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Supplement to the
Fidelity Advisor® Inflation-Protected Bond Fund
Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C
May 28, 2011
Prospectus

Effective July 15, 2011, the following information replaces similar sales charge waiver information for Class A and Class T found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 32.

A front-end sales charge will not apply to the following Class A or Class T shares:

1. Purchased for an employee benefit plan other than a plan investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include 401(a), 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b) governmental plans, but do not include: IRAs, SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; or health savings accounts;

2. Purchased for an insurance company separate account;

3. Purchased for managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution or bank trust department;

AIFB-11-01		June 7, 2011
1.790682.121

4. Purchased with the proceeds of a redemption of Fidelity or Fidelity Advisor fund shares held in (i) an insurance company separate account, or (ii) an employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program), the proceeds of which must be reinvested directly into Fidelity Advisor fund shares;

5. Purchased with any proceeds of a distribution from a Fidelity recordkept employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program) that is rolled directly into a Fidelity Advisor IRA;

6. Purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative, or other employee (or a member of one of their immediate families) of intermediaries having agreements with FDC. A member of the immediate family of a bank trust officer, a registered representative, or other employee of intermediaries having agreements with FDC, is a spouse of one of those individuals, an account for which one of those individuals is acting as custodian for a minor child, and a trust account that is registered for the sole benefit of a minor child of one of those individuals;

7. Purchased with distributions of income, principal, and capital gains from Fidelity Defined Trusts;

8. Purchased to repay a loan against Class A, Class T, or Class B shares held in the investor's Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

9. Purchased for health savings account programs by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, or bank trust department; or

10. (Applicable only to Class A purchases after October 23, 2009) Purchased by a shareholder who redeemed Destiny Plan assets and received the proceeds in the form of directly held shares of a Fidelity Advisor fund after September 30, 2008.

The following information replaces similar CDSC waiver information found in the "Fund Distribution" section on page 34.

The CDSC may be waived on the redemption of shares (applies to Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C, unless otherwise noted):

1. For disability or death;

2. From employer-sponsored retirement plans (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

3. For minimum required distributions from Traditional IRAs, Rollover IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs (excludes Roth accounts) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

4. Through the Fidelity Advisor Systematic Withdrawal Program, if the amount does not exceed 12% of the account balance in a rolling 12-month period;

5. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) Held by insurance company separate accounts;

6. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) From an employee benefit plan (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, SARSEPs, and plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees) or 403(b) programs (except Fidelity Advisor 403(b) programs for which Fidelity or an affiliate serves as custodian);

7. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) On which a finder's fee was eligible to be paid to an investment professional at the time of purchase, but was not paid because payment was declined (to determine your eligibility for this CDSC waiver, please ask your investment professional if he or she received a finder's fee at the time of purchase);

8. (Applicable to Class C only) On which investment professionals did not receive a concession at the time of purchase; or

9. (Applicable to Class B only) From the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program.

Supplement to the
Fidelity Advisor® Inflation-Protected Bond Fund
Institutional Class
May 28, 2011
Prospectus

The following information supplements the similar information found in the "Buying Shares" section beginning on page 16.

Institutional Class shares are offered to:

1. Employee benefit plans investing through an intermediary. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include profit sharing, 401(k), and 403(b) plans, but do not include: IRAs; SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees (formerly Keogh/H.R. 10 plans); health savings accounts; or plans investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

2. Insurance company separate accounts;

3. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution and bank trust department managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee;

4. Current or former Trustees or officers of a Fidelity fund or current or retired officers, directors, or regular employees of FMR LLC or FIL Limited or their direct or indirect subsidiaries (Fidelity Trustee or employee), spouses of Fidelity Trustees or employees, Fidelity Trustees or employees acting as a custodian for a minor child, or persons acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child of a Fidelity Trustee or employee;

5. Purchased for any state, county, or city, or any governmental instrumentality, department, authority or agency;

6. Purchased by a charitable organization (as defined for purposes of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) or a charitable remainder trust or life income pool established for the benefit of a charitable organization;

7. Qualified tuition programs for which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment manager, or mutual funds managed by Fidelity or other parties;

8. Non-U.S. public and private retirement programs and non-U.S. insurance companies, if approved by Fidelity;

9. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, and bank trust department health savings account programs; and

10. Destiny Planholders who exchange, or have exchanged, from Class O to Institutional Class of Fidelity Advisor funds.

AIFBI-11-01		June 7, 2011
1.790683.114

Supplement to the
Fidelity AdvisorSM Investment Grade Bond Fund
Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C
October 30, 2010
Prospectus

The following information replaces similar information found under the heading "Description of Principal Security Types" in the "Fund Basics" section on page 10.

Forward-settling securities involve a commitment to purchase or sell specific securities when issued, or at a predetermined price or yield. When a fund does not already own or have the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount, a commitment to sell securities is equivalent to a short sale. Payment and delivery take place after the customary settlement period.

The following information replaces similar information found under the heading "Principal Investment Risks" in the "Fund Basics" section beginning on page 10.

Leverage Risk. Derivatives, forward-settling securities, and short sale transactions involve leverage because they can provide investment exposure in an amount exceeding the initial investment. Leverage can magnify investment risks and cause losses to be realized more quickly. A small change in the underlying asset, instrument, or index can lead to a significant loss. Assets segregated to cover these transactions may decline in value and are not available to meet redemptions. Forward-settling securities and short sale transactions also involve the risk that a security will not be issued, delivered, available for purchase, or paid for when anticipated. An increase in the market price of securities sold short will result in a loss. Government legislation or regulation could affect the use of these transactions and could limit the fund's ability to pursue its investment strategies.

