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SUPPLEMENT TO THE

FIDELITY® ADVISOR DIVERSIFIED INTERNATIONAL FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR EMERGING ASIA FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR EUROPE CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND,
FIDELITY ADVISOR FLOATING RATE HIGH INCOME FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR GLOBAL EQUITY FUND, FIDELITY
ADVISOR GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR HIGH INCOME FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR HIGH INCOME ADVANTAGE FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR INTERMEDIATE BOND FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR JAPAN FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR KOREA FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR LATIN AMERICA FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR MORTGAGE SECURITIES FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR OVERSEAS FUND, FIDELITY ADVISOR SHORT FIXED-INCOME FUND, AND FIDELITY ADVISOR TAX MANAGED STOCK FUND

Funds of Fidelity Advisor Series II, Fidelity Advisor Series VIII, and Fidelity Beacon Street Trust Class A, Class T, Class B, Class C, and Institutional Class

December 30, 2002

STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

<R>The following information replaces similar information under the heading "Swap Agreements" in the "Investment Policies and Limitations" section on page 31.</R>

Swap Agreements can be individually negotiated and structured to include exposure to a variety of different types of investments or market factors. Depending on their structure, swap agreements may increase or decrease a fund's exposure to long- or short-term interest rates (in the United States or abroad), foreign currency values, mortgage securities, corporate borrowing rates, or other factors such as security prices or inflation rates. Swap agreements can take many different forms and are known by a variety of names<R>, including interest rate swaps (where the parties exchange a floating rate for a fixed rate), total return swaps (where the parties exchange a floating rate for the total return of a security or</R> index), and credit default swaps (where one party pays a fixed rate and the other agrees to buy a specific issuer's debt at par upon the occurrence of certain agreed events, including for example, if the issuer is bankrupt, defaults on any of its debt obligations or makes arrangements with a creditor to modify a debt obligation).

ACOM10B-03-02 June 26, 2003
1.734041.113

<R>In a typical cap or floor agreement, one party agrees to make payments only under specified circumstances, usually in return for payment of a fee by the other party. For example, the buyer of an interest rate cap obtains the right to receive payments to the extent that a specified interest rate exceeds an agreed-upon level, while the seller of an interest rate floor is obligated to make payments to the extent that a specified interest rate falls below an agreed-upon level. An interest rate collar combines elements of buying a cap and selling a floor.</R>

<R>Swap agreements will tend to shift a fund's investment exposure from one type of investment to another. For example, if the fund agreed to exchange payments in dollars for payments in foreign currency, the swap agreement would tend to decrease the fund's exposure to U.S. interest rates and increase its exposure to foreign currency and interest rates. Caps and floors have an effect similar to buying or writing options. Depending on how they are used, swap agreements may increase or decrease the overall volatility of a fund's investments and its share price and yield.</R>

<R>Swap agreements also may allow a fund to acquire or reduce credit exposure to a particular issuer. The most significant factor in the performance of swap agreements is the change in the factors that determine the amounts of payments due to and from a fund. If a swap agreement calls for payments by the fund, the fund must be prepared to make such payments when due. In the case of a physically settled credit default swap written by the fund, the fund must be prepared to pay par for and take possession of eligible debt of a defaulted issuer. If a swap counterparty's creditworthiness declines, the risk that they may not perform may increase, potentially resulting in a loss to the fund. In the case of a credit default swap written by the fund, the fund will experience a loss if a credit event occurs and the credit of the underlying referenced entity (the debt issuer as to which credit protection has been written) has deteriorated. Although there can be no assurance that the fund will be able to do so, the fund may be able to reduce or eliminate its exposure under a swap agreement either by assignment or other disposition, or by entering into an offsetting swap agreement with the same party or a similarly creditworthy party. The fund may have limited ability to eliminate its exposure under a credit default swap if the credit of the underlying referenced entity has declined.</R>

The following information replaces the fourth paragraph in the "Portfolio Transactions" section on page 44.

Purchases and sales of securities on a securities exchange are effected through brokers who receive compensation for their services. Compensation may also be paid in connection with riskless principal transactions (in both OTC securities and securities listed on an exchange) and agency OTC transactions executed with an electronic communications network or an alternative trading system.

The following information has been removed from the "Portfolio Transactions" section on page 44.

Ordinarily commissions are not charged on OTC orders because a fund pays a spread which is included in the cost of the security, and is the difference between the dealer's cost and the cost to the fund. When a fund executes an OTC order with an electronic communications network, an alternative trading system, or a non-market maker, a commission is charged because there is no spread on the trade.