9,282,645
Return of capital 6,634,123 4,899,088
Total $13,193,640 $14,181,733
As of December 31, 2023, there were no distributable earnings on a tax basis.
Such distributions and distributable earnings, on a tax basis, are determined in conformity with income tax regulations, which may differ from US GAAP. Distributions in excess of tax basis earnings and profits, if any, are reported in the fund’s financial statements as a return of capital.
Capital accounts within the financial statements are adjusted for permanent book-tax differences. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or the results of operations. Temporary book-tax differences, if any, will reverse in a subsequent period. Book-tax differences are primarily attributable to investments in passive foreign investment companies, derivative transactions, capital gains tax and wash sale loss deferrals.
Note 3Derivative instruments
The fund may invest in derivatives in order to meet its investment objective. Derivatives include a variety of different instruments that may be traded in the over-the-counter (OTC) market, on a regulated exchange or through a clearing facility. The risks in using derivatives vary depending upon the structure of the instruments, including the use of leverage, optionality, the liquidity or lack of liquidity of the contract, the creditworthiness of the counterparty or clearing organization and the volatility of the position. Some derivatives involve risks that are potentially greater than the risks associated with investing directly in the referenced securities or other referenced underlying instrument. Specifically, the fund is exposed to the risk that the counterparty to an OTC derivatives contract will be unable or unwilling to make timely settlement payments or otherwise honor its obligations. OTC derivatives transactions typically can only be closed out with the other party to the transaction.
Derivatives which are typically traded through the OTC market are regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the CFTC). Derivative counterparty risk is managed through an ongoing evaluation of the creditworthiness of all potential counterparties and, if applicable, designated clearing organizations. The fund attempts to reduce its exposure to counterparty risk for derivatives traded in the OTC market, whenever possible, by entering into an International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) Master Agreement with each of its OTC counterparties. The ISDA gives each party to the agreement the right to terminate all transactions traded under the agreement if there is certain deterioration in the credit quality or contractual default of the other party, as defined in the ISDA. Upon an event of default or a termination of the ISDA, the non-defaulting party has the right to close out all transactions and to net amounts owed.
As defined by the ISDA, the fund may have collateral agreements with certain counterparties to mitigate counterparty risk on OTC derivatives. Subject to established minimum levels, collateral for OTC transactions is generally determined based on the net aggregate unrealized gain or loss on contracts with a particular counterparty. Collateral pledged to the fund, if any, is held in a segregated account by a third-party agent or held by the custodian bank for the benefit of the fund and can be in the form of cash or debt securities issued by the U.S. government or related agencies; collateral posted by the fund, if any, for OTC transactions is held in a segregated account at the fund’s custodian and is noted in the accompanying Fund’s investments, or if cash is posted, on the Statement of assets and liabilities. The fund’s risk of loss due to counterparty risk is equal to the asset value of outstanding contracts offset by collateral received.
Certain derivatives are traded or cleared on an exchange or central clearinghouse. Exchange-traded or centrally-cleared transactions generally present less counterparty risk to a fund than OTC transactions. The exchange or clearinghouse stands between the fund and the broker to the contract and therefore, credit risk is generally limited to the failure of the exchange or clearinghouse and the clearing member.
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund 32

Futures. A futures contract is a contractual agreement to buy or sell a particular currency or financial instrument at a pre-determined price in the future. Futures are traded on an exchange and cleared through a central clearinghouse. Risks related to the use of futures contracts include possible illiquidity of the futures markets and contract prices that can be highly volatile and imperfectly correlated to movements in the underlying financial instrument and potential losses in excess of the amounts recognized on the Statement of assets and liabilities. Use of long futures contracts subjects the fund to the risk of loss up to the notional value of the futures contracts. Use of short futures contracts subjects the fund to unlimited risk of loss.
Upon entering into a futures contract, the fund is required to deposit initial margin with the broker in the form of cash or securities. The amount of required margin is set by the broker and is generally based on a percentage of the contract value. The margin deposit must then be maintained at the established level over the life of the contract. Cash that has been pledged by the fund, if any, is detailed in the Statement of assets and liabilities as Collateral held at broker for futures contracts. Securities pledged by the fund, if any, are identified in the Fund’s investments. Subsequent payments, referred to as variation margin, are made or received by the fund periodically and are based on changes in the market value of open futures contracts. Futures contracts are marked-to-market daily and unrealized gain or loss is recorded by the fund. Payable for futures variation margin is included on the Statement of assets and liabilities. When the contract is closed, the fund records a realized gain or loss equal to the difference between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was closed.
During the year ended December 31, 2023, the fund used futures contracts to manage against changes in certain securities markets. The fund held futures contracts with USD notional values ranging from $32.7 million to $41.2 million, as measured at each quarter end.
Forward foreign currency contracts. A forward foreign currency contract is an agreement between two parties to buy and sell specific currencies at a price that is set on the date of the contract. The forward contract calls for delivery of the currencies on a future date that is specified in the contract. Forwards are typically traded OTC. Risks related to the use of forwards include the possible failure of counterparties to meet the terms of the forward agreement, the failure of the counterparties to timely post collateral if applicable, and the risk that currency movements will not favor the fund thereby reducing the fund’s total return, and the potential for losses in excess of the amounts recognized on the Statement of assets and liabilities.
The market value of a forward foreign currency contract fluctuates with changes in foreign currency exchange rates. Forward foreign currency contracts are marked-to-market daily and the change in value is recorded by the fund as an unrealized gain or loss. Realized gains or losses, equal to the difference between the value of the contract at the time it was opened and the value at the time it was closed, are recorded upon delivery or receipt of the currency or settlement with the counterparty.
During the year ended December 31, 2023, the fund used forward foreign currency contracts to manage against changes in foreign currency exchange rates and to gain exposure to foreign currencies. The fund held forward foreign currency contracts with USD notional values ranging from $27.1 million to $36.8 million, as measured at each quarter end.
Fair value of derivative instruments by risk category
The table below summarizes the fair value of derivatives held by the fund at December 31, 2023 by risk category:
Risk Statement of assets
and liabilities
location
Financial
instruments
location
Assets
derivatives
fair value
Liabilities
derivatives
fair value
Equity Receivable/payable for futures variation margin1 Futures $408,264 $(415,583)
Currency Unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on forward foreign currency contracts Forward foreign currency contracts 7,226 (543,314)
      $415,490 $(958,897)
33 JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund | ANNUAL REPORT  

1 Reflects cumulative appreciation/depreciation on open futures as disclosed in the Derivatives section of Fund’s investments. Only the year end variation margin receivable/payable is separately reported on the Statement of assets and liabilities.
For financial reporting purposes, the fund does not offset OTC derivative assets or liabilities that are subject to master netting arrangements, as defined by the ISDAs, in the Statement of assets and liabilities. In the event of default by the counterparty or a termination of the agreement, the ISDA allows an offset of amounts across the various transactions between the fund and the applicable counterparty. 
Effect of derivative instruments on the Statement of operations
The table below summarizes the net realized gain (loss) included in the net increase (decrease) in net assets from operations, classified by derivative instrument and risk category, for the year ended December 31, 2023:
  Statement of operations location - Net realized gain (loss) on:
Risk Futures contracts Forward foreign
currency contracts
Total
Currency $93,766 $93,766
Equity $(2,094,834) (2,094,834)
Total $(2,094,834) $93,766 $(2,001,068)
The table below summarizes the net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) included in the net increase (decrease) in net assets from operations, classified by derivative instrument and risk category, for the year ended December 31, 2023:
  Statement of operations location - Change in net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) of:
Risk Futures contracts Forward foreign
currency contracts
Total
Currency $(280,465) $(280,465)
Equity $(373,612) (373,612)
Total $(373,612) $(280,465) $(654,077)
Note 4Guarantees and indemnifications
Under the fund’s organizational documents, its Officers and Trustees are indemnified against certain liabilities arising out of the performance of their duties to the fund. Additionally, in the normal course of business, the fund enters into contracts with service providers that contain general 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. The risk of material loss from such claims is considered remote.
Note 5Fees and transactions with affiliates
John Hancock Investment Management LLC (the Advisor) serves as investment advisor for the fund. The Advisor is an indirect, principally owned subsidiary of John Hancock Life Insurance Company (U.S.A.), which in turn is a subsidiary of Manulife Financial Corporation (MFC).
Management fee. The fund has an investment management agreement with the Advisor under which the fund pays a daily management fee to the Advisor equivalent on an annual basis to 0.95% of the fund’s average daily gross assets. The Advisor has a subadvisory agreement with Wellington Management Company LLP. The fund is not responsible for payment of the subadvisory fees.
The Advisor has contractually agreed to waive a portion of its management fee and/or reimburse expenses for certain funds of the John Hancock group of funds complex, including the fund (the participating portfolios). This waiver is based upon aggregate managed assets of all the participating portfolios. The amount of the reimbursement is calculated daily and allocated among all the participating portfolios in proportion to the daily
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund 34

net assets of each fund. During the year ended December 31, 2023, this waiver amounted to 0.01% of the fund’s average daily net assets. This arrangement expires on July 31, 2025, unless renewed by mutual agreement of the fund and the Advisor based upon a determination that this is appropriate under the circumstances at that time.
The expense reductions described above amounted to $10,214 for the year ended December 31, 2023.
Expenses waived or reimbursed in the current fiscal period are not subject to recapture in future fiscal periods.
The investment management fees, including the impact of the waivers and reimbursements as described above, incurred for the year ended December 31, 2023, were equivalent to a net annual effective rate of 0.94% of the fund’s average daily managed net assets.
Accounting and legal services.  Pursuant to a service agreement, the fund reimburses the Advisor for all expenses associated with providing the administrative, financial, legal, compliance, accounting and recordkeeping services to the fund, including the preparation of all tax returns, periodic reports to shareholders and regulatory reports, among other services. These accounting and legal services fees incurred, for the year ended December 31, 2023, amounted to an annual rate of 0.02% of the fund’s average daily managed net assets.
Trustee expenses. The fund compensates each Trustee who is not an employee of the Advisor or its affiliates. These Trustees receive from the fund and the other John Hancock closed-end funds an annual retainer. In addition, Trustee out-of-pocket expenses are allocated to each fund based on its net assets relative to other funds within the John Hancock group of funds complex.
Note 6Fund share transactions
On December 6, 2011, the Board of Trustees approved a share repurchase plan, which is subsequently reviewed by the Board of Trustees each year in December. Under the current share repurchase plan, the fund may purchase in the open market, between January 1, 2024 and December 31, 2024, up to 10% of its outstanding common shares as of December 31, 2023. The share repurchase plan will remain in effect between January 1, 2024 and December 31, 2024.
During the year ended December 31, 2023, the fund repurchased 0.71% of common shares. The weighted average discount per share on the repurchase amounted to 14.04% for the year ended December 31, 2023. During the year ended December 31, 2022, the fund had no activity under the repurchase program. Shares repurchased and corresponding dollar amounts are included on the Statements of changes in net assets. The anti-dilutive impacts of these share repurchases are included on the Financial highlights.
Note 7Purchase and sale of securities
Purchases and sales of securities, other than short-term investments, amounted to $168,940,563 and $178,776,481, respectively, for the year ended December 31, 2023.
35 JOHN HANCOCK Hedged Equity & Income Fund | ANNUAL REPORT  

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Board of Trustees and Shareholders of John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund
Opinion on the Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the fund’s investments, of John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund (the "Fund") as of December 31, 2023, the related statement of operations for the year ended December 31, 2023, the statements of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period ended December 31, 2023, including the related notes, and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period ended December 31, 2023 (collectively referred to as the “financial statements”). In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Fund as of December 31, 2023, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period ended December 31, 2023 and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period ended December 31, 2023 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
Basis for Opinion
These financial statements are the responsibility of the Fund’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Fund’s financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent with respect to the Fund in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB. 
We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud.  
Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of December 31, 2023 by correspondence with the custodian, transfer agent and brokers; when replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Boston, Massachusetts
February 16, 2024
We have served as the auditor of one or more investment companies in the John Hancock group of funds since 1988.
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 36

Tax information
(Unaudited)
For federal income tax purposes, the following information is furnished with respect to the distributions of the fund, if any, paid during its taxable year ended December 31, 2023.
The fund reports the maximum amount allowable of its net taxable income as eligible for the corporate dividends-received deduction.
The fund reports the maximum amount allowable of its net taxable income as qualified dividend income as provided in the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003.
The fund reports the maximum amount allowable as Section 163(j) Interest Dividends.
Income derived from foreign sources was $6,588,128. The fund intends to pass through foreign tax credits of $851,796.
The fund reports the maximum amount allowable of its Section 199A dividends as defined in Proposed Treasury Regulation §1.199A-3(d).
Eligible shareholders will be mailed a 2023 Form 1099-DIV in early 2024. This will reflect the tax character of all distributions paid in calendar year 2023.
Please consult a tax advisor regarding the tax consequences of your investment in the fund.
37 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT  