Effective July 15, 2011, the following information replaces similar sales charge waiver information for Class A and Class T found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 31.

A front-end sales charge will not apply to the following Class A or Class T shares:

1. Purchased for an employee benefit plan other than a plan investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include 401(a), 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b) governmental plans, but do not include: IRAs, SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; or health savings accounts;

2. Purchased for an insurance company separate account;

3. Purchased for managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution or bank trust department;

AIGB-11-02		June 7, 2011
1.777602.120

4. Purchased with the proceeds of a redemption of Fidelity or Fidelity Advisor fund shares held in (i) an insurance company separate account, or (ii) an employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program), the proceeds of which must be reinvested directly into Fidelity Advisor fund shares;

5. Purchased with any proceeds of a distribution from a Fidelity recordkept employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program) that is rolled directly into a Fidelity Advisor IRA;

6. Purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative, or other employee (or a member of one of their immediate families) of intermediaries having agreements with FDC. A member of the immediate family of a bank trust officer, a registered representative, or other employee of intermediaries having agreements with FDC, is a spouse of one of those individuals, an account for which one of those individuals is acting as custodian for a minor child, and a trust account that is registered for the sole benefit of a minor child of one of those individuals;

7. Purchased with distributions of income, principal, and capital gains from Fidelity Defined Trusts;

8. Purchased to repay a loan against Class A, Class T, or Class B shares held in the investor's Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

9. Purchased for health savings account programs by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, or bank trust department; or

10. (Applicable only to Class A purchases after October 23, 2009) Purchased by a shareholder who redeemed Destiny Plan assets and received the proceeds in the form of directly held shares of a Fidelity Advisor fund after September 30, 2008.

The following information replaces similar CDSC waiver information found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 33.

The CDSC may be waived on the redemption of shares (applies to Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C, unless otherwise noted):

1. For disability or death;

2. From employer-sponsored retirement plans (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

3. For minimum required distributions from Traditional IRAs, Rollover IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs (excludes Roth accounts) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

4. Through the Fidelity Advisor Systematic Withdrawal Program, if the amount does not exceed 12% of the account balance in a rolling 12-month period;

5. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) Held by insurance company separate accounts;

6. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) From an employee benefit plan (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, SARSEPs, and plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees) or 403(b) programs (except Fidelity Advisor 403(b) programs for which Fidelity or an affiliate serves as custodian);

7. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) On which a finder's fee was eligible to be paid to an investment professional at the time of purchase, but was not paid because payment was declined (to determine your eligibility for this CDSC waiver, please ask your investment professional if he or she received a finder's fee at the time of purchase);

8. (Applicable to Class C only) On which investment professionals did not receive a concession at the time of purchase; or

9. (Applicable to Class B only) From the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program.

Supplement to the
Fidelity AdvisorSM
Investment Grade Bond Fund
Institutional Class
October 30, 2010
Prospectus

The following information replaces similar information found under the heading "Description of Principal Security Types" in the "Fund Basics" section on page 9.

Forward-settling securities involve a commitment to purchase or sell specific securities when issued, or at a predetermined price or yield. When a fund does not already own or have the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount, a commitment to sell securities is equivalent to a short sale. Payment and delivery take place after the customary settlement period.

The following information replaces similar information found under the heading "Principal Investment Risks" in the "Fund Basics" section beginning on page 9.

Leverage Risk. Derivatives, forward-settling securities, and short sale transactions involve leverage because they can provide investment exposure in an amount exceeding the initial investment. Leverage can magnify investment risks and cause losses to be realized more quickly. A small change in the underlying asset, instrument, or index can lead to a significant loss. Assets segregated to cover these transactions may decline in value and are not available to meet redemptions. Forward-settling securities and short sale transactions also involve the risk that a security will not be issued, delivered, available for purchase, or paid for when anticipated. An increase in the market price of securities sold short will result in a loss. Government legislation or regulation could affect the use of these transactions and could limit the fund's ability to pursue its investment strategies.

The following information supplements the similar information found in the "Buying Shares" section beginning on page 15.

Institutional Class shares are offered to:

1. Employee benefit plans investing through an intermediary. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include profit sharing, 401(k), and 403(b) plans, but do not include: IRAs; SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees (formerly Keogh/H.R. 10 plans); health savings accounts; or plans investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

2. Insurance company separate accounts;

3. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution and bank trust department managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee;

AIGBI-11-02		June 7, 2011
1.790651.113

4. Current or former Trustees or officers of a Fidelity fund or current or retired officers, directors, or regular employees of FMR LLC or FIL Limited or their direct or indirect subsidiaries (Fidelity Trustee or employee), spouses of Fidelity Trustees or employees, Fidelity Trustees or employees acting as a custodian for a minor child, or persons acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child of a Fidelity Trustee or employee;

5. Purchased for any state, county, or city, or any governmental instrumentality, department, authority or agency;

6. Purchased by a charitable organization (as defined for purposes of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) or a charitable remainder trust or life income pool established for the benefit of a charitable organization;

7. Qualified tuition programs for which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment manager, or mutual funds managed by Fidelity or other parties;

8. Non-U.S. public and private retirement programs and non-U.S. insurance companies, if approved by Fidelity;

9. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, and bank trust department health savings account programs; and

10. Destiny Planholders who exchange, or have exchanged, from Class O to Institutional Class of Fidelity Advisor funds.

Supplement to the
Fidelity Advisor® Strategic Real Return Fund
Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C
November 29, 2010
Prospectus

The following information replaces similar information found under the heading "Description of Principal Security Types" in the "Fund Basics" section on page 11.

