497 1 gvt497.htm THE AMERICAN FUNDS INCOME SERIES (U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES FUND) gvt497.htm
<PAGE>


                        THE AMERICAN FUNDS INCOME SERIES
                       (U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES FUND)

                                     Part B
                      Statement of Additional Information

                                May 1, 2009

                       (as supplemented July 29, 2009)


This document is not a prospectus but should be read in conjunction with the
current prospectus of U.S. Government Securities Fund (the "fund" or "GVT")
dated November 1, 2008 or retirement plan prospectus of the fund dated May 1,
2009. You may obtain a prospectus from your financial adviser or by writing to
the fund at the following address:

                        The American Funds Income Series
                       (U.S. Government Securities Fund)
                              Attention: Secretary
                             333 South Hope Street
                         Los Angeles, California 90071
                                  213/486-9200

Certain privileges and/or services described below may not be available to all
shareholders (including shareholders who purchase shares at net asset value
through eligible retirement plans) depending on the shareholder's investment
dealer or retirement plan recordkeeper. Please see your financial adviser,
investment dealer, plan recordkeeper or employer for more information.

                               TABLE OF CONTENTS



Item                                                                  Page no.
----                                                                  --------

Certain investment limitations and guidelines . . . . . . . . . . .        2
Description of certain securities and investment techniques . . . .        2
Fundamental policies and investment restrictions. . . . . . . . . .        7
Management of the fund  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       10
Execution of portfolio transactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       30
Disclosure of portfolio holdings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       33
Price of shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       34
Taxes and distributions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       36
Purchase and exchange of shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       40
Sales charges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       44
Sales charge reductions and waivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       47
Selling shares. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       51
Shareholder account services and privileges . . . . . . . . . . . .       52
General information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       55
Appendix. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       62
Financial statements




                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 1
<PAGE>


                 CERTAIN INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS AND GUIDELINES

The following limitations and guidelines are considered at the time of purchase,
under normal circumstances, and are based on a percentage of the fund's net
assets unless otherwise noted. This summary is not intended to reflect all of
the fund's investment limitations.


.    The fund will invest at least 80% of its assets in securities guaranteed or
     sponsored by the U.S. government.

.    The fund may invest up to 20% of its assets in non-government securities
     rated AAA or Aaa by a nationally recognized statistical ratings
     organization or unrated securities determined to be of equivalent quality
     by the fund's investment adviser.

                        *     *     *     *     *     *

The fund may experience difficulty liquidating certain portfolio securities
during significant market declines or periods of heavy redemptions.


          DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN SECURITIES AND INVESTMENT TECHNIQUES

The descriptions below are intended to supplement the material in the prospectus
under "Investment objective, strategies and risks."


OBLIGATIONS BACKED BY THE "FULL FAITH AND CREDIT" OF THE U.S. GOVERNMENT -- U.S.
government obligations include the following types of securities:


     U.S. TREASURY SECURITIES -- U.S. Treasury securities include direct
     obligations of the U.S. Treasury, such as Treasury bills, notes and bonds.
     For these securities, the payment of principal and interest is
     unconditionally guaranteed by the U.S. government, and thus they are of the
     highest possible credit quality. Such securities are subject to variations
     in market value due to fluctuations in interest rates, but, if held to
     maturity, will be paid in full.

     FEDERAL AGENCY SECURITIES -- The securities of certain U.S. government
     agencies and government-sponsored entities are guaranteed as to the timely
     payment of principal and interest by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
     government. Such agencies and entities include the Government National
     Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae), the Veterans Administration (VA), the
     Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the Export-Import Bank (Exim Bank),
     the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), the Commodity Credit
     Corporation (CCC) and the Small Business Administration (SBA).

OTHER FEDERAL AGENCY OBLIGATIONS -- Additional federal agency securities are
neither direct obligations of, nor guaranteed by, the U.S. government. These
obligations include securities issued by certain U.S. government agencies and
government-sponsored entities. However, they generally involve some form of
federal sponsorship: some operate under a government charter; some are backed by
specific types of collateral; some are supported by the issuer's right to borrow
from the Treasury; and others are supported only by the credit of the issuing
government agency or entity. These agencies and entities include, but are not
limited to: Federal Home Loan Bank, Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
(Freddie Mac), Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), Tennessee
Valley Authority and Federal Farm Credit Bank System.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 2
<PAGE>


On September 7, 2008, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae were placed into
conservatorship by their new regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
Simultaneously, the U.S. Treasury made a commitment of indefinite duration to
maintain the positive net worth of both firms.


These securities will be rated AAA by Standard & Poor's Corporation or Aaa by
Moody's Investors Service or unrated but determined to be of equivalent quality.


DEBT SECURITIES -- Debt securities are used by issuers to borrow money.
Generally, issuers pay investors periodic interest and repay the amount borrowed
either periodically during the life of the security and/or at maturity. Some
debt securities, such as zero coupon bonds, do not pay current interest, but are
purchased at a discount from their face values and their values accrete over
time to face value at maturity. The market prices of debt securities fluctuate
depending on such factors as interest rates, credit quality and maturity. In
general, market prices of debt securities decline when interest rates rise and
increase when interest rates fall.


Certain additional risk factors relating to debt securities are discussed below:


     SENSITIVITY TO INTEREST RATE AND ECONOMIC CHANGES -- Debt securities may be
     sensitive to economic changes, political and corporate developments, and
     interest rate changes. In addition, during an economic downturn or
     substantial period of rising interest rates, issuers that are highly
     leveraged may experience increased financial stress that could adversely
     affect their ability to meet projected business goals, to obtain additional
     financing and to service their principal and interest payment obligations.
     Periods of economic change and uncertainty also can be expected to result
     in increased volatility of market prices and yields of certain debt
     securities. For example, prices of these securities can be affected by
     financial contracts held by the issuer or third parties (such as
     derivatives) relating to the security or other assets or indices.

     PAYMENT EXPECTATIONS -- Debt securities may contain redemption or call
     provisions. If an issuer exercises these provisions in a lower interest
     rate market, the fund would have to replace the security with a lower
     yielding security, resulting in decreased income to investors. If the
     issuer of a debt security defaults on its obligations to pay interest or
     principal or is the subject of bankruptcy proceedings, the fund may incur
     losses or expenses in seeking recovery of amounts owed to it.

     LIQUIDITY AND VALUATION -- There may be little trading in the secondary
     market for particular debt securities, which may affect adversely the
     fund's ability to value accurately or dispose of such debt securities.
     Adverse publicity and investor perceptions, whether or not based on
     fundamental analysis, may decrease the value and/or liquidity of debt
     securities.

Credit ratings for debt securities provided by rating agencies reflect an
evaluation of the safety of principal and interest payments, not market value
risk. The rating of an issuer is a rating agency's view of past and future
potential developments related to the issuer and may not necessarily reflect
actual outcomes. There can be a lag between the time of developments relating to
an issuer and the time a rating is assigned and updated.


Bond rating agencies may assign modifiers (such as +/-) to ratings categories to
signify the relative position of a credit within the rating category. Investment
policies that are based on ratings categories should be read to include any
security within that category, without giving


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 3
<PAGE>


consideration to the modifier except where otherwise provided. See the Appendix
for more information about credit ratings.


PASS-THROUGH SECURITIES -- The fund may invest in various debt obligations
backed by pools of mortgages. Principal and interest payments made on the
underlying asset pools backing these obligations are typically passed through to
investors, net of any fees paid to any insurer or any guarantor of the
securities. Pass-through securities may have either fixed or adjustable coupons.
These securities include:


     MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES -- These securities may be issued by U.S.
     government agencies and government-sponsored entities, such as Ginnie Mae,
     Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The payment of interest and principal on
     mortgage-backed obligations issued by U.S. government agencies may be
     guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government (in the case
     of Ginnie Mae), or may be guaranteed by the issuer (in the case of Fannie
     Mae and Freddie Mac). However, these guarantees do not apply to the market
     prices and yields of these securities, which vary with changes in interest
     rates.

     COLLATERALIZED MORTGAGE OBLIGATIONS (CMOS) -- CMOs are also backed by a
     pool of mortgages or mortgage loans, which are divided into two or more
     separate bond issues. CMOs issued by U.S. government agencies are backed by
     agency mortgages. Payments of principal and interest are passed through to
     each bond issue at varying schedules resulting in bonds with different
     coupons, effective maturities and sensitivities to interest rates. Some
     CMOs may be structured in a way that when interest rates change, the impact
     of changing prepayment rates on the effective maturities of certain issues
     of these securities is magnified. CMOs may be less liquid or may exhibit
     greater price volatility than other types of mortgage or asset-backed
     securities.

     COMMERCIAL MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES -- These securities are backed by
     mortgages on commercial property, such as hotels, office buildings, retail
     stores, hospitals and other commercial buildings. These securities may have
     a lower prepayment uncertainty than other mortgage-related securities
     because commercial mortgage loans generally prohibit or impose penalties on
     prepayments of principal. In addition, commercial mortgage-related
     securities often are structured with some form of credit enhancement to
     protect against potential losses on the underlying mortgage loans. Many of
     the risks of investing in commercial mortgage-backed securities reflect the
     risks of investing in the real estate securing the underlying mortgage
     loans, including the effects of local and other economic conditions on real
     estate markets, the ability of tenants to make rental payments and the
     ability of a property to attract and retain tenants. Commercial
     mortgage-backed securities may be less liquid or exhibit greater price
     volatility than other types of mortgage or asset-backed securities.

     ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES -- These securities are backed by other assets such
     as credit card, automobile or consumer loan receivables, retail installment
     loans or participations in pools of leases. Credit support for these
     securities may be based on the underlying assets and/or provided through
     credit enhancements by a third party. The values of these securities are
     sensitive to changes in the credit quality of the underlying collateral,
     the credit strength of the credit enhancement, changes in interest rates
     and at times the financial condition of the issuer. Some asset-backed
     securities also may receive prepayments that can change their effective
     maturities.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 4
<PAGE>



INFLATION-INDEXED BONDS -- The fund may invest in inflation-indexed bonds issued
by governments, their agencies or instrumentalities and corporations. The fund
has no current intention of investing in inflation-index bonds issued by
corporations.


The principal amount of an inflation-indexed bond is adjusted in response to
changes in the level of the consumer price index. Repayment of the original bond
principal upon maturity (as adjusted for inflation) is guaranteed in the case of
U.S. Treasury inflation-indexed bonds, and therefore the principal amount of
such bonds cannot be reduced below par even during a period of deflation.
However, the current market value of these bonds is not guaranteed and will
fluctuate, reflecting the rise and fall of yields. In certain jurisdictions
outside the United States the repayment of the original bond principal upon the
maturity of an inflation-indexed bond is not guaranteed, allowing for the amount
of the bond repaid at maturity to be less than par.


The interest rate for inflation-indexed bonds is fixed at issuance as a
percentage of this adjustable principal. Accordingly, the actual interest income
may both rise and fall as the principal amount of the bonds adjusts in response
to movements of the consumer price index. For example, typically interest income
would rise during a period of inflation and fall during a period of deflation.


REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS -- The fund may enter into repurchase agreements under
which the fund buys a security and obtains a simultaneous commitment from the
seller to repurchase the security at a specified time and price. Repurchase
agreements permit the fund to maintain liquidity and earn income over periods of
time as short as overnight. The seller must maintain with the fund's custodian
collateral equal to at least 100% of the repurchase price, including accrued
interest, as monitored daily by the investment adviser. The fund will only enter
into repurchase agreements involving securities in which it could otherwise
invest and with selected banks and securities dealers whose financial condition
is monitored by the investment adviser. If the seller under the repurchase
agreement defaults, the fund may incur a loss if the value of the collateral
securing the repurchase agreement has declined and may incur disposition costs
in connection with liquidating the collateral. If bankruptcy proceedings are
commenced with respect to the seller, realization of the collateral by the fund
may be delayed or limited.


FORWARD COMMITMENT, WHEN ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY TRANSACTIONS -- The fund
may enter into commitments to purchase or sell securities at a future date. When
the fund agrees to purchase such securities, it assumes the risk of any decline
in value of the security from the date of the agreement. If the other party to
such a transaction fails to deliver or pay for the securities, the fund could
miss a favorable price or yield opportunity, or could experience a loss.


The fund will not use these transactions for the purpose of leveraging and will
segregate liquid assets that will be marked to market daily in an amount
sufficient to meet its payment obligations in these transactions. Although these
transactions will not be entered into for leveraging purposes, to the extent the
fund's aggregate commitments in connection with these transactions exceed its
segregated assets, the fund temporarily could be in a leveraged position
(because it may have an amount greater than its net assets subject to market
risk). Should market values of the fund's portfolio securities decline while the
fund is in a leveraged position, greater depreciation of its net assets would
likely occur than if it were not in such a position. The fund will not borrow
money to settle these transactions and, therefore, will liquidate other
portfolio securities in advance of settlement if necessary to generate
additional cash to meet its obligations. After a transaction is entered into,
the fund may still dispose of or renegotiate the


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 5
<PAGE>



transaction. Additionally, prior to receiving delivery of securities as part of
a transaction, the fund may sell such securities.


The fund may also enter into reverse repurchase agreements and "roll"
transactions. A reverse repurchase agreement involves the sale of a security by
a fund and its agreement to repurchase the security at a specified time and
price. A "roll" transaction involves the sale of mortgage-backed or other
securities together with a commitment to purchase similar, but not identical,
securities at a later date. The fund assumes the risk of price and yield
fluctuations during the time of the commitment. The fund will segregate liquid
assets that will be marked to market daily in an amount sufficient to meet its
payment obligations under "roll" transactions and reverse repurchase agreements
with broker-dealers (no collateral is required for reverse repurchase agreements
with banks).


RESTRICTED OR ILLIQUID SECURITIES -- The fund may purchase securities subject to
restrictions on resale. Restricted securities may only be sold pursuant to an
exemption from registration under the Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933 Act"),
or in a registered public offering. Where registration is required, the holder
of a registered security may be obligated to pay all or part of the registration
expense and a considerable period may elapse between the time it decides to seek
registration and the time it may be permitted to sell a security under an
effective registration statement. Difficulty in selling such securities may
result in a loss to the fund or cause it to incur additional administrative
costs.


Securities (including restricted securities) not actively traded will be
considered illiquid unless they have been specifically determined to be liquid
under procedures adopted by the fund's board of trustees, taking into account
factors such as the frequency and volume of trading, the commitment of dealers
to make markets and the availability of qualified investors, all of which can
change from time to time. The fund may incur certain additional costs in
disposing of illiquid securities.


CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS -- The fund may hold cash or invest in cash
equivalents. Cash equivalents include (a) commercial paper (for example,
short-term notes with maturities typically up to 12 months in length issued by
corporations, governmental bodies or bank/corporation sponsored conduits
(asset-backed commercial paper)) (b) short-term bank obligations (for example,
certificates of deposit, bankers' acceptances (time drafts on a commercial bank
where the bank accepts an irrevocable obligation to pay at maturity)) or bank
notes, (c) savings association and savings bank obligations (for example, bank
notes and certificates of deposit issued by savings banks or savings
associations), (d) securities of the U.S. government, its agencies or
instrumentalities that mature, or may be redeemed, in one year or less, and (e)
corporate bonds and notes that mature, or that may be redeemed, in one year or
less. Investments in these securities are subject to the fund's ratings
guidelines.


VARIABLE AND FLOATING RATE OBLIGATIONS -- The interest rates payable on certain
securities in which the fund may invest may not be fixed but may fluctuate based
upon changes in market rates or credit ratings. Variable and floating rate
obligations bear coupon rates that are adjusted at designated intervals, based
on the then current market rates of interest or credit ratings. The rate
adjustment features tend to limit the extent to which the market value of the
obligations will fluctuate.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 6
<PAGE>


ADJUSTMENT OF MATURITIES -- The investment adviser seeks to anticipate movements
in interest rates and may adjust the maturity distribution of the portfolio
accordingly, keeping in mind the fund's objectives.


LOANS OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES -- The fund is authorized to lend portfolio
securities to selected securities dealers or other institutional investors whose
financial condition is monitored by the investment adviser. The borrower must
maintain with the fund's custodian collateral consisting of cash, cash
equivalents or U.S. government securities equal to at least 100% of the value of
the borrowed securities, plus any accrued interest. The investment adviser will
monitor the adequacy of the collateral on a daily basis. The fund may at any
time call a loan of its portfolio securities and obtain the return of the loaned
securities. The fund will receive any interest paid on the loaned securities and
a fee or a portion of the interest earned on the collateral. The fund will limit
its loans of portfolio securities to an aggregate of 33-1/3% of the value of its
total assets, measured at the time any such loan is made.


The fund does not currently intend to engage in this investment practice over
the next 12 months.

                        *     *     *     *     *     *

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER -- Portfolio changes will be made without regard to the
length of time particular investments may have been held. Short-term trading
profits are not the fund's objective, and changes in its investments are
generally accomplished gradually, though short-term transactions may
occasionally be made. High portfolio turnover involves correspondingly greater
transaction costs in the form of dealer spreads or brokerage commissions, and
may result in the realization of net capital gains, which are taxable when
distributed to shareholders.


Fixed-income securities are generally traded on a net basis and usually neither
brokerage commissions nor transfer taxes are involved. Transaction costs are
usually reflected in the spread between the bid and asked price.


The fund's portfolio turnover rates for the fiscal years ended August 31, 2008
and 2007 were 92% and 110%, respectively. The portfolio turnover rate would
equal 100% if each security in a fund's portfolio were replaced once per year.
See "Financial highlights" in the prospectus for the fund's annual portfolio
turnover rate for each of the last five fiscal years.


                FUNDAMENTAL POLICIES AND INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

All percentage limitations are considered at the time securities are purchased
and are based on the fund's net assets unless otherwise indicated. None of the
following investment restrictions involving a maximum percentage of assets will
be considered violated unless the excess occurs immediately after, and is caused
by, an acquisition by the fund.


FUNDAMENTAL POLICIES -- The fund has adopted the following fundamental policies
and investment restrictions, which may not be changed without approval by
holders of a majority of its outstanding shares. Such majority is defined in the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"), as the vote of the
lesser of (a) 67% or more of the voting securities present at a shareholder
meeting, if the holders of more than 50% of the outstanding voting securities
are present in person or by proxy, or (b) more than 50% of the outstanding
voting securities.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 7
<PAGE>


These restrictions provided that the fund may not:


1.   Purchase any security (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S. government or its agencies or instrumentalities ("U.S. government
securities") if, immediately after and as a result of such investment, more than
5% of the value of the fund's total assets would be invested in securities of
the issuer;

2.   Invest 25% or more of the value of its total assets in the securities of
issuers conducting their principal business activities in the same industry,
except that this limitation shall not apply to U.S. government securities;

3.   Invest in companies for the purpose of exercising control or management;

4.   Knowingly purchase securities of other investment companies, except in
connection with a merger, consolidation, acquisition, or reorganization;

5.   Buy or sell real estate or commodities or commodity contracts in the
ordinary course of its business; however, the fund may purchase or sell readily
marketable debt securities secured by real estate or interests therein or issued
by companies which invest in real estate or interests therein, including real
estate investment trusts;

6.   Acquire securities subject to restrictions on disposition imposed by the
Securities Act of 1933, if, immediately after and as a result of such
acquisition, the value of such restricted securities and all other illiquid
securities held by the fund would exceed 10% of the value of the fund's total
assets;

7.   Engage in the business of underwriting securities of other issuers, except
to the extent that the disposal of an investment position may technically cause
it to be considered an underwriter as that term is defined under the Securities
Act of 1933;

8.   Make loans, except that the fund may purchase readily marketable debt
securities and invest in repurchase agreements and make loans of portfolio
securities. The fund will not invest in repurchase agreements maturing in more
than seven days (unless subject to a demand feature) if any such investment,
together with any illiquid securities (including securities which are subject to
legal or contractual restrictions on resale) held by the fund, exceeds 10% of
the value of its total assets;

9.   Sell securities short, except to the extent that the fund contemporaneously
owns or has the right to acquire at no additional cost securities identical to
those sold short;

10.  Purchase securities on margin, except that the fund may obtain such
short-term credits as may be necessary for the clearance of purchases and sales
of securities;

11.  Borrow money, except from banks for temporary or emergency purposes not in
excess of 5% of the value of the fund's total assets, except that the fund may
enter into reverse repurchase agreements, provided that the fund will limit its
aggregate borrowings to no more than one-third of its total assets;

12.  Mortgage, pledge, or hypothecate any of its assets, provided that this
restriction shall not apply to the sale of securities pursuant to a reverse
repurchase agreement;


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 8
<PAGE>


13.  Purchase or retain the securities of any issuer, if those individual
officers and Trustees of the Trust, its investment adviser, or distributor, each
owning beneficially more than 1/2 of 1% of the securities of such issuer,
together own more than 5% of the securities of such issuer;

14.  Invest in interests in oil, gas, or other mineral exploration or
development programs;

15.  Invest more than 5% of its total assets in warrants which are unattached to
securities;

16.  Write, purchase or sell puts, calls or combinations thereof.

Notwithstanding Investment Restriction #4, the fund may invest in securities of
other investment companies if deemed advisable by its officers in connection
with the administration of a deferred compensation plan adopted by the Trustees
pursuant to an exemptive order granted by the Securities and Exchange
Commission. For purposes of Investment Restriction #6, the fund will not invest
more than 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities.