Investment objective, principal investment strategies, and principal risks

Unaudited
Investment Objective
The fund’s investment objective is to provide total return with a focus on current income and gains and also consisting of long-term capital appreciation.
Principal Investment Strategies
Under normal circumstances, the fund will invest at least 80% of its net assets (assets plus borrowings for investment purposes) in equity and equity-related securities, including common stock, preferred stock, depositary receipts (including American Depositary Receipts and Global Depositary Receipts), index-related securities (including exchange traded funds (“ETFs”), options on equity securities and equity indexes, real estate investment structures (including real estate investment trusts (“REITs”)), convertible securities, private placements, convertible preferred stock, rights, warrants, derivatives linked to equity securities or indexes and other similar equity equivalents. The fund may invest in listed and unlisted domestic and foreign equity and equity-related securities or instruments. These equity and equity-related instruments may include equity securities of, or derivatives linked to, foreign issuers and indexes (including emerging market issuers or indexes). The fund may invest in foreign issuers and foreign-currency securities without any limitation. The fund will notify shareholders at least 60 days prior to any change in this 80% policy.
The fund uses an equity strategy (the “Equity Strategy”) and an actively managed option overlay strategy (the “Option Strategy”) to pursue its investment objective. By combining these two strategies, the fund seeks to provide investors with a portfolio that will generate attractive long-term total returns with significant downside equity market protection.
The Equity Strategy will seek to provide broad-based exposure to equity markets, while emphasizing downside equity market protection. The goal of the Equity Strategy is a broadly diversified equity portfolio that is generally fully invested and seeks value across all market capitalization ranges, industries and sectors that seeks to participate in and capture the broader equity market returns in rising market conditions, while limiting losses relative to the broader equity markets in declining market circumstances through an effective combination of equity investment strategies.
The Option Strategy will pursue two goals: (i) to generate earnings for current distribution from option premiums; and (ii) downside equity market protection (through the use of U.S. equity index put options). The Option Strategy will seek to enhance risk-adjusted returns, generate earnings from option premiums and reduce overall portfolio volatility. The fund expects to write index call options on a substantial portion of the fund’s common stock portfolio, although this amount is expected to vary over time based upon U.S. equity market conditions and other factors, including the Advisor’s and Subadvisor’s assessment of market conditions and the liquidity needs of the fund to meet quarterly distributions.
The fund anticipates writing index call options on the S&P 500 Index (the “S&P 500”) with a typical expiration of approximately one month and with call strikes typically set slightly “out-of-the-money” (ranging from approximately 0%-7% above the then-current value of the index). The fund typically will limit notional exposure of the index call options from 0%-50% of the value of the fund’s portfolio securities. In certain circumstances or market conditions (including to meet distribution payments), the Subadvisor may write index call options on a lower percentage of the fund’s portfolio.
The Option Strategy typically will maintain an overall short position on the S&P 500 through its use of index call options. In certain circumstances, the fund may trade out of its index option positions during an intra-month period to lock in a gain, to limit risk, or to meet distribution payments. The Subadvisor retains the discretion to write call options on indices other than the S&P 500 if it deems this appropriate in particular market circumstances or based upon the fund’s stock holdings. A meaningful portion of the fund’s stock holdings will normally consist of
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 38

stocks not included in the indices on which it writes call options. The fund expects to primarily use listed/exchange-traded options contracts but may also use over-the-counter (“OTC”) options. OTC options may be utilized to obtain exposure to specific strike prices, expiration dates and/or exposure to underlying indices not available in the exchange-traded options market. The fund may also invest in derivatives such as futures contracts and foreign currency forward contracts.
The fund may also invest up to 20% of its net assets (plus borrowings for investment purposes) in fixed-income securities and fixed-income related instruments. These fixed-income securities may include non-investment grade (“high yield” or “junk bond”) instruments.”
The manager may also take into consideration environmental, social, and/or governance (ESG) factors, alongside other relevant factors, as part of its investment selection process. The ESG characteristics utilized in the fund’s investment process may change over time and one or more characteristics may not be relevant with respect to all issuers that are eligible fund investments.
Principal Risks
As is the case with all exchange-listed closed-end funds, shares of this fund may trade at a discount or a premium to the fund’s net asset value (NAV). An investment in the fund is subject to investment and market risks, including the possible loss of the entire principal invested.
The fund’s main risks are listed below in alphabetical order, not in order of importance.
Changing distribution level & return of capital risk. There is no guarantee prior distribution levels will be maintained, and distributions may include a substantial tax return of capital. A return of capital is the return of all or a portion of a shareholder’s investment in the fund. For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023, the fund’s aggregate distributions included a return of capital of $0.54 per share, or 50.28% of aggregate distributions, which could impact the tax treatment of a subsequent sale of fund shares.
Credit and counterparty risk. The issuer or guarantor of a fixed-income security, the counterparty to an over-the-counter derivatives contract, or a borrower of fund securities may not make timely payments or otherwise honor its obligations. A downgrade or default affecting any of the fund’s securities could affect the fund’s performance.
Economic and market events risk. Events in the U.S. and global financial markets, including actions taken by the U.S. Federal Reserve or foreign central banks to stimulate or stabilize economic growth, may at times result in unusually high market volatility, which could negatively impact performance. Reduced liquidity in credit and fixed-income markets could adversely affect issuers worldwide. Financial institutions could suffer losses as interest rates rise or economic conditions deteriorate.
Equity securities risk. The price of equity securities may decline due to changes in a company’s financial condition or overall market conditions. Securities the manager believes are undervalued may never realize their full potential value, and in certain markets value stocks may underperform the market as a whole.
ESG integration risk. The manager considers ESG factors that it deems relevant or additive, along with other material factors and analysis, when managing the fund. The portion of the fund’s investments for which the manager considers these ESG factors may vary, and could increase or decrease over time. In certain situations, the extent to which these ESG factors may be applied according to the manager’s integrated investment process may not include U.S. Treasuries, government securities, or other asset classes. ESG factors may include, but are not limited to, matters regarding board diversity, climate change policies, and supply chain and human rights policies. Incorporating ESG criteria and making investment decisions based on certain ESG characteristics, as determined by the Advisor, carries the risk that the fund may perform differently, including underperforming funds that do not utilize ESG criteria or funds that utilize different ESG criteria. Integration of ESG factors into the fund’s investment process may result in a manager making different investments for the fund than for a fund with a similar investment universe and/or investment style that does not incorporate such considerations in its investment
39 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT  

strategy or processes, and the fund’s investment performance may be affected. Because ESG factors are one of many considerations for the fund, the manager may nonetheless include companies with low ESG characteristics or exclude companies with high ESG characteristics in the fund’s investments.
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) risk. The risks of owning shares of an ETF include the risks of owning the underlying securities the ETF holds. Lack of liquidity in an ETF could result in the ETF being more volatile than its underlying securities. An ETF’s shares could trade at a significant premium or discount to its NAV. A fund bears ETF fees and expenses indirectly.
Fixed-income securities risk. A rise in interest rates typically causes bond prices to fall. The longer the average maturity or duration of the bonds held by a fund, the more sensitive it will likely be to interest-rate fluctuations. An issuer may not make all interest payment or repay all or any of the principal borrowed. Changes in a security’s credit qualify may adversely affect fund performance. Additionally, the value of inflation-indexed securities is subject to the effects of changes in market interest rates caused by factors other than inflation (“real interest rates”). Generally, when real interest rates rise, the value of inflation-indexed securities will fall and the fund’s value may decline as a result of this exposure to these securities.
Foreign securities risk. Less information may be publicly available regarding foreign issuers, including foreign government issuers. Foreign securities may be subject to foreign taxes and may be more volatile than U.S. securities. Currency fluctuations and political and economic developments may adversely impact the value of foreign securities. The risks of investing in foreign securities are magnified in emerging markets. If applicable, depositary receipts are subject to most of the risks associated with investing in foreign securities directly because the value of a depositary receipt is dependent upon the market price of the underlying foreign equity security. Depositary receipts are also subject to liquidity risk.
Hedging, derivatives, and other strategic transactions risk. Hedging, derivatives, and other strategic transactions may increase a fund’s volatility and could produce disproportionate losses, potentially more than the fund’s principal investment. Risks of these transactions are different from and possibly greater than risks of investing directly in securities and other traditional instruments. Under certain market conditions, derivatives could become harder to value or sell and may become subject to liquidity risk (i.e., the inability to enter into closing transactions). Derivatives and other strategic transactions that the fund intends to utilize include: foreign currency forward contracts, futures contracts and options. Foreign currency forward contracts, futures contracts and options generally are subject to counterparty risk. Derivatives associated with foreign currency transactions are subject to currency risk.
Illiquid and restricted securities risk. Illiquid and restricted securities may be difficult to value and may involve greater risks than liquid securities. Illiquidity may have an adverse impact on a particular security’s market price and the fund’s ability to sell the security.
Large company risk. Larger companies may grow more slowly than smaller companies or be slower to respond to business developments. Large-capitalization securities may underperform the market as a whole.
LIBOR discontinuation risk. The official publication of the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), which many debt securities, derivatives and other financial instruments traditionally utilized as the reference or benchmark rate for interest rate calculations, was discontinued as of June 30, 2023. However, a subset of British pound sterling and U.S. dollar LIBOR settings will continue to be published on a “synthetic” basis. The synthetic publication of the three-month sterling LIBOR will continue until March 31, 2024, and the publication of the one-, three- and six-month U.S. dollar LIBOR will continue until September 30, 2024. The discontinuation of LIBOR and a transition to replacement rates may lead to volatility and illiquidity in markets and may adversely affect the fund’s performance.
Liquidity risk. The extent (if at all) to which a security may be sold or a derivative position closed without negatively impacting its market value may be impaired by reduced market activity or participation, legal restrictions, or other economic and market impediments.
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 40

Lower-rated and high-yield fixed-income securities risk. Lower-rated and high-yield fixed-income securities (junk bonds) are subject to greater credit quality risk, risk of default, and price volatility than higher-rated fixed-income securities, may be considered speculative, and can be difficult to resell.
Operational and cybersecurity risk. Cybersecurity breaches may allow an unauthorized party to gain access to fund assets, customer data, or proprietary information, or cause a fund or its service providers to suffer data corruption or lose operational functionality. Similar incidents affecting issuers of a fund’s securities may negatively impact performance. Operational risk may arise from human error, error by third parties, communication errors, or technology failures, among other causes.
Preferred and convertible securities risk. Preferred stock dividends are payable only if declared by the issuer’s board. Preferred stock may be subject to redemption provisions. The market values of convertible securities tend to fall as interest rates rise and rise as interest rates fall. Convertible preferred stock’s value can depend heavily upon the underlying common stock’s value.
Real estate investment trust risk. REITs, pooled investment vehicles that typically invest in real estate directly or in loans collateralized by real estate, carry risks associated with owning real estate, including the potential for a decline in value due to economic or market conditions.
Real estate securities risk. Securities of companies in the real estate industry carry risks associated with owning real estate, including the potential for a decline in value due to economic or market conditions.
Small and mid-sized company risk. Small and mid-sized companies are generally less established and may be more volatile than larger companies. Small and/or mid-capitalization securities may underperform the market as a whole.
41 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT  

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Unaudited
The fund is a closed-end, diversified management investment company, common shares of which were initially offered to the public on May 26, 2011 and are publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (the NYSE).
Dividends and distributions
During the year ended December 31, 2023, distributions from net investment income totaling $0.5370 per share and tax return of capital totaling $0.5430 per share were paid to shareholders. The dates of payments and the amounts per share were as follows:
Payment Date Income Distributions
March 31, 2023 $0.2900
June 30, 2023 0.2900
September 29, 2023 0.2500
December 29, 2023 0.2500
Total $1.0800
Dividend reinvestment plan
The fund’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan (the Plan) provides that distributions of dividends and capital gains are automatically reinvested in common shares of the fund by Computershare Trust Company, N.A. (the Plan Agent). Every shareholder holding at least one full share of the fund is entitled to participate in the Plan. In addition, every shareholder who became a shareholder of the fund after June 30, 2011, and holds at least one full share of the fund will be automatically enrolled in the Plan. Shareholders may withdraw from the Plan at any time and shareholders who do not participate in the Plan will receive all distributions in cash.
If the fund declares a dividend or distribution payable either in cash or in common shares of the fund and the market price of shares on the payment date for the distribution or dividend equals or exceeds the fund’s net asset value per share (NAV), the fund will issue common shares to participants at a value equal to the higher of NAV or 95% of the market price. The number of additional shares to be credited to each participant’s account will be determined by dividing the dollar amount of the distribution or dividend by the higher of NAV or 95% of the market price. If the market price is lower than NAV, or if dividends or distributions are payable only in cash, then participants will receive shares purchased by the Plan Agent on participants’ behalf on the NYSE or otherwise on the open market. If the market price exceeds NAV before the Plan Agent has completed its purchases, the average per share purchase price may exceed NAV, resulting in fewer shares being acquired than if the fund had issued new shares.
There are no brokerage charges with respect to common shares issued directly by the fund. However, whenever shares are purchased or sold on the NYSE or otherwise on the open market, each participant will pay a pro rata portion of brokerage trading fees, currently $0.05 per share purchased or sold. Brokerage trading fees will be deducted from amounts to be invested.
The reinvestment of dividends and net capital gains distributions does not relieve participants of any income tax that may be payable on such dividends or distributions.
Shareholders participating in the Plan may buy additional shares of the fund through the Plan at any time in amounts of at least $50 per investment, up to a maximum of $10,000, with a total calendar year limit of $100,000. Shareholders will be charged a $5 transaction fee plus $0.05 per share brokerage trading fee for each order. Purchases of additional shares of the fund will be made on the open market. Shareholders who elect to utilize monthly electronic fund transfers to buy additional shares of the fund will be charged a $2 transaction fee plus $0.05 per share brokerage trading fee for each automatic purchase. Shareholders can also sell fund shares held in the Plan account at any time by contacting the Plan Agent by telephone, in writing or by visiting the Plan
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 42

Agent’s website at www.computershare.com/investor. The Plan Agent will mail a check (less applicable brokerage trading fees) on settlement date. Pursuant to regulatory changes, effective September 5, 2017, the settlement date is changed from three business days after the shares have been sold to two business days after the shares have been sold. If shareholders choose to sell shares through their stockbroker, they will need to request that the Plan Agent electronically transfer those shares to their stockbroker through the Direct Registration System.
Shareholders participating in the Plan may withdraw from the Plan at any time by contacting the Plan Agent by telephone, in writing or by visiting the Plan Agent’s website at www.computershare.com/investor. Such termination will be effective immediately if the notice is received by the Plan Agent prior to any dividend or distribution record date; otherwise, such termination will be effective on the first trading day after the payment date for such dividend or distribution, with respect to any subsequent dividend or distribution. If shareholders withdraw from the Plan, their shares will be credited to their account; or, if they wish, the Plan Agent will sell their full and fractional shares and send the shareholders the proceeds, less a transaction fee of $5 and less brokerage trading fees of $0.05 per share. If a shareholder does not maintain at least one whole share of common stock in the Plan account, the Plan Agent may terminate such shareholder’s participation in the Plan after written notice. Upon termination, shareholders will be sent a check for the cash value of any fractional share in the Plan account, less any applicable broker commissions and taxes.
Shareholders who hold at least one full share of the fund may join the Plan by notifying the Plan Agent by telephone, in writing or by visiting the Plan Agent’s website at www.computershare.com/investor. If received in proper form by the Plan Agent before the record date of a dividend, the election will be effective with respect to all dividends paid after such record date. If shareholders wish to participate in the Plan and their shares are held in the name of a brokerage firm, bank or other nominee, shareholders should contact their nominee to see if it will participate in the Plan. If shareholders wish to participate in the Plan, but their brokerage firm, bank or other nominee is unable to participate on their behalf, they will need to request that their shares be re-registered in their own name, or they will not be able to participate. The Plan Agent will administer the Plan on the basis of the number of shares certified from time to time by shareholders as representing the total amount registered in their name and held for their account by their nominee.
Experience under the Plan may indicate that changes are desirable. Accordingly, the fund and the Plan Agent reserve the right to amend or terminate the Plan. Participants generally will receive written notice at least 90 days before the effective date of any amendment. In the case of termination, participants will receive written notice at least 90 days before the record date for the payment of any dividend or distribution by the fund.
All correspondence or requests for additional information about the Plan should be directed to Computershare Trust Company, N.A., at the address stated below, or by calling 800-852-0218, 201-680-6578 (For International Telephone Inquiries) and 800-952-9245 (For the Hearing Impaired (TDD)).
Shareholder communication and assistance
If you have any questions concerning the fund, we will be pleased to assist you. If you hold shares in your own name and not with a brokerage firm, please address all notices, correspondence, questions or other communications regarding the fund to the transfer agent at:
Regular Mail:
Computershare
P.O. Box 43006
Providence, RI 02940-3078
Registered or Overnight Mail:
Computershare
150 Royall Street, Suite 101
Canton, MA 02021
If your shares are held with a brokerage firm, you should contact that firm, bank or other nominee for assistance.
43 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND  | ANNUAL REPORT  