Forward-settling securities involve a commitment to purchase or sell specific securities when issued, or at a predetermined price or yield. When a fund does not already own or have the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount, a commitment to sell securities is equivalent to a short sale. Payment and delivery take place after the customary settlement period.

The following information replaces similar information found under the heading "Principal Investment Risks" in the "Fund Basics" section on page 14.

Leverage Risk. Derivatives, forward-settling securities, and short sale transactions involve leverage because they can provide investment exposure in an amount exceeding the initial investment. Leverage can magnify investment risks and cause losses to be realized more quickly. A small change in the underlying asset, instrument, or index can lead to a significant loss. Assets segregated to cover these transactions may decline in value and are not available to meet redemptions. Forward-settling securities and short sale transactions also involve the risk that a security will not be issued, delivered, available for purchase, or paid for when anticipated. An increase in the market price of securities sold short will result in a loss. Government legislation or regulation could affect the use of these transactions and could limit the fund's ability to pursue its investment strategies.

Effective July 15, 2011, the following information replaces similar sales charge waiver information for Class A and Class T found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 36.

A front-end sales charge will not apply to the following Class A or Class T shares:

1. Purchased for an employee benefit plan other than a plan investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include 401(a), 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b) governmental plans, but do not include: IRAs, SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; or health savings accounts;

2. Purchased for an insurance company separate account;

3. Purchased for managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution or bank trust department;

ARRS-11-02		June 7, 2011
1.820981.118

4. Purchased with the proceeds of a redemption of Fidelity or Fidelity Advisor fund shares held in (i) an insurance company separate account, or (ii) an employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program), the proceeds of which must be reinvested directly into Fidelity Advisor fund shares;

5. Purchased with any proceeds of a distribution from a Fidelity recordkept employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program) that is rolled directly into a Fidelity Advisor IRA;

6. Purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative, or other employee (or a member of one of their immediate families) of intermediaries having agreements with FDC. A member of the immediate family of a bank trust officer, a registered representative, or other employee of intermediaries having agreements with FDC, is a spouse of one of those individuals, an account for which one of those individuals is acting as custodian for a minor child, and a trust account that is registered for the sole benefit of a minor child of one of those individuals;

7. Purchased with distributions of income, principal, and capital gains from Fidelity Defined Trusts;

8. Purchased to repay a loan against Class A, Class T, or Class B shares held in the investor's Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

9. Purchased for health savings account programs by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, or bank trust department; or

10. (Applicable only to Class A purchases after October 23, 2009) Purchased by a shareholder who redeemed Destiny Plan assets and received the proceeds in the form of directly held shares of a Fidelity Advisor fund after September 30, 2008.

The following information replaces similar CDSC waiver information found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 37.

The CDSC may be waived on the redemption of shares (applies to Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C, unless otherwise noted):

1. For disability or death;

2. From employer-sponsored retirement plans (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

3. For minimum required distributions from Traditional IRAs, Rollover IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs (excludes Roth accounts) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

4. Through the Fidelity Advisor Systematic Withdrawal Program, if the amount does not exceed 12% of the account balance in a rolling 12-month period;

5. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) Held by insurance company separate accounts;

6. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) From an employee benefit plan (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, SARSEPs, and plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees) or 403(b) programs (except Fidelity Advisor 403(b) programs for which Fidelity or an affiliate serves as custodian);

7. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) On which a finder's fee was eligible to be paid to an investment professional at the time of purchase, but was not paid because payment was declined (to determine your eligibility for this CDSC waiver, please ask your investment professional if he or she received a finder's fee at the time of purchase);

8. (Applicable to Class C only) On which investment professionals did not receive a concession at the time of purchase; or

9. (Applicable to Class B only) From the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program.

Supplement to the
Fidelity Advisor® Strategic Real Return Fund
Institutional Class
November 29, 2010
Prospectus

The following information replaces similar information found under the heading "Description of Principal Security Types" in the "Fund Basics" section on page 11.

Forward-settling securities involve a commitment to purchase or sell specific securities when issued, or at a predetermined price or yield. When a fund does not already own or have the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount, a commitment to sell securities is equivalent to a short sale. Payment and delivery take place after the customary settlement period.

The following information replaces similar information found under the heading "Principal Investment Risks" in the "Fund Basics" section on page 14.

Leverage Risk. Derivatives, forward-settling securities, and short sale transactions involve leverage because they can provide investment exposure in an amount exceeding the initial investment. Leverage can magnify investment risks and cause losses to be realized more quickly. A small change in the underlying asset, instrument, or index can lead to a significant loss. Assets segregated to cover these transactions may decline in value and are not available to meet redemptions. Forward-settling securities and short sale transactions also involve the risk that a security will not be issued, delivered, available for purchase, or paid for when anticipated. An increase in the market price of securities sold short will result in a loss. Government legislation or regulation could affect the use of these transactions and could limit the fund's ability to pursue its investment strategies.