NONFUNDAMENTAL POLICIES -- The fund has adopted the following nonfundamental
investment policies, which may be changed by action of the board of trustees
without shareholder approval:

1.   The fund may not issue senior securities, except as permitted by the 1940
Act.

2.   The fund may not acquire securities of open-end investment companies or
unit investment trusts registered under the 1940 Act in reliance on Sections
12(d)(1)(F) or 12(d)(1)(G) of the 1940 Act.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 9
<PAGE>


                             MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND

"INDEPENDENT" TRUSTEES/1/




 NAME, AGE AND                                                NUMBER OF
 POSITION WITH FUND                                         PORTFOLIOS/3/
 (YEAR FIRST ELECTED AS A      PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)        OVERSEEN      OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS/4/ HELD
 TRUSTEE/2/)                    DURING PAST FIVE YEARS       BY TRUSTEE             BY TRUSTEE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Ambassador Richard G.       Corporate director and              16         Carnival Corporation
 Capen, Jr., 74              author; former U.S.
 Trustee (1999)              Ambassador to Spain; former
                             Vice Chairman,
                             Knight-Ridder, Inc.
                             (communications company);
                             former Chairman and
                             Publisher, The Miami Herald
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 H. Frederick Christie,      Private investor; former            16         AECOM Technology
 75                          President and CEO, The                         Corporation;
 Trustee (1985)              Mission Group (non-utility                     DineEquity, Inc.;
                             holding company, subsidiary                    Ducommun Incorporated;
                             of Southern California                         SouthWest Water Company
                             Edison Company)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 James G. Ellis, 62          Dean and Professor of               14         Quiksilver, Inc.
 Trustee (2006)              Marketing, University of
                             Southern California
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Martin Fenton, 73           Chairman of the Board,              19         None
 Chairman of the Board       Senior Resource Group LLC
 (Independent and Non-       (development and management
 Executive) (1989)           of senior living
                             communities)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Leonard R. Fuller, 62       President and CEO, Fuller           17         None
 Trustee (1994)              Consulting (financial
                             management consulting firm)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 R. Clark Hooper, 62         Private investor; former            19         JPMorgan Value Opportunities
 Trustee (2005)              President, Dumbarton Group                     Fund, Inc.;
                             LLC (securities industry                       The Swiss Helvetia Fund,
                             consulting); former                            Inc.
                             Executive Vice President -
                             Policy and Oversight, NASD
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Richard G. Newman, 74       Chairman of the Board, AECOM        15         Sempra Energy;
 Trustee (1991)              Technology Corporation                         SouthWest Water Company
                             (engineering, consulting and
                             professional technical
                             services)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Frank M. Sanchez, 65        Principal, The Sanchez              14         None
 Trustee (1999)              Family Corporation dba
                             McDonald's Restaurants
                             (McDonald's licensee)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Steadman Upham, Ph.D.,      President and Professor of          15         None
 60                          Anthropology, The University
 Trustee (2007)              of Tulsa; former President
                             and Professor of
                             Archaeology, Claremont
                             Graduate University
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 10
<PAGE>


"INTERESTED" TRUSTEES/6,7/




                                PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S)
                                 DURING PAST FIVE YEARS
 NAME, AGE AND                  AND POSITIONS HELD WITH       NUMBER OF
 POSITION WITH FUND            AFFILIATED ENTITIES OR THE   PORTFOLIOS/3/
 (YEAR FIRST ELECTED AS A        PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER        OVERSEEN      OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS/4/ HELD
 TRUSTEE/OFFICER/2/)                  OF THE FUND            BY TRUSTEE             BY TRUSTEE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Abner D. Goldstine, 79        Senior Vice President -           14         None
 Vice Chairman of the Board    Fixed Income, Capital
 (1985)                        Research and Management
                               Company; Director, Capital
                               Research and Management
                               Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Paul G. Haaga, Jr., 60        Vice Chairman of the              15         None
 Vice Chairman of the Board    Board, Capital Research
 (1985)                        and Management Company;
                               Senior Vice President -
                               Fixed Income, Capital
                               Research and Management
                               Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 John H. Smet, 52              Senior Vice President -            2         None
 President (1993)              Fixed Income, Capital
                               Research and Management
                               Company; Director,
                               American Funds
                               Distributors, Inc.*
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 11
<PAGE>


OTHER OFFICERS/7/



 NAME, AGE AND
 POSITION WITH FUND          PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S) DURING PAST FIVE YEARS
 (YEAR FIRST ELECTED AS       AND POSITIONS HELD WITH AFFILIATED ENTITIES
 AN OFFICER/2/)                 OR THE PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER OF THE FUND
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Thomas H. Hogh, 46      Senior Vice President - Fixed Income, Capital Research
 Vice President (2004)   Company*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Kristine M.             Vice President and Senior Counsel - Fund Business
 Nishiyama, 38           Management Group, Capital Research and Management
 Vice President (2003)   Company; Vice President and Counsel, Capital Bank and
                         Trust Company*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Kimberly S. Verdick,    Vice President - Fund Business Management Group,
 44                      Capital Research and Management Company
 Secretary (1994)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Ari M. Vinocor, 34      Vice President - Fund Business Management Group,
 Treasurer (2007)        Capital Research and Management Company
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Courtney R. Taylor,     Assistant Vice President - Fund Business Management
 34                      Group, Capital Research and Management Company
 Assistant Secretary
 (2006)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 M. Susan Gupton, 35     Vice President - Fund Business Management Group,
 Assistant Treasurer     Capital Research and Management Company
 (2008)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------



* Company affiliated with Capital Research and Management Company.

1  Trustees and officers of the fund serve until their resignation, removal or
   retirement.
2  Funds managed by Capital Research and Management Company, including the
   American Funds; American Funds Insurance Series,(R) which is composed of 16
   funds and serves as the underlying investment vehicle for certain variable
   insurance contracts; American Funds Target Date Retirement Series,(R)/ /Inc.,
   which is composed of nine funds and is available through tax-deferred
   retirement plans and IRAs; and Endowments, which is composed of two portfolios
   and is available to certain nonprofit organizations.
3  This includes all directorships (other than those in the American Funds or
   other funds managed by Capital Research and Management Company) that are held
   by each trustee as a director of a public company or a registered investment
   company.
4  The investment adviser and its affiliates use a subsidiary of AECOM, Inc. to
   perform architectural and space management services. The investment adviser's
   business relationship with the subsidiary preceded its acquisition by AECOM in
   1994. The total fees relating to this engagement for the last two years
   represent less than 0.1% of AECOM, Inc.'s 2007 gross revenues.
5  The term "independent" trustee refers to a trustee who is not an "interested
   person" of the fund within the meaning of the 1940 Act.
6  "Interested persons" of the fund within the meaning of the 1940 Act, on the
   basis of their affiliation with the fund's investment adviser, Capital Research
   and Management Company, or affiliated entities (including the fund's principal
   underwriter).
7  All of the officers listed are officers and/or directors/trustees of one or
   more of the other funds for which Capital Research and Management Company
   serves as investment adviser.

THE ADDRESS FOR ALL TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS OF THE FUND IS 333 SOUTH HOPE STREET,
55TH FLOOR, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90071, ATTENTION: SECRETARY.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 12
<PAGE>



FUND SHARES OWNED BY TRUSTEES AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2008:




                                                                               AGGREGATE
                                                                                DOLLAR
                                                                              RANGE/1/ OF
                                                                              INDEPENDENT
                                            AGGREGATE                          TRUSTEES
                                         DOLLAR RANGE/1/      DOLLAR           DEFERRED
                                            OF SHARES       RANGE/1 /OF     COMPENSATION/2/
                                            OWNED IN        INDEPENDENT      ALLOCATED TO
                                            ALL FUNDS        TRUSTEES          ALL FUNDS
                                             IN THE          DEFERRED           WITHIN
                        DOLLAR RANGE/1/  AMERICAN FUNDS   COMPENSATION/2/   AMERICAN FUNDS
                            OF FUND      FAMILY OVERSEEN     ALLOCATED      FAMILY OVERSEEN
         NAME            SHARES OWNED      BY TRUSTEE         TO FUND         BY TRUSTEE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 "INDEPENDENT" TRUSTEES
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Richard G. Capen,           None         Over $100,000         N/A          Over $100,000
 Jr.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 H. Frederick                None         Over $100,000         N/A          Over $100,000
 Christie
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 James G. Ellis/3/           None         Over $100,000         N/A               N/A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Martin Fenton             $10,001 -      Over $100,000         N/A          Over $100,000
                            $50,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Leonard R. Fuller           None           $50,001 -           N/A          Over $100,000
                                            $100,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 R. Clark Hooper             None         Over $100,000         N/A            $50,001 -
                                                                               $100,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Richard G. Newman       Over $100,000    Over $100,000         N/A               N/A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Frank M. Sanchez        $1 - $10,000       $10,001 -           N/A               N/A
                                             $50,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Steadman Upham              None         Over $100,000         N/A          Over $100,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------







                                                          AGGREGATE
                                                       DOLLAR RANGE/1/
                                                          OF SHARES
                                                           OWNED IN
                                                          ALL FUNDS
                                                            IN THE
                          DOLLAR RANGE/1/               AMERICAN FUNDS
                              OF FUND                  FAMILY OVERSEEN
       NAME                 SHARES OWNED                  BY TRUSTEE
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

 "INTERESTED" TRUSTEES
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Abner D.                  Over $100,000                Over $100,000
 Goldstine
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Paul G. Haaga,          $10,001 - $50,000              Over $100,000
 Jr.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 John H. Smet              Over $100,000                Over $100,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------





                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 13
<PAGE>


1  Ownership disclosure is made using the following ranges: None; $1 - $10,000;
   $10,001 - $50,000; $50,001 - $100,000; and Over $100,000. The amounts listed
   for "interested" trustees include shares owned through The Capital Group
   Companies, Inc. retirement plan and 401(k) plan.

2  Eligible trustees may defer their compensation under a nonqualified deferred
   compensation plan. Deferred amounts accumulate at an earnings rate determined
   by the total return of one or more American Funds as designated by the trustee.

3  As of May 1, 2008, the aggregate dollar range of shares owned in all funds
   overseen by Mr. Ellis was $50,001 - $100,000.

TRUSTEE COMPENSATION -- No compensation is paid by the fund to any officer or
trustee who is a director, officer or employee of the investment adviser or its
affiliates. The boards of funds advised by the investment adviser typically meet
either individually or jointly with the boards of one or more other such funds
with substantially overlapping board membership (in each case referred to as a
"board cluster"). The fund typically pays each independent trustee an annual
fee, which ranges from $1,222 to $2,496, based primarily on the total number of
board clusters on which that independent trustee serves.


In addition, the fund generally pays independent trustees attendance and other
fees for meetings of the board and its committees. Board and committee chairs
receive additional fees for their services.


Independent trustees also receive attendance fees for certain special joint
meetings and information sessions with directors and trustees of other groupings
of funds advised by the investment adviser. The fund and the other funds served
by each independent trustee each pay an equal portion of these attendance fees.


No pension or retirement benefits are accrued as part of fund expenses.
Independent trustees may elect, on a voluntary basis, to defer all or a portion
of their fees through a deferred compensation plan in effect for the fund. The
fund also reimburses certain expenses of the independent trustees.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 14
<PAGE>



TRUSTEE COMPENSATION EARNED DURING THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 2008



                                                                                                       TOTAL COMPENSATION (INCLUDING
                                                                                                           VOLUNTARILY DEFERRED
                                                                                                             COMPENSATION/1/)
                                                                             AGGREGATE COMPENSATION      FROM ALL FUNDS MANAGED BY
                                                                             (INCLUDING VOLUNTARILY        CAPITAL RESEARCH AND
                                                                            DEFERRED COMPENSATION/1/)           MANAGEMENT
                                   NAME                                           FROM THE FUND        COMPANY OR ITS AFFILIATES/2/
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Richard G. Capen, Jr./3/                                                            $4,694                      $210,706
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 H. Frederick Christie/3/                                                             3,718                       419,797
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 James G. Ellis                                                                       6,236                       109,431
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Martin Fenton/3/                                                                     5,332                       367,616
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Leonard R. Fuller/3/                                                                 4,480                       327,277
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 R. Clark Hooper                                                                      4,529                       322,056
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Richard G. Newman                                                                    5,985                       224,667
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Frank M. Sanchez                                                                     6,768                       117,198
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Steadman Upham/3/                                                                    4,792                       211,837
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



1  Amounts may be deferred by eligible trustees under a nonqualified deferred
   compensation plan adopted by the fund in 1993. Deferred amounts accumulate at
   an earnings rate determined by the total return of one or more American Funds
   as designated by the trustees. Compensation shown in this table for the fiscal
   year ended August 31, 2008 does not include earnings on amounts deferred in
   previous fiscal years. See footnote 3 to this table for more information.
2  Funds managed by Capital Research and Management Company, including the
   American Funds; American Funds Insurance Series,(R) which is composed of 16
   funds and serves as the underlying investment vehicle for certain variable
   insurance contracts; American Funds Target Date Retirement Series,(R)/ /Inc.,
   which is composed of nine funds and is available through tax-deferred
   retirement plans and IRAs; and Endowments, which is composed of two portfolios
   and is available to certain nonprofit organizations.

3  Since the deferred compensation plan's adoption, the total amount of deferred
   compensation accrued by the fund (plus earnings thereon) through the 2008
   fiscal year for participating trustees is as follows: Richard G. Capen, Jr.
   ($11,265), H. Frederick Christie ($19,592), Martin Fenton ($49,457), Leonard R.
   Fuller, ($38,597) and Steadman Upham ($4,428). Amounts deferred and accumulated
   earnings thereon are not funded and are general unsecured liabilities of the
   fund until paid to the trustees.

As of March 1, 2009, the officers and trustees of the fund and their families,
as a group, owned beneficially or of record less than 1% of the outstanding
shares of the fund.


FUND ORGANIZATION AND THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES -- The fund, an open-end,
diversified management investment company, was organized as a Massachusetts
business trust on May 8, 1985. Although the board of trustees has delegated
day-to-day oversight to the investment adviser, all fund operations are
supervised by the fund's board, which meets periodically and performs duties
required by applicable state and federal laws.


Massachusetts common law provides that a trustee of a Massachusetts business
trust owes a fiduciary duty to the trust and must carry out his or her
responsibilities as a trustee in accordance with that fiduciary duty. Generally,
a trustee will satisfy his or her duties if he or she acts in good faith and
uses ordinary prudence.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 15
<PAGE>



Independent board members are paid certain fees for services rendered to the
fund as described above. They may elect to defer all or a portion of these fees
through a deferred compensation plan in effect for the fund.


The fund has several different classes of shares. Shares of each class represent
an interest in the same investment portfolio. Each class has pro rata rights as
to voting, redemption, dividends and liquidation, except that each class bears
different distribution expenses and may bear different transfer agent fees and
other expenses properly attributable to the particular class as approved by the
board of trustees and set forth in the fund's rule 18f-3 Plan. Each class'
shareholders have exclusive voting rights with respect to the respective class'
rule 12b-1 plans adopted in connection with the distribution of shares and on
other matters in which the interests of one class are different from interests
in another class. Shares of all classes of the fund vote together on matters
that affect all classes in substantially the same manner. Each class votes as a
class on matters that affect that class alone. Note that 529 college savings
plan account owners invested in Class 529 shares are not shareholders of the
fund and, accordingly, do not have the rights of a shareholder, such as the
right to vote proxies relating to fund shares. As the legal owner of the fund's
Class 529 shares, the Virginia College Savings Plan/SM/ will vote any proxies
relating to such fund shares.


The fund does not hold annual meetings of shareholders. However, significant
matters that require shareholder approval, such as certain elections of board
members or a change in a fundamental investment policy, will be presented to
shareholders at a meeting called for such purpose. Shareholders have one vote
per share owned. At the request of the holders of at least 10% of the shares,
the fund will hold a meeting at which any member of the board could be removed
by a majority vote.


The fund's declaration of trust and by-laws as well as separate indemnification
agreements that the fund has entered into with independent trustees provide in
effect that, subject to certain conditions, the fund will indemnify its officers
and trustees against liabilities or expenses actually and reasonably incurred by
them relating to their service to the fund. However, trustees are not protected
from liability by reason of their willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross
negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of their
office.


REMOVAL OF TRUSTEES BY SHAREHOLDERS -- At any meeting of shareholders, duly
called and at which a quorum is present, shareholders may, by the affirmative
vote of the holders of a majority of the votes entitled to be cast, remove any
trustee from office and may elect a successor or successors to fill any
resulting vacancies for the unexpired terms of removed trustees. The fund has
agreed, at the request of the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission,
to apply the provisions of section 16(c) of the 1940 Act with respect to the
removal of trustees, as though the fund were a common-law trust. Accordingly,
the trustees of the fund will promptly call a meeting of shareholders for the
purpose of voting upon the removal of any trustees when requested in writing to
do so by the record holders of at least 10% of the outstanding shares.


COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES -- The fund has an audit committee comprised
of James G. Ellis, Martin Fenton, Richard G. Newman and Frank M. Sanchez, none
of whom is an "interested person" of the fund within the meaning of the 1940
Act. The committee provides oversight regarding the fund's accounting and
financial reporting policies and practices, its internal controls and the
internal controls of the fund's principal service providers. The committee acts
as a liaison between the fund's independent registered public accounting firm
and the full board of trustees. Four audit committee meetings were held during
the 2008 fiscal year.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 16
<PAGE>



The fund has a contracts committee comprised of Richard G. Capen, Jr.; H.
Frederick Christie; James G. Ellis; Martin Fenton; Leonard R. Fuller; R. Clark
Hooper; Richard G. Newman; Frank M. Sanchez; and Steadman Upham, none of whom is
an "interested person" of the fund within the meaning of the 1940 Act. The
committee's principal function is to request, review and consider the
information deemed necessary to evaluate the terms of certain agreements between
the fund and its investment adviser or the investment adviser's affiliates, such
as the Investment Advisory and Service Agreement, Principal Underwriting
Agreement, Administrative Services Agreement and Plans of Distribution adopted
pursuant to rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act, that the fund may enter into, renew
or continue, and to make its recommendations to the full board of trustees on
these matters. One contracts committee meeting was held during the 2008 fiscal
year.