Trustees and Officers
This chart provides information about the Trustees and Officers who oversee your John Hancock fund. Officers elected by the Trustees manage the day-to-day operations of the fund and execute policies formulated by the Trustees.
Independent Trustees    
Name, year of birth
Position(s) held with fund
Principal occupation(s) and other
directorships during past 5 years
Trustee
of the
Trust
since1
Number of John
Hancock funds
overseen by
Trustee
Hassell H. McClellan,2 Born: 1945 2012 182
Trustee and Chairperson of the Board    
Director/Trustee, Virtus Funds (2008-2020); Director, The Barnes Group (2010-2021); Associate Professor, The Wallace E. Carroll School of Management, Boston College (retired 2013). Trustee (since 2005) and Chairperson of the Board (since 2017) of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex.
James R. Boyle, Born: 1959 2015 178
Trustee    
Board Member, United of Omaha Life Insurance Company (since 2022). Board Member, Mutual of Omaha Investor Services, Inc. (since 2022). Foresters Financial, Chief Executive Officer (2018–2022) and board member (2017–2022). Manulife Financial and John Hancock, more than 20 years, retiring in 2012 as Chief Executive Officer, John Hancock and Senior Executive Vice President, Manulife Financial. Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (2005–2014 and since 2015).
William H. Cunningham,3 Born: 1944 2011 180
Trustee    
Professor, University of Texas, Austin, Texas (since 1971); former Chancellor, University of Texas System and former President of the University of Texas, Austin, Texas; Director (since 2006), Lincoln National Corporation (insurance); Director, Southwest Airlines (since 2000). Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 1986).
Noni L. Ellison, Born: 1971 2022 178
Trustee    
Senior Vice President, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary, Tractor Supply Company (rural lifestyle retailer) (since 2021); General Counsel, Chief Compliance Officer & Corporate Secretary, Carestream Dental, L.L.C. (2017–2021); Associate General Counsel & Assistant Corporate Secretary, W.W. Grainger, Inc. (global industrial supplier) (2015–2017); Board Member, Goodwill of North Georgia, 2018 (FY2019)–2020 (FY2021); Board Member, Howard University School of Law Board of Visitors (since 2021); Board Member, University of Chicago Law School Board of Visitors (since 2016); Board member, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Foundation Board (2021–2023). Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2022).
Grace K. Fey, Born: 1946 2012 182
Trustee    
Chief Executive Officer, Grace Fey Advisors (since 2007); Director and Executive Vice President, Frontier Capital Management Company (1988–2007); Director, Fiduciary Trust (since 2009). Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2008).
Dean C. Garfield, Born: 1968 2022 178
Trustee    
Vice President, Netflix, Inc. (since 2019); President & Chief Executive Officer, Information Technology Industry Council (2009–2019); NYU School of Law Board of Trustees (since 2021); Member, U.S. Department of Transportation, Advisory Committee on Automation (since 2021); President of the United States Trade Advisory Council (2010–2018); Board Member, College for Every Student (2017–2021); Board Member, The Seed School of Washington, D.C. (2012–2017); Advisory Board Member of the Block Center for Technology and Society (since 2019). Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2022).
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 44

Independent Trustees (continued)    
Name, year of birth
Position(s) held with fund
Principal occupation(s) and other
directorships during past 5 years
Trustee
of the
Trust
since1
Number of John
Hancock funds
overseen by
Trustee
Deborah C. Jackson, Born: 1952 2011 180
Trustee    
President, Cambridge College, Cambridge, Massachusetts (2011-2023); Board of Directors, Amwell Corporation (since 2020); Board of Directors, Massachusetts Women’s Forum (2018-2020); Board of Directors, National Association of Corporate Directors/New England (2015-2020); Chief Executive Officer, American Red Cross of Massachusetts Bay (2002–2011); Board of Directors of Eastern Bank Corporation (since 2001); Board of Directors of Eastern Bank Charitable Foundation (since 2001); Board of Directors of Boston Stock Exchange (2002–2008); Board of Directors of Harvard Pilgrim Healthcare (health benefits company) (2007–2011). Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2008).
Steven R. Pruchansky, Born: 1944 2011 178
Trustee and Vice Chairperson of the Board    
Managing Director, Pru Realty (since 2017); Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Greenscapes of Southwest Florida, Inc. (2014-2020); Director and President, Greenscapes of Southwest Florida, Inc. (until 2000); Member, Board of Advisors, First American Bank (until 2010); Managing Director, Jon James, LLC (real estate) (since 2000); Partner, Right Funding, LLC (2014-2017); Director, First Signature Bank & Trust Company (until 1991); Director, Mast Realty Trust (until 1994); President, Maxwell Building Corp. (until 1991). Trustee (since 1992), Chairperson of the Board (2011–2012), and Vice Chairperson of the Board (since 2012) of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex.
Frances G. Rathke,3 Born: 1960 2020 178
Trustee    
Director, Audit Committee Chair, Oatly Group AB (plant-based drink company) (since 2021); Director, Audit Committee Chair and Compensation Committee Member, Green Mountain Power Corporation (since 2016); Director, Treasurer and Finance & Audit Committee Chair, Flynn Center for Performing Arts (since 2016); Director and Audit Committee Chair, Planet Fitness (since 2016); Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Keurig Green Mountain, Inc. (2003-retired 2015). Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2020).
Gregory A. Russo, Born: 1949 2011 178
Trustee    
Director and Audit Committee Chairman (2012-2020), and Member, Audit Committee and Finance Committee (2011-2020), NCH Healthcare System, Inc. (holding company for multi-entity healthcare system); Director and Member (2012-2018), and Finance Committee Chairman (2014-2018), The Moorings, Inc. (nonprofit continuing care community); Global Vice Chairman, Risk & Regulatory Matters, KPMG LLP (KPMG) (2002–2006); Vice Chairman, Industrial Markets, KPMG (1998–2002). Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2008).
    
45 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT  

Non-Independent Trustees4    
Name, year of birth
Position(s) held with fund
Principal occupation(s) and other
directorships during past 5 years
Trustee
of the
Trust
since1
Number of John
Hancock funds
overseen by
Trustee
Andrew G. Arnott, Born: 1971 2017 180
Non-Independent Trustee    
Global Head of Retail for Manulife (since 2022); Head of Wealth and Asset Management, United States and Europe, for John Hancock and Manulife (2018-2023); Director and Chairman, John Hancock Investment Management LLC (2005-2023, including prior positions); Director and Chairman, John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers LLC (2006-2023, including prior positions); Director and Chairman, John Hancock Investment Management Distributors LLC (2004-2023, including prior positions); President of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (2007-2023, including prior positions). Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2017).
Paul Lorentz, Born: 1968 2022 178
Non-Independent Trustee    
Global Head, Manulife Wealth and Asset Management (since 2017); General Manager, Manulife, Individual Wealth Management and Insurance (2013–2017); President, Manulife Investments (2010–2016). Trustee of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2022).
    
Principal officers who are not Trustees  
Name, year of birth
Position(s) held with fund
Principal occupation(s)
during past 5 years
Current
Position(s)
with the
Trust
since
Kristie M. Feinberg, Born: 1975 2023
President  
Head of Wealth and Asset Management, United States and Europe, for John Hancock and Manulife (since 2023); Director and Chairman, John Hancock Investment Management LLC (since 2023); Director and Chairman, John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers LLC (since 2023); Director and Chairman, John Hancock Investment Management Distributors LLC (since 2023); CFO and Global Head of Strategy, Manulife Investment Management (2021-2023, including prior positions); CFO Americas & Global Head of Treasury, Invesco, Ltd., Invesco US (2019-2020, including prior positions); Senior Vice President, Corporate Treasurer and Business Controller, Oppenheimer Funds (2001-2019, including prior positions); President of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2023).
Charles A. Rizzo, Born: 1957 2011
Chief Financial Officer  
Vice President, John Hancock Financial Services (since 2008); Senior Vice President, John Hancock Investment Management LLC and John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers LLC (since 2008); Chief Financial Officer of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2007).
Salvatore Schiavone, Born: 1965 2011
Treasurer  
Assistant Vice President, John Hancock Financial Services (since 2007); Vice President, John Hancock Investment Management LLC and John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers LLC (since 2007); Treasurer of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2007, including prior positions).
  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 46

Principal officers who are not Trustees (continued)  
Name, year of birth
Position(s) held with fund
Principal occupation(s)
during past 5 years
Current
Position(s)
with the
Trust
since
Christopher (Kit) Sechler, Born: 1973 2018
Secretary and Chief Legal Officer  
Vice President and Deputy Chief Counsel, John Hancock Investment Management (since 2015); Assistant Vice President and Senior Counsel (2009–2015), John Hancock Investment Management; Assistant Secretary of John Hancock Investment Management LLC and John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers LLC (since 2009); Chief Legal Officer and Secretary of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2009, including prior positions).
Trevor Swanberg, Born: 1979 2020
Chief Compliance Officer  
Chief Compliance Officer, John Hancock Investment Management LLC and John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers LLC (since 2020); Deputy Chief Compliance Officer, John Hancock Investment Management LLC and John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers LLC (2019–2020); Assistant Chief Compliance Officer, John Hancock Investment Management LLC and John Hancock Variable Trust Advisers LLC (2016–2019); Vice President, State Street Global Advisors (2015–2016); Chief Compliance Officer of various trusts within the John Hancock Fund Complex (since 2016, including prior positions).
The business address for all Trustees and Officers is 200 Berkeley Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116-5023.
The Fund does not make available copies of its Statement of Additional Information because the Fund’s shares are not continuously offered and the Statement of Additional Information has not been updated since the Fund’s last public offering, therefore the information contained in the Statement of Additional Information may be outdated.
1 Ms. Ellison and Ms. Rathke serve as Trustees for a term expiring in 2024; Mr. Arnott, Mr. Garfield, Ms. Jackson, and Mr. Pruchansky serve as Trustees for a term expiring in 2025; Mr. Boyle, Dr. Cunningham, Ms. Fey, Mr. Lorentz, Dr. McClellan and Mr. Russo serve as Trustees for a term expiring in 2026; Mr. Boyle has served as Trustee at various times prior to date listed in the table.
2 Member of the Audit Committee as of September 26, 2023.
3 Member of the Audit Committee.
4 The Trustee is a Non-Independent Trustee due to current or former positions with the Advisor and certain of its affiliates.
   
   
47 JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND | ANNUAL REPORT  

More information
Trustees
Hassell H. McClellan, Chairpersonπ
Steven R. Pruchansky, Vice Chairperson
Andrew G. Arnott
James R. Boyle
William H. Cunningham*
Noni L. Ellison
Grace K. Fey
Dean C. Garfield
Deborah C. Jackson
Paul Lorentz
Frances G. Rathke*
Gregory A. Russo
Officers
Kristie M. Feinberg#
President
Charles A. Rizzo
Chief Financial Officer
Salvatore Schiavone
Treasurer
Christopher (Kit) Sechler
Secretary and Chief Legal Officer
Trevor Swanberg
Chief Compliance Officer
Investment advisor
John Hancock Investment Management LLC
Subadvisor
Wellington Management Company LLP
Portfolio Managers
Robert J. Isch, CFA
Gregg R. Thomas, CFA
Custodian
State Street Bank and Trust Company
Transfer agent
Computershare Shareowner Services, LLC
Legal counsel
K&L Gates LLP
Independent registered public accounting firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Stock symbol
Listed New York Stock Exchange: HEQ
 
π Member of the Audit Committee as of September 26, 2023.
 Non-Independent Trustee
* Member of the Audit Committee
# Effective June 29, 2023.
The fund’s proxy voting policies and procedures, as well as the fund proxy voting record for the most recent twelve-month period ended June 30, are available free of charge on the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) website at sec.gov or on our website.
All of the fund’s holdings as of the end of the third month of every fiscal quarter are filed with the SEC on Form N-PORT within 60 days of the end of the fiscal quarter. The fund’s Form N-PORT filings are available on our website and the SEC’s website, sec.gov.
We make this information on your fund, as well as monthly portfolio holdings, and other fund details available on our website at jhinvestments.com or by calling 800-852-0218.
The report is certified under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which requires closed-end funds and other public companies to affirm that, to the best of their knowledge, the information in their financial reports is fairly and accurately stated in all material respects.
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  ANNUAL REPORT | JOHN HANCOCK HEDGED EQUITY & INCOME FUND 48

John Hancock family of funds
U.S. EQUITY FUNDS

Blue Chip Growth
Classic Value
Disciplined Value
Disciplined Value Mid Cap
Equity Income
Financial Industries
Fundamental All Cap Core
Fundamental Large Cap Core
Mid Cap Growth
New Opportunities
Regional Bank
Small Cap Core
Small Cap Dynamic Growth
Small Cap Value
U.S. Global Leaders Growth
U.S. Growth
INTERNATIONAL EQUITY FUNDS

Disciplined Value International
Emerging Markets
Emerging Markets Equity
Fundamental Global Franchise
Global Environmental Opportunities
Global Equity
Global Shareholder Yield
Global Thematic Opportunities
International Dynamic Growth
International Growth
International Small Company
FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

Bond
California Municipal Bond
Emerging Markets Debt
Floating Rate Income
Government Income
High Yield
High Yield Municipal Bond
Income
Investment Grade Bond
Money Market
Municipal Opportunities
Opportunistic Fixed Income
Short Duration Bond
Short Duration Municipal Opportunities
Strategic Income Opportunities
ALTERNATIVE FUNDS

Alternative Asset Allocation
Diversified Macro
Infrastructure
Multi-Asset Absolute Return
Real Estate Securities
Seaport Long/Short
 
The fund’s investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses are included in the prospectus and should be considered carefully before investing. For a prospectus, contact your financial professional, call John Hancock Investment Management at 800-852-0218, or visit the fund’s website at jhinvestments.com. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing or sending money.
The John Hancock funds are distributed by John Hancock Investment Management Distributors LLC. Member FINRA SIPC.