The following information supplements the similar information found in the "Buying Shares" section beginning on page 19.

Institutional Class shares are offered to:

1. Employee benefit plans investing through an intermediary. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include profit sharing, 401(k), and 403(b) plans, but do not include: IRAs; SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees (formerly Keogh/H.R. 10 plans); health savings accounts; or plans investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

2. Insurance company separate accounts;

3. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution and bank trust department managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee;

ARRSI-11-02		June 7, 2011
1.820980.114

4. Current or former Trustees or officers of a Fidelity fund or current or retired officers, directors, or regular employees of FMR LLC or FIL Limited or their direct or indirect subsidiaries (Fidelity Trustee or employee), spouses of Fidelity Trustees or employees, Fidelity Trustees or employees acting as a custodian for a minor child, or persons acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child of a Fidelity Trustee or employee;

5. Purchased for any state, county, or city, or any governmental instrumentality, department, authority or agency;

6. Purchased by a charitable organization (as defined for purposes of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) or a charitable remainder trust or life income pool established for the benefit of a charitable organization;

7. Qualified tuition programs for which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment manager, or mutual funds managed by Fidelity or other parties;

8. Non-U.S. public and private retirement programs and non-U.S. insurance companies, if approved by Fidelity;

9. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, and bank trust department health savings account programs; and

10. Destiny Planholders who exchange, or have exchanged, from Class O to Institutional Class of Fidelity Advisor funds.

Supplement to the
Fidelity Advisor® Strategic Dividend & Income Fund
Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C
January 29, 2011
Prospectus

Effective July 15, 2011, the following information replaces similar sales charge waiver information for Class A and Class T found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 32.

A front-end sales charge will not apply to the following Class A or Class T shares:

1. Purchased for an employee benefit plan other than a plan investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include 401(a), 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b) governmental plans, but do not include: IRAs; SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; or health savings accounts;

2. Purchased for an insurance company separate account;

3. Purchased for managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution or bank trust department;

4. Purchased with the proceeds of a redemption of Fidelity or Fidelity Advisor fund shares held in (i) an insurance company separate account, or (ii) an employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program), the proceeds of which must be reinvested directly into Fidelity Advisor fund shares;

5. Purchased with any proceeds of a distribution from a Fidelity recordkept employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program) that is rolled directly into a Fidelity Advisor IRA;

6. Purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative, or other employee (or a member of one of their immediate families) of intermediaries having agreements with FDC. A member of the immediate family of a bank trust officer, a registered representative, or other employee of intermediaries having agreements with FDC, is a spouse of one of those individuals, an account for which one of those individuals is acting as custodian for a minor child, and a trust account that is registered for the sole benefit of a minor child of one of those individuals;

7. Purchased with distributions of income, principal, and capital gains from Fidelity Defined Trusts;

ASDI-11-01		June 7, 2011
1.805077.120

8. Purchased to repay a loan against Class A, Class T, or Class B shares held in the investor's Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

9. Purchased for health savings account programs by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, or bank trust department; or

10. (Applicable only to Class A purchases after October 23, 2009) Purchased by a shareholder who redeemed Destiny Plan assets and received the proceeds in the form of directly held shares of a Fidelity Advisor fund after September 30, 2008.

The following information replaces similar CDSC waiver information found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 33.

The CDSC may be waived on the redemption of shares (applies to Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C, unless otherwise noted):

1. For disability or death;

2. From employer-sponsored retirement plans (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

3. For minimum required distributions from Traditional IRAs, Rollover IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs (excludes Roth accounts) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

4. Through the Fidelity Advisor Systematic Withdrawal Program, if the amount does not exceed 12% of the account balance in a rolling 12-month period;

5. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) Held by insurance company separate accounts;

6. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) From an employee benefit plan (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, SARSEPs and plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees) or 403(b) programs (except Fidelity Advisor 403(b) programs for which Fidelity or an affiliate serves as custodian);

7. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) On which a finder's fee was eligible to be paid to an investment professional at the time of purchase, but was not paid because payment was declined (to determine your eligibility for this CDSC waiver, please ask your investment professional if he or she received a finder's fee at the time of purchase);

8. (Applicable to Class C only) On which investment professionals did not receive a concession at the time of purchase; or

9. (Applicable to Class B only) From the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program.

Supplement to the
Fidelity Advisor® Strategic Dividend & Income Fund
Institutional Class
January 29, 2011
Prospectus

The following information supplements the similar information found in the "Buying Shares" section beginning on page 15.