The fund has a nominating and governance committee comprised of Richard G.
Capen, Jr.; H. Frederick Christie; James G. Ellis; Martin Fenton; Leonard R.
Fuller; R. Clark Hooper; Richard G. Newman; Frank M. Sanchez; and Steadman
Upham, none of whom is an "interested person" of the fund within the meaning of
the 1940 Act. The committee periodically reviews such issues as the board's
composition, responsibilities, committees, compensation and other relevant
issues, and recommends any appropriate changes to the full board of trustees.
The committee also evaluates, selects and nominates independent trustee
candidates to the full board of trustees. While the committee normally is able
to identify from its own and other resources an ample number of qualified
candidates, it will consider shareholder suggestions of persons to be considered
as nominees to fill future vacancies on the board. Such suggestions must be sent
in writing to the nominating and governance committee of the fund, addressed to
the fund's secretary, and must be accompanied by complete biographical and
occupational data on the prospective nominee, along with a written consent of
the prospective nominee for consideration of his or her name by the committee.
One nominating and governance committee meeting was held during the 2008 fiscal
year.


PROXY VOTING PROCEDURES AND PRINCIPLES -- The fund's investment adviser, in
consultation with the fund's board, has adopted Proxy Voting Procedures and
Principles (the "Principles") with respect to voting proxies of securities held
by the fund, other American Funds, Endowments and American Funds Insurance
Series. The complete text of these principles is available on the American Funds
website at americanfunds.com. Certain American Funds have established separate
proxy voting committees that vote proxies or delegate to a voting officer the
authority to vote on behalf of those funds. Proxies for all other funds
(including the fund) are voted by a committee of the appropriate equity
investment division of the investment adviser under authority delegated by those
funds' boards. Therefore, if more than one fund invests in the same company,
they may vote differently on the same proposal.


All U.S. proxies are voted. Proxies for companies outside the U.S. also are
voted, provided there is sufficient time and information available. After a
proxy statement is received, the investment adviser prepares a summary of the
proposals contained in the proxy statement. A discussion of any potential
conflicts of interest also is included in the summary. For proxies of securities
managed by a particular investment division of the investment adviser, the
initial voting recommendation is made by one or more of the division's
investment analysts familiar with the company and industry. A second
recommendation is made by a proxy coordinator (an investment analyst with
experience in corporate governance and proxy voting matters) within the
appropriate investment division, based on knowledge of these Principles and
familiarity with proxy-related issues. The proxy summary and voting
recommendations are made available to the appropriate proxy voting committee for
a final voting decision.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 17
<PAGE>


The analyst and proxy coordinator making voting recommendations are responsible
for noting any potential material conflicts of interest. One example might be
where a director of one or more American Funds is also a director of a company
whose proxy is being voted. In such instances, proxy voting committee members
are alerted to the potential conflict. The proxy voting committee may then elect
to vote the proxy or seek a third-party recommendation or vote of an ad hoc
group of committee members.


The Principles, which have been in effect in substantially their current form
for many years, provide an important framework for analysis and decision-making
by all funds. However, they are not exhaustive and do not address all potential
issues. The Principles provide a certain amount of flexibility so that all
relevant facts and circumstances can be considered in connection with every
vote. As a result, each proxy received is voted on a case-by-case basis
considering the specific circumstances of each proposal. The voting process
reflects the funds' understanding of the company's business, its management and
its relationship with shareholders over time.


Information regarding how the fund voted proxies relating to portfolio
securities during the 12-month period ended June 30 of each year will be
available on or about September 1 of each year (a) without charge, upon request
by calling American Funds Service Company at 800/421-0180, (b) on the American
Funds website and (c) on the SEC's website at sec.gov.


The following summary sets forth the general positions of the American Funds,
Endowments, American Funds Insurance Series and the investment adviser on
various proposals. A copy of the full Principles is available upon request, free
of charge, by calling American Funds Service Company or visiting the American
Funds website.


     DIRECTOR MATTERS -- The election of a company's slate of nominees for
     director generally is supported. Votes may be withheld for some or all of
     the nominees if this is determined to be in the best interest of
     shareholders. Separation of the chairman and CEO positions also may be
     supported.

     GOVERNANCE PROVISIONS -- Typically, proposals to declassify a board (elect
     all directors annually) are supported based on the belief that this
     increases the directors' sense of accountability to shareholders. Proposals
     for cumulative voting generally are supported in order to promote
     management and board accountability and an opportunity for leadership
     change. Proposals designed to make director elections more meaningful,
     either by requiring a majority vote or by requiring any director receiving
     more withhold votes than affirmative votes to tender his or her
     resignation, generally are supported.

     SHAREHOLDER RIGHTS -- Proposals to repeal an existing poison pill generally
     are supported. (There may be certain circumstances, however, when a proxy
     voting committee of a fund or an investment division of the investment
     adviser believes that a company needs to maintain anti-takeover
     protection.) Proposals to eliminate the right of shareholders to act by
     written consent or to take away a shareholder's right to call a special
     meeting typically are not supported.

     COMPENSATION AND BENEFIT PLANS -- Option plans are complicated, and many
     factors are considered in evaluating a plan. Each plan is evaluated based
     on protecting shareholder interests and a knowledge of the company and its
     management. Considerations include the pricing (or repricing) of options
     awarded under the plan and the impact of dilution on existing shareholders
     from past and future equity awards. Compensation


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 18
<PAGE>


     packages should be structured to attract, motivate and retain existing
     employees and qualified directors; however, they should not be excessive.

     ROUTINE MATTERS -- The ratification of auditors, procedural matters
     relating to the annual meeting and changes to company name are examples of
     items considered routine. Such items generally are voted in favor of
     management's recommendations unless circumstances indicate otherwise.

PRINCIPAL FUND SHAREHOLDERS -- The following table identifies those investors
who own of record or are known by the fund to own beneficially 5% or more of any
class of its shares as of the opening of business on March 1, 2009. Unless
otherwise indicated, the ownership percentages below represent ownership of
record rather than beneficial ownership.




             NAME AND ADDRESS                OWNERSHIP   OWNERSHIP PERCENTAGE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Edward D. Jones & Co.                       Record      Class A        17.62%
 Omnibus Account                                         Class B        10.20
 Maryland Heights, MO
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 First Clearing, LLC                         Record      Class A         6.37
 Custody Account                                         Class B         7.10
 Glen Allen, VA                                          Class C         7.45
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Merrill Lynch                               Record      Class B         9.15
 Omnibus Account                                         Class C        20.07
 Jacksonville, FL                                        Class F-1       6.00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 LPL Financial                               Record      Class F-1       5.62
 Omnibus Account                                         Class F-2      12.67
 San Diego, CA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.                  Record      Class F-2      10.51
 Custody Account
 San Francisco. CA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Ameritrade                                  Record      Class F-2       8.80
 FBO Individual Investor                     Beneficial
 Decatur, AL
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Site Management Services, Inc.              Record      Class R-1       6.35
 Defined Benefit Pension Plan                Beneficial
 Rancho Santa Fe, CA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Trader Joe's Company                        Record      Class R-4      38.71
 Retirement Plan                             Beneficial
 Englewood, CO
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 American Funds 2020 Target Date             Record      Class R-5      18.62
 Retirement Fund
 Norfolk, VA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 American Funds 2015 Target Date             Record      Class R-5      15.48
 Retirement Fund
 Norfolk, VA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 American Funds 2010 Target Date             Record      Class R-5      12.12
 Retirement Fund
 Norfolk, VA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 American Funds 2025 Target Date             Record      Class R-5       8.89
 Retirement Fund
 Norfolk, VA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 American Funds 2030 Target Date             Record      Class R-5       6.38
 Retirement Fund
 Norfolk, VA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------





                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 19
<PAGE>


UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED, REFERENCES IN THIS STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
TO CLASS F SHARES, CLASS R SHARES OR CLASS 529 SHARES REFER TO BOTH F SHARE
CLASSES, ALL R SHARE CLASSES OR ALL 529 SHARE CLASSES, RESPECTIVELY.


INVESTMENT ADVISER -- Capital Research and Management Company, the fund's
investment adviser, founded in 1931, maintains research facilities in the United
States and abroad (Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York, Washington, DC, London,
Geneva, Hong Kong, Singapore and Tokyo). These facilities are staffed with
experienced investment professionals. The investment adviser is located at 333
South Hope Street, Los Angeles, CA 90071 and 6455 Irvine Center Drive, Irvine,
CA 92618. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of The Capital Group Companies, Inc.,
a holding company for several investment management subsidiaries. Capital
Research and Management Company manages equity assets through two investment
divisions, Capital World Investors and Capital Research Global Investors, and
manages fixed-income assets through its Fixed Income division. Capital World
Investors and Capital Research Global Investors make investment decisions on an
independent basis.


The investment adviser has adopted policies and procedures that address issues
that may arise as a result of an investment professional's management of the
fund and other funds and accounts. Potential issues could involve allocation of
investment opportunities and trades among funds and accounts, use of information
regarding the timing of fund trades, investment professional compensation and
voting relating to portfolio securities. The investment adviser believes that
its policies and procedures are reasonably designed to address these issues.


COMPENSATION OF INVESTMENT PROFESSIONALS -- As described in the prospectus, the
investment adviser uses a system of multiple portfolio counselors in managing
fund assets. In addition, Capital Research and Management Company's investment
analysts may make investment decisions with respect to a portion of a fund's
portfolio within their research coverage.


Portfolio counselors and investment analysts are paid competitive salaries by
Capital Research and Management Company. In addition, they may receive bonuses
based on their individual portfolio results. Investment professionals also may
participate in profit-sharing plans. The relative mix of compensation
represented by bonuses, salary and profit-sharing plans will vary depending on
the individual's portfolio results, contributions to the organization and other
factors.


To encourage a long-term focus, bonuses based on investment results are
calculated by comparing pretax total investment returns to relevant benchmarks
over the most recent year, a four-year rolling average and an eight-year rolling
average with greater weight placed on the


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 20
<PAGE>



four-year and eight-year rolling averages. For portfolio counselors, benchmarks
may include measures of the marketplaces in which the fund invests and measures
of the results of comparable mutual funds. For investment analysts, benchmarks
may include relevant market measures and appropriate industry or sector indexes
reflecting their areas of expertise. Capital Research and Management Company
makes periodic subjective assessments of analysts' contributions to the
investment process and this is an element of their overall compensation. The
investment results of each of the fund's portfolio counselors are measured
against the following benchmark: Citigroup Treasury/Government
Sponsored/Mortgage Index.


PORTFOLIO COUNSELOR FUND HOLDINGS AND OTHER MANAGED ACCOUNTS -- As described
below, portfolio counselors may personally own shares of the fund. In addition,
portfolio counselors may manage portions of other mutual funds or accounts
advised by Capital Research and Management Company or its affiliates.


THE FOLLOWING TABLE REFLECTS INFORMATION AS OF AUGUST 31, 2008:





                                       NUMBER             NUMBER
                                      OF OTHER           OF OTHER           NUMBER
                                     REGISTERED           POOLED           OF OTHER
                                     INVESTMENT         INVESTMENT         ACCOUNTS
                                  COMPANIES (RICS)   VEHICLES (PIVS)      FOR WHICH
                                      FOR WHICH         FOR WHICH         PORTFOLIO
                                      PORTFOLIO         PORTFOLIO         COUNSELOR
                    DOLLAR RANGE      COUNSELOR         COUNSELOR        IS A MANAGER
                      OF FUND       IS A MANAGER       IS A MANAGER       (ASSETS OF
    PORTFOLIO          SHARES      (ASSETS OF RICS   (ASSETS OF PIVS    OTHER ACCOUNTS
    COUNSELOR         OWNED/1/     IN BILLIONS)/2/   IN BILLIONS)/3/   IN BILLIONS)/4/
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      <C
 John H. Smet        $100,001 -      6      $201.4         None           3       $2.30
                      $500,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Thomas H. Hogh       None/5/        3      $116.0         None           3       $0.32
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Mark R.             $100,001 -      4      $239.8         None              None
 Macdonald            $500,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



1  Ownership disclosure is made using the following ranges: None; $1 - $10,000;
   $10,001 - $50,000; $50,001 - $100,000; $100,001 - $500,000; $500,001 -
   $1,000,000; and Over $1,000,000. The amounts listed include shares owned
   through The Capital Group Companies, Inc. retirement plan and 401(k) plan.
2  Indicates fund(s) where the portfolio counselor also has significant
   responsibilities for the day to day management of the fund(s). Assets noted are
   the total net assets of the registered investment companies and are not the
   total assets managed by the individual, which is a substantially lower amount.
   No fund has an advisory fee that is based on the performance of the fund.
3  Represents funds advised or sub-advised by Capital Research and Management
   Company and sold outside the United States and/ or fixed-income assets in
   institutional accounts managed by investment adviser subsidiaries of Capital
   Group International, Inc., an affiliate of Capital Research and Management
   Company. Assets noted are the total net assets of the funds or accounts and are
   not the total assets managed by the individual, which is a substantially lower
   amount. No fund or account has an advisory fee that is based on the performance
   of the fund or account.
4  Reflects other professionally managed accounts held at companies affiliated
   with Capital Research and Management Company. Personal brokerage accounts of
   portfolio counselors and their families are not reflected.
5  Portfolio counselor resides outside the United States. As such, tax
   considerations may adversely influence his or her ability to own shares of the
   fund.

INVESTMENT ADVISORY AND SERVICE AGREEMENT -- The Investment Advisory and Service
Agreement (the "Agreement") between the fund and the investment adviser will
continue in effect until May 31, 2009, unless sooner terminated, and may be
renewed from year to year thereafter,


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 21
<PAGE>



provided that any such renewal has been specifically approved at least annually
by (a) the board of trustees, or by the vote of a majority (as defined in the
1940 Act) of the outstanding voting securities of the fund, and (b) the vote of
a majority of trustees who are not parties to the Agreement or interested
persons (as defined in the 1940 Act) of any such party, cast in person at a
meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval. The Agreement
provides that the investment adviser has no liability to the fund for its acts
or omissions in the performance of its obligations to the fund not involving
willful misconduct, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its
obligations under the Agreement. The Agreement also provides that either party
has the right to terminate it, without penalty, upon 60 days' written notice to
the other party, and that the Agreement automatically terminates in the event of
its assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act).


In addition to providing investment advisory services, the investment adviser
furnishes the services and pays the compensation and travel expenses of persons
to perform the fund's executive, administrative, clerical and bookkeeping
functions, and provides suitable office space, necessary small office equipment
and utilities, general purpose accounting forms, supplies and postage used at
the fund's offices. The fund pays all expenses not assumed by the investment
adviser, including, but not limited to: custodian, stock transfer and dividend
disbursing fees and expenses; shareholder recordkeeping and administrative
expenses; costs of the designing, printing and mailing of reports, prospectuses,
proxy statements and notices to its shareholders; taxes; expenses of the
issuance and redemption of fund shares (including stock certificates,
registration and qualification fees and expenses); expenses pursuant to the
fund's plans of distribution (described below); legal and auditing expenses;
compensation, fees and expenses paid to independent trustees; association dues;
costs of stationery and forms prepared exclusively for the fund; and costs of
assembling and storing shareholder account data.


The management fee is based upon the daily net assets of the fund and monthly
gross investment income. Gross investment income is determined in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles and does not include gains or
losses from sales of capital assets.


The management fee is based on the following annualized rates and daily net
asset levels:


                                Net asset level



          RATE                  IN EXCESS OF                  UP TO
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

         0.30%                 $            0             $   60,000,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         0.21                      60,000,000              1,000,000,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         0.18                   1,000,000,000              3,000,000,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         0.15                   3,000,000,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------



The Agreement also provides for fees based on monthly gross investment income at
the following annualized rates:


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 22
<PAGE>


                        Monthly gross investment income



            RATE                     IN EXCESS OF                  UP TO
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

            3.00%                     $        0                 $3,333,333
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            2.25                       3,333,333                  8,333,333
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            2.00                       8,333,333
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------



The investment adviser has agreed that in the event the Class A expenses of the
fund (with the exclusion of interest, taxes, brokerage costs, distribution
expenses pursuant to a plan under rule 12b-1 and extraordinary expenses such as
litigation and acquisitions or other expenses excludable under applicable state
securities laws or regulations) for any fiscal year ending on a date on which
the Agreement is in effect exceed the expense limitations, if any, applicable to
the fund pursuant to state securities laws or any related regulations, it will
reduce its fee by the extent of such excess and, if required pursuant to any
such laws or any regulations thereunder, will reimburse the fund in the amount
of such excess. To the extent the fund's management fee must be waived due to
Class A share expense ratios exceeding the above limit, management fees will be
reduced similarly for all classes of shares of the fund, or other Class A fees
will be waived in lieu of management fees.


For the fiscal years ended August 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006, the investment
adviser was entitled to receive from the fund management fees of $9,781,000,
$7,659,000 and $7,351,000, respectively. After giving effect to the management
fee waivers/expense reimbursements described below, the fund paid the investment
adviser management fees of $8,803,000 (a reduction of $978,000), $6,893,000 (a
reduction of $766,000) and $6,616,000 (a reduction of $735,000) for the fiscal
years ended August 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006, respectively.


For the period from September 1, 2004 through March 31, 2005, the investment
adviser agreed to waive 5% of the management fees that it was otherwise entitled
to receive under the Agreement. From April 1, 2005 through December 31, 2008,
this waiver increased to 10% of the management fees that the investment adviser
was otherwise entitled to receive. The waiver was discontinued effective January
1, 2009.


ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AGREEMENT -- The Administrative Services Agreement (the
"Administrative Agreement") between the fund and the investment adviser relating
to the fund's Class C, F, R and 529 shares will continue in effect until May 31,
2009, unless sooner terminated, and may be renewed from year to year thereafter,
provided that any such renewal has been specifically approved at least annually
by the vote of a majority of trustees who are not parties to the Administrative
Agreement or interested persons (as defined in the 1940 Act) of any such party,
cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval.
The fund may terminate the Administrative Agreement at any time by vote of a
majority of independent trustees. The investment adviser has the right to
terminate the Administrative Agreement upon 60 days' written notice to the fund.
The Administrative Agreement automatically terminates in the event of its
assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act).


Under the Administrative Agreement, the investment adviser provides certain
transfer agent and administrative services for shareholders of the fund's Class
C and F shares, and Class R and 529 shares. The investment adviser may contract
with third parties, including American Funds


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 23
<PAGE>



Service Company,/(R)/ the fund's Transfer Agent, to provide some of these
services. Services include, but are not limited to, shareholder account
maintenance, transaction processing, tax information reporting and shareholder
and fund communications. In addition, the investment adviser monitors,
coordinates, oversees and assists with the activities performed by third parties
providing such services. For Class R-2 shares, the investment adviser has agreed
to pay a portion of the fees payable under the Administrative Agreement that
would otherwise have been paid by the fund. For the year ended August 31, 2008,
the total fees paid by the investment adviser were $150,000.


The investment adviser receives an administrative services fee at the annual
rate of up to 0.15% of the average daily net assets for Class C, F, R (excluding
Class R-5 and R-6 shares) and 529 shares for administrative services provided to
these share classes. Administrative services fees are paid monthly and accrued
daily. The investment adviser uses a portion of this fee to compensate third
parties for administrative services provided to the fund. Of the remainder, the
investment adviser does not retain more than 0.05% of the average daily net
assets for each applicable share class. For Class R-5 and R-6 shares, the
administrative services fee is calculated at the annual rate of up to 0.10% and
0.05%, respectively, of the average daily net assets of such class. The
administrative services fee includes compensation for transfer agent and
shareholder services provided to the fund's Class C, F, R and 529 shares. In
addition to making administrative service fee payments to unaffiliated third
parties, the investment adviser also makes payments from the administrative
services fee to American Funds Service Company according to a fee schedule,
based principally on the number of accounts serviced, contained in a Shareholder
Services Agreement between the fund and American Funds Service Company. A
portion of the fees paid to American Funds Service Company for transfer agent
services is also paid directly from the relevant share class.