EXCHANGE-TRADED FUNDS

Corporate Bond ETF
Disciplined Value International Select ETF
Dynamic Municipal Bond ETF
Fundamental All Cap Core ETF
International High Dividend ETF
Mortgage-Backed Securities ETF
Multifactor Developed International ETF
Multifactor Emerging Markets ETF
Multifactor Large Cap ETF
Multifactor Mid Cap ETF
Multifactor Small Cap ETF
Preferred Income ETF
U.S. High Dividend ETF
ASSET ALLOCATION/TARGET DATE FUNDS

Balanced
Multi-Asset High Income
Lifestyle Blend Portfolios
Lifetime Blend Portfolios
Multimanager Lifestyle Portfolios
Multimanager Lifetime Portfolios
ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL, AND
GOVERNANCE FUNDS

ESG Core Bond
ESG International Equity
ESG Large Cap Core
CLOSED-END FUNDS

Asset-Based Lending
Financial Opportunities
Hedged Equity & Income
Income Securities Trust
Investors Trust
Preferred Income
Preferred Income II
Preferred Income III
Premium Dividend
Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income
Tax-Advantaged Global Shareholder Yield
John Hancock ETF shares are bought and sold at market price (not NAV), and are not individually redeemed from the fund. Brokerage commissions will reduce returns.
John Hancock ETFs are distributed by Foreside Fund Services, LLC, and are subadvised by Manulife Investment Management (US) LLC or Dimensional Fund Advisors LP. Foreside is not affiliated with John Hancock Investment Management Distributors LLC, Manulife Investment Management (US) LLC or Dimensional Fund Advisors LP.
Dimensional Fund Advisors LP receives compensation from John Hancock in connection with licensing rights to the John Hancock Dimensional indexes. Dimensional Fund Advisors LP does not sponsor, endorse, or sell, and makes no representation as to the advisability of investing in, John Hancock Multifactor ETFs.

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Manulife Investment Management, the Stylized M Design, and Manulife Investment Management & Stylized M Design are trademarks of The Manufacturers Life Insurance Company and are used by its affiliates under license.
MF3308520 P15A 12/23
2/2024

ITEM 2. CODE OF ETHICS.

As of the end of the period, December 31, 2023, the registrant has adopted a code of ethics, as defined in Item 2 of Form N-CSR, that applies to its Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer (respectively, the principal executive officer, the principal financial officer and the principal accounting officer, the "Covered Officers"). A copy of the code of ethics is filed as an exhibit to this Form N-CSR.

ITEM 3. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT.

Frances G. Rathke is the audit committee financial expert and is "independent", pursuant to general instructions on Form N-CSR Item 3.

ITEM 4. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES.

(a) Audit Fees

The aggregate fees billed for professional services rendered by the principal accountant(s) for John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund for the audit of the registrant's annual financial statements or services that are normally provided by the accountant(s) in connection with statutory and regulatory filings or engagements amounted to $53,951 for the year ended December 31, 2023 and $51,788 for the year ended December 31, 2022. These fees were billed to the registrant and were approved by the registrant's audit committee.

(b) Audit-Related Services

The aggregate fees for John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund for audit-related fees amounted to $12 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023 and $5 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022. These fees were billed to the registrant or to the registrant's investment adviser (not including any sub-adviser whose role is primarily portfolio management and is subcontracted with or overseen by another investment adviser), and any entity controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the adviser that provides ongoing services to the registrant ("control affiliates"). The nature of the services provided was related to software licensing fee.

(c) Tax Fees

The aggregate fees billed for John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund for professional services rendered by the principal accountant(s) for the tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning ("tax fees") amounted to $4,339 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023 and $4,192 for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2022. The nature of the services comprising the tax fees was the review of the registrant's tax returns and tax distribution requirements. These fees were billed to the registrant and were approved by the registrant's audit committee.

(d) All Other Fees

The all other fees for John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund billed to the registrant or control affiliates for products and services provided by the principal accountant were $369 for the year ended December 31, 2023 and $163 and for the year ended December 31, 2022. The nature of the services comprising all other fees is advisory services provided to the investment manager. These fees were approved by the registrant's audit committee.

(e)(1) Audit Committee Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures:

The trust's Audit Committee must pre-approve all audit and non-audit services provided by the independent registered public accounting firm (the "Auditor") relating to the operations or financial reporting of the funds. Prior to the commencement of any audit or non-audit services to a fund, the Audit Committee reviews the services to determine whether they are appropriate and permissible under applicable law.

 

The trust's Audit Committee has adopted policies and procedures to, among other purposes, provide a framework for the Committee's consideration of audit-related and non-audit services by the Auditor. The policies and procedures require that any audit-related and non-audit service provided by the Auditor and any non-audit service provided by the Auditor to a fund service provider that relates directly to the operations and financial reporting of a fund are subject to approval by the Audit Committee before such service is provided. Audit-related services provided by the Auditor that are expected to exceed $25,000 per instance/per fund are subject to specific pre-approval by the Audit Committee. Tax services provided by the Auditor that are expected to exceed $30,000 per instance/per fund are subject to specific pre-approval by the Audit Committee.

All audit services, as well as the audit-related and non-audit services that are expected to exceed the amounts stated above, must be approved in advance of provision of the service by formal resolution of the Audit Committee. At the regularly scheduled Audit Committee meetings, the Committee reviews a report summarizing the services, including fees, provided by the Auditor.

(e)(2) Services approved pursuant to paragraph (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X: Audit-Related Fees, Tax Fees and All Other Fees:

There were no amounts that were approved by the Audit Committee pursuant to the de minimis exception under Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.

(f)According to the registrant's principal accountant, for the fiscal period ended December 31, 2023, the percentage of hours spent on the audit of the registrant's financial statements for the most recent fiscal year that were attributed to work performed by persons who were not full-time, permanent employees of principal accountant was less than 50%.

(g)The aggregate non-audit fees billed by the registrant's accountant(s) for services rendered to the registrant and rendered to the registrant's control affiliates of the registrant were $1,370,147 for the year ended December 31, 2023 and $1,328,471 for the year ended December 31, 2022.

(h)The audit committee of the registrant has considered the non-audit services provided by the registrant's principal accountant(s) to the control affiliates and has determined that the services that were not pre-approved are compatible with maintaining the principal accountant(s)' independence.

(i)Not applicable.

(j)Not applicable.

ITEM 5. AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS.

The registrant has a separately-designated standing audit committee comprised of independent trustees. The members of the audit committee are as follows:

Frances G. Rathke – Chairperson William H. Cunningham

Hassell H. McClellan, effective September 26, 2023

ITEM 6. SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS.

(a)Not applicable.

(b)Not applicable.

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

See attached exhibit "Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures".

 

ITEM 8.

PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

Information about the Wellington Management Company LLP ("Wellington Management") portfolio managers

Management Biographies

Below is a list of the portfolio managers who share joint responsibility for the day-to-day investment management of the Fund. It provides a brief summary of their business careers over the past five years. The information provided is as of the filing date of this N-CSR.

Gregg R. Thomas, CFA

Senior Managing Director and Director of Investment Strategy,

Wellington Management Company LLP since 2002

On Fund team since its inception (2011)

Roberto J. Isch, CFA

Senior Managing Director and Portfolio Manager,

Wellington Management Company LLP since 2012

Joined Fund team in 2019

Other Accounts the Portfolio Managers are Managing

The table below indicates for each portfolio manager information about the accounts over which the portfolio manager has day-to-day investment responsibility. All information on the number of accounts and total assets in the table is as of December 31, 2023. For purposes of the table, "Other Pooled Investment Vehicles" may include investment partnerships and group trusts, and "Other Accounts" may include separate accounts for institutions or individuals, insurance company general or separate accounts, pension funds and other similar institutional accounts.

PORTFOLIO

 

Registered Investment

 

Other Pooled Investment

 

 

 

 

MANAGER

 

 

 

Other Accounts

 

Companies

 

Vehicles

 

 

NAME

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Number of

 

Total

 

Number of

 

 

Total

 

Number of

 

Total

 

 

 

Assets

 

 

 

Assets

 

 

Assets

 

 

Accounts

 

 

Accounts

 

 

 

Accounts

 

 

 

 

$Million

 

 

 

$Million

 

 

$Million

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gregg R.

 

7

 

10,844

 

11

 

 

2,973

 

6

 

3,511

Thomas, CFA

 

0*

 

0*

 

0*

 

 

0*

 

0*

 

0*

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Roberto J.

 

3

 

480

 

12

 

 

4,534

 

5

 

1,915

Isch, CFA

 

0*

 

0*

 

8*

 

 

3,078*

 

0*

 

0*

Note: (*) represents the number and value of accounts, within the total accounts that are subject to a performance-based advisory fee.

Conflicts of Interest. Individual investment professionals at Wellington Management manage multiple accounts for multiple clients. These accounts may include mutual funds, separate accounts (assets managed on behalf of institutions, such as pension funds, insurance companies, foundations, or

 

separately managed account programs sponsored by financial intermediaries), bank common trust accounts, and hedge funds. The Fund's managers listed in the prospectus who are primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the Fund ("Investment Professionals") generally manage accounts in several different investment styles. These accounts may have investment objectives, strategies, time horizons, tax considerations and risk profiles that differ from those of the Fund. The Investment Professionals make investment decisions for each account, including the Fund, based on the investment objectives, policies, practices, benchmarks, cash flows, tax and other relevant investment considerations applicable to that account. Consequently, Investment Professionals may purchase or sell securities, including IPOs, for one account and not another account, and the performance of securities purchased for one account may vary from the performance of securities purchased for other accounts. Alternatively, these accounts may be managed in a similar fashion to the Fund and thus the accounts may have similar, and in some cases nearly identical, objectives, strategies and/or holdings to that of the Fund.

An Investment Professional or other investment professionals at Wellington Management may place transactions on behalf of other accounts that are directly or indirectly contrary to investment decisions made on behalf of the Fund, or make investment decisions that are similar to those made for the Fund, both of which have the potential to adversely impact the Fund depending on market conditions. For example, an investment professional may purchase a security in one account while appropriately selling that same security in another account. Similarly, an Investment Professional may purchase the same security for the Fund and one or more other accounts at or about the same time. In those instances the other accounts will have access to their respective holdings prior to the public disclosure of the Fund's holdings. In addition, some of these accounts have fee structures, including performance fees, which are or have the potential to be higher, in some cases significantly higher, than the fees Wellington Management receives for managing the Fund. Mr. Isch manages accounts which pay performance allocations to Wellington Management or its affiliates. Because incentive payments paid by Wellington Management to the Investment Professionals are tied to revenues earned by Wellington Management and, where noted, to the performance achieved by the manager in each account, the incentives associated with any given account may be significantly higher or lower than those associated with other accounts managed by an Investment Professional. Therefore, portfolio managers and other investment team members have an incentive to favor accounts that have the potential to provide a higher incentive compensation for them as individuals. Wellington Management manages the conflict created by these incentive arrangements through policies on the allocation of investment opportunities, including the allocation of equity IPOs, as well as after-the-fact monitoring the review of client accounts to assess dispersion among accounts with similar mandates. Finally, the Investment Professionals may hold shares or investments in the other pooled investment vehicles and/or other accounts identified above.

Wellington Management's goal is to meet its fiduciary obligation to treat all clients fairly and provide high quality investment services to all of its clients. Wellington Management has adopted and implemented policies and procedures, including brokerage and trade allocation policies and procedures, which it believes address the conflicts associated with managing multiple accounts for multiple clients. In addition, Wellington Management monitors a variety of areas, including compliance with primary account guidelines, the allocation of IPOs, and compliance with the firm's Code of Ethics, and places additional investment restrictions on investment professionals who manage hedge funds and certain other accounts. Furthermore, senior investment and business personnel at Wellington Management periodically review the performance of Wellington Management's investment professionals. Although Wellington Management does not track the time an investment professional spends on a single account, Wellington Management does periodically assess whether an investment professional has adequate time and resources to effectively manage the investment professional's various client mandates.

Compensation Wellington Management receives a fee based on the assets under management of the Fund as set forth in the Subadvisory Agreement between Wellington Management and the Adviser on

 

behalf of the Fund. Wellington Management pays its investment professionals out of its total revenues, including the advisory fees earned with respect to the Fund. The following information relates to the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023. Wellington Management's compensation structure is designed to attract and retain high-caliber investment professional's necessary to deliver high quality investment management services to its clients. Wellington Management's compensation of the Fund's manager listed in the Prospectus who is primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the Fund (the "Investment Professional") includes a base salary. The base salary for each Investment Professional who is a partner (a "Partner") of Wellington Management Group LLP, the ultimate holding company of Wellington Management, is generally a fixed amount that is determined by the managing partners of Wellington Management Group LLP. The Investment Professionals may also be eligible for bonus payments based on their overall contribution to Wellington Management's business operations. Senior management at Wellington Management may reward individuals as it deems appropriate based on other factors. Each Partner is eligible to participate in a Partner-funded tax qualified retirement plan, the contributions to which are made pursuant to an actuarial formula. Messrs. Thomas and Isch are Partners.

Each Portfolio Manager's incentive payment relating to the Hedged Equity & Income Fund Fund is linked to the gross pre-tax performance of the Fund managed by the Portfolio Managers compared to the MSCI All Country World Index over one, three and five year periods, with an emphasis on five year results. Wellington Management applies similar incentive compensation structures (although the benchmarks or peer groups, time periods and rates may differ) to other accounts managed by these Portfolio Managers, including accounts with performance fees.

Share Ownership by Portfolio Managers. The following table indicates as of December 31, 2023, the value of shares beneficially owned by the portfolio managers in the Fund.