Institutional Class shares are offered to:

1. Employee benefit plans investing through an intermediary. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include profit sharing, 401(k), and 403(b) plans, but do not include: IRAs; SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees (formerly Keogh/H.R. 10 plans); health savings accounts; or plans investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

2. Insurance company separate accounts;

3. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution and bank trust department managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee;

4. Current or former Trustees or officers of a Fidelity fund or current or retired officers, directors, or regular employees of FMR LLC or FIL Limited or their direct or indirect subsidiaries (Fidelity Trustee or employee), spouses of Fidelity Trustees or employees, Fidelity Trustees or employees acting as a custodian for a minor child, or persons acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child of a Fidelity Trustee or employee;

5. Purchased for any state, county, or city, or any governmental instrumentality, department, authority or agency;

6. Purchased by a charitable organization (as defined for purposes of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) or a charitable remainder trust or life income pool established for the benefit of a charitable organization;

7. Qualified tuition programs for which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment manager, or mutual funds managed by Fidelity or other parties;

8. Non-U.S. public and private retirement programs and non-U.S. insurance companies, if approved by Fidelity;

9. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, and bank trust department health savings account programs; and

10. Destiny Planholders who exchange, or have exchanged, from Class O to Institutional Class of Fidelity Advisor funds.

ASDII-11-01		June 7, 2011
1.805078.116

Supplement to the
Fidelity Advisor Dynamic Strategies® Fund
Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C
March 1, 2011
Prospectus

The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Dynamic Strategies® Fund has approved certain changes effective June 1, 2011, including changing the name "Dynamic Strategies" to "Global Strategies" and modifying the fund's investment policies.

Effective June 1, 2011, the following bullet replaces the first bullet under the heading "Principal Investment Strategies" in the "Fund Summary" section on page 4.

  • Allocating the fund's assets between stocks and bonds by investing in Fidelity funds (underlying Fidelity funds) and unaffiliated exchanged traded funds (ETFs), or through direct investments.

Effective June 1, 2011, the following bullets supplement the information found under the heading "Principal Investment Strategies" in the "Fund Summary" section beginning on page 4.

  • Investing in securities issued anywhere in the world.
ADYS-11-03		June 7, 2011
1.883716.109
  • Allocating investments across different countries and regions.

Effective June 1, 2011, the fifth bullet under the heading "Principal Investment Strategies" in the "Fund Summary" section on page 5 has been removed.

Effective June 1, 2011, the following information replaces the information found under the heading "Principal Investment Strategies" in the "Fund Basics" section beginning on page 10.

FMRC invests the fund's assets in securities issued anywhere in the world, including the United States. FMRC generally allocates the fund's assets between stocks (equity securities of all types, including domestic, international and emerging markets equities and ETFs) and bonds (fixed income securities of all types, including domestic, international, emerging markets, high yield, investment grade and inflation protected bonds, floating rate loans, and ETNs). The fund may make investments that do not fall into either asset class. FMRC may invest a significant portion of the fund's assets in non-traditional assets, including commodity-related investments.

The fund gains exposure to each asset class by investing primarily in a combination of Fidelity funds and unaffiliated ETFs (underlying funds), although it may also invest directly in individual securities.

FMRC may invest up to 25% of the fund's assets in a wholly-owned subsidiary of the fund organized under the laws of the Cayman Islands (the Subsidiary). The Subsidiary is managed by FMRC and has the same investment objective as the fund. FMRC intends to invest the Subsidiary's assets directly in commodity-related ETFs and ETNs and other commodities and commodity-linked investments.

FMR normally allocates the fund's investments across different countries and regions.

FMRC regularly reviews the fund's allocation and makes changes to favor investments it believes will provide the most favorable outlook for achieving the fund's objective. Depending on its outlook, FMRC may from time to time allocate substantially all of the fund's assets in either the stock class or bond class. In making allocation decisions, FMRC will consider multiple data sources, including economic research, quantitative analysis, fundamental research, and technical analysis. FMRC expects to emphasize specific themes within each asset class.

FMRC may actively adjust the fund's allocation between asset classes at any time to take advantage of short-term market opportunities, and may therefore hold some positions for a relatively short period of time. Other allocation decisions will be strategic and longer-term in nature. FMRC will attempt to capture short-term market opportunities by actively trading ETFs, but does not intend to actively trade Fidelity funds.

For current information on fund holdings, please visit Fidelity's website at www.advisor.fidelity.com. For information on the underlying funds, see the underlying funds' prospectuses. A copy of any underlying Fidelity fund's prospectus is available at www.fidelity.com or www.advisor.fidelity.com. For a copy of an ETF's prospectus, visit the web site of the company that manages or sponsors that ETF.

The non-traditional assets in which the fund invests may include commodities and commodity-related investments, real estate-related investments, and market neutral strategies, which can be less correlated with the overall stock market than traditional asset classes. In addition to the principal investment strategies discussed above, FMRC may also lend the fund's securities to broker dealers or other institutions to earn income for the fund. FMRC may also use various techniques, such as buying and selling futures contracts, as tools in the management of portfolio assets.

If FMRC's strategies do not work as intended, the fund may not achieve its objective.

Effective July 15, 2011, the following information replaces similar sales charge waiver information for Class A and Class T found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 35.

A front-end sales charge will not apply to the following Class A or Class T shares:

1. Purchased for an employee benefit plan other than a plan investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include 401(a), 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b) governmental plans, but do not include: IRAs, SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; or health savings accounts;

2. Purchased for an insurance company separate account;

3. Purchased for managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution or bank trust department;

4. Purchased with the proceeds of a redemption of Fidelity or Fidelity Advisor fund shares held in (i) an insurance company separate account, or (ii) an employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program), the proceeds of which must be reinvested directly into Fidelity Advisor fund shares;

5. Purchased with any proceeds of a distribution from a Fidelity recordkept employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program) that is rolled directly into a Fidelity Advisor IRA;

6. Purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative, or other employee (or a member of one of their immediate families) of intermediaries having agreements with FDC. A member of the immediate family of a bank trust officer, a registered representative, or other employee of intermediaries having agreements with FDC, is a spouse of one of those individuals, an account for which one of those individuals is acting as custodian for a minor child, and a trust account that is registered for the sole benefit of a minor child of one of those individuals;

7. Purchased with distributions of income, principal, and capital gains from Fidelity Defined Trusts;

8. Purchased to repay a loan against Class A, Class T, or Class B shares held in the investor's Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

9. Purchased for health savings account programs by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, or bank trust department; or

10. (Applicable only to Class A purchases after October 23, 2009) Purchased by a shareholder who redeemed Destiny Plan assets and received the proceeds in the form of directly held shares of a Fidelity Advisor fund after September 30, 2008.