During the 2008 fiscal year, administrative services fees, gross of any payments
made by the investment adviser, were:



                                               ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES FEE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                CLASS C                                 $310,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS F-1                                 165,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS F-2                                      --
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              CLASS 529-A                                 79,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              CLASS 529-B                                 24,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              CLASS 529-C                                 50,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              CLASS 529-E                                  6,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             CLASS 529-F-1                                 6,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS R-1                                  16,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS R-2                                 639,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS R-3                                 259,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS R-4                                 121,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS R-5                                 155,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 24
<PAGE>




PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER AND PLANS OF DISTRIBUTION -- American Funds
Distributors,/(R)/ Inc. (the "Principal Underwriter") is the principal
underwriter of the fund's shares. The Principal Underwriter is located at 333
South Hope Street, Los Angeles, CA 90071; 6455 Irvine Center Drive, Irvine, CA
92618; 3500 Wiseman Boulevard, San Antonio, TX 78251; 8332 Woodfield Crossing
Boulevard, Indianapolis, IN 46240; and 5300 Robin Hood Road, Norfolk, VA 23513.


The Principal Underwriter receives revenues relating to sales of the fund's
shares, as follows:


     .    For Class A and 529-A shares, the Principal Underwriter receives
          commission revenue consisting of the balance of the Class A and 529-A
          sales charge remaining after the allowances by the Principal
          Underwriter to investment dealers.

     .    For Class B and 529-B shares, the Principal Underwriter sells its
          rights to the 0.75% distribution-related portion of the 12b-1 fees
          paid by the fund, as well as any contingent deferred sales charges, to
          a third party. The Principal Underwriter compensates investment
          dealers for sales of Class B and 529-B shares out of the proceeds of
          this sale and keeps any amounts remaining after this compensation is
          paid.

     .    For Class C and 529-C shares, the Principal Underwriter receives any
          contingent deferred sales charges that apply during the first year
          after purchase.

In addition, the fund reimburses the Principal Underwriter for advancing
immediate service fees to qualified dealers and advisers upon the sale of Class
B, 529-B, C and 529-C shares. The fund also reimburses the Principal Underwriter
for service fees (and, in the case of Class 529-E shares, commissions) paid on a
quarterly basis to qualified dealers and advisers in connection with investments
in Class F-1, 529-F-1, 529-E, R-1, R-2, R-3 and R-4 shares.


Commissions, revenue or service fees retained by the Principal Underwriter after
allowances or compensation to dealers were:



                                                                 COMMISSIONS,        ALLOWANCE OR

                                                                    REVENUE          COMPENSATION

                                           FISCAL YEAR/PERIOD  OR FEES RETAINED       TO DEALERS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                 CLASS A                          2008            $1,717,000          $6,572,000
                                                  2007               767,000           2,997,000
                                                  2006               814,000           3,121,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 CLASS B                          2008                67,000             574,000
                                                  2007                40,000             247,000
                                                  2006                52,000             357,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 CLASS C                          2008                    --             751,000
                                                  2007                    --             292,000
                                                  2006                 8,000             259,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS 529-A                        2008                65,000             250,000
                                                  2007                39,000             148,000
                                                  2006                41,000             155,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS 529-B                        2008                 4,000              34,000
                                                  2007                 4,000              28,000
                                                  2006                 6,000              36,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               CLASS 529-C                        2008                    --             106,000
                                                  2007                    --              55,000
                                                  2006                   113              41,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------




                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 25
<PAGE>


Plans of distribution -- The fund has adopted plans of distribution (the
"Plans") pursuant to rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act. The Plans permit the fund to
expend amounts to finance any activity primarily intended to result in the sale
of fund shares, provided the fund's board of trustees has approved the category
of expenses for which payment is being made.


Each Plan is specific to a particular share class of the fund. As the fund has
not adopted a Plan for Class F-2, Class R-5 or Class R-6, no 12b-1 fees are paid
from Class F-2, Class R-5 or Class R-6 share assets and the following disclosure
is not applicable to these share classes.


Payments under the Plans may be made for service-related and/or
distribution-related expenses. Service-related expenses include paying service
fees to qualified dealers. Distribution-related expenses include commissions
paid to qualified dealers. The amounts actually paid under the Plans for the
past fiscal year, expressed as a percentage of the fund's average daily net
assets attributable to the applicable share class, are disclosed in the
prospectus under "Fees and expenses of the fund." Further information regarding
the amounts available under each Plan is in the "Plans of Distribution" section
of the prospectus.


Following is a brief description of the Plans:


     CLASS A AND 529-A -- For Class A and 529-A shares, up to 0.25% of the
     fund's average daily net assets attributable to such shares is reimbursed
     to the Principal Underwriter for paying service-related expenses, and the
     balance available under the applicable Plan


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 26
<PAGE>


     may be paid to the Principal Underwriter for distribution-related expenses.
     The fund may annually expend up to 0.30% for Class A shares and up to 0.50%
     for Class 529-A shares under the applicable Plan.

     Distribution-related expenses for Class A and 529-A shares include dealer
     commissions and wholesaler compensation paid on sales of shares of $1
     million or more purchased without a sales charge. Commissions on these "no
     load" purchases (which are described in further detail under the "Sales
     Charges" section of this statement of additional information) in excess of
     the Class A and 529-A Plan limitations and not reimbursed to the Principal
     Underwriter during the most recent fiscal quarter are recoverable for five
     quarters, provided that the reimbursement of such commissions does not
     cause the fund to exceed the annual expense limit. After five quarters,
     these commissions are not recoverable.

     CLASS B AND 529-B -- The Plans for Class B and 529-B shares provide for
     payments to the Principal Underwriter of up to 0.25% of the fund's average
     daily net assets attributable to such shares for paying service-related
     expenses and 0.75% for distribution-related expenses, which include the
     financing of commissions paid to qualified dealers.

     OTHER SHARE CLASSES (CLASS C, 529-C, F-1, 529-F-1, 529-E, R-1, R-2, R-3 AND
     R-4) -- The Plans for each of the other share classes that have adopted
     Plans provide for payments to the Principal Underwriter for paying
     service-related and distribution-related expenses of up to the following
     amounts of the fund's average daily net assets attributable to such shares:




                                                                        TOTAL
                                           SERVICE    DISTRIBUTION    ALLOWABLE
                                           RELATED      RELATED         UNDER
                  SHARE CLASS            PAYMENTS/1/  PAYMENTS/1/    THE PLANS/2/
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

          Class C                           0.25%        0.75%          1.00%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Class 529-C                       0.25         0.75           1.00
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Class F-1                         0.25           --           0.50
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Class 529-F-1                     0.25           --           0.50
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Class 529-E                       0.25         0.25           0.75
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Class R-1                         0.25         0.75           1.00
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Class R-2                         0.25         0.50           1.00
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Class R-3                         0.25         0.25           0.75
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Class R-4                         0.25           --           0.50
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------




     1 Amounts in these columns represent the amounts approved by the board of
       trustees under the applicable Plan.
     2 The fund may annually expend the amounts set forth in this column under
       the current Plans with the approval of the board of trustees.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 27
<PAGE>



During the 2008 fiscal year, 12b-1 expenses accrued and paid, and if applicable,
unpaid, were:



                                                      12B-1 UNPAID LIABILITY
                               12B-1 EXPENSES              OUTSTANDING
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

        CLASS A                  $6,427,000                 $1,240,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        CLASS B                   1,807,000                    238,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        CLASS C                   1,808,000                    412,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       CLASS F-1                    318,000                     94,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      CLASS 529-A                   121,000                     32,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      CLASS 529-B                   148,000                     20,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      CLASS 529-C                   331,000                     77,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      CLASS 529-E                    20,000                      7,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     CLASS 529-F-1                        0                          0
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       CLASS R-1                     64,000                     19,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       CLASS R-2                    885,000                    224,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       CLASS R-3                    534,000                    127,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       CLASS R-4                    209,000                     55,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Approval of the Plans -- As required by rule 12b-1 and the 1940 Act, the Plans
(together with the Principal Underwriting Agreement) have been approved by the
full board of trustees and separately by a majority of the independent trustees
of the fund who have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operation
of the Plans or the Principal Underwriting Agreement. In addition, the selection
and nomination of independent trustees of the fund are committed to the
discretion of the independent trustees during the existence of the Plans.


Potential benefits of the Plans to the fund include quality shareholder
services, savings to the fund in transfer agency costs, and benefits to the
investment process from growth or stability of assets. The Plans may not be
amended to materially increase the amount spent for distribution without
shareholder approval. Plan expenses are reviewed quarterly by the board of
trustees and the Plans must be renewed annually by the board of trustees.


FEE TO VIRGINIA COLLEGE SAVINGS PLAN -- With respect to Class 529 Shares, as
compensation for its oversight and administration, Virginia College Savings Plan
receives a quarterly fee accrued daily and calculated at the annual rate of
0.10% on the first $30 billion of the net assets invested in Class 529 Shares of
the American Funds, 0.09% on net assets between $30 billion and $60 billion,
0.08% on net assets between $60 billion and $90 billion, 0.07% on net assets
between $90 billion and $120 billion, and 0.06% on net assets between $120
billion and $150 billion. The fee for any given calendar quarter is accrued and
calculated on the basis of average net assets of Class 529 Shares of the
American Funds for the last month of the prior calendar quarter.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 28
<PAGE>



FUND EXPENSES -- In periods of market volatility, assets of the fund may decline
significantly, causing total annual fund operating expenses to become higher
than the numbers shown in the annual fund operating expenses table in the
prospectus.


OTHER COMPENSATION TO DEALERS -- As of October 2008, the top dealers (or their
affiliates) that American Funds Distributors anticipates will receive additional
compensation (as described in the prospectus) include:

     AIG Advisors Group
          Advantage Capital Corporation
          AIG Financial Advisors, Inc.
          American General Securities Incorporated
          FSC Securities Corporation
          Royal Alliance Associates, Inc.
     AXA Advisors, LLC
     Cadaret, Grant & Co., Inc.
     Cambridge Investment Research, Inc.
     Commonwealth Financial Network
     Cuna Brokerage Services, Inc.
     Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.
     Edward Jones
     Genworth Financial Securities Corporation
     Hefren-Tillotson, Inc.
     HTK / Janney Montgomery Group
          Hornor, Townsend & Kent, Inc.
          Janney Montgomery Scott LLC
     ING Advisors Network Inc.
          Bancnorth Investment Group, Inc.
          Financial Network Investment Corporation
          Guaranty Brokerage Services, Inc.
          ING Financial Partners, Inc.
          Multi-Financial Securities Corporation
          Primevest Financial Services, Inc.
     Intersecurities / Transamerica
          InterSecurities, Inc.
          Transamerica Financial Advisors, Inc.
     JJB Hilliard/PNC Bank
          J.J.B. Hilliard, W.L. Lyons, Inc.
          PNC Bank, National Association
          PNC Investments LLC
     Lincoln Financial Advisors Corporation
     LPL Group
          Associated Securities Corp.
          LPL Financial Corporation
          Mutual Service Corporation
          Uvest Investment Services
          Waterstone Financial Group, Inc.
     Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated
     Metlife Enterprises
          Metlife Securities Inc.
          New England Securities
          Tower Square Securities
          Walnut Street Securities, Inc.
     MML Investors Services, Inc.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 29
<PAGE>


     Morgan Keegan & Company, Inc.
     Morgan Stanley & Co., Incorporated
     National Planning Holdings Inc.
          Invest Financial Corporation
          Investment Centers of America, Inc.
          National Planning Corporation
          SII Investments, Inc.
     NFP Securities, Inc.
     Northwestern Mutual Investment Services, LLC
     Park Avenue Securities LLC
     Princor Financial Services Corporation
     Raymond James Group
          Raymond James & Associates, Inc.
          Raymond James Financial Services Inc.
     RBC Dain Rauscher Inc.
     Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated
     Securian / C.R.I.
          CRI Securities, LLC
          Securian Financial Services, Inc.
     Smith Barney
          Legg Mason
          Primerica Financial Services
     U.S. Bancorp Investments, Inc.
     UBS Financial Services Inc.
     Wachovia Group
          A. G. Edwards, a Division of Wachovia Securities, LLC
          First Clearing LLC
          Wachovia Securities Financial Network, LLC
          Wachovia Securities Investment Services Group
          Wachovia Securities Latin American Channel
          Wachovia Securities Private Client Group
     Wells Fargo Investments, LLC

                      EXECUTION OF PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

The investment adviser places orders with broker-dealers for the fund's
portfolio transactions. Purchases and sales of equity securities on a securities
exchange or an over-the-counter market are effected through broker-dealers who
receive commissions for their services. Generally, commissions relating to
securities traded on foreign exchanges will be higher than commissions relating
to securities traded on U.S. exchanges and may not be subject to negotiation.
Equity securities may also be purchased from underwriters at prices that include
underwriting fees. Purchases and sales of fixed-income securities are generally
made with an issuer or a primary market-maker acting as principal with no stated
brokerage commission. The price paid to an underwriter for fixed-income
securities includes underwriting fees. Prices for fixed-income securities in
secondary trades usually include undisclosed compensation to the market-maker
reflecting the spread between the bid and ask prices for the securities.


In selecting broker-dealers, the investment adviser strives to obtain "best
execution" (the most favorable total price reasonably attainable under the
circumstances) for the fund's portfolio transactions, taking into account a
variety of factors. These factors include the size and type of


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 30
<PAGE>


transaction, the nature and character of the markets for the security to be
purchased or sold, the cost, quality and reliability of the executions and the
broker-dealer's ability to offer liquidity and anonymity. The investment adviser
considers these factors, which involve qualitative judgments, when selecting
broker-dealers and execution venues for fund portfolio transactions. The
investment adviser views best execution as a process that should be evaluated
over time as part of an overall relationship with particular broker-dealer firms
rather than on a trade-by-trade basis. The fund does not consider the investment
adviser as having an obligation to obtain the lowest commission rate available
for a portfolio transaction to the exclusion of price, service and qualitative
considerations.


The investment adviser may execute portfolio transactions with broker-dealers
who provide certain brokerage and/or investment research services to it, but
only when in the investment adviser's judgment the broker-dealer is capable of
providing best execution for that transaction. The receipt of these services
permits the investment adviser to supplement its own research and analysis and
makes available the views of, and information from, individuals and the research
staffs of other firms. Such views and information may be provided in the form of
written reports, telephone contacts and meetings with securities analysts. These
services may include, among other things, reports and other communications with
respect to individual companies, industries, countries and regions, economic,
political and legal developments, as well as scheduling meetings with corporate
executives and seminars and conferences related to relevant subject matters. The
investment adviser considers these services to be supplemental to its own
internal research efforts and therefore the receipt of investment research from
broker-dealers does not tend to reduce the expenses involved in the investment
adviser's research efforts. If broker-dealers were to discontinue providing such
services it is unlikely the investment adviser would attempt to replicate them
on its own, in part because they would then no longer provide an independent,
supplemental viewpoint. Nonetheless, if it were to attempt to do so, the
investment adviser would incur substantial additional costs. Research services
that the investment adviser receives from broker-dealers may be used by the
investment adviser in servicing the fund and other funds and accounts that it
advises; however, not all such services will necessarily benefit the fund.


The investment adviser may pay commissions in excess of what other
broker-dealers might have charged - including on an execution-only basis - for
certain portfolio transactions in recognition of brokerage and/or investment
research services provided by a broker-dealer. In this regard, the investment
adviser has adopted a brokerage allocation procedure consistent with the
requirements of Section 28(e) of the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Section 28(e) permits an investment adviser to cause an account to pay a higher
commission to a broker-dealer that provides certain brokerage and/or investment
research services to the investment adviser, if the investment adviser makes a
good faith determination that such commissions are reasonable in relation to the
value of the services provided by such broker-dealer to the investment adviser
in terms of that particular transaction or the investment adviser's overall
responsibility to the fund and other accounts that it advises. Certain brokerage
and/or investment research services may not necessarily benefit all accounts
paying commissions to each such broker-dealer; therefore, the investment adviser
assesses the reasonableness of commissions in light of the total brokerage and
investment research services provided by each particular broker-dealer.


In accordance with its internal brokerage allocation procedure, each equity
investment division of the investment adviser periodically assesses the
brokerage and investment research services provided by each broker-dealer from
which it receives such services. Using its judgment, each equity investment
division of the investment adviser then creates lists with suggested levels of


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 31
<PAGE>


commissions for particular broker-dealers and provides those lists to its
trading desks. Neither the investment adviser nor the fund incurs any obligation
to any broker-dealer to pay for research by generating trading commissions. The
actual level of business received by any broker-dealer may be less than the
suggested level of commissions and can, and often does, exceed the suggested
level in the normal course of business. As part of its ongoing relationships
with broker-dealers, the investment adviser routinely meets with firms,
typically at the firm's request, to discuss the level and quality of the
brokerage and research services provided, as well as the perceived value and
cost of such services. In valuing the brokerage and investment research services
the investment adviser receives from broker-dealers in connection with its good
faith determination of reasonableness, the investment adviser does not attribute
a dollar value to such services, but rather takes various factors into
consideration, including the quantity, quality and usefulness of the services to
the investment adviser.


The investment adviser seeks, on an ongoing basis, to determine what the
reasonable levels of commission rates are in the marketplace. The investment
adviser takes various considerations into account when evaluating such
reasonableness, including, (a) rates quoted by broker-dealers, (b) the size of a
particular transaction in terms of the number of shares and dollar amount, (c)
the complexity of a particular transaction, (d) the nature and character of the
markets on which a particular trade takes place, (e) the ability of a
broker-dealer to provide anonymity while executing trades, (f) the ability of a
broker-dealer to execute large trades while minimizing market impact, (g) the
extent to which a broker-dealer has put its own capital at risk, (h) the level
and type of business done with a particular broker-dealer over a period of time,
(i) historical commission rates, and (j) commission rates that other
institutional investors are paying.


When executing portfolio transactions in the same equity security for the funds
and accounts, or portions of funds and accounts, over which the investment
adviser, through its equity investment divisions, has investment discretion,
each of the investment divisions will normally aggregate its respective
purchases or sales and execute them as part of the same transaction or series of
transactions. When executing portfolio transactions in the same fixed-income
security for the fund and the other funds or accounts over which it or one of
its affiliated companies has investment discretion, the investment adviser will
normally aggregate such purchases or sales and execute them as part of the same
transaction or series of transactions. The objective of aggregating purchases
and sales of a security is to allocate executions in an equitable manner among
the funds and other accounts that have concurrently authorized a transaction in
such security.


The investment adviser may place orders for the fund's portfolio transactions
with broker-dealers who have sold shares of the funds managed by the investment
adviser or its affiliated companies; however, it does not consider whether a
broker-dealer has sold shares of the funds managed by the investment adviser or
its affiliated companies when placing any such orders for the fund's portfolio
transactions.


No brokerage commissions were paid by the fund on portfolio transactions for the
fiscal years ended August 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006.


The fund is required to disclose information regarding investments in the
securities of its "regular" broker-dealers (or parent companies of its regular
broker-dealers) that derive more than 15% of their revenue from broker-dealer,
underwriter or investment adviser activities. A regular broker-dealer is (a) one
of the 10 broker-dealers that received from the fund the largest amount of
brokerage commissions by participating, directly or indirectly, in the fund's
portfolio transactions


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 32
<PAGE>


during the fund's most recent fiscal year; (b) one of the 10 broker-dealers that
engaged as principal in the largest dollar amount of portfolio transactions of
the fund during the fund's most recent fiscal year; or (c) one of the 10
broker-dealers that sold the largest amount of securities of the fund during the
fund's most recent fiscal year.


As of the fund's most recent fiscal year-end, the fund did not hold securities
of its regular broker-dealers.