 

Range of

Portfolio Manager

Beneficial

Ownership

 

 

Gregg R. Thomas, CFA

None

 

Roberto J. Isch, CFA

None

 

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

 

REGISTRANT PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES

 

 

 

 

 

Maximum

 

 

 

 

Number of

 

Total

Average

Total Number of

Shares that May

 

Shares Purchased

Yet Be

 

Number of Shares

Price per

as Part of Publicly

Purchased

Period

Purchased

Share

Announced Plans*

Under the Plans

Jan 23

-

-

-

1,223,109

Feb 23

1,223,109

-

-

-

Mar 23

1,223,109

-

-

-

 

 

 

Apr 23

-

-

-

1,223,109

May 23

1,223,109

-

-

-

Jun 23

1,223,109

-

-

-

Jul 23

1,223,109

-

-

-

Aug 23

1,223,109

-

-

-

Sep 23

1,223,109

-

-

-

Oct 23

1,135,806

87,303

9.51

87,303

Nov 23

1,135,806

-

-

-

Dec 23

-

-

-

1,135,806

Total

 

87,303

 

87,303

 

 

 

 

*On December 6, 2011, the Board of Trustees approved a share repurchase plan which was subsequently reviewed by the Board of Trustees each year in December. Under the current share repurchase plan, the Fund may purchase in the open market up to 10% of its outstanding common shares as of December 31, 2023 (shares that may yet be purchased under the current plan are 1,215,124 shares). The current plan is in effect between January 1, 2024 and December 31, 2024.

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

(a)The registrant has adopted procedures by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the registrant's Board of Trustees. A copy of the procedures is filed as an exhibit to this Form N-CSR. See attached "John Hancock Funds – Nominating and Governance Committee Charter".

ITEM 11. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

(a)Based upon their evaluation of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures as conducted within 90 days of the filing date of this Form N-CSR, the registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded that those disclosure controls and procedures provide reasonable assurance that the material information required to be disclosed by the registrant on this report is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission's rules and forms.

(b)There were no changes in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the period covered by this report that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

ITEM 12. DISCLOSURE OF SECURITIES LENDING ACTIVITIES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

Not applicable.

ITEM 13. EXHIBITS.

(a)(1) Code of Ethics for Covered Officers is attached.

(a)(2) Separate certifications for the registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial officer, as required by Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and Rule 30a-2(a) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, are attached.

(b)Separate certifications for the registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial officer, as required by 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, and Rule 30a-2(b) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, are attached. The certifications furnished pursuant to this paragraph are not deemed to be "filed" for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or otherwise subject to the liability of that section. Such certifications are not deemed to be incorporated by reference into any filing under the SecuritiesAct of 1933 or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, except to the extent that the Registrant specifically incorporates them by reference.

(c)(1) Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures are attached.

(c)(2) Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders is attached. See attached "John Hancock Funds - Governance Committee Charter".

(c)(3) Registrant's notice to shareholders pursuant to Registrant's exemptive order granting an exemption from Section 19(b) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended and Rule 19b-1 thereunder regarding distributions made pursuant to the Registrant's Managed Distribution Plan.

 

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.

John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund

By:

/s/ Kristie M. Feinberg

 

------------------------------

 

Kristie M. Feinberg

 

President

Date:

February 16, 2024

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

By:

/s/ Kristie M. Feinberg

 

------------------------------

 

Kristie M. Feinberg

 

President

Date:

February 16, 2024

By:

/s/ Charles A. Rizzo

 

--------------------------------

 

Charles A. Rizzo

 

Chief Financial Officer

Date:

February 16, 2024


JOHN HANCOCK VARIABLE INSURANCE TRUST

JOHN HANCOCK FUNDS

JOHN HANCOCK FUNDS II

JOHN HANCOCK EXCHANGE-TRADED FUND TRUST

SARBANES-OXLEY CODE OF ETHICS

FOR

PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE, PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL OFFICER & TREASURER

I.Covered Officers/Purpose of the Code

This code of ethics (this "Code") for John Hancock Variable Insurance Trust, John Hancock Funds1, and John Hancock Funds II, John Hancock Exchange-Traded Fund Trust and, each a registered management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended ("1940 Act"), which may issue shares in separate and distinct series (each investment company and series thereunder to be hereinafter referred to as a "Fund"), applies to each Fund's Principal Executive Officer ("President"), Principal Financial Officer ("Chief Financial Officer") and Treasurer ("Treasurer") (the "Covered Officers" as set forth in Exhibit A) for the purpose of promoting:

honest and ethical conduct, including the ethical handling of actual or apparent conflicts of interest between personal and professional relationships;

full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure in reports and documents that the Fund files with, or submits to, the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") and in other public communications made by the Fund;

compliance with applicable laws and governmental rules and regulations;

the prompt internal reporting of violations of the Code to an appropriate person or persons identified in the Code; and

accountability for adherence to the Code.

1John Hancock Funds includes the following trusts: John Hancock Financial Opportunities Fund; John Hancock Bond Trust; John Hancock California Tax-Free Income Fund; John Hancock Capital Series; John Hancock Funds III; John Hancock Income Securities Trust; John Hancock Investment Trust; John Hancock Investment Trust II; John Hancock Investors Trust; John Hancock Municipal Securities Trust; John Hancock Premium Dividend Fund ; John Hancock Preferred Income Fund; John Hancock Preferred Income Fund II; John Hancock Preferred Income Fund III; John Hancock Sovereign Bond Fund; John Hancock Strategic Series; John Hancock Tax-Advantaged Dividend Income Fund; John Hancock Tax-Advantaged Global Shareholder Yield Fund; John Hancock Hedged Equity and Income Fund; and John Hancock Collateral Trust.

1 of 6

Each of the Covered Officers should adhere to a high standard of business ethics and should be sensitive to situations that may give rise to actual as well as apparent conflicts of interest.

II.Covered Officers Should Handle Ethically Actual and Apparent Conflicts of Interest Overview

A "conflict of interest" occurs when a Covered Officer's private interest interferes with the interests of, or his service to, the Fund. For example, a conflict of interest would arise if a Covered Officer, or a member of his family, receives improper personal benefits as a result of his position with the Fund. Certain conflicts of interest arise out of the relationships between the Covered Officers and the Fund and already are subject to conflict of interest provisions in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "Investment Company Act") and the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the "Investment Advisers Act"). For example, Covered Officers may not individually engage in certain transactions (such as the purchase or sale of securities or other property) with the Fund because of their status as "affiliated persons" of the Fund. Each of the Covered Officers is an officer or employee of the investment adviser or a service provider ("Service Provider") to the Fund. The Fund's, the investment adviser's and the Service Provider's compliance programs and procedures are designed to prevent, or identify and correct, violations of these provisions. This Code does not, and is not intended to, repeat or replace these programs and procedures, and such conflicts fall outside of the parameters of this Code.

Although typically not presenting an opportunity for improper personal benefit, conflicts arise from, or as a result of, the contractual relationship between the Fund and the investment adviser and the Service Provider of which the Covered Officers are also officers or employees. As a result, this Code recognizes that the Covered Officers will, in the normal course of their duties (whether formally for the Fund, for the investment adviser or for the Service Provider), be involved in establishing policies and implementing decisions which will have different effects on the investment adviser, the Service Provider and the Fund. The participation of the Covered Officers in such activities is inherent in the contractual relationship between the Fund and the investment adviser and the Service Provider and is consistent with the performance by the Covered Officers of their duties as officers of the Fund. Thus, if such participation is performed in conformity with the provisions of the Investment Company Act and the Investment Advisers Act, it will be deemed to have been handled ethically. In addition, it is recognized by the Fund's Board of Trustees/Directors (the "Board") that the Covered Officers may also be officers or employees of one or more other investment companies covered by other Codes.

Other conflicts of interest are covered by the Code, even if such conflicts of interest are not subject to provisions in the Investment Company Act and the Investment Advisers Act. The following list provides examples of conflicts of interest under the Code, but the Covered Officers should keep in mind that these examples are not exhaustive. The overarching principle is that the personal interest of a Covered Officer should not be placed improperly before the interest of the Fund.

***

2 of 6

Each Covered Officer must:

not use his/her personal influence or personal relationships improperly to influence investment decisions or financial reporting by the Fund whereby the Covered Officer would benefit personally to the detriment of the Fund;

not cause the Fund to take action, or fail to take action, for the individual personal benefit of the Covered Officer rather than for the benefit of the Fund; and

not use material non-public knowledge of portfolio transactions made or contemplated for the Fund to trade personally or cause others to trade personally in contemplation of the market effect of such transactions.

Additionally, conflicts of interest may arise in other situations, the propriety of which may be discussed, if material, with the Fund's Chief Compliance Officer ("CCO"). Examples of these include:

serve as a director/trustee on the board of any public or private company;

the receipt of any non-nominal gifts;

the receipt of any entertainment from any company with which the Fund has current or prospective business dealings unless such entertainment is business-related, reasonable in cost, appropriate as to time and place, and not so frequent as to raise any question of impropriety (or other formulation as the Fund already uses in another code of conduct);

any ownership interest in, or any consulting or employment relationship with, any of the Fund's service providers, other than its investment adviser, any sub-adviser, principal underwriter, administrator or any affiliated person thereof; and

a direct or indirect financial interest in commissions, transaction charges or spreads paid by the Fund for effecting portfolio transactions or for selling or redeeming shares other than an interest arising from the Covered Officer's employment, such as compensation or equity ownership.

III.Disclosure & Compliance

Each Covered Officer should familiarize himself or herself with the disclosure requirements generally applicable to the Fund;

Each Covered Officer should not knowingly misrepresent, or cause others to misrepresent, facts about the Fund to others, whether within or outside the Fund, including to the Fund's directors and auditors, and to governmental regulators and self- regulatory organizations;

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Each Covered Officer should, to the extent appropriate within his/her area of responsibility, consult with other officers and employees of the Fund and the Fund's adviser or any sub-adviser with the goal of promoting full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure in the reports and documents the Fund files with, or submits to, the SEC and in other public communications made by the Fund; and

It is the responsibility of each Covered Officer to promote compliance with the standards and restrictions imposed by applicable laws, rules and regulations.

IV. Reporting & Accountability

Each Covered Officer must:

upon adoption of the Code (or thereafter as applicable, upon becoming an Covered Officer), affirm in writing to the Fund's CCO that he/she has received, read, and understands the Code;

annually thereafter affirm to the Fund's CCO that he/she has complied with the requirements of the Code;

not retaliate against any employee or Covered Officer or their affiliated persons for reports of potential violations that are made in good faith;

notify the Fund's CCO promptly if he/she knows of any violation of this Code (Note: failure to do so is itself a violation of this Code); and

report at least annually any change in his/her affiliations from the prior year.

The Fund's CCO is responsible for applying this Code to specific situations in which questions are presented under it and has the authority to interpret this Code in any particular situation. However, any approvals or waivers sought by the Principal Executive Officer will be considered by the Fund's Board or the Compliance Committee thereof (the "Committee").

The Fund will follow these procedures in investigating and enforcing this Code:

the Fund's CCO will take all appropriate action to investigate any potential violations reported to him/her;

if, after such investigation, the CCO believes that no violation has occurred, the CCO is not required to take any further action;

any matter that the CCO believes is a violation will be reported to the Board or, if applicable, Compliance Committee;

if the Board or, if applicable, Compliance Committee concurs that a violation has occurred, the Board, either upon its determination of a violation or upon

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recommendation of the Compliance Committee, if applicable, will consider appropriate action, which may include review of, and appropriate modifications to, applicable policies and procedures; notification to appropriate personnel of the Service Provider or the investment adviser or its board; or a recommendation to dismiss the Registrant's Executive Officer;

the Board, or if applicable the Compliance Committee, will be responsible for granting waivers, as appropriate; and

any changes to or waivers of this Code will, to the extent required, be disclosed as provided by SEC rules.

V.Other Policies & Procedures

This Code shall be the sole code of ethics adopted by the Fund for purposes of Section 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and the rules and forms applicable to registered investment companies thereunder. Insofar as other policies or procedures of the Fund, the Fund's adviser, any sub- adviser, principal underwriter or other service providers govern or purport to govern the behavior or activities of the Covered Officers who are subject to this Code, they are superseded by this Code to the extent that they overlap or conflict with the provisions of this Code. The Fund's and its investment adviser's codes of ethics under Rule 204A-1 under the Investment Advisers Act and Rule 17j-1 under the Investment Company Act, respectively, are separate requirements applying to the Covered Officers and others and are not part of this Code.

VI. Amendments

Any amendments to this Code, other than amendments to Exhibit A, must be approved or ratified by a majority vote of the Fund's Board, including a majority of independent directors.

VII. Confidentiality

All reports and records prepared or maintained pursuant to this Code will be considered confidential and shall be maintained and protected accordingly. Except as otherwise required by law or this Code, such matters shall not be disclosed to anyone other than the Fund's Board and its counsel, the investment adviser and the relevant Service Providers.

VIII. Internal Use

The Code is intended solely for the internal use by the Fund and does not constitute an admission, by or on behalf of the Fund, as to any fact, circumstance, or legal conclusion.

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Exhibit A

Persons Covered by this Code of Ethics

(As of June 29, 2023)

John Hancock Variable Insurance Trust

Principal Executive Officer and President – Kristie Feinberg

Principal Financial Officer and Chief Financial Officer – Charles Rizzo

Treasurer – Salvatore Schiavone

John Hancock Funds

Principal Executive Officer and President – Kristie Feinberg

Principal Financial Officer and Chief Financial Officer – Charles Rizzo

Treasurer – Salvatore Schiavone

John Hancock Funds II

Principal Executive Officer and President – Kristie Feinberg

Principal Financial Officer and Chief Financial Officer – Charles Rizzo

Treasurer – Salvatore Schiavone

John Hancock Exchange-Traded Trust

Principal Executive Officer and President – Kristie Feinberg

Principal Financial Officer and Chief Financial Officer – Charles Rizzo

Treasurer – Salvatore Schiavone

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CERTIFICATION

I, Kristie M. Feinberg, certify that:

1.I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of the John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund (the "registrant");

2.Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4.The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of

1940) for the registrant and have:

(a)Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

(b)Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial

reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

(c)Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based on such evaluation; and

(d)Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during 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, and

5.The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

(a)All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

(b)Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date: February 16, 2024

/s/ Kristie M. Feinberg

 

Kristie M. Feinberg

 

President


CERTIFICATION

I, Charles A. Rizzo, certify that:

1.I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of the John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund (the "registrant");

2.Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4.The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of

1940) for the registrant and have:

(a)Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

(b)Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial

reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

(c)Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based on such evaluation; and

(d)Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during 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, and

5.The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

(a)All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

(b)Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

Date: February 16, 2024

/s/ Charles A. Rizzo

 

Charles A. Rizzo

 

Chief Financial Officer


Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of

the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002*

In connection with the attached Report of John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund (the "registrant") on Form N-CSR to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Report"), each of the undersigned officers of the registrant does hereby certify that, to the best of such officer's knowledge:

1.The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

2.The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in the Report.

/s/ Kristie M. Feinberg Kristie M. Feinberg President

Dated: February 16, 2024

/s/ Charles A. Rizzo Charles A. Rizzo Chief Financial Officer

Dated: February 16, 2024

A signed original of this written statement, required by Section 906, has been provided to the registrant and will be retained by the registrant and furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission or its staff upon request.

*These certifications are being furnished solely pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350 and are not being filed as part of this Form N-CSR or as a separate disclosure document.


WELLINGTON MANAGEMENT COMPANY

Wellington Management

2023 Global Proxy Voting Guidelines

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WELLINGTON'S PHILOSOPHY

Wellington Management are long-term stewards of clients' assets and aim to vote proxies for which we have voting authority in the best interest of clients.

These guidelines are based on Wellington Management's fiduciary obligation to act in the best interest of its clients as shareholders and while written to apply globally, we consider differences in local practice, cultures, and law to make informed decisions.

It should be noted that the following are guidelines, and not rigid rules, and Wellington Management reserves the right in all cases to deviate from the general direction set out below where doing so is judged to represent the best interest of its clients.

OUR APPROACH TO STEWARDSHIP

The goal of our stewardship activities is to support decisions that we believe will deliver sustainable, competitive investment returns for our clients.

The mechanisms we use to implement our stewardship activities vary by asset class. Engagement applies to all our investments across equity and credit, in both private and public markets. Proxy voting applies mostly to public equities.

Stewardship extends to any area that may affect the long-term sustainability of an investment, including the considerations of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues. Stewardship can be accomplished through research and constructive dialogue with company management and boards, by monitoring company behavior through informed active ownership, and by emphasizing management accountability for important issues via our proxy votes, which have long been part of Wellington's investment ethos. Please refer to our Engagement Policy for more information on how engagement is conducted at Wellington.

OUR APPROACH TO VOTING

We vote proxies in what we consider to be the best interests of our clients. Our approach to voting is investment-led and serves as an influential component of our engagement and escalation strategy. The Investment Stewardship Committee, a cross- functional group of experienced professionals, oversees Wellington Management's stewardship activities with regards to proxy voting and engagement practices.

Generally, issues which can be addressed by the proxy voting guidance below are voted by means of standing instructions communicated to our primary voting agent. Some votes warrant analysis of specific facts and circumstances and therefore are reviewed individually. We examine such proxy proposals on their merits and take voting action in a manner that best serves the interests of our clients. While manual votes are often resolved by ESG analysts, grounded in their sector and company research, each portfolio manager is empowered to make a final decision for their relevant client portfolio(s), absent a material conflict of interest. Proactive portfolio manager input is sought under certain circumstances, which may include consideration of position size and proposal subject matter and nature. Where portfolio manager input is proactively sought, deliberation across the firm may occur. This collaboration does not prioritize consensus across the firm above all other interests but rather seeks to inform portfolio managers' decisions by allowing them to consider multiple perspectives. Consistent with our community-of- boutiques model, portfolio managers may occasionally arrive at different voting conclusions for their clients, resulting

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in different decisions for the same vote. Robust voting procedures and the deliberation that occurs before a vote decision are aligned with our role as active owners and fiduciaries for our clients.

When voting on shareholder proposals, we consider the spirit of the proposal, not just the letter, and generally support proposals addressing material issues even when management has been responsive to our engagement on the issue. In this way, we seek to align our voting with our engagement activities. If our views differ from any specific suggestions in the proposals, we may provide clarification via direct engagement.

Please refer to our Global Proxy Policy and Procedures for further background on the process and governance of our voting approach.

Detailed below are the principles which we consider when deciding how to vote.

VOTING GUIDELINES

BOARD COMPOSITION AND ROLE OF DIRECTORS

Effective boards should act in shareholders' best economic interests and possess the relevant skills to implement the company's strategy.

We consider shareholders' ability to elect directors annually an important right and accordingly, generally support proposals to enable annual director elections and declassify boards.

We may withhold votes from directors for being unresponsive to shareholders or for failing to make progress on material issues. We may also withhold votes from directors who fail to implement shareholder proposals that have received majority support or have implemented poison pills without shareholder approval.

Time commitments

We expect directors to have the time and energy to fully commit to their board-related responsibilities and not be over-stretched with multiple external directorships. We reserve the right to vote against directors when serving on five or more public company boards; and public company executives when serving on three or more public company boards, including their own.

We consider the roles of board chair and chair of the audit committee as equivalent to an additional board seat when evaluating the overboarding matrix for non-executives. We may take into consideration that certain directorships, such as Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs) and investment companies, are usually less demanding.

Directors should also attend at least 75% of scheduled board meetings and we may vote against their re-election unless they disclose a valid reason.

Succession planning and board refreshment

We do not have specific voting policies relating to director age or tenure. We prefer to take a holistic view, evaluating whether the company is balancing the perspectives of new directors with the institutional knowledge of longer-serving board members. Succession planning is a key topic during many of our board engagements.

We expect companies to refresh their board membership every five years and may vote against the chair of the nominating committee for failure to implement. We believe a degree of director turnover allows companies to strengthen board diversity and add new skillsets to the board to enhance their oversight and adapt to evolving strategies.

Boards should offer transparency around their process to evaluate director performance and independence, conducting a rigorous regular evaluation of the board, key committees as well as individual directors, which is

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responsive to shareholder input. We believe externally facilitated board evaluations may contribute to companies retaining an appropriate mix of skills, experience and diversity on their boards over time.

In certain markets companies are governed by multi-tiered boards, with each tier having different responsibilities. We hold supervisory board members to similar standards, subject to prevailing local governance best practices.

Board independence

In our view, boards perform best when composed of an appropriate combination of executive and non-executive (in particular independent non-executive) directors to challenge and counsel management.

To determine appropriate minimum levels of board independence, we look to prevailing market best practices; two- thirds in the US, for example, and majority in the UK and France. In Japan, we will consider voting against the board chair (or most senior executive on the ballot) in cases where the board is less than one-third independent.

In addition to the overall independence at the board level, we also consider the independence of audit, compensation, and nominating committees. Where independence falls short of our expectations, we may withhold approval for non- independent directors or those responsible for the board composition. We typically vote in support of shareholder proposals calling for improved independence.

We believe that having an independent chair is the preferred structure for board leadership. Having an independent chair avoids the inherent conflict of self-oversight and helps ensure robust debate and diversity of thought in the boardroom. We will generally support proposals to separate the chair and CEO or establish a lead director but may support the involvement of an outgoing CEO as executive chair for a limited period to ensure a smooth transition to new management.

Board diversity

We believe boards which reflect a wide range of perspectives are best positioned to create shareholder value. Appointing boards that thoughtfully debate company strategy and direction is not possible unless boards elect highly qualified and diverse directors. By setting a leadership example, diverse boardrooms encourage an organizational culture that promotes diverse thinkers, enabling better strategic decisions and the navigation of increasingly complex issues facing companies today.

We think it is not in shareholders' best interests for the full board to be comprised of directors from the same industry, gender, race, nationality, or ethnic group. We expect for our portfolio companies to be thoughtful and intentional in considering the widest possible pool of skilled candidates who bring diverse perspectives into the boardroom. We encourage companies to disclose the composition of their board and to communicate their ambitions and strategies for creating and fostering a diverse board.

We reserve the right to vote against the re-election of the Nominating/Governance Committee Chair when the board is not meeting local market standards from a diversity perspective or when the gender-diverse representation is below 20% at companies in major indices. Outside of these major indices and absent a market-defined standard, we may vote against the reelection of the Nominating/Governance Committee Chair where no gender-diverse directors are represented on a board.

We reserve the right to vote against the reelection of the Nominating/Governance Committee Chair at US large cap and FTSE 100 companies that failed to appoint at least one director from a minority ethnic group and provide clear and compelling reason why it has been unable to do so. We will continue to engage on ethnic diversity of the board in other markets and may vote against the re-election of directors where we fail to see improvements.

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Majority vote on election of directors

Because we believe the election of directors by a majority of votes cast is the appropriate standard, we will generally support proposals that seek to adopt such a standard. Our support will typically extend to situations where the relevant company has an existing resignation policy for directors that receive a majority of ''withhold'' votes. We believe majority voting should be defined in the company's charter and not simply in its corporate governance policy.

Generally, we oppose proposals that fail to provide for the exceptional use of a plurality standard in the case of contested elections. Further, we will not support proposals that seek to adopt a standard of majority of votes outstanding (total votes eligible as opposed to votes cast). We likely will support shareholder and management proposals to remove existing supermajority vote requirements.

We generally support proposals to remove existing supermajority vote requirements.

Contested director elections

We approach contested director elections on a case-by-case basis, considering the specific circumstances of each situation to determine what we believe to be in the best interest of our clients. In each case, we welcome the opportunity to engage with both the company and the proponent to ensure that we understand both perspectives and are making an informed decision on our clients' behalf.

COMPENSATION

Executive compensation plans establish the incentive structure that plays a role in strategy-setting, decision-making, and risk management. While design and structure vary widely, we believe the most effective compensation plans attract and retain high- caliber executives, foster a culture of performance and accountability, and align management's interests with those of long-term shareholders.

Due to each company's unique circumstances and wide range of plan structures, Wellington determines support for a compensation plan on a case-by-case basis. We support plans that we believe lead to long-term value creation for our clients and the right to vote on compensation plans annually.

In evaluating compensation plans, we consider the following attributes in the context of the company's business, size, industry, and geographic location:

Alignment — We believe in pay-for-performance and encourage plan structures that align executive compensation with shareholder experience. We compare total compensation to performance metrics on an absolute and relative basis over various timeframes, and we look for a strong positive correlation. To ensure shareholder alignment, executives should maintain meaningful equity ownership in the company while they are employed, and for a period thereafter.

Transparency — We expect compensation committees to articulate the decision-making process and rationale behind the plan structure, and to provide adequate disclosure so shareholders can evaluate actual compensation relative to the committee's intentions. Disclosure should include how metrics, targets, and timeframes are chosen, and detail desired outcomes. We also seek to understand how the compensation committee determines the target level of compensation and constructs the peer group for benchmarking purposes.

Structure — The plan should be clear and comprehensible. We look for a mix of cash versus equity, fixed versus variable, and short- versus long-term pay that incentivizes appropriate risk-taking and aligns with industry practice. Performance targets should be achievable but rigorous, and equity awards should be subject to performance and/or vesting periods of at least three years, to discourage executives from managing the business with a near-term focus. Unless otherwise specified by local market regulators, performance-based compensation should be based primarily

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on quantitative financial and non-financial criteria such as ESG-related criteria. There is scope, however, for qualitative criteria related to strategic, individual, or ESG goals, that are critical to the business. Qualitative goals may be acceptable if a compensation committee has demonstrated a fair and consistent approach to evaluating qualitative performance and applying discretion over time.

Accountability — Compensation committees should be able to use discretion, positive and negative, to ensure compensation aligns with performance and provide a cogent explanation to shareholders. We generally oppose one- time awards aimed at retention or achieving a pre-determined goal. Barring an extenuating circumstance, we view retesting provisions unfavorably.

Approving equity incentive plans

A well-designed equity incentive plan facilitates the alignment of interests of long-term shareholders, management, employees, and directors. We evaluate equity-based compensation plans on a case-by-case basis, considering projected plan costs, plan features, and grant practices. We will reconsider our support for a plan if we believe these factors, on balance, are not in the best interest of shareholders. Specific items of concern may include excessive cost or dilution, unfavorable change-in-control features, insufficient performance conditions, holding/vesting periods, or stock ownership requirements, repricing stock options/stock appreciation rights (SARs) without prior shareholder approval, or automatic share replenishment (an ''evergreen'' feature).

Employee stock purchase plans

We generally support employee stock purchase plans, as they may align employees' interests with those of shareholders. That said, we typically vote against plans that do not offer shares to a broad group of employees (e.g., if only executives can participate) or plans that offer shares at a significant discount.

Non-executive director compensation

We expect companies to disclose non-executive director compensation and we prefer the use of an annual retainer or fee, delivered as cash, equity, or a combination. We do not believe non-executive directors should receive performance-based compensation, as this creates a potential conflict of interest. Non-executive directors oversee executive compensation plans; their objectivity is compromised if they design a plan that they also participate in.

Severance arrangements

We are mindful of the board's need for flexibility in recruitment and retention but will oppose excessively generous arrangements unless agreements encourage management to negotiate in shareholders' best interest. We generally support proposals calling for shareholder ratification of severance arrangements.

Retirement bonuses (Japan)

Misaligned compensation which is based on tenure and seniority may compromise director independence. We generally vote against directors and statutory auditors if retirement bonuses are given to outgoing directors.

Claw-back policies

We believe companies should be able to recoup incentive compensation from members of management who received awards based on fraudulent activities, accounting misstatements, or breaches in standards of conduct that lead to corporate reputational damage. We generally support shareholder proposals requesting that a company establish a robust claw-back provision if existing policies do not cover these circumstances. We also support proposals seeking greater transparency about the application of claw back policies.

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Audit quality and oversight

Scrutiny of auditors, particularly audit quality and oversight, has been increasing. When we assess financial statement reporting and audit quality, we will generally support management's choice of auditors, unless the auditors have demonstrated failure to act in shareholders' best economic interest. We also pay close attention to the non-audit services provided by auditors and consider the potential for the revenue from those services to create conflicts of interest that could compromise the integrity of financial statement audits.

SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS

Shareholder rights plans

Also known as poison pills, these plans can enable boards of directors to negotiate higher takeover prices on behalf of shareholders. Such plans also may be misused, however, as a means of entrenching management. Consequently, we may support plans that include a shareholder approval requirement, a sunset provision, or a permitted bid feature (e.g., bids that are made for all shares and demonstrate evidence of financing must be submitted to a shareholder vote).

Because boards generally have the authority to adopt shareholder rights plans without shareholder approval, we are equally vigilant in our assessment of requests for authorization of blank-check preferred shares.

Multiple voting rights

We generally support one share, one vote structures. The growing practice of going public with a dual-class share structure can raise governance and performance concerns. In our view, dual-class shares can create misalignment between shareholders' economic stake and their voting power and can grant control to a small number of insiders who may make decisions that are not in the interests of all shareholders.

We generally prefer that companies dispense with dual-class share structures but we recognize that newly listed companies may benefit from a premium by building in some protection for founders for a limited time after their IPO. The Council of Institutional Investors, a nonprofit association of pension funds, endowments, and foundations, recommends that newly public companies that adopt structures with unequal voting rights do away with the structure within seven years of going public. We believe such sunset clauses are a reasonable compromise between founders seeking to defend against takeover attempts in pivotal early years, and shareholders demanding a mechanism for holding management accountable, especially in the event of leadership changes.

Similarly, we generally do not support the introduction of loyalty shares, which grant increased voting rights to investors who hold shares over multiple years.

Proxy access

We believe shareholders should have the right to nominate director candidates on the management's proxy card. We will generally support shareholder proposals seeking proxy access unless the existing policy is already in-line with market norms.

Special meeting rights

We believe the right to call a special meeting is a shareholder right, and we will generally support such proposals to establish this right at companies that lack this facility. We will generally support proposals lowering thresholds where the current level exceeds 15% and the shareholder proposals calls for a 10%+ threshold, taking into consideration the make-up of the existing shareholder base and the company's general responsiveness to shareholders. If shareholders are granted the right to call special meetings, we generally do not support written consent.

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CAPITAL STRUCTURE AND CAPITAL ALLOCATION

Mergers and acquisitions

We approach votes to approve mergers and acquisitions on a case-by-case basis, considering the specific circumstances of each proposal to determine what we believe to be in the best interest of our clients.

Increases in authorized common stock

We generally support requests for increases up to 100% of the shares with preemption rights. Exceptions will be made when the company has clearly articulated a reasonable need for a greater increase. Conversely, at companies trading in less liquid markets, we may impose a lower threshold. When companies seek to issue shares without preemptive rights, we consider potential dilution and generally support requests when dilution is below 20%. For issuance with preemptive rights, we review on a case-by-case basis, considering the size of issuance relative to peers.

Capital allocation (Japan)

We hold board chairs accountable for persistently low returns on equity (ROE) in Japan, using a five-year average ROE of below 5% as a guide. Our assessment of a company's capital stewardship complements our assessment of board effectiveness without dictating specific capital allocation decisions. We may make exceptions where ROE is improving, where a long-cycle business warrants a different standard, or where new management is in place, and we feel they should not be punished for the past CEO/Chair's record.

Cross-shareholdings (Japan)

Cross-shareholdings reduce management accountability by creating a cushion of cross-over investor support. We may vote against the highest-ranking director up for re-election for companies where management has allocated a significant portion (20% or more) of net assets to cross-shareholdings. When considering this issue, we will take into account a company's trajectory in reducing cross-shareholdings over time as well as legitimate business reasons given to retain specific shareholdings.

ENVIRONMENTAL TOPICS

We assess portfolio companies' performance on environmental issues we deem to be material to long-term financial performance and communicate our expectations for best practice.

Climate change

As an asset manager entrusted with investing on our clients' behalf, we aim to assess, monitor, and manage the potential effects of climate change on our investment processes and portfolios, as well as on our business operations. Proxy voting is a key tool we use for managing climate risks, as part of our stewardship escalation process.

We expect companies facing material climate risks to have credible transition plans communicated using the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD). Appropriate reporting on climate readiness will help stakeholders understand companies' willingness and ability to adapt to or mitigate climate- related risks. In addition to the voting policies specifically mentioned, we may also vote against directors at companies where climate plans and disclosures meaningfully lag our expectations for those companies.

Emissions disclosure

We encourage all companies to disclose Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions. While we recognize the challenges associated with collecting Scope 3 emissions data, this disclosure is necessary for us to fully understand the transition risks applicable to an issuer. Disclosure of both overall categories of Scope 3 emissions ---upstream and downstream ---with context and granularity from companies about the most significant Scope 3 sources, enhances our ability to evaluate investment risks and opportunities. We encourage companies to adopt emerging global standards for measurement and disclosure of emissions such as those being developed by the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB)

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7

As of December

2023 Global Proxy Voting Guidelines

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and believe companies will benefit from acting now and consequently evolving their approach in line with emerging global standards.

We view disclosure of Scope 1 and 2 emissions as a minimum expectation where measurement practices are well- defined and attainable. We will generally vote against the re-election of the Chair of MSCI World companies, Climate Action 100+ companies, as well as companies assessed by the Transition Pathway Initiative (TPI) which do not disclose Scope 1 and 2 emissions, have not made a commitment to do so in the next year and where emissions intensity is material. We will expand this expectation to large cap companies in Emerging Markets in 2024.

Net-zero targets

As an outcome of enterprise risk management and strategic planning to reduce the potential financial impacts of climate change, we encourage companies to set a credible, science-based decarbonization glidepath, with an interim and long- term target, that comprises all categories of material emissions and is consistent with the ambition to achieve net zero emissions by 2050 or sooner. For Climate Action 100+ companies we reserve the right to vote against the company chair where quantitative emission reduction targets have not been defined. We consider it to be best practice for companies to pursue validation from the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi).

We generally support shareholder proposals asking for improved disclosure on climate risk management and we generally support those that request alignment of business strategies with the Paris Agreement or similar language. We also generally support proposals asking for board oversight of political contributions and lobbying activities or those asking for improved disclosures where material inconsistencies in reporting and strategy may exist, especially as it relates to climate strategy.

Other environmental shareholder proposals

For other environmental proposals covering themes including biodiversity, natural capital, deforestation, water usage, (plastic) packaging as well as palm oil, we take a case-by-case approach and will generally support proposals calling for companies to provide disclosure where this is additive to the company's existing efforts, the proposed information pertains to a material impact and in our view is of benefit to investors. When voting on any shareholder proposals, we consider the spirit of the proposal, not just the letter, and generally support proposals addressing material issues even when management has been responsive to our engagement on the issue.

SOCIAL TOPICS

Corporate culture, human capital, and diversity, equity, & inclusion

Through engagement we emphasize to management the importance of how they invest in and cultivate their human capital to perpetuate a strong culture. We assess culture holistically from an alignment of management incentives, responsiveness to employee feedback, evidence of an equitable and sound talent management strategy and commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion. We value transparency and use of key performance indicators.

A well-articulated culture statement and talent attraction, retention and development strategy suggest that a company appreciates culture and talent as competitive advantages that can drive long-term value creation. It also sends a strong message when management compensation is linked, when appropriate, to employee satisfaction. If the company conducts regular employee

engagement surveys, we look for leadership to disclosethe results ------------------------------------------------------------------------

both

positive and negative--------

so we can monitor patterns and assess whether they are implementing changes based on the

feedback they receive. We consider workplace locations and how a company balances attracting talent with the costs of operating in desirable cities.

We maintain that a deliberate human capital management strategy should foster a collaborative, productive workplace in which all talent can thrive. One ongoing engagement issue that pertains to human capital management is diversity, equity, and inclusion. We seek to better understand how and to what extent a company's approach to diversity is integrated with talent management at all levels. A sound long-term plan holds more weight than a company's current demographics, so we look for a demonstrable diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) strategy that

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8

As of December

2023 Global Proxy Voting Guidelines

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seeks to improve metrics over time and align management incentives accordingly. We expect companies in the US to publicly disclose their EEO-1 reporting and their strategy to create an inclusive, diverse, and equitable workplace. We see DEI practices as a material input to long-term performance, so as our clients' fiduciaries, we seek to better understand how and to what extent a company's approach to diversity is integrated with talent management at all levels. This is only possible when there is consistent, robust disclosure in place.

Gender and racial pay equity are important parts of our assessment of a company's diversity efforts. Pay equity can impact shareholder value by exposing a company to challenges with recruiting & retaining talent, job dissatisfaction, workforce turnover, and costly lawsuits. Consequently, we may support proposals asking for improved transparency on a company's gender and/or racial pay gap if existing disclosures are lagging best practice and if the company has not articulated its efforts to eliminate disparities and promote equal opportunities for women and minorities to advance to senior roles.

We believe diversity among directors, leaders, and employees contributes positively to shareholder value by imbuing a company with myriad perspectives that help it better navigate complex challenges. A strong culture of diversity and inclusion begins in the boardroom. See the Board Diversity section above for more on our approach.

Stakeholders and risk management

In recent years, discourse on opioids, firearms, and sexual harassment has brought the potential for social externalities -----the negative effects that companies can have on society through their products, cultures, or policies -----

into sharp focus. These nuanced, often misunderstood issues can affect the value of corporate securities.

In our engagement with companies facing these risks, we encourage companies to disclose risk management strategies that acknowledge their societal impacts. When a company faces litigation or negative press, we inquire about lessons learned and request evidence of substantive changes that aim to prevent recurrence and mitigate downside risk. In these cases, we may also support proposals requesting enhanced disclosure on actions taken by management, including racial equity audits.

Human rights

Following the 2015 passage of the UK's Modern Slavery Act, a handful of countries have passed laws requiring companies to report on how they are addressing risks related to human rights abuses in their global supply chains. While human rights have been a part of our research and engagement in this context, we seek to assess companies' exposures to these risks, determine the sectors for which this risk is most material (highest possibility of supply-chain exposure), enhance our own engagement questions, and potentially work with external data providers to gain insights on specific companies or industries. To help us assess company practices and drive more substantive engagement with companies on this issue, we will generally support proposals requesting enhanced disclosure on companies' approach to mitigating the risk of human rights violations in their business.

Cybersecurity

Robust cybersecurity practices are imperative for maintaining customer trust, preserving brand strength, and mitigating regulatory risk. Companies that fail to strengthen their cybersecurity platforms may end up bearing large costs. Through engagement, we aim to compare companies' approaches to cyber threats, regardless of region or sector, to distinguish businesses that lag from those that are better prepared.

Political contributions and lobbying

We generally support proposals asking for board oversight of a company's political contributions and lobbying activities or those asking for improved disclosures where material inconsistencies in reporting and strategy may exist. In assessing shareholder proposals focused on lobbying, we also focus on the level of transparency of existing disclosures and whether companies clearly explain how they will respond if policy engagement of trade association membership to which they belong do not align with company policy.

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As of December

2023 Global Proxy Voting Guidelines

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Important Information

Wellington Management Company LLP (WMC) is an independently owned investment adviser registered with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). WMC is also registered with the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) as a commodity trading advisor (CTA) and serves as a CTA to certain clients including commodity pools operated by registered commodity pool operators. WMC provides commodity trading advice to all other clients in reliance on exemptions from CTA registration. WMC, along with its affiliates (collectively, Wellington Management), provides investment management and investment advisory services to institutions around the world. Located in Boston, Massachusetts, Wellington Management also has offices in Chicago, Illinois; Radnor, Pennsylvania; San Francisco, California; Frankfurt; Hong Kong; London; Luxembourg; Madrid, Milan; Shanghai; Singapore; Sydney; Tokyo; Toronto; and Zurich.

This material is prepared for, and authorized for internal use by, designated institutional and professional investors and their consultants or for such other use as may be authorized by Wellington Management. This material and/or its contents are current at the time of writing and may not be reproduced or distributed in whole or in part, for any purpose, without the express written consent of Wellington Management. This material is not intended to constitute investment advice or an offer to sell, or the solicitation of an offer to purchase shares or other securities. Investors should always obtain and read an up-to-date investment services description or prospectus before deciding whether to appoint an investment manager or to invest in a fund. Any views expressed herein are those of the author(s), are based on available information, and are subject to change without notice. Individual portfolio management teams may hold different views and may make different investment decisions for different clients.

©2022 Wellington Management Company LLP. All rights reserved.

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10

As of December


JOHN HANCOCK FUNDS1

NOMINATING AND GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE CHARTER

Overall Role and Responsibility

The Nominating and Governance Committee (the "Committee") of each of the Trusts shall (1) make determinations and recommendations to the Board of Trustees (the "Board") regarding issues related to (a) the composition of the Board and (b) corporate governance matters applicable to the Trustees who are not "interested persons" as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"), of any of the Trusts, or of any Fund's investment adviser, subadviser or principal underwriter and who are "independent" as defined in the rules of the New York Stock Exchange ("NYSE") (the "Independent Trustees") and (2) discharge such additional duties, responsibilities and functions as are delegated to it from time to time.

Membership

The Nominating and Governance Committee (the "Committee") shall be composed of all of the Independent Trustees of the Board. One member of the Committee shall be appointed by the Board as Chair of the Committee. The chair shall be responsible for leadership of the Committee, including scheduling meetings or reviewing and approving the schedule for them, preparing agendas or reviewing and approving them before meetings, presiding over meetings of the Committee and making reports to the full Board, as appropriate.

Structure, Operations and Governance

Meetings and Actions by Written Consent. The Committee shall meet as often as required or as the Committee deems appropriate, with or without management present. Meetings may be called and notice given by the Committee chair or a majority of the members of the Committee. Members may attend meetings in person or by telephone. The Committee may act by written consent to the extent permitted by law and the Funds' governing documents. The Committee shall report to the Board on any significant action it takes not later than the next following Board meeting.

Required Vote and Quorum. The affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the Committee participating in any meeting of the Committee at which a quorum is present is necessary for the adoption of any resolution. At least a majority of the Committee members present at the meeting in person or by telephone shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.

1"John Hancock Funds" includes each trust and series as may be amended from time to time (each individually, a "Trust," and collectively, the "Trusts," and each series thereof, a "Portfolio" or "Fund," and collectively, the "Portfolios" or "Funds").

1

Delegation to Subcommittees. The Committee may delegate any portion of its authority to a subcommittee of one or more members.

Appropriate Resources and Authority. The Committee shall have the resources and authority appropriate to discharge its responsibilities, including the authority to retain special counsel and other advisers, experts or consultants, at the Funds' expense, as it determines necessary or appropriate to carry out its duties and responsibilities. In addition, the Committee shall have direct access to such officers of and service providers to the Funds as it deems desirable.

Review of Charter. The Committee Charter shall be approved by at least a majority of the Independent Trustees of the Trust. The Committee shall review and assess the adequacy of this Charter periodically and, where necessary or as it deems desirable, will recommend changes to the Board for its approval. The Board may amend this Charter at any time in response to recommendations from the Committee or on its own motion.

Executive Sessions. The Committee may meet privately and may invite non-members to attend such meetings. The Committee may meet with representatives of the Investment Management Services department of the Funds' advisers, internal legal counsel of the Funds' advisers, members of the John Hancock Funds Risk & Investment Operations Committee (the "RIO Committee") and with representatives of the Funds' service providers, including the subadvisers, to discuss matters that relate to the areas for which the Committee has responsibility.

Specific Duties and Responsibilities

The Committee shall have the following duties and powers, to be exercised at such times and in such manner as the Committee shall determine:

1.Except where a Trust is legally required to nominate individuals recommended by another, to identify individuals qualified to serve as Independent Trustees of the Trusts, and to consider and recommend to the full Board nominations of individuals to serve as Trustees.

2.To consider, as it deems necessary or appropriate, the criteria for persons to fill existing or newly created Trustee vacancies. The Committee shall use the criteria and principles set forth in Annex A to guide its Trustee selection process.

3.To consider and recommend changes to the Board regarding the size, structure, and composition of the Board.

4.To evaluate, from time to time, and determine changes to the retirement policies for the Independent Trustees, as appropriate.

5.To periodically review the Board's committee structure and, in collaboration with the Chairs of the various Committees, the charters of the Board's committees, and

2

recommend to the Board of Trustees changes to the committee structure and charters as it deems appropriate.

6.To retain and terminate any firm(s) to be used to identify or evaluate or assist in identifying or evaluating potential Independent Board nominees, subject to the Board's sole authority to approve the firm's fees and other retention terms.

7.To consider and determine the amount of compensation to be paid by the Trusts to the Independent Trustees, including the compensation of the Chair of the Board or any Vice-Chair of the Board and of Committee Chairs, and to address compensation-related matters. The Chair of the Board has been granted the authority to approve special compensation to Independent Trustees in recognition of any significant amount of additional time and service to the Trusts provided by them, subject to ratification of any such special compensation by the Committee at the next regular meeting of the Committee.

8.To coordinate and administer an annual self-evaluation of the Board, which will include, at a minimum, a review of its effectiveness in overseeing the number of Funds in the Fund complex and the effectiveness of its committee structure.

9.To review the Board Governance Procedures and recommend to the Board of Trustees changes to the Procedures as the Committee deems appropriate.

10.To report its activities to the full Board and to make such recommendations with respect to the matters described above and other matters as the Committee may deem necessary or appropriate.

Additional Responsibilities

The Committee will also perform other tasks assigned to it from time to time by the Chair of the Board or by the Board, and will report findings and recommendations to the Board, as appropriate.

Last revised: December 12, 2018

3

ANNEX A

The Committee may take into account a wide variety of factors in considering Trustee candidates, including (but not limited to) the criteria set forth below. The Committee may determine that a candidate who does not satisfy these criteria in one or more respects should nevertheless be considered as a nominee if the Committee finds that the criteria satisfied by the candidate and the candidate's other qualifications demonstrate the appropriate level of fitness to serve.

General Criteria

1.Nominees should have a reputation for integrity, honesty and adherence to high ethical standards, and such other personal characteristics as a capacity for leadership and the ability to work well with others.

2.Nominees should have business, professional, academic, financial, accounting or other experience and qualifications which demonstrate that they will make a valuable contribution as Trustees.

3.Nominees should have a commitment to understand the Funds, and the responsibilities of a trustee/director of an investment company and to regularly attend and participate in meetings of the Board and its committees.

4.Nominees should have the ability to understand the sometimes conflicting interests of the various constituencies of the Funds, including shareholders and the investment adviser, and to act in the interests of all shareholders.

5.Nominees should not have, nor appear to have, a conflict of interest that would impair their ability to represent the interests of all the shareholders and to fulfill the responsibilities of a trustee.

6.Nominees should have experience on corporate or other institutional bodies having oversight responsibilities.

It is the intent of the Committee that at least one Independent Trustee be an "audit committee financial expert" as that term is defined in Item 3 of Form N-CSR.

Application of Criteria to Current Trustees

The re-nomination of current Trustees should not be viewed as automatic, but should be based on continuing qualification under the criteria set forth above based on, among other things, the current Trustee's contribution to the Board and any committee on which he or she serves.

Review of Nominations

1.The Committee believes that it is in the best interests of each Trust and its shareholders to obtain highly-qualified candidates to serve as members of the Board.

2.In nominating candidates who would be Independent Trustees, the Committee believes that no particular qualities or skills nor any specific minimum qualifications or disqualifications are controlling or paramount. The Committee shall take into consideration any such factors as it deems appropriate; however, the appropriate mix of skills, expertise and attributes needed to maintain an effective board are sought in the applicant pool as part of every search the Board undertakes for new trustees, including but not limited to the diversity of thought, as well as of gender, race, ethnic background and geographic origin. These factors may also include (but are not limited to) the person's character, integrity, judgment, skill and experience with investment companies and other organizations of comparable purpose, complexity and size and subject to similar legal restrictions and oversight; the interplay of the candidate's experience with the experience of other Board members; and the extent to which the candidate would be a desirable addition to the Board and any Committees thereof. Other factors that the Committee may take into consideration include a person's availability and commitment to attend meetings and perform his or her responsibilities; whether or not the person has or had any relationships that might impair or appear to impair his or her independence, such as any business, financial or family relationships with Fund management, the investment adviser and/or any subadviser of the Funds, as applicable, Fund service providers, or their affiliates or with Fund shareholders. The Committee will strive to achieve a group that reflects a diversity of experiences in respect of industries, professions and other experiences, and that is diversified as to thought, gender, race, ethnic background and geographic origin.

3.While the Committee is solely responsible for the selection and recommendation to the Board of Independent Trustee candidates, the Committee may consider nominees recommended by any source, including shareholders, management, legal counsel and Board members, as it deems appropriate. The Committee may retain a professional search firm or a consultant to assist the Committee in a search for a qualified candidate. Any recommendations from shareholders shall be directed to the Secretary of the relevant Trust at such address as is set forth in the Trust's disclosure documents. Recommendations from management may be submitted to the Committee Chair. All recommendations shall include all information relating to such person that is required to be disclosed in solicitations of proxies for the election of Board members and as specified

in the relevant Trust's By-Laws, and must be accompanied by a written consent of the proposed candidate to stand for election if nominated for the Board and to serve if elected by shareholders.

4.Any shareholder nomination must be submitted in compliance with all of the pertinent provisions of Rule 14a-8 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 in order to be considered by the Committee. In evaluating a nominee recommended by a shareholder, the Committee, in addition to the criteria discussed above, may consider the objectives of the shareholder in submitting that nomination and whether such objectives are consistent with the interests of all shareholders. If the Board determines to include a shareholder's candidate among the slate of its designated nominees, the candidate's name will be placed on the Trust's proxy card. If the Board determines not to include such candidate among its designated nominees, and the shareholder has satisfied the requirements of Rule 14a-8, the shareholder's candidate will be treated as a nominee of the shareholder who originally nominated the candidate. In that case, the candidate will not be named on the proxy card distributed with the Trust's proxy statement.

5.As long as a current Independent Trustee continues, in the opinion of the Committee, to satisfy the criteria listed above, the Committee generally would favor the re-nomination of a current Trustee rather than a new candidate. Consequently, while the Committee will consider nominees recommended by shareholders to serve as trustees, the Committee may only act upon such recommendations if there is a vacancy on the Board, or the Committee determines that the selection of a new or additional Trustee is in the best interests of the relevant Trust. In the event that a vacancy arises or a change in Board membership is determined to be advisable, the Committee will, in addition to any shareholder recommendations, consider candidates identified by other means as discussed in this Annex A.

6.With respect to candidates for Independent Trustee, a biography of each candidate shall be acquired and shall be reviewed by counsel to the Independent Trustees and counsel to the Trust to determine the candidate's eligibility to serve as an Independent Trustee.

7.The Committee may from time to time establish specific requirements and/or additional factors to be considered for Independent Trustee candidates as it deems necessary or appropriate.

8.After its consideration of relevant factors, the Committee shall present its recommendation(s) to the full Board for its consideration.


John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund

Notification of Sources of Distribution

This notice provides shareholders of the John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund (NYSE: HEQ) with important information concerning the distribution declared on June 30, 2023, and payable on September 29, 2023. No action is required on your part.

Distribution Period:

September 2023

Distribution Amount Per Common Share:

$0.2500

The following table sets forth the estimated sources of the current distribution, payable September 29, 2023, and the cumulative distributions paid this fiscal year to date from the following sources: net investment income; net realized short term capital gains; net realized long term capital gains; and return of capital or other capital source. All amounts are expressed on a per common share basis and as a percentage of the distribution amount.

 

 

 

 

For the fiscal year-to-date period

 

For the period 7/1/2023-09/30/2023

 

1/1/2023-09/30/2023 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

% Breakdown

 

 

% Breakdown

 

 

 

of the Total

 

Current

of the Current

 

Total Cumulative

Cumulative

Source

Distribution ($)

Distribution

 

Distributions ($)

Distributions

Net Investment Income

0.1128

45%

 

0.4400

 

53%

Net Realized Short-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Term Capital Gains

0.0000

0%

 

0.0000

 

0%

Net Realized Long-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Term Capital Gains

0.0200

8%

 

0.0000

 

0%

Return of Capital or

 

 

 

 

 

 

Other Capital Source

0.1172

47%

 

0.3898

 

47%

Total per common share

0.2500

100%

 

0.8298

 

100%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average annual total return (in relation to NAV) for the 5 years ended on August 31, 2023

3.27%

Annualized current distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of August 31, 2023

8.64%

Cumulative total return (in relation to NAV) for the fiscal year through August 31, 2023

3.80%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cumulative fiscal year-to-date distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of

 

August 31, 2023

 

 

 

 

 

7.17%

You should not draw any conclusions about the Fund's investment performance from the amount of this distribution or from the terms of the Fund's managed distribution plan.

1The Fund's current fiscal year began on January 1, 2023 and will end on December 31, 2023.

The Fund estimates that it has distributed more than its income and net realized capital gains; therefore, a portion of your distribution may be a return of capital. A return of capital may occur, for example, when some or all of the money that you invested in the Fund is paid back to you. A return of capital distribution does not necessarily reflect the Fund's investment performance and should not be confused with "yield" or "income."

The amounts and sources of distributions reported in this Notice are only estimates and are not being provided for tax reporting purposes. The actual amounts and sources of the amounts for tax reporting purposes will depend upon the Fund's investment experience during the remainder of its fiscal year and may be subject to changes based on tax regulations. The Fund will send you a Form 1099-DIV for the calendar year that will tell you how to report these distributions for federal income tax purposes.

The Fund has declared the September 2023 distribution pursuant to the Fund's managed distribution plan (the "Plan"). Under the Plan, the Fund makes fixed quarterly distributions in the amount of $0.2500 per share, which will continue to be paid quarterly until further notice.

If you have questions or need additional information, please contact your financial professional or call the John Hancock Investment Management Closed-End Fund Information Line at 1-800-843-0090, Monday through Friday between 8:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m., Eastern Time.


John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund

Notification of Sources of Distribution

This notice provides shareholders of the John Hancock Hedged Equity & Income Fund (NYSE: HEQ) with important information concerning the distribution declared on December 1, 2023, and payable on December 29, 2023. No action is required on your part.

Distribution Period:

December 2023

Distribution Amount Per Common Share:

$0.2500

The following table sets forth the estimated sources of the current distribution, payable December 29, 2023, and the cumulative distributions paid this fiscal year to date from the following sources: net investment income; net realized short term capital gains; net realized long term capital gains; and return of capital or other capital source. All amounts are expressed on a per common share basis and as a percentage of the distribution amount.

 

 

 

 

For the fiscal year-to-date period

 

For the period 10/1/2023-12/31/2023

 

1/1/2023-12/31/2023 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

% Breakdown

 

 

% Breakdown

 

 

 

of the Total

 

Current

of the Current

 

Total Cumulative

Cumulative

Source

Distribution ($)

Distribution

 

Distributions ($)

Distributions

Net Investment Income

0.0666

27%

 

0.5045

 

46%

Net Realized Short-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Term Capital Gains

0.0000

0%

 

0.0000

 

0%

Net Realized Long-

 

 

 

 

 

 

Term Capital Gains

0.0160

6%

 

0.0000

 

0%

Return of Capital or

 

 

 

 

 

 

Other Capital Source

0.1674

67%

 

0.5813

 

54%

Total per common share

0.2500

100%

 

1.0858

 

100%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average annual total return (in relation to NAV) for the 5 years ended on November 30, 2023

4.30%

Annualized current distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of November 30,

 

2023

 

 

 

 

 

8.70%

Cumulative total return (in relation to NAV) for the fiscal year through November 30, 2023

5.77%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cumulative fiscal year-to-date distribution rate expressed as a percentage of NAV as of

 

November 30, 2023

 

 

 

 

 

9.45%

You should not draw any conclusions about the Fund's investment performance from the amount of this distribution or from the terms of the Fund's managed distribution plan.

1The Fund's current fiscal year began on January 1, 2023 and will end on December 31, 2023.

The Fund estimates that it has distributed more than its income and net realized capital gains; therefore, a portion of your distribution may be a return of capital. A return of capital may occur, for example, when some or all of the money that you invested in the Fund is paid back to you. A return of capital distribution does not necessarily reflect the Fund's investment performance and should not be confused with "yield" or "income."

The amounts and sources of distributions reported in this Notice are only estimates and are not being provided for tax reporting purposes. The actual amounts and sources of the amounts for tax reporting purposes will depend upon the Fund's investment experience during the remainder of its fiscal year and may be subject to changes based on tax regulations. The Fund will send you a Form 1099-DIV for the calendar year that will tell you how to report these distributions for federal income tax purposes.

The Fund has declared the December 2023 distribution pursuant to the Fund's managed distribution plan (the "Plan"). Under the Plan, the Fund makes fixed quarterly distributions in the amount of $0.2500 per share, which will continue to be paid quarterly until further notice.

If you have questions or need additional information, please contact your financial professional or call the John Hancock Investment Management Closed-End Fund Information Line at 1-800-843-0090, Monday through Friday between 8:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m., Eastern Time.



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