The following information replaces similar CDSC waiver information found in the "Fund Distribution" section on page 37.

The CDSC may be waived on the redemption of shares (applies to Class A, Class T, Class B, and Class C, unless otherwise noted):

1. For disability or death;

2. From employer-sponsored retirement plans (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

3. For minimum required distributions from Traditional IRAs, Rollover IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs (excludes Roth accounts) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

4. Through the Fidelity Advisor Systematic Withdrawal Program, if the amount does not exceed 12% of the account balance in a rolling 12-month period;

5. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) Held by insurance company separate accounts;

6. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) From an employee benefit plan (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, SARSEPs, and plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees) or 403(b) programs (except Fidelity Advisor 403(b) programs for which Fidelity or an affiliate serves as custodian);

7. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) On which a finder's fee was eligible to be paid to an investment professional at the time of purchase, but was not paid because payment was declined (to determine your eligibility for this CDSC waiver, please ask your investment professional if he or she received a finder's fee at the time of purchase);

8. (Applicable to Class C only) On which investment professionals did not receive a concession at the time of purchase; or

9. (Applicable to Class B only) From the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program.

Supplement to the
Fidelity Advisor Dynamic Strategies® Fund
Institutional Class
March 1, 2011
Prospectus

The Board of Trustees of Fidelity Dynamic Strategies® Fund has approved certain changes effective June 1, 2011, including changing the name "Dynamic Strategies" to "Global Strategies" and modifying the fund's investment policies.

Effective June 1, 2011, the following bullet replaces the first bullet under the heading "Principal Investment Strategies" in the "Fund Summary" section on page 4.

  • Allocating the fund's assets between stocks and bonds by investing in Fidelity funds (underlying Fidelity funds) and unaffiliated exchanged traded funds (ETFs), or through direct investments.

Effective June 1, 2011, the following bullets supplement the information found under the heading "Principal Investment Strategies" in the "Fund Summary" section on page 4.

  • Investing in securities issued anywhere in the world.
  • Allocating investments across different countries and regions.
ADYSI-11-03		June 7, 2011
1.883717.107

Effective June 1, 2011, the fifth bullet under the heading "Principal Investment Strategies" in the "Fund Summary" section on page 4 has been removed.

Effective June 1, 2011, the following information replaces the information found under the heading "Principal Investment Strategies" in the "Fund Basics" section beginning on page 9.

FMRC invests the fund's assets in securities issued anywhere in the world, including the United States. FMRC generally allocates the fund's assets between stocks (equity securities of all types, including domestic, international and emerging markets equities and ETFs) and bonds (fixed income securities of all types, including domestic, international, emerging markets, high yield, investment grade and inflation protected bonds, floating rate loans, and ETNs). The fund may make investments that do not fall into either asset class. FMRC may invest a significant portion of the fund's assets in non-traditional assets, including commodity-related investments.

The fund gains exposure to each asset class by investing primarily in a combination of Fidelity funds and unaffiliated ETFs (underlying funds), although it may also invest directly in individual securities.

FMRC may invest up to 25% of the fund's assets in a wholly-owned subsidiary of the fund organized under the laws of the Cayman Islands (the Subsidiary). The Subsidiary is managed by FMRC and has the same investment objective as the fund. FMRC intends to invest the Subsidiary's assets directly in commodity-related ETFs and ETNs and other commodities and commodity-linked investments.

FMR normally allocates the fund's investments across different countries and regions.

FMRC regularly reviews the fund's allocation and makes changes to favor investments it believes will provide the most favorable outlook for achieving the fund's objective. Depending on its outlook, FMRC may from time to time allocate substantially all of the fund's assets in either the stock class or bond class. In making allocation decisions, FMRC will consider multiple data sources, including economic research, quantitative analysis, fundamental research, and technical analysis. FMRC expects to emphasize specific themes within each asset class.

FMRC may actively adjust the fund's allocation between asset classes at any time to take advantage of short-term market opportunities, and may therefore hold some positions for a relatively short period of time. Other allocation decisions will be strategic and longer-term in nature. FMRC will attempt to capture short-term market opportunities by actively trading ETFs, but does not intend to actively trade Fidelity funds.

For current information on fund holdings, please visit Fidelity's website at www.advisor.fidelity.com. For information on the underlying funds, see the underlying funds' prospectuses. A copy of any underlying Fidelity fund's prospectus is available at www.fidelity.com or www.advisor.fidelity.com. For a copy of an ETF's prospectus, visit the web site of the company that manages or sponsors that ETF.

The non-traditional assets in which the fund invests may include commodities and commodity-related investments, real estate-related investments, and market neutral strategies, which can be less correlated with the overall stock market than traditional asset classes. In addition to the principal investment strategies discussed above, FMRC may also lend the fund's securities to broker dealers or other institutions to earn income for the fund. FMRC may also use various techniques, such as buying and selling futures contracts, as tools in the management of portfolio assets.

If FMRC's strategies do not work as intended, the fund may not achieve its objective.

The following information supplements the similar information found in the "Buying Shares" section beginning on page 20.

Institutional Class shares are offered to:

1. Employee benefit plans investing through an intermediary. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include profit sharing, 401(k), and 403(b) plans, but do not include: IRAs; SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees (formerly Keogh/H.R. 10 plans); health savings accounts; or plans investing through the Fidelity Advisor® 403(b) program;

2. Insurance company separate accounts;

3. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution and bank trust department managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee;

4. Current or former Trustees or officers of a Fidelity fund or current or retired officers, directors, or regular employees of FMR LLC or FIL Limited or their direct or indirect subsidiaries (Fidelity Trustee or employee), spouses of Fidelity Trustees or employees, Fidelity Trustees or employees acting as a custodian for a minor child, or persons acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child of a Fidelity Trustee or employee;

5. Purchased for any state, county, or city, or any governmental instrumentality, department, authority or agency;

6. Purchased by a charitable organization (as defined for purposes of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) or a charitable remainder trust or life income pool established for the benefit of a charitable organization;

7. Qualified tuition programs for which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment manager, or mutual funds managed by Fidelity or other parties;

8. Non-U.S. public and private retirement programs and non-U.S. insurance companies, if approved by Fidelity;

9. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, and bank trust department health savings account programs; and

10. Destiny Planholders who exchange, or have exchanged, from Class O to Institutional Class of Fidelity Advisor funds.

Supplement to the
Fidelity AdvisorSM Corporate Bond Fund
Class A, Class T, and Class C
October 30, 2010
Prospectus

Effective July 15, 2011, the following information replaces similar sales charge waiver information for Class A and Class T found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 29.

A front-end sales charge will not apply to the following Class A or Class T shares:

1. Purchased for an employee benefit plan other than a plan investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include 401(a), 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b) governmental plans, but do not include: IRAs; SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; or health savings accounts;

2. Purchased for an insurance company separate account;

3. Purchased for managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution or bank trust department;

4. Purchased with the proceeds of a redemption of Fidelity or Fidelity Advisor fund shares held in (i) an insurance company separate account, or (ii) an employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program), the proceeds of which must be reinvested directly into Fidelity Advisor fund shares;

5. Purchased with any proceeds of a distribution from a Fidelity recordkept employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program) that is rolled directly into a Fidelity Advisor IRA;

6. Purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative, or other employee (or a member of one of their immediate families) of intermediaries having agreements with FDC. A member of the immediate family of a bank trust officer, a registered representative, or other employee of intermediaries having agreements with FDC, is a spouse of one of those individuals, an account for which one of those individuals is acting as custodian for a minor child, and a trust account that is registered for the sole benefit of a minor child of one of those individuals;

7. Purchased with distributions of income, principal, and capital gains from Fidelity Defined Trusts;

ACBD-11-01		June 7, 2011
1.913959.101

8. Purchased to repay a loan against Class A, Class T or Class B shares held in the investor's Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

9. Purchased for health savings account programs by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, or bank trust department; or

10. (Applicable only to Class A purchases after October 23, 2009) Purchased by a shareholder who redeemed Destiny Plan assets and received the proceeds in the form of directly held shares of a Fidelity Advisor fund after September 30, 2008.

The following information replaces similar CDSC waiver information found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 30.

The CDSC may be waived on the redemption of shares (applies to Class A, Class T, and Class C, unless otherwise noted):

1. For disability or death;

2. From employer-sponsored retirement plans (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

3. For minimum required distributions from Traditional IRAs, Rollover IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs (excludes Roth accounts) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

4. Through the Fidelity Advisor Systematic Withdrawal Program, if the amount does not exceed 12% of the account balance in a rolling 12-month period;

5. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) Held by insurance company separate accounts;

6. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) From an employee benefit plan (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, SARSEPs and plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees) or 403(b) programs (except Fidelity Advisor 403(b) programs for which Fidelity or an affiliate serves as custodian);

7. (Applicable to Class A and Class T only) On which a finder's fee was eligible to be paid to an investment professional at the time of purchase, but was not paid because payment was declined (to determine your eligibility for this CDSC waiver, please ask your investment professional if he or she received a finder's fee at the time of purchase); or

8. (Applicable to Class C only) On which investment professionals did not receive a concession at the time of purchase.

Supplement to the
Fidelity AdvisorSM Corporate Bond Fund
Institutional Class
October 30, 2010
Prospectus

The following information supplements the similar information found in the "Buying Shares" section beginning on page 14.

Institutional Class shares are offered to:

1. Employee benefit plans investing through an intermediary. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include profit sharing, 401(k), and 403(b) plans, but do not include: IRAs; SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees (formerly Keogh/H.R. 10 plans); health savings accounts; or plans investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

2. Insurance company separate accounts;

3. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution and bank trust department managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee;

4. Current or former Trustees or officers of a Fidelity fund or current or retired officers, directors, or regular employees of FMR LLC or FIL Limited or their direct or indirect subsidiaries (Fidelity Trustee or employee), spouses of Fidelity Trustees or employees, Fidelity Trustees or employees acting as a custodian for a minor child, or persons acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child of a Fidelity Trustee or employee;

5. Purchased for any state, county, or city, or any governmental instrumentality, department, authority or agency;

6. Purchased by a charitable organization (as defined for purposes of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) or a charitable remainder trust or life income pool established for the benefit of a charitable organization;

7. Qualified tuition programs for which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment manager, or mutual funds managed by Fidelity or other parties;

8. Non-U.S. public and private retirement programs and non-U.S. insurance companies, if approved by Fidelity;

9. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, and bank trust department health savings account programs; and

10. Destiny Planholders who exchange, or have exchanged, from Class O to Institutional Class of Fidelity Advisor funds.

ACBDI-11-01		June 7, 2011
1.928684.100

Supplement to the
Fidelity® Defined Maturity Funds
Class A
May 16, 2011
As Revised
May 19, 2011
Prospectus

Effective July 15, 2011, the following information replaces similar sales charge waiver information for Class A found in the "Fund Distribution" section beginning on page 45.

A front-end sales charge will not apply to the following Class A shares:

1. Purchased for an employee benefit plan other than a plan investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include 401(a), 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b) governmental plans, but do not include: IRAs, SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; or health savings accounts;

2. Purchased for an insurance company separate account;

3. Purchased for managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution or bank trust department;

4. Purchased with the proceeds of a redemption of Fidelity or Fidelity Advisor fund shares held in (i) an insurance company separate account, or (ii) an employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program), the proceeds of which must be reinvested directly into Fidelity Advisor fund shares;

5. Purchased with any proceeds of a distribution from a Fidelity recordkept employee benefit plan (as described in waiver number 1 above, including the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program) that is rolled directly into a Fidelity Advisor IRA;

6. Purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative, or other employee (or a member of one of their immediate families) of intermediaries having agreements with FDC. A member of the immediate family of a bank trust officer, a registered representative, or other employee of intermediaries having agreements with FDC, is a spouse of one of those individuals, an account for which one of those individuals is acting as custodian for a minor child, and a trust account that is registered for the sole benefit of a minor child of one of those individuals;

7. Purchased with distributions of income, principal, and capital gains from Fidelity Defined Trusts;

8. Purchased to repay a loan against Class A shares held in the investor's Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

ADMI-11-01		June 7, 2011
1.929001.100

9. Purchased for health savings account programs by a broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, or bank trust department; or

10. (Applicable only to Class A purchases after October 23, 2009) Purchased by a shareholder who redeemed Destiny Plan assets and received the proceeds in the form of directly held shares of a Fidelity Advisor fund after September 30, 2008.

The following information replaces similar CDSC waiver information found in the "Fund Distribution" section on page 47.

The CDSC may be waived on the redemption of shares (applies to Class A, unless otherwise noted):

1. For disability or death;

2. From employer-sponsored retirement plans (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

3. For minimum required distributions from Traditional IRAs, Rollover IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, and SARSEPs (excludes Roth accounts) starting the year in which age 70 1/2 is attained;

4. Through the Fidelity Advisor Systematic Withdrawal Program, if the amount does not exceed 12% of the account balance in a rolling 12-month period;

5. Held by insurance company separate accounts;

6. From an employee benefit plan (except SIMPLE IRAs, SEPs, SARSEPs, and plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees) or 403(b) programs (except Fidelity Advisor 403(b) programs for which Fidelity or an affiliate serves as custodian); or

7. On which a finder's fee was eligible to be paid to an investment professional at the time of purchase, but was not paid because payment was declined (to determine your eligibility for this CDSC waiver, please ask your investment professional if he or she received a finder's fee at the time of purchase).

Supplement to the
Fidelity® Defined Maturity Funds
Institutional Class
May 16, 2011
Prospectus

The following information supplements the similar information found in the "Buying Shares" section beginning on page 31.

Institutional Class shares are offered to:

1. Employee benefit plans investing through an intermediary. For this purpose, employee benefit plans generally include profit sharing, 401(k), and 403(b) plans, but do not include: IRAs; SIMPLE, SEP, or SARSEP plans; plans covering self-employed individuals and their employees (formerly Keogh/H.R. 10 plans); health savings accounts; or plans investing through the Fidelity Advisor 403(b) program;

2. Insurance company separate accounts;

3. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution and bank trust department managed account programs that charge an asset-based fee;

4. Current or former Trustees or officers of a Fidelity fund or current or retired officers, directors, or regular employees of FMR LLC or FIL Limited or their direct or indirect subsidiaries (Fidelity Trustee or employee), spouses of Fidelity Trustees or employees, Fidelity Trustees or employees acting as a custodian for a minor child, or persons acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child of a Fidelity Trustee or employee;

5. Purchased for any state, county, or city, or any governmental instrumentality, department, authority or agency;

6. Purchased by a charitable organization (as defined for purposes of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) or a charitable remainder trust or life income pool established for the benefit of a charitable organization;

7. Qualified tuition programs for which FMR or an affiliate serves as investment manager, or mutual funds managed by Fidelity or other parties;

8. Non-U.S. public and private retirement programs and non-U.S. insurance companies, if approved by Fidelity;

9. Broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, insurance company, trust institution, and bank trust department health savings account programs; and

10. Destiny Planholders who exchange, or have exchanged, from Class O to Institutional Class of Fidelity Advisor funds.

ADMII-11-01		June 7, 2011
1.929002.100