                        DISCLOSURE OF PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS

The fund's investment adviser, on behalf of the fund, has adopted policies and
procedures with respect to the disclosure of information about fund portfolio
securities. These policies and procedures have been reviewed by the fund's board
of trustees and compliance will be periodically assessed by the board in
connection with reporting from the fund's Chief Compliance Officer.


Under these policies and procedures, the fund's complete list of portfolio
holdings available for public disclosure, dated as of the end of each calendar
quarter, is permitted to be posted on the American Funds website no earlier than
the tenth day after such calendar quarter. In practice, the public portfolio
typically is posted on the website approximately 45 days after the end of the
calendar quarter. Such portfolio holdings information may then be disclosed to
any person pursuant to an ongoing arrangement to disclose portfolio holdings
information to such person no earlier than one day after the day on which the
information is posted on the American Funds website. The fund's custodian,
outside counsel and auditor, each of which requires portfolio holdings
information for legitimate business and fund oversight purposes, may receive the
information earlier.


Affiliated persons of the fund, including officers of the fund and employees of
the investment adviser and its affiliates, who receive portfolio holdings
information are subject to restrictions and limitations on the use and handling
of such information pursuant to applicable codes of ethics, including
requirements not to trade in securities based on confidential and proprietary
investment information, to maintain the confidentiality of such information, and
to preclear securities trades and report securities transactions activity, as
applicable. For more information on these restrictions and limitations, please
see the "Code of Ethics" section in this statement of additional information and
the Code of Ethics. Third party service providers of the fund, as described in
this statement of additional information, receiving such information are subject
to confidentiality obligations. When portfolio holdings information is disclosed
other than through the American Funds website to persons not affiliated with the
fund (which, as described above, would typically occur no earlier than one day
after the day on which the information is posted on the American Funds website),
such persons will be bound by agreements (including confidentiality agreements)
or fiduciary obligations that restrict and limit their use of the information to
legitimate business uses only. Neither the fund nor its investment adviser or
any affiliate thereof receives compensation or other consideration in connection
with the disclosure of information about portfolio securities.


Subject to board policies, the authority to disclose a fund's portfolio
holdings, and to establish policies with respect to such disclosure, resides
with the appropriate investment-related committees of the fund's investment
adviser. In exercising their authority, the committees determine whether
disclosure of information about the fund's portfolio securities is appropriate
and in the best interest of fund shareholders. The investment adviser has
implemented policies


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 33
<PAGE>



and procedures to address conflicts of interest that may arise from the
disclosure of fund holdings. For example, the investment adviser's code of
ethics specifically requires, among other things, the safeguarding of
information about fund holdings and contains prohibitions designed to prevent
the personal use of confidential, proprietary investment information in a way
that would conflict with fund transactions. In addition, the investment adviser
believes that its current policy of not selling portfolio holdings information
and not disclosing such information to unaffiliated third parties until such
holdings have been made public on the American Funds website (other than to
certain fund service providers for legitimate business and fund oversight
purposes) helps reduce potential conflicts of interest between fund shareholders
and the investment adviser and its affiliates.

                                PRICE OF SHARES

Shares are purchased at the offering price or sold at the net asset value price
next determined after the purchase or sell order is received and accepted by the
fund or the Transfer Agent; the offering or net asset value price is effective
for orders received prior to the time of determination of the net asset value
and, in the case of orders placed with dealers or their authorized designees,
accepted by the Principal Underwriter, the Transfer Agent, a dealer or any of
their designees. In the case of orders sent directly to the fund or the Transfer
Agent, an investment dealer should be indicated. The dealer is responsible for
promptly transmitting purchase and sell orders to the Principal Underwriter.


Orders received by the investment dealer or authorized designee, the Transfer
Agent or the fund after the time of the determination of the net asset value
will be entered at the next calculated offering price. Note that investment
dealers or other intermediaries may have their own rules about share
transactions and may have earlier cut-off times than those of the fund. For more
information about how to purchase through your intermediary, contact your
intermediary directly.


Prices that appear in the newspaper do not always indicate prices at which you
will be purchasing and redeeming shares of the fund, since such prices generally
reflect the previous day's closing price, while purchases and redemptions are
made at the next calculated price. The price you pay for shares, the offering
price, is based on the net asset value per share, which is calculated once daily
as of approximately 4 p.m. New York time, which is the normal close of trading
on the New York Stock Exchange, each day the Exchange is open. If, for example,
the Exchange closes at 1 p.m., the fund's share price would still be determined
as of 4 p.m. New York time. The New York Stock Exchange is currently closed on
weekends and on the following holidays: New Year's Day; Martin Luther King, Jr.
Day; Presidents' Day; Good Friday; Memorial Day; Independence Day; Labor Day;
Thanksgiving; and Christmas Day. Each share class of the fund has a separately
calculated net asset value (and share price).


All portfolio securities of funds managed by Capital Research and Management
Company (other than money market funds) are valued, and the net asset values per
share for each share class are determined, as indicated below. The fund follows
standard industry practice by typically reflecting changes in its holdings of
portfolio securities on the first business day following a portfolio trade.

1.    Equity securities, including depositary receipts, are valued at the
official closing price of, or the last reported sale price on, the exchange or
market on which such securities are traded, as of the close of business on the
day the securities are being valued or, lacking any sales, at the last available
bid price. Prices for each security are taken from the principal exchange or
market



                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 34
<PAGE>


in which the security trades. Fixed-income securities are valued at prices
obtained from one or more independent pricing vendors, when such prices are
available; however, in circumstances where the investment adviser deems it
appropriate to do so, such securities will be valued in good faith at the mean
quoted bid and asked prices that are reasonably and timely available (or bid
prices, if asked prices are not available) or at prices for securities
of comparable maturity, quality and type. The pricing vendors base bond prices
on, among other things, valuation matrices which may incorporate dealer-supplied
valuations, electronic data processing techniques and an evaluation of the
yield curve as of approximately 3 p.m. New York time. The fund's investment
adviser performs certain checks on these prices prior to calculation of the
fund's net asset value.

Securities with both fixed-income and equity characteristics (e.g., convertible
bonds, preferred stocks, units comprised of more than one type of security,
etc.), or equity securities traded principally among fixed-income dealers, are
valued in the manner described above for either equity or fixed-income
securities, depending on which method is deemed most appropriate by the
investment adviser.

Securities with original maturities of one year or less having 60 days or less
to maturity are amortized to maturity based on their cost if acquired within 60
days of maturity, or if already held on the 60th day, based on the value
determined on the 61st day. Forward currency contracts are valued at the mean of
representative quoted bid and asked prices.


Assets or liabilities initially expressed in terms of currencies other than U.S.
dollars are translated prior to the next determination of the net asset value of
the fund's shares into U.S. dollars at the prevailing market rates.


Securities and assets for which market quotations are not readily available or
are considered unreliable are valued at fair value as determined in good faith
under policies approved by the fund's board. Subject to board oversight, the
fund's board has delegated the obligation to make fair valuation determinations
to a valuation committee established by the fund's investment adviser. The board
receives regular reports describing fair-valued securities and the valuation
methods used.


The valuation committee has adopted guidelines and procedures (consistent with
SEC rules and guidance) to consider certain relevant principles and factors
when making all fair value determinations. As a general principle,
securities lacking readily available market quotations, or that have quotations
that are considered unreliable by the investment adviser, are valued in good
faith by the valuation committee based upon what the fund might reasonably
expect to receive upon their current sale. Fair valuations and valuations of
investments that are not actively trading involve judgment and may differ
materially from valuations that would have been used had greater market
activity occurred. The valuation committee considers relevant indications of
value that are reasonably and timely available to it in determining the fair
value to be assigned to a particular security, such as the type and
cost of the security, contractual or legal restrictions on resale of the
security, relevant financial or business developments of the issuer, actively
traded similar or related securities, conversion or exchange rights on the
security, related corporate actions, significant events occurring after the
close of trading in the security and changes in overall market conditions.


2.   Each class of shares represents interests in the same portfolio of
investments and is identical in all respects to each other class, except for
differences relating to distribution, service and other charges and expenses,
certain voting rights, differences relating to eligible investors, the
designation of each class of shares, conversion features and exchange
privileges. Expenses attributable to the fund, but not to a particular class of
shares, are borne by each class pro rata based on relative aggregate net assets
of the classes. Expenses directly attributable to a class of


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 35
<PAGE>


shares are borne by that class of shares. Liabilities, including accruals of
taxes and other expense items attributable to particular share classes, are
deducted from total assets attributable to such share classes.

3.   Net assets so obtained for each share class are then divided by the total
number of shares outstanding of that share class, and the result, rounded to the
nearest cent, is the net asset value per share for that share class.

                            TAXES AND DISTRIBUTIONS

FUND TAXATION -- The fund has elected to be treated as a regulated investment
company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code (the "Code"). A
regulated investment company qualifying under Subchapter M of the Code is
required to distribute to its shareholders at least 90% of its investment
company taxable income (including the excess of net short-term capital gain over
net long-term capital losses) and generally is not subject to federal income tax
to the extent that it distributes annually 100% of its investment company
taxable income and net realized capital gains in the manner required under the
Code. The fund intends to distribute annually all of its investment company
taxable income and net realized capital gains and therefore does not expect to
pay federal income tax, although in certain circumstances the fund may determine
that it is in the interest of shareholders to distribute less than that amount.


To be treated as a regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Code,
the fund must also (a) derive at least 90% of its gross income from dividends,
interest, payments with respect to securities loans, net income from certain
publicly traded partnerships and gains from the sale or other disposition of
securities or foreign currencies, or other income (including, but not limited
to, gains from options, futures or forward contracts) derived with respect to
the business of investing in such securities or currencies, and (b) diversify
its holdings so that, at the end of each fiscal quarter, (i) at least 50% of the
market value of the fund's assets is represented by cash, U.S. government
securities and securities of other regulated investment companies, and other
securities (for purposes of this calculation, generally limited in respect of
any one issuer, to an amount not greater than 5% of the market value of the
fund's assets and 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer) and
(ii) not more than 25% of the value of its assets is invested in the securities
of any one issuer (other than U.S. government securities or the securities of
other regulated investment companies), two or more issuers which the fund
controls and which are determined to be engaged in the same or similar trades or
businesses or the securities of certain publicly traded partnerships.


Under the Code, a nondeductible excise tax of 4% is imposed on the excess of a
regulated investment company's "required distribution" for the calendar year
ending within the regulated investment company's taxable year over the
"distributed amount" for such calendar year. The term "required distribution"
means the sum of (a) 98% of ordinary income (generally net investment income)
for the calendar year, (b) 98% of capital gain (both long-term and short-term)
for the one-year period ending on October 31 (as though the one-year period
ending on October 31 were the regulated investment company's taxable year) and
(c) the sum of any untaxed, undistributed net investment income and net capital
gains of the regulated investment company for prior periods. The term
"distributed amount" generally means the sum of (a) amounts actually distributed
by the fund from its current year's ordinary income and capital gain net income
and (b) any amount on which the fund pays income tax during the periods
described above. Although the fund intends to distribute its net investment
income and net capital gains so as to avoid excise tax liability, the fund may
determine that it is in the interest of shareholders to distribute a


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 36
<PAGE>



lesser amount. The fund may pass through the income earned on certain U.S.
government bonds free of various states' income taxes. However, a few states
require the fund to hold more than 50% of its assets in these types of
government bonds at the end of every fiscal quarter in order to qualify for the
tax exemption. The fund does not currently intend to actively meet the 50%
threshold in order to qualify for the tax exemption in those few states.


The following information may not apply to you if you hold fund shares in a
tax-deferred account, such as a retirement plan or education savings account.
Please see your tax adviser for more information.


DIVIDENDS AND CAPITAL GAIN DISTRIBUTIONS -- Dividends and capital gain
distributions on fund shares will be reinvested in shares of the fund of the
same class, unless shareholders indicate in writing that they wish to receive
them in cash or in shares of the same class of other American Funds, as provided
in the prospectus. Dividends and capital gain distributions by 529 share classes
will be automatically reinvested.


Distributions of investment company taxable income and net realized capital
gains to  shareholders will be taxable whether received in shares or in cash,
unless such shareholders are exempt from taxation. Shareholders electing to
receive distributions in the form of additional shares will have a cost basis
for federal income tax purposes in each share so received equal to the net asset
value of that share on the reinvestment date. Dividends and capital gain
distributions by the fund to a tax-deferred retirement plan account are not
taxable currently.


     DIVIDENDS -- The fund intends to follow the practice of distributing
     substantially all of its investment company taxable income. Investment
     company taxable income generally includes dividends, interest, net
     short-term capital gains in excess of net long-term capital losses, and
     certain foreign currency gains, if any, less expenses and certain foreign
     currency losses.

     A portion of the difference between the issue price of zero coupon
     securities and their face value (original issue discount) is considered to
     be income to the fund each year, even though the fund will not receive cash
     interest payments from these securities. This original issue discount
     (imputed income) will comprise a part of the investment company taxable
     income of the fund that must be distributed to shareholders in order to
     maintain the qualification of the fund as a regulated investment company
     and to avoid federal income taxation at the level of the fund.


     The price of a bond purchased after its original issuance may reflect
     market discount which, depending on the particular circumstances, may
     affect the tax character and amount of income required to be recognized by
     a fund holding the bond. In determining whether a bond is purchased with
     market discount, certain de minimis rules apply.


     CAPITAL GAIN DISTRIBUTIONS -- The fund also intends to follow the practice
     of distributing the entire excess of net realized long-term capital gains
     over net realized short-term capital losses. Net capital gains for a fiscal
     year are computed by taking into account any capital loss carryforward of
     the fund.

     If any net long-term capital gains in excess of net short-term capital
     losses are retained by the fund for reinvestment, requiring federal income
     taxes to be paid thereon by the fund, the fund intends to elect to treat
     such capital gains as having been distributed to


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 37
<PAGE>



     shareholders. As a result, each shareholder will report such capital gains
     as long-term capital gains taxable to individual shareholders at a maximum
     15% capital gains rate, will be able to claim a pro rata share of federal
     income taxes paid by the fund on such gains as a credit against personal
     federal income tax liability, and will be entitled to increase the adjusted
     tax basis on fund shares by the difference between a pro rata share of the
     retained gains and such shareholder's related tax credit.


SHAREHOLDER TAXATION -- In January of each year, individual shareholders holding
fund shares in taxable accounts will receive a statement of the federal income
tax status of all distributions. Shareholders of the fund also may be subject to
state and local taxes on distributions received from the fund.


     DIVIDENDS -- Fund dividends are taxable to shareholders as ordinary income.
     All or a portion of a fund's dividend distribution may be a "qualified
     dividend." If the fund meets the applicable holding period requirement, it
     will distribute dividends derived from qualified corporation dividends to
     shareholders as qualified dividends. Interest income from bonds and money
     market instruments and nonqualified foreign dividends will be distributed
     to shareholders as nonqualified fund dividends. The fund will report on
     Form 1099-DIV the amount of each shareholder's dividend that may be treated
     as a qualified dividend. If a shareholder other than a corporation meets
     the requisite holding period requirement, qualified dividends are taxable
     at a maximum rate of 15%.

     CAPITAL GAINS -- Distributions of the excess of net long-term capital gains
     over net short-term capital losses that the fund properly designates as
     "capital gain dividends" generally will be taxable as long-term capital
     gain. Regardless of the length of time the shares of the fund have been
     held by a shareholder, a capital gain distribution by the fund is subject
     to a maximum tax rate of 15%. Any loss realized upon the redemption of
     shares held at the time of redemption for six months or less from the date
     of their purchase will be treated as a long-term capital loss to the extent
     of any amounts treated as distributions of long-term capital gains during
     such six-month period.

Distributions by the fund result in a reduction in the net asset value of the
fund's shares. Investors should consider the tax implications of buying shares
just prior to a distribution. The price of shares purchased at that time
includes the amount of the forthcoming distribution. Those purchasing just prior
to a distribution will subsequently receive a partial return of their investment
capital upon payment of the distribution, which will be taxable to them.


Redemptions of shares, including exchanges for shares of other American Funds,
may result in federal, state and local tax consequences (gain or loss) to the
shareholder.


If a shareholder exchanges or otherwise disposes of shares of the fund within 90
days of having acquired such shares, and if, as a result of having acquired
those shares, the shareholder subsequently pays a reduced sales charge for
shares of the fund, or of a different fund, the sales charge previously incurred
in acquiring the fund's shares will not be taken into account (to the extent
such previous sales charges do not exceed the reduction in sales charges) for
the purposes of determining the amount of gain or loss on the exchange, but will
be treated as having been incurred in the acquisition of such other fund(s).


Any loss realized on a redemption or exchange of shares of the fund will be
disallowed to the extent substantially identical shares are reacquired within
the 61-day period beginning 30 days


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 38
<PAGE>


before and ending 30 days after the shares are disposed of. Any loss disallowed
under this rule will be added to the shareholder's tax basis in the new shares
purchased.


The fund will be required to report to the IRS all distributions of investment
company taxable income and capital gains as well as gross proceeds from the
redemption or exchange of fund shares, except in the case of certain exempt
shareholders. Under the backup withholding provisions of Section 3406 of the
Code, distributions of investment company taxable income and capital gains and
proceeds from the redemption or exchange of a regulated investment company may
be subject to backup withholding of federal income tax in the case of non-exempt
U.S. shareholders who fail to furnish the investment company with their taxpayer
identification numbers and with required certifications regarding their status
under the federal income tax law. Withholding may also be required if the fund
is notified by the IRS or a broker that the taxpayer identification number
furnished by the shareholder is incorrect or that the shareholder has previously
failed to report interest or dividend income. If the withholding provisions are
applicable, any such distributions and proceeds, whether taken in cash or
reinvested in additional shares, will be reduced by the amounts required to be
withheld.


The foregoing discussion of U.S. federal income tax law relates solely to the
application of that law to U.S. persons (i.e., U.S. citizens and residents and
U.S. corporations, partnerships, trusts and estates). Each shareholder who is
not a U.S. person should consider the U.S. and foreign tax consequences of
ownership of shares of the fund, including the possibility that such a
shareholder may be subject to a U.S. withholding tax at a rate of 30% (or a
lower rate under an applicable income tax treaty) on dividend income received by
the shareholder.


Shareholders should consult their tax advisers about the application of federal,
state and local tax law in light of their particular situation.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 39
<PAGE>


UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED, ALL REFERENCES IN THE FOLLOWING PAGES TO CLASS A, B, C
OR F-1 SHARES ALSO REFER TO THE CORRESPONDING CLASS 529-A, 529-B, 529-C OR
529-F-1 SHARES. CLASS 529 SHAREHOLDERS SHOULD ALSO REFER TO THE APPLICABLE
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION FOR INFORMATION ON POLICIES AND SERVICES SPECIFICALLY
RELATING TO THESE ACCOUNTS. SHAREHOLDERS HOLDING SHARES THROUGH AN ELIGIBLE
RETIREMENT PLAN SHOULD CONTACT THEIR PLAN'S ADMINISTRATOR OR RECORDKEEPER FOR
INFORMATION REGARDING PURCHASES, SALES AND EXCHANGES.

                        PURCHASE AND EXCHANGE OF SHARES

PURCHASES BY INDIVIDUALS -- As described in the prospectus, you may generally
open an account and purchase fund shares by contacting a financial adviser or
investment dealer authorized to sell the fund's shares. You may make investments
by any of the following means:


     CONTACTING YOUR FINANCIAL ADVISER -- Deliver or mail a check to your
     financial adviser.

     BY MAIL -- For initial investments, you may mail a check, made payable to
     the fund, directly to the address indicated on the account application.
     Please indicate an investment dealer on the account application. You may
     make additional investments by filling out the "Account Additions" form at
     the bottom of a recent account statement and mailing the form, along with a
     check made payable to the fund, using the envelope provided with your
     account statement.

     The amount of time it takes for us to receive regular U.S. postal mail may
     vary and there is no assurance that we will receive such mail on the day
     you expect. Mailing addresses for regular U.S. postal mail can be found in
     the prospectus. To send investments or correspondence to us via overnight
     mail or courier service, use either of the following addresses:

           American Funds
           8332 Woodfield Crossing Blvd.
           Indianapolis, IN 46240-2482

           American Funds
           5300 Robin Hood Rd.
           Norfolk, VA  23513-2407

     BY TELEPHONE -- Using the American FundsLine. Please see the "Shareholder
     account services and privileges" section of this statement of additional
     information for more information regarding this service.

     BY INTERNET -- Using americanfunds.com. Please see the "Shareholder account
     services and privileges" section of this statement of additional
     information for more information regarding this service.

     BY WIRE -- If you are making a wire transfer, instruct your bank to wire
     funds to:

           Wells Fargo Bank
           ABA Routing No. 121000248
           Account No. 4600-076178


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 40
<PAGE>


           Your bank should include the following information when wiring funds:

           For credit to the account of:
           American Funds Service Company
           (fund's name)

           For further credit to:
           (shareholder's fund account number)
           (shareholder's name)

     You may contact American Funds Service Company at 800/421-0180 if you have
     questions about making wire transfers.

OTHER PURCHASE INFORMATION -- The Principal Underwriter will not knowingly sell
shares of the fund directly or indirectly to any person or entity, where, after
the sale, such person or entity would own beneficially directly or indirectly
more than 4.5% of the outstanding shares of the fund without the consent of a
majority of the fund's board.


Class 529 shares may be purchased only through CollegeAmerica by investors
establishing qualified higher education savings accounts. Class 529-E shares may
be purchased only by investors participating in CollegeAmerica through an
eligible employer plan. Class R-5 shares are also available to clients of the
Personal Investment Management group of Capital Guardian Trust Company who do
not have an intermediary associated with their accounts. In addition, the
American Funds state tax-exempt funds are qualified for sale only in certain
jurisdictions, and tax-exempt funds in general should not serve as retirement
plan investments. The fund and the Principal Underwriter reserve the right to
reject any purchase order.


Class R-5 and R-6 shares may be made available to certain charitable foundations
organized and maintained by The Capital Group Companies, Inc. or its affiliates.


Beginning May 1, 2009, cash investments received without investment instructions
will be invested in Class A shares of the American Funds Money Market Fund
(rather than The Cash Management Trust of America) pursuant to the policies
described in the "Purchase and exchange of shares" section of the prospectus.



PURCHASE MINIMUMS AND MAXIMUMS -- All investments are subject to the purchase
minimums and maximums described in the prospectus. As noted in the prospectus,
purchase minimums may be waived or reduced in certain cases.


In the case of American Funds non-tax-exempt funds, the initial purchase minimum
of $25 may be waived for the following account types:


     .    Payroll deduction retirement plan accounts (such as, but not limited
          to, 403(b), 401(k), SIMPLE IRA, SARSEP and deferred compensation plan
          accounts); and

     .    Employer-sponsored CollegeAmerica accounts.

The following account types may be established without meeting the initial
purchase minimum:


     .    Retirement accounts that are funded with employer contributions; and


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 41
<PAGE>


     .    Accounts that are funded with monies set by court decree.

The following account types may be established without meeting the initial
purchase minimum, but shareholders wishing to invest in two or more funds must
meet the normal initial purchase minimum of each fund:


     .    Accounts that are funded with (a) transfers of assets, (b) rollovers
          from retirement plans, (c) rollovers from 529 college savings plans or
          (d) required minimum distribution automatic exchanges; and

     .    American Funds money market fund accounts registered in the name of
          clients of Capital Guardian Trust Company's Personal Investment
          Management group.

Certain accounts held on the fund's books, known as omnibus accounts, contain
multiple underlying accounts that are invested in shares of the fund. These
underlying accounts are maintained by entities such as financial intermediaries
and are subject to the applicable initial purchase minimums as described in the
prospectus and this statement of additional information. However, in the case
where the entity maintaining these accounts aggregates the accounts' purchase
orders for fund shares, such accounts are not required to meet the fund's
minimum amount for subsequent purchases.


EXCHANGES -- You may only exchange shares into other American Funds within the
same share class. However, exchanges from Class A shares of The Cash Management
Trust of America or American Funds Money Market Fund may be made to Class C shares
of other American Funds for dollar cost averaging purposes. Exchanges are not
permitted from Class A shares of The Cash Management Trust of America or American
Funds Money Market Fund to Class C shares of Intermediate Bond Fund of America,
Limited Term Tax-Exempt Bond Fund of America or Short-Term Bond Fund of America.
Exchange purchases are subject to the minimum investment requirements of the fund
purchased and no sales charge generally applies. However, exchanges of shares from
American Funds money market funds are subject to applicable sales charges on the
fund being purchased, unless the money market fund shares were acquired by an
exchange from a fund having a sales charge, or by reinvestment or cross-reinvestment
of dividends or capital gain distributions. Exchanges of Class F shares generally
may only be made through fee-based programs of investment firms that have special
agreements with the fund's distributor and certain registered investment advisers.


You may exchange shares of other classes by contacting the Transfer Agent, by
contacting your investment dealer or financial adviser, by using American
FundsLine or americanfunds.com, or by telephoning 800/421-0180 toll-free, or
faxing (see "American Funds Service Company service areas" in the prospectus for
the appropriate fax numbers) the Transfer Agent. For more information, see
"Shareholder account services and privileges" in this statement of additional
information. THESE TRANSACTIONS HAVE THE SAME TAX CONSEQUENCES AS ORDINARY SALES
AND PURCHASES.


Shares held in employer-sponsored retirement plans may be exchanged into other
American Funds by contacting your plan administrator or recordkeeper. Exchange
redemptions and purchases are processed simultaneously at the share prices next
determined after the exchange order is received (see "Price of shares" in this
statement of additional information).


FREQUENT TRADING OF FUND SHARES -- As noted in the prospectus, certain
redemptions may trigger a purchase block lasting 30 calendar days under the
fund's "purchase blocking policy."


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 42
<PAGE>


Under this policy, systematic redemptions will not trigger a purchase block and
systematic purchases will not be prevented. For purposes of this policy,
systematic redemptions include, for example, regular periodic automatic
redemptions and statement of intention escrow share redemptions. Systematic
purchases include, for example, regular periodic automatic purchases and
automatic reinvestments of dividends and capital gain distributions.


OTHER POTENTIALLY ABUSIVE ACTIVITY -- In addition to implementing purchase
blocks, American Funds Service Company will monitor for other types of activity
that could potentially be harmful to the American Funds - for example,
short-term trading activity in multiple funds. When identified, American Funds
Service Company will request that the shareholder discontinue the activity. If
the activity continues, American Funds Service Company will freeze the
shareholder account to prevent all activity other than redemptions of fund
shares.


MOVING BETWEEN SHARE CLASSES

     If you wish to "move" your investment between share classes (within the
     same fund or between different funds), we generally will process your
     request as an exchange of the shares you currently hold for shares in the
     new class or fund. Below is more information about how sales charges are
     handled for various scenarios.

     EXCHANGING CLASS B SHARES FOR CLASS A SHARES -- If you exchange Class B
     shares for Class A shares during the contingent deferred sales charge
     period you are responsible for paying any applicable deferred sales charges
     attributable to those Class B shares, but you will not be required to pay a
     Class A sales charge. If, however, you exchange your Class B shares for
     Class A shares after the contingent deferred sales charge period, you are
     responsible for paying any applicable Class A sales charges.

     EXCHANGING CLASS C SHARES FOR CLASS A SHARES -- If you exchange Class C
     shares for Class A shares, you are still responsible for paying any Class C
     contingent deferred sales charges and applicable Class A sales charges.

     EXCHANGING CLASS C SHARES FOR CLASS F SHARES -- If you are part of a
     qualified fee-based program and you wish to exchange your Class C shares
     for Class F shares to be held in the program, you are still responsible for
     paying any applicable Class C contingent deferred sales charges.

     EXCHANGING CLASS F SHARES FOR CLASS A SHARES -- You can exchange Class F
     shares held in a qualified fee-based program for Class A shares without
     paying an initial Class A sales charge if all of the following requirements
     are met: (a) you are leaving or have left the fee-based program, (b) you
     have held the Class F shares in the program for at least one year, and (c)
     you notify American Funds Service Company of your request. If you have
     already redeemed your Class F shares, the foregoing requirements apply and
     you must purchase Class A shares within 90 days after redeeming your Class
     F shares to receive the Class A shares without paying an initial Class A
     sales charge.

     EXCHANGING CLASS A SHARES FOR CLASS F SHARES -- If you are part of a
     qualified fee-based program and you wish to exchange your Class A shares
     for Class F shares to be held in the program, any Class A sales charges
     (including contingent deferred sales charges) that you paid or are payable
     will not be credited back to your account.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 43
<PAGE>


     EXCHANGING CLASS A SHARES FOR CLASS R SHARES -- Provided it is eligible to
     invest in Class R shares, a retirement plan currently invested in Class A
     shares may exchange its shares for Class R shares. Any Class A sales
     charges that the retirement plan previously paid will not be credited back
     to the plan's account.

     EXCHANGING CLASS F-1 SHARES FOR CLASS F-2 SHARES -- If you are part of a
     qualified fee-based program that offers Class F-2 shares, you may exchange
     your Class F-1 shares for Class F-2 shares to be held in the program.

     MOVING BETWEEN OTHER SHARE CLASSES -- If you desire to move your investment
     between share classes and the particular scenario is not described in this
     statement of additional information, please contact American Funds Service
     Company at 800/421-0180 for more information.

     NON-REPORTABLE TRANSACTIONS -- Automatic conversions described in the
     prospectus will be non-reportable for tax purposes. In addition, except in
     the case of a movement between a 529 share class and a non-529 share class,
     an exchange of shares from one share class of a fund to another share class
     of the same fund will be treated as a non-reportable exchange for tax
     purposes, provided that the exchange request is received in writing by
     American Funds Service Company and processed as a single transaction.

                                 SALES CHARGES

CLASS A PURCHASES


     PURCHASES BY CERTAIN 403(B) PLANS

     A 403(b) plan may not invest in Class A, B or C shares on or after January
     1, 2009, unless such plan was invested in Class A, B or C shares prior to
     that date.

     Participant accounts of a 403(b) plan that were treated as an
     individual-type plan for sales charge purposes prior to January 1, 2009,
     may continue to be treated as accounts of an individual-type plan for sales
     charge purposes. Participant accounts of a 403(b) plan that were treated as
     an employer-sponsored plan for sales charge purposes prior to January 1,
     2009, may continue to be treated as accounts of an employer-sponsored plan
     for sales charge purposes. Participant accounts of a 403(b) plan that is
     established on or after January 1, 2009 are treated as accounts of an
     employer-sponsored plan for sales charge purposes.

     PURCHASES BY SEP PLANS AND SIMPLE IRA PLANS

     Participant accounts in a Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) plan or a
     Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees of Small Employers IRA (SIMPLE
     IRA) plan will be aggregated together for Class A sales charge purposes if
     the SEP plan or SIMPLE IRA plan was established after November 15, 2004 by
     an employer adopting a prototype plan produced by American Funds
     Distributors, Inc. In the case where the employer adopts any other plan
     (including, but not limited to, an IRS model agreement), each participant's
     account in the plan will be aggregated with the participant's own personal
     investments that qualify under the aggregation policy. A SEP plan or SIMPLE
     IRA plan with a certain method of


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 44
<PAGE>


     aggregating participant accounts as of November 15, 2004 may continue with
     that method so long as the employer has not modified the plan document
     since that date.

     OTHER PURCHASES

     Pursuant to a determination of eligibility by a vice president or more
     senior officer of the Capital Research and Management Company Fund
     Administration Unit, or by his or her designee, Class A shares of the
     American Funds stock, stock/bond and bond funds may be sold at net asset
     value to:

     (1)  current or retired directors, trustees, officers and advisory board
          members of, and certain lawyers who provide services to, the funds
          managed by Capital Research and Management Company, current or retired
          employees of Washington Management Corporation, current or retired
          employees and partners of The Capital Group Companies, Inc. and its
          affiliated companies, certain family members of the above persons, and
          trusts or plans primarily for such persons;

     (2)  currently registered representatives and assistants directly employed
          by such representatives, retired registered representatives with
          respect to accounts established while active, or full-time employees
          (collectively, "Eligible Persons") (and their (a) spouses or
          equivalents if recognized under local law, (b) parents and children,
          including parents and children in step and adoptive relationships,
          sons-in-law and daughters-in-law, and (c) parents-in-law, if the
          Eligible Persons or the spouses, children or parents of the Eligible
          Persons are listed in the account registration with the
          parents-in-law) of dealers who have sales agreements with the
          Principal Underwriter (or who clear transactions through such
          dealers), plans for the dealers, and plans that include as
          participants only the Eligible Persons, their spouses, parents and/or
          children;

     (3)  currently registered investment advisers ("RIAs") and assistants
          directly employed by such RIAs, retired RIAs with respect to accounts
          established while active, or full-time employees (collectively,
          "Eligible Persons") (and their (a) spouses or equivalents if
          recognized under local law, (b) parents and children, including
          parents and children in step and adoptive relationships, sons-in-law
          and daughters-in-law and (c) parents-in-law, if the Eligible Persons
          or the spouses, children or parents of the Eligible Persons are listed
          in the account registration with the parents-in-law) of RIA firms that
          are authorized to sell shares of the funds, plans for the RIA firms,
          and plans that include as participants only the Eligible Persons,
          their spouses, parents and/or children;

     (4)  companies exchanging securities with the fund through a merger,
          acquisition or exchange offer;

     (5)  insurance company separate accounts;

     (6)  accounts managed by subsidiaries of The Capital Group Companies, Inc.;

     (7)  The Capital Group Companies, Inc., its affiliated companies and
          Washington Management Corporation;

     (8)  an individual or entity with a substantial business relationship with
          The Capital Group Companies, Inc. or its affiliates, or an individual
          or entity related or relating to such individual or entity;


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 45
<PAGE>


     (9)  wholesalers and full-time employees directly supporting wholesalers
          involved in the distribution of insurance company separate accounts
          whose underlying investments are managed by any affiliate of The
          Capital Group Companies, Inc.; and

     (10) full-time employees of banks that have sales agreements with the
          Principal Underwriter, who are solely dedicated to directly supporting
          the sale of mutual funds.

     Shares are offered at net asset value to these persons and organizations
     due to anticipated economies in sales effort and expense. Once an account
     is established under this net asset value privilege, additional investments
     can be made at net asset value for the life of the account.

     TRANSFERS TO COLLEGEAMERICA -- A transfer from the Virginia Prepaid
     Education Program/SM/ or the Virginia Education Savings Trust/SM/ to a
     CollegeAmerica account will be made with no sales charge. No commission
     will be paid to the dealer on such a transfer.

MOVING BETWEEN ACCOUNTS -- Investments in certain account types may be moved to
other account types without incurring additional Class A sales charges. These
transactions include, for example:


     .    redemption proceeds from a non-retirement account (for example, a
          joint tenant account) used to purchase fund shares in an IRA or other
          individual-type retirement account;

     .    required minimum distributions from an IRA or other individual-type
          retirement account used to purchase fund shares in a non-retirement
          account; and

     .    death distributions paid to a beneficiary's account that are used by
          the beneficiary to purchase fund shares in a different account.

LOAN REPAYMENTS -- Repayments on loans taken from a retirement plan or an
individual-type retirement account are not subject to sales charges if American
Funds Service Company is notified of the repayment.


DEALER COMMISSIONS AND COMPENSATION -- Commissions (up to 1.00%) are paid to
dealers who initiate and are responsible for certain Class A share purchases not
subject to initial sales charges. These purchases consist of purchases of $1
million or more, purchases by employer-sponsored defined contribution-type
retirement plans investing $1 million or more or with 100 or more eligible
employees, and purchases made at net asset value by certain retirement plans,
endowments and foundations with assets of $50 million or more. Commissions on
such investments (other than IRA rollover assets that roll over at no sales
charge under the fund's IRA rollover policy as described in the prospectus) are
paid to dealers at the following rates: 1.00% on amounts of less than $4
million, 0.50% on amounts of at least $4 million but less than $10 million and
0.25% on amounts of at least $10 million. Commissions are based on cumulative
investments over the life of the account with no adjustment for redemptions,
transfers, or market declines. For example, if a shareholder has accumulated
investments in excess of $4 million (but less than $10 million) and subsequently
redeems all or a portion of the account(s), purchases following the redemption
will generate a dealer commission of 0.50%.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 46
<PAGE>


A dealer concession of up to 1% may be paid by the fund under its Class A plan
of distribution to reimburse the Principal Underwriter in connection with dealer
and wholesaler compensation paid by it with respect to investments made with no
initial sales charge.


                      SALES CHARGE REDUCTIONS AND WAIVERS

REDUCING YOUR CLASS A SALES CHARGE -- As described in the prospectus, there are
various ways to reduce your sales charge when purchasing Class A shares.
Additional information about Class A sales charge reductions is provided below.


     STATEMENT OF INTENTION -- By establishing a statement of intention (the
     "Statement"), you enter into a nonbinding commitment to purchase shares of
     the American Funds (excluding money market funds) over a 13-month period
     and receive the same sales charge (expressed as a percentage of your
     purchases) as if all shares had been purchased at once, unless the
     Statement is upgraded as described below.

     The Statement period starts on the date on which your first purchase made
     toward satisfying the Statement is processed. The market value of your
     existing holdings eligible to be aggregated (see below) as of the day
     immediately before the start of the Statement period may be credited toward
     satisfying the Statement.

     You may revise the commitment you have made in your Statement upward at any
     time during the Statement period. If your prior commitment has not been met
     by the time of the revision, the Statement period during which purchases
     must be made will remain unchanged. Purchases made from the date of the
     revision will receive the reduced sales charge, if any, resulting from the
     revised Statement. If your prior commitment has been met by the time of the
     revision, your original Statement will be considered met and a new
     Statement will be established.

     The Statement will be considered completed if the shareholder dies within
     the 13-month Statement period. Commissions to dealers will not be adjusted
     or paid on the difference between the Statement amount and the amount
     actually invested before the shareholder's death.

     When a shareholder elects to use a Statement, shares equal to 5% of the
     dollar amount specified in the Statement may be held in escrow in the
     shareholder's account out of the initial purchase (or subsequent purchases,
     if necessary) by the Transfer Agent. All dividends and any capital gain
     distributions on shares held in escrow will be credited to the
     shareholder's account in shares (or paid in cash, if requested). If the
     intended investment is not completed within the specified Statement period,
     the purchaser may be required to remit to the Principal Underwriter the
     difference between the sales charge actually paid and the sales charge
     which would have been paid if the total of such purchases had been made at
     a single time. Any dealers assigned to the shareholder's account at the
     time a purchase was made during the Statement period will receive a
     corresponding commission adjustment if appropriate. If the difference is
     not paid by the close of the Statement period, the appropriate number of
     shares held in escrow will be redeemed to pay such difference. If the
     proceeds from this redemption are inadequate, the purchaser may be liable
     to the Principal Underwriter for the balance still outstanding.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 47
<PAGE>


     Certain payroll deduction retirement plans purchasing Class A shares under
     a Statement on or before November 12, 2006, may continue to purchase Class
     A shares at the sales charge determined by that particular Statement until
     the plans' values reach the amounts specified in their Statements. Upon
     reaching such amounts, the Statements for these plans will be deemed
     completed and will terminate. In addition, effective May 1, 2009, the
     Statements for these plans will expire if they have not been met by next
     anniversary of the establishment of such Statement. After such termination,
     these plans are eligible for additional sales charge reductions by meeting
     the criteria under the fund's rights of accumulation policy.

     In addition, if you currently have individual holdings in American Legacy
     variable annuity contracts or variable life insurance policies that were
     established on or before March 31, 2007, you may continue to apply
     purchases under such contracts and policies to a Statement.

     Shareholders purchasing shares at a reduced sales charge under a Statement
     indicate their acceptance of these terms and those in the prospectus with
     their first purchase.

     AGGREGATION -- Qualifying investments for aggregation include those made by
     you and your "immediate family" as defined in the prospectus, if all
     parties are purchasing shares for their own accounts and/or:

     .    individual-type employee benefit plans, such as an IRA,
          single-participant Keogh-type plan, or a participant account of a
          403(b) plan that is treated as an individual-type plan for sales
          charge purposes (see "Purchases by certain 403(b) plans" under "Sales
          charges" in this statement of additional information);

     .    SEP plans and SIMPLE IRA plans established after November 15, 2004 by
          an employer adopting any plan document other than a prototype plan
          produced by American Funds Distributors, Inc.;

     .    business accounts solely controlled by you or your immediate family
          (for example, you own the entire business);

     .    trust accounts established by you or your immediate family (for trusts
          with only one primary beneficiary, upon the trustor's death the trust
          account may be aggregated with such beneficiary's own accounts; for
          trusts with multiple primary beneficiaries, upon the trustor's death
          the trustees of the trust may instruct American Funds Service Company
          to establish separate trust accounts for each primary beneficiary;
          each primary beneficiary's separate trust account may then be
          aggregated with such beneficiary's own accounts);

     .    endowments or foundations established and controlled by you or your
          immediate family;

     .    529 accounts, which will be aggregated at the account owner level
          (Class 529-E accounts may only be aggregated with an eligible employer
          plan).

     Individual purchases by a trustee(s) or other fiduciary(ies) may also be
     aggregated if the investments are:

     .    for a single trust estate or fiduciary account, including employee
          benefit plans other than the individual-type employee benefit plans
          described above;


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 48
<PAGE>


     .    made for two or more employee benefit plans of a single employer or of
          affiliated employers as defined in the 1940 Act, excluding the
          individual-type employee benefit plans described above;


     .    for a diversified common trust fund or other diversified pooled
          account not specifically formed for the purpose of accumulating fund
          shares;

     .    for nonprofit, charitable or educational organizations, or any
          endowments or foundations established and controlled by such
          organizations, or any employer-sponsored retirement plans established
          for the benefit of the employees of such organizations, their
          endowments, or their foundations;

     .    for participant accounts of a 403(b) plan that is treated as an
          employer-sponsored plan for sales charge purposes (see "Purchases by
          certain 403(b) plans" under "Sales charges" in this statement of
          additional information), or made for participant accounts of two or
          more such plans, in each case of a single employer or affiliated
          employers as defined in the 1940 Act; or

     .    for a SEP or SIMPLE IRA plan established after November 15, 2004 by an
          employer adopting a prototype plan produced by American Funds
          Distributors, Inc.


     Purchases made for nominee or street name accounts (securities held in the
     name of an investment dealer or another nominee such as a bank trust
     department instead of the customer) may not be aggregated with those made
     for other accounts and may not be aggregated with other nominee or street
     name accounts unless otherwise qualified as described above.

     CONCURRENT PURCHASES -- As described in the prospectus, you may reduce your
     Class A sales charge by combining purchases of all classes of shares in the
     American Funds, as well as holdings in Endowments and applicable holdings
     in the American Funds Target Date Retirement Series. Shares of money market
     funds purchased through an exchange, reinvestment or cross-reinvestment
     from a fund having a sales charge also qualify. However, direct purchases
     of American Funds money market funds are excluded. If you currently have
     individual holdings in American Legacy variable annuity contracts or
     variable life insurance policies that were established on or before March
     31, 2007, you may continue to combine purchases made under such contracts
     and policies to reduce your Class A sales charge.

     RIGHTS OF ACCUMULATION -- Subject to the limitations described in the
     aggregation policy, you may take into account your accumulated holdings in
     all share classes of the American Funds, as well as your holdings in
     Endowments and applicable holdings in the American Funds Target Date
     Retirement Series, to determine your sales charge on investments in
     accounts eligible to be aggregated. Direct purchases of American Funds
     money market funds are excluded. Subject to your investment dealer's or
     recordkeeper's capabilities, your accumulated holdings will be calculated
     as the higher of (a) the current value of your existing holdings (the
     "market value") or (b) the amount you invested (including reinvested
     dividends and capital gains, but excluding capital appreciation) less any
     withdrawals (the "cost value"). Depending on the entity on whose books your
     account is held, the value of your holdings in that account may not be
     eligible for calculation at cost value. For example, accounts held in
     nominee or street name may not be eligible for


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 49
<PAGE>


     calculation at cost value and instead may be calculated at market value for
     purposes of rights of accumulation.

     The value of all of your holdings in accounts established in calendar year
     2005 or earlier will be assigned an initial cost value equal to the market
     value of those holdings as of the last business day of 2005. Thereafter,
     the cost value of such accounts will increase or decrease according to
     actual investments or withdrawals. You must contact your financial adviser
     or American Funds Service Company if you have additional information that
     is relevant to the calculation of the value of your holdings.

     When determining your American Funds Class A sales charge, if your
     investment is not in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, you may also
     continue to take into account the market value (as of the day prior to your
     American Funds investment) of your individual holdings in various American
     Legacy variable annuity contracts and variable life insurance policies that
     were established on or before March 31, 2007. An employer-sponsored
     retirement plan may also continue to take into account the market value of
     its investments in American Legacy Retirement Investment Plans that were
     established on or before March 31, 2007.

     You may not purchase Class B or 529-B shares if your combined American
     Funds and applicable American Legacy holdings cause you to be eligible to
     purchase Class A or 529-A shares at the $100,000 or higher sales charge
     discount rate. In addition, you may not purchase Class C or 529-C shares if
     such combined holdings cause you to be eligible to purchase Class A or
     529-A shares at the $1 million or more sales charge discount rate (i.e. at
     net asset value).

     If you make a gift of American Funds Class A shares, upon your request, you
     may purchase the shares at the sales charge discount allowed under rights
     of accumulation of all of your American Funds and applicable American
     Legacy accounts.

     RIGHT OF REINVESTMENT -- As described in the prospectus, certain
     transactions may be eligible for investment without a sales charge pursuant
     to the fund's right of reinvestment policy. Recent legislation suspended
     required minimum distributions from individual retirement accounts and
     employer-sponsored retirement plan accounts for the 2009 tax year. Given
     this suspension, proceeds from an automatic withdrawal plan to satisfy a
     required minimum distribution may be invested without a sales charge for
     the 2009 tax year, or any subsequent period, to the extent such legislation
     is extended. This policy is subject to any restrictions regarding the
     investment of proceeds from a required minimum distribution that may be
     established by the transfer agent.

CDSC WAIVERS FOR CLASS A, B AND C SHARES -- As noted in the prospectus, a
contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC") may be waived for redemptions due to
death or post-purchase disability of a shareholder (this generally excludes
accounts registered in the names of trusts and other entities). In the case of
joint tenant accounts, if one joint tenant dies, a surviving joint tenant, at
the time he or she notifies the Transfer Agent of the other joint tenant's death
and removes the decedent's name from the account, may redeem shares from the
account without incurring a CDSC. Redemptions made after the Transfer Agent is
notified of the death of a joint tenant will be subject to a CDSC.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 50
<PAGE>


In addition, a CDSC may be waived for the following types of transactions, if
together they do not exceed 12% of the value of an "account" (defined below)
annually (the "12% limit"):


     .    Required minimum distributions taken from retirement accounts upon the
          shareholder's attainment of age 70-1/2 (required minimum distributions
          that continue to be taken by the beneficiary(ies) after the account
          owner is deceased also qualify for a waiver).

     .    Redemptions through an automatic withdrawal plan ("AWP") (see
          "Automatic withdrawals" under "Shareholder account services and
          privileges" in this statement of additional information). For each AWP
          payment, assets that are not subject to a CDSC, such as appreciation
          on shares and shares acquired through reinvestment of dividends and/or
          capital gain distributions, will be redeemed first and will count
          toward the 12% limit. If there is an insufficient amount of assets not
          subject to a CDSC to cover a particular AWP payment, shares subject to
          the lowest CDSC will be redeemed next until the 12% limit is reached.
          Any dividends and/or capital gain distributions taken in cash by a
          shareholder who receives payments through an AWP will also count
          toward the 12% limit. In the case of an AWP, the 12% limit is
          calculated at the time an automatic redemption is first made, and is
          recalculated at the time each additional automatic redemption is made.
          Shareholders who establish an AWP should be aware that the amount of a
          payment not subject to a CDSC may vary over time depending on
          fluctuations in the value of their accounts. This privilege may be
          revised or terminated at any time.

     For purposes of this paragraph, "account" means:

     .    in the case of Class A shares, your investment in Class A shares of
          all American Funds (investments representing direct purchases of
          American Funds money market funds are excluded);

     .    in the case of Class B shares, your investment in Class B shares of
          the particular fund from which you are making the redemption; and

     .    in the case of Class C shares, your investment in Class C shares of
          the particular fund from which you are making the redemption.

CDSC waivers are allowed only in the cases listed here and in the prospectus.
For example, CDSC waivers will not be allowed on redemptions of Class 529-B and
529-C shares due to termination of CollegeAmerica; a determination by the
Internal Revenue Service that CollegeAmerica does not qualify as a qualified
tuition program under the Code; proposal or enactment of law that eliminates or
limits the tax-favored status of CollegeAmerica; or elimination of the fund by
the Virginia College Savings Plan as an option for additional investment within
CollegeAmerica.

                                 SELLING SHARES

The methods for selling (redeeming) shares are described more fully in the
prospectus. If you wish to sell your shares by contacting American Funds Service
Company directly, any such request must be signed by the registered
shareholders. To contact American Funds Service Company via overnight mail or
courier service, see "Purchase and exchange of shares."


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 51
<PAGE>


A signature guarantee may be required for certain redemptions. In such an event,
your signature may be guaranteed by a domestic stock exchange or the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, bank, savings association or credit union that is
an eligible guarantor institution. The Transfer Agent reserves the right to
require a signature guarantee on any redemptions.


Additional documentation may be required for sales of shares held in corporate,
partnership or fiduciary accounts. You must include with your written request
any shares you wish to sell that are in certificate form.


If you sell Class A, B or C shares and request a specific dollar amount to be
sold, we will sell sufficient shares so that the sale proceeds, after deducting
any applicable CDSC, equals the dollar amount requested.


Redemption proceeds will not be mailed until sufficient time has passed to
provide reasonable assurance that checks or drafts (including certified or
cashier's checks) for shares purchased have cleared (which may take up to 10
business days from the purchase date). Except for delays relating to clearance
of checks for share purchases or in extraordinary circumstances (and as
permissible under the 1940 Act), sale proceeds will be paid on or before the
seventh day following receipt and acceptance of an order. Interest will not
accrue or be paid on amounts that represent uncashed distribution or redemption
checks.


You may request that redemption proceeds of $1,000 or more from money market
funds be wired to your bank by writing American Funds Service Company. A
signature guarantee is required on all requests to wire funds.


                  SHAREHOLDER ACCOUNT SERVICES AND PRIVILEGES

The following services and privileges are generally available to all
shareholders. However, certain services and privileges described in the
prospectus and this statement of additional information may not be available for
Class 529 shareholders or if your account is held with an investment dealer or
through an employer-sponsored retirement plan.


AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT PLAN -- An automatic investment plan enables you to make
monthly or quarterly investments in the American Funds through automatic debits
from your bank account. To set up a plan, you must fill out an account
application and specify the amount that you would like to invest and the date on
which you would like your investments to occur. The plan will begin within 30
days after your account application is received. Your bank account will be
debited on the day or a few days before your investment is made, depending on
the bank's capabilities. The Transfer Agent will then invest your money into the
fund you specified on or around the date you specified. If the date you
specified falls on a weekend or holiday, your money will be invested on the
following business day. However, if the following business day falls in the next
month, your money will be invested on the business day immediately preceding the
weekend or holiday. If your bank account cannot be debited due to insufficient
funds, a stop-payment or the closing of the account, the plan may be terminated
and the related investment reversed. You may change the amount of the investment
or discontinue the plan at any time by contacting the Transfer Agent.


AUTOMATIC REINVESTMENT -- Dividends and capital gain distributions are
reinvested in additional shares of the same class and fund at net asset value
unless you indicate otherwise on the account application. You also may elect to
have dividends and/or capital gain distributions paid in


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 52
<PAGE>


cash by informing the fund, the Transfer Agent or your investment dealer.
Dividends and capital gain distributions paid to retirement plan shareholders or
shareholders of the 529 share classes will be automatically reinvested.


If you have elected to receive dividends and/or capital gain distributions in
cash, and the postal or other delivery service is unable to deliver checks to
your address of record, or you do not respond to mailings from American Funds
Service Company with regard to uncashed distribution checks, your distribution
option may be automatically converted to having all dividends and other
distributions reinvested in additional shares.


CROSS-REINVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS -- For all share classes,
except the 529 classes of shares, you may cross-reinvest dividends and capital
gains (distributions) into other American Funds in the same share class at net
asset value, subject to the following conditions:


(1)  the aggregate value of your account(s) in the fund(s) paying distributions
equals or exceeds $5,000 (this is waived if the value of the account in the fund
receiving the distributions equals or exceeds that fund's minimum initial
investment requirement);

(2)  if the value of the account of the fund receiving distributions is below
the minimum initial investment requirement, distributions must be automatically
reinvested; and

(3)  if you discontinue the cross-reinvestment of distributions, the value of
the account of the fund receiving distributions must equal or exceed the minimum
initial investment requirement. If you do not meet this requirement within 90
days of notification, the fund has the right to automatically redeem the
account.

AUTOMATIC EXCHANGES -- For all share classes, you may automatically exchange
shares of the same class in amounts of $50 or more among any of the American
Funds on any day (or preceding business day if the day falls on a nonbusiness
day) of each month you designate.


AUTOMATIC WITHDRAWALS -- Depending on the type of account, for all share classes
except R shares, you may automatically withdraw shares from any of the American
Funds. You can make automatic withdrawals of $50 or more. You can designate the
day of each period for withdrawals and request that checks be sent to you or
someone else. Withdrawals may also be electronically deposited to your bank
account. The Transfer Agent will withdraw your money from the fund you specify
on or around the date you specify. If the date you specified falls on a weekend
or holiday, the redemption will take place on the previous business day.
However, if the previous business day falls in the preceding month, the
redemption will take place on the following business day after the weekend or
holiday. You should consult with your adviser or intermediary to determine if
your account is eligible for automatic withdrawals.


Withdrawal payments are not to be considered as dividends, yield or income.
Generally, automatic investments may not be made into a shareholder account from
which there are automatic withdrawals. Withdrawals of amounts exceeding
reinvested dividends and distributions and increases in share value would reduce
the aggregate value of the shareholder's account. The Transfer Agent arranges
for the redemption by the fund of sufficient shares, deposited by the
shareholder with the Transfer Agent, to provide the withdrawal payment
specified.


Redemption proceeds from an automatic withdrawal plan are not eligible for
reinvestment without a sales charge.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 53
<PAGE>



ACCOUNT STATEMENTS -- Your account is opened in accordance with your
registration instructions. Transactions in the account, such as additional
investments, will be reflected on regular confirmation statements from the
Transfer Agent. Dividend and capital gain reinvestments, purchases through
automatic investment plans and certain retirement plans, as well as automatic
exchanges and withdrawals, will be confirmed at least quarterly.


AMERICAN FUNDSLINE AND AMERICANFUNDS.COM -- You may check your share balance,
the price of your shares or your most recent account transaction; redeem shares
(up to $75,000 per American Funds shareholder each day) from nonretirement plan
accounts; or exchange shares around the clock with American FundsLine or using
americanfunds.com. To use American FundsLine, call 800/325-3590 from a
TouchTone(TM) telephone. Redemptions and exchanges through American FundsLine
and americanfunds.com are subject to the conditions noted above and in
"Telephone and Internet purchases, redemptions and exchanges" below. You will
need your fund number (see the list of the American Funds under "General
information -- fund numbers"), personal identification number (generally the
last four digits of your Social Security number or other tax identification
number associated with your account) and account number.


Generally, all shareholders are automatically eligible to use these services.
However, if you are not currently authorized to do so, you may complete an
American FundsLink Authorization Form. Once you establish this privilege, you,
your financial adviser or any person with your account information may use these
services.


TELEPHONE AND INTERNET PURCHASES, REDEMPTIONS AND EXCHANGES -- By using the
telephone (including American FundsLine) or the Internet (including
americanfunds.com), or fax purchase, redemption and/or exchange options, you
agree to hold the fund, the Transfer Agent, any of its affiliates or mutual
funds managed by such affiliates, and each of their respective directors,
trustees, officers, employees and agents harmless from any losses, expenses,
costs or liabilities (including attorney fees) that may be incurred in
connection with the exercise of these privileges. Generally, all shareholders
are automatically eligible to use these services. However, you may elect to opt
out of these services by writing the Transfer Agent (you may also reinstate them
at any time by writing the Transfer Agent). If the Transfer Agent does not
employ reasonable procedures to confirm that the instructions received from any
person with appropriate account information are genuine, it and/or the fund may
be liable for losses due to unauthorized or fraudulent instructions. In the
event that shareholders are unable to reach the fund by telephone because of
technical difficulties, market conditions or a natural disaster, redemption and
exchange requests may be made in writing only.


CHECKWRITING -- You may establish check writing privileges for Class A shares
(but not Class 529-A shares) of American Funds money market funds upon meeting
the fund's initial purchase minimum of $1,000. This can be done by using an
account application. If you request check writing privileges, you will be
provided with checks that you may use to draw against your account. These checks
may be made payable to anyone you designate and must be signed by the authorized
number of registered shareholders exactly as indicated on your account
application.


REDEMPTION OF SHARES -- The fund's declaration of trust permits the fund to
direct the Transfer Agent to redeem the shares of any shareholder for their then
current net asset value per share if at such time the shareholder of record owns
shares having an aggregate net asset value of less than the minimum initial
investment amount required of new shareholders as set forth in the


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 54
<PAGE>


fund's current registration statement under the 1940 Act, and subject to such
further terms and conditions as the board of trustees of the fund may from time
to time adopt.


While payment of redemptions normally will be in cash, the fund's declaration of
trust permits payment of the redemption price wholly or partly with portfolio
securities or other fund assets under conditions and circumstances determined by
the fund's board of trustees. For example, redemptions could be made in this
manner if the board determined that making payments wholly in cash over a
particular period would be unfair and/or harmful to other fund shareholders.


SHARE CERTIFICATES -- Shares are credited to your account and certificates are
not issued unless you request them by contacting the Transfer Agent.
Certificates are not available for the 529 or R share classes.


                              GENERAL INFORMATION

CUSTODIAN OF ASSETS -- Securities and cash owned by the fund, including proceeds
from the sale of shares of the fund and of securities in the fund's portfolio,
are held by JPMorgan Chase Bank, 270 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017-2070, as
Custodian. If the fund holds securities of issuers outside the U.S., the
Custodian may hold these securities pursuant to subcustodial arrangements in
banks outside the U.S. or branches of U.S. banks outside the U.S.


TRANSFER AGENT -- American Funds Service Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of
the investment adviser, maintains the records of shareholder accounts, processes
purchases and redemptions of the fund's shares, acts as dividend and capital
gain distribution disbursing agent, and performs other related shareholder
service functions. The principal office of American Funds Service Company is
located at 6455 Irvine Center Drive, Irvine, CA 92618. American Funds Service
Company was paid a fee of $3,074,000 for Class A shares and  $237,000 for Class
B shares for the 2008 fiscal year. American Funds Service Company is also
compensated for certain transfer agency services provided to all other share
classes from the administrative services fees paid to Capital Research and
Management Company and from the relevant share class, as described under
"Administrative services agreement."


In the case of certain shareholder accounts, third parties who may be
unaffiliated with the investment adviser provide transfer agency and shareholder
services in place of American Funds Service Company. These services are rendered
under agreements with American Funds Service Company or its affiliates and the
third parties receive compensation according to such agreements. Compensation
for transfer agency and shareholder services, whether paid to American Funds
Service Company or such third parties, is ultimately paid from fund assets and
is reflected in the expenses of the fund as disclosed in the prospectus.


INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM -- Deloitte & Touche LLP, 695 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa, California 92626, serves as the fund's independent
registered public accounting firm, providing audit services, preparation of tax
returns and review of certain documents to be filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission. The financial statements included in this statement of
additional information from the annual report have been audited by Deloitte &
Touche LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, as stated in their
report appearing herein. Such financial statements have been so included in
reliance upon the report of such firm given upon their authority as experts in
accounting and auditing. The selection of the fund's independent registered
public accounting firm is reviewed and determined annually by the board of
trustees.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 55
<PAGE>



INDEPENDENT LEGAL COUNSEL -- Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP, 515 South
Flower Street, Los Angeles, CA 90071, serves as independent legal counsel
("counsel") for the fund and for independent trustees in their capacities as
such. Certain legal matters in connection with certain shares of beneficial
interest offered by the prospectus have been passed upon for the fund by Paul,
Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP and Dechert LLP. A determination with respect to
the independence of the fund's counsel will be made at least annually by the
independent trustees of the fund, as prescribed by the 1940 Act and related
rules.


PROSPECTUSES, REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS AND PROXY STATEMENTS -- The fund's fiscal
year ends on August 31. Shareholders are provided updated prospectuses annually
and at least semiannually with reports showing the fund's investment portfolio
or summary investment portfolio, financial statements and other information. The
fund's annual financial statements are audited by the fund's independent
registered public accounting firm, Deloitte & Touche LLP. In addition,
shareholders may also receive proxy statements for the fund. In an effort to
reduce the volume of mail shareholders receive from the fund when a household
owns more than one account, the Transfer Agent has taken steps to eliminate
duplicate mailings of prospectuses, shareholder reports and proxy statements. To
receive additional copies of a prospectus, report or proxy statement,
shareholders should contact the Transfer Agent.


Shareholders may also elect to receive updated prospectuses, annual reports and
semi-annual reports electronically by signing up for electronic delivery on our
website, americanfunds.com. Upon electing the electronic delivery of updated
prospectuses and other reports, a shareholder will no longer automatically
receive such documents in paper form by mail. A shareholder who elects
electronic delivery is able to cancel this service at any time and return to
receiving updated prospectuses and other reports in paper form by mail.


Prospectuses, annual reports and semi-annual reports that are mailed to
shareholders by the American Funds organization are printed with ink containing
soy and/or vegetable oil on paper containing recycled fibers.


SHAREHOLDER AND TRUSTEE RESPONSIBILITY -- Under the laws of certain states,
including Massachusetts, where the fund was organized, and California, where the
fund's principal office is located, shareholders of a Massachusetts business
trust may, under certain circumstances, be held personally liable as partners
for the obligations of the fund. However, the risk of a shareholder incurring
any financial loss on account of shareholder liability is limited to
circumstances in which a fund itself would be unable to meet its obligations.
The Declaration of Trust contains an express disclaimer of shareholder liability
for acts, omissions, obligations or affairs of the fund and provides that notice
of the disclaimer may be given in each agreement, obligation, or instrument
which is entered into or executed by the fund or trustees. The Declaration of
Trust provides for indemnification out of fund property of any shareholder held
personally liable for the obligations of the fund and also provides for the fund
to reimburse such shareholder for all legal and other expenses reasonably
incurred in connection with any such claim or liability.


Under the Declaration of Trust, the trustees, officers, employees or agents of
the fund are not liable for actions or failure to act; however, they are not
protected from liability by reason of their willful misfeasance, bad faith,
gross negligence, or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of
their office.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 56
<PAGE>


CODES OF ETHICS -- The fund and Capital Research and Management Company and its
affiliated companies, including the fund's Principal Underwriter, have adopted
codes of ethics that allow for personal investments, including securities in
which the fund may invest from time to time. These codes include a ban on
acquisitions of securities pursuant to an initial public offering; restrictions
on acquisitions of private placement securities; preclearance and reporting
requirements; review of duplicate confirmation statements; annual
recertification of compliance with codes of ethics; blackout periods on personal
investing for certain investment personnel; ban on short-term trading profits
for investment personnel; limitations on service as a director of publicly
traded companies; and disclosure of personal securities transactions.


LEGAL PROCEEDINGS -- On February 16, 2005, the NASD (now the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority, or FINRA) filed an administrative complaint against the
Principal Underwriter. The complaint alleges violations of certain NASD rules by
the Principal Underwriter with respect to the selection of broker-dealer firms
that buy and sell securities for mutual fund investment portfolios. The
complaint seeks sanctions, restitution and disgorgement. On August 30, 2006, a
FINRA Hearing Panel ruled against the Principal Underwriter and imposed a $5
million fine. On April 30, 2008, FINRA's National Adjudicatory Council affirmed
the decision by FINRA's Hearing Panel. The Principal Underwriter has appealed
this decision to the Securities and Exchange Commission.


The investment adviser and Principal Underwriter believe that the likelihood
that this matter could have a material adverse effect on the fund or on the
ability of the investment adviser or Principal Underwriter to perform their
contracts with the fund is remote. In addition, class action lawsuits have been
filed in the U.S. District Court, Central District of California, relating to
this and other matters. The investment adviser believes that these suits are
without merit and will defend itself vigorously.


DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE, REDEMPTION PRICE AND MAXIMUM OFFERING PRICE
PER SHARE FOR CLASS A SHARES -- AUGUST 31, 2008




Net asset value and redemption price per share
  (Net assets divided by shares outstanding). .                     $13.56
Maximum offering price per share
  (100/96.25 of net asset value per share,
  which takes into account the fund's current maximum
  sales charge). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                      $14.09



OTHER INFORMATION -- The fund reserves the right to modify the privileges
described in this statement of additional information at any time.


The financial statements, including the investment portfolio and the report of
the fund's independent registered public accounting firm contained in the annual
report, are included in this statement of additional information. The following
information on fund numbers is not included in the annual report:


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 57
<PAGE>


FUND NUMBERS -- Here are the fund numbers for use with our automated telephone
line, American FundsLine/(R)/, or when making share transactions:




                                               FUND NUMBERS
                              -------------------------------------------------
FUND                          CLASS A  CLASS B  CLASS C  CLASS F-1   CLASS F-2
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

STOCK AND STOCK/BOND FUNDS
AMCAP Fund/(R)/ . . . . . .     002      202      302       402         602
American Balanced Fund/(R)/     011      211      311       411         611
American Mutual Fund/(R)/ .     003      203      303       403         603
Capital Income Builder/(R)/     012      212      312       412         612
Capital World Growth and
Income Fund/SM/ . . . . . .     033      233      333       433         633
EuroPacific Growth Fund/(R)/    016      216      316       416         616
Fundamental Investors/SM/ .     010      210      310       410         610
The Growth Fund of
America/(R)/. . . . . . . .     005      205      305       405         605
The Income Fund of
America/(R)/. . . . . . . .     006      206      306       406         606
International Growth and
Income Fund/SM/ . . . . . .     034      234      334       434         634
The Investment Company of
America/(R)/. . . . . . . .     004      204      304       404         604
The New Economy Fund/(R)/ .     014      214      314       414         614
New Perspective Fund/(R)/ .     007      207      307       407         607
New World Fund/(R)/ . . . .     036      236      336       436         636
SMALLCAP World Fund/(R)/  .     035      235      335       435         635
Washington Mutual Investors
Fund/SM/  . . . . . . . . .     001      201      301       401         601
BOND FUNDS
American High-Income
Municipal Bond Fund/(R)/  .     040      240      340       440         640
American High-Income
Trust/SM/ . . . . . . . . .     021      221      321       421         621
The Bond Fund of America/SM/    008      208      308       408         608
Capital World Bond Fund/(R)/    031      231      331       431         631
Intermediate Bond Fund of
America/SM/ . . . . . . . .     023      223      323       423         623
Limited Term Tax-Exempt Bond
Fund of America/SM/ . . . .     043      243      343       443         643
Short-Term Bond Fund of
America/SM/ . . . . . . . .     048      248      348       448         648
The Tax-Exempt Bond Fund of
America/(R)/. . . . . . . .     019      219      319       419         619
The Tax-Exempt Fund of
California/(R)/*. . . . . .     020      220      320       420         620
The Tax-Exempt Fund of
Maryland/(R)/*. . . . . . .     024      224      324       424         624
The Tax-Exempt Fund of
Virginia/(R)/*. . . . . . .     025      225      325       425         625
U.S. Government Securities
Fund/SM/. . . . . . . . . .     022      222      322       422         622
MONEY MARKET FUNDS
American Funds Money Market
Fund/SM/  . . . . . . . . .     059      259      359       459         659
The Cash Management Trust of
America/(R)/. . . . . . . .     009      209      309       409         609
The Tax-Exempt Money Fund of
America/SM/ . . . . . . . .     039      N/A      N/A       N/A         N/A
The U.S. Treasury Money Fund
of America/SM/  . . . . . .     049      N/A      N/A       N/A         N/A
___________
*Qualified for sale only in certain jurisdictions.




                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 58
<PAGE>





                                                 FUND NUMBERS
                                 ----------------------------------------------
                                  CLASS    CLASS    CLASS    CLASS     CLASS
FUND                              529-A    529-B    529-C    529-E    529-F-1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

STOCK AND STOCK/BOND FUNDS
AMCAP Fund . . . . . . . . . .    1002     1202     1302     1502       1402
American Balanced Fund . . . .    1011     1211     1311     1511       1411
American Mutual Fund . . . . .    1003     1203     1303     1503       1403
Capital Income Builder . . . .    1012     1212     1312     1512       1412
Capital World Growth and Income
Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . .    1033     1233     1333     1533       1433
EuroPacific Growth Fund  . . .    1016     1216     1316     1516       1416
Fundamental Investors  . . . .    1010     1210     1310     1510       1410
The Growth Fund of America . .    1005     1205     1305     1505       1405
The Income Fund of America . .    1006     1206     1306     1506       1406
International Growth and Income
Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . .    1034     1234     1334     1534       1434
The Investment Company of
America. . . . . . . . . . . .    1004     1204     1304     1504       1404
The New Economy Fund . . . . .    1014     1214     1314     1514       1414
New Perspective Fund . . . . .    1007     1207     1307     1507       1407
New World Fund . . . . . . . .    1036     1236     1336     1536       1436
SMALLCAP World Fund  . . . . .    1035     1235     1335     1535       1435
Washington Mutual Investors
Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . .    1001     1201     1301     1501       1401
BOND FUNDS
American High-Income Trust . .    1021     1221     1321     1521       1421
The Bond Fund of America . . .    1008     1208     1308     1508       1408
Capital World Bond Fund  . . .    1031     1231     1331     1531       1431
Intermediate Bond Fund of
America. . . . . . . . . . . .    1023     1223     1323     1523       1423
Short-Term Bond Fund of America   1048     1248     1348     1548       1448
U.S. Government Securities Fund   1022     1222     1322     1522       1422
MONEY MARKET FUND
American Funds Money Market
Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . .    1059     1259     1359     1559       1459
The Cash Management Trust of
America. . . . . . . . . . . .    1009     1209     1309     1509       1409





                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 59
<PAGE>





                                               FUND NUMBERS
                                     ------------------------------------------
                                     CLASS  CLASS  CLASS  CLASS  CLASS   CLASS
FUND                                  R-1    R-2    R-3    R-4    R-5     R-6
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

STOCK AND STOCK/BOND FUNDS
AMCAP Fund . . . . . . . . . . . .   2102   2202   2302   2402   2502    2602
American Balanced Fund . . . . . .   2111   2211   2311   2411   2511    2611
American Mutual Fund . . . . . . .   2103   2203   2303   2403   2503    2603
Capital Income Builder . . . . . .   2112   2212   2312   2412   2512    2612
Capital World Growth and Income
Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2133   2233   2333   2433   2533    2633
EuroPacific Growth Fund  . . . . .   2116   2216   2316   2416   2516    2616
Fundamental Investors  . . . . . .   2110   2210   2310   2410   2510    2610
The Growth Fund of America . . . .   2105   2205   2305   2405   2505    2605
The Income Fund of America . . . .   2106   2206   2306   2406   2506    2606
International Growth and Income
Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2134   2234   2334   2434   2534    2634
The Investment Company of America    2104   2204   2304   2404   2504    2604
The New Economy Fund . . . . . . .   2114   2214   2314   2414   2514    2614
New Perspective Fund . . . . . . .   2107   2207   2307   2407   2507    2607
New World Fund . . . . . . . . . .   2136   2236   2336   2436   2536    2636
SMALLCAP World Fund  . . . . . . .   2135   2235   2335   2435   2535    2635
Washington Mutual Investors Fund .   2101   2201   2301   2401   2501    2601
BOND FUNDS
American High-Income Municipal Bond
Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A   2540     N/A
American High-Income Trust . . . .   2121   2221   2321   2421   2521    2621
The Bond Fund of America . . . . .   2108   2208   2308   2408   2508    2608
Capital World Bond Fund  . . . . .   2131   2231   2331   2431   2531    2631
Intermediate Bond Fund of America    2123   2223   2323   2423   2523    2623
Limited Term Tax-Exempt Bond Fund
of America . . . . . . . . . . . .    N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A   2543     N/A
Short-Term Bond Fund of America. .   2148   2248   2348   2448   2548    2648
The Tax-Exempt Bond Fund of America   N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A   2519     N/A
The Tax-Exempt Fund of California*    N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A   2520     N/A
The Tax-Exempt Fund of Maryland* .    N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A   2524     N/A
The Tax-Exempt Fund of Virginia* .    N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A   2525     N/A
U.S. Government Securities Fund  .   2122   2222   2322   2422   2522    2622
MONEY MARKET FUNDS
American Funds Money Market Fund .   2159   2259   2359   2459   2559    2659
The Cash Management Trust of
America. . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2109   2209   2309   2409   2509     N/A
The Tax-Exempt Money Fund of
America  . . . . . . . . . . . . .    N/A    N/A    N/A    N/A   2539     N/A
The U.S. Treasury Money Fund of
America  . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2149   2249   2349   2449   2549     N/A
___________
*Qualified for sale only in certain
jurisdictions.





                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 60
<PAGE>






                                           FUND NUMBERS
                            ---------------------------------------------------
                                     CLASS  CLASS  CLASS  CLASS  CLASS   CLASS
FUND                        CLASS A   R-1    R-2    R-3    R-4    R-5     R-6
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

AMERICAN FUNDS TARGET DATE RETIREMENT SERIES/(R)/
American Funds 2050 Target
Date Retirement Fund/(R)/     069    2169   2269   2369   2469   2569    2669
American Funds 2045 Target
Date Retirement Fund/(R)/     068    2168   2268   2368   2468   2568    2668
American Funds 2040 Target
Date Retirement Fund/(R)/     067    2167   2267   2367   2467   2567    2667
American Funds 2035 Target
Date Retirement Fund/(R)/     066    2166   2266   2366   2466   2566    2666
American Funds 2030 Target
Date Retirement Fund/(R)/     065    2165   2265   2365   2465   2565    2665
American Funds 2025 Target
Date Retirement Fund/(R)/     064    2164   2264   2364   2464   2564    2664
American Funds 2020 Target
Date Retirement Fund/(R)/     063    2163   2263   2363   2463   2563    2663
American Funds 2015 Target
Date Retirement Fund/(R)/     062    2162   2262   2362   2462   2562    2662
American Funds 2010 Target
Date Retirement Fund/(R)/     061    2161   2261   2361   2461   2561    2661






                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 61
<PAGE>


                                    APPENDIX

The following descriptions of debt security ratings are based on information
provided by Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's Corporation.


                          DESCRIPTION OF BOND RATINGS

MOODY'S
LONG-TERM RATING DEFINITIONS

Aaa
Obligations rated Aaa are judged to be of the highest quality, with minimal
credit risk.


Aa
Obligations rated Aa are judged to be of high quality and are subject to very
low credit risk.


A
Obligations rated A are considered upper-medium grade and are subject to low
credit risk.


Baa
Obligations rated Baa are subject to moderate credit risk. They are considered
medium-grade and as such may possess certain speculative characteristics.


Ba
Obligations rated Ba are judged to have speculative elements and are subject to
substantial credit risk.


B
Obligations rated B are considered speculative and are subject to high credit
risk.


Caa
Obligations rated Caa are judged to be of poor standing and are subject to very
high credit risk.


Ca
Obligations rated Ca are highly speculative and are likely in, or very near,
default, with some prospect of recovery of principal and interest.


C
Obligations rated C are the lowest rated class of bonds and are typically in
default, with little prospect for recovery of principal or interest.


NOTE: Moody's appends numerical modifiers 1, 2, and 3 to each generic rating
classification from Aa through Caa. The modifier 1 indicates that the obligation
ranks in the higher end of its generic rating category; the modifier 2 indicates
a mid-range ranking; and the modifier 3 indicates a ranking in the lower end of
that generic rating category.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 62
<PAGE>


STANDARD & POOR'S
LONG-TERM ISSUE CREDIT RATINGS

AAA
An obligation rated AAA has the highest rating assigned by Standard & Poor's.
The obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is
extremely strong.


AA
An obligation rated AA differs from the highest-rated obligations only in small
degree. The obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment on the
obligation is very strong.


A
An obligation rated A is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of
changes in circumstances and economic conditions than obligations in
higher-rated categories. However, the obligor's capacity to meet its financial
commitment on the obligation is still strong.


BBB
An obligation rated BBB exhibits adequate protection parameters. However,
adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to
a weakened capacity of the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the
obligation.


BB, B, CCC, CC, AND C
Obligations rated BB, B, CCC, CC, and C are regarded as having significant
speculative characteristics. BB indicates the least degree of speculation and C
the highest. While such obligations will likely have some quality and protective
characteristics, these may be outweighed by large uncertainties or major
exposures to adverse conditions.


BB
An obligation rated BB is less vulnerable to nonpayment than other speculative
issues. However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to adverse
business, financial, or economic conditions which could lead to the obligor's
inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.


B
An obligation rated B is more vulnerable to nonpayment than obligations rated
BB, but the obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitment
on the obligation. Adverse business, financial, or economic conditions will
likely impair the obligor's capacity or willingness to meet its financial
commitment on the obligation.


CCC
An obligation rated CCC is currently vulnerable to nonpayment and is dependent
upon favorable business, financial, and economic conditions for the obligor to
meet its financial commitment on the obligation. In the event of adverse
business, financial, or economic conditions, the obligor is not likely to have
the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.


CC
An obligation rated CC is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 63
<PAGE>


C
A C rating is assigned to obligations that are currently highly vulnerable to
nonpayment, obligations that have payment arrearages allowed by the terms of the
documents, or obligations of an issuer that is the subject of a bankruptcy
petition or similar action which have not experienced a payment default. Among
others, the C rating may be assigned to subordinated debt, preferred stock or
other obligations on which cash payments have been suspended in accordance with
the instrument's terms.


D
An obligation rated D is in payment default. The D rating category is used when
payments on an obligation are not made on the date due even if the applicable
grace period has not expired, unless Standard & Poor's believes that such
payments will be made during such grace period. The D rating also will be used
upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of a similar action if
payments on an obligation are jeopardized.


PLUS (+) OR MINUS (-)
The ratings from AA to CCC may be modified by the addition of a plus or minus
sign to show relative standing within the major rating categories.


FITCH
LONG-TERM CREDIT RATINGS

AAA
Highest credit quality. 'AAA' ratings denote the lowest expectation of credit
risk. They are assigned only in case of exceptionally strong capacity for
payment of financial commitments. This capacity is highly unlikely to be
adversely affected by foreseeable events.


AA
Very high credit quality. 'AA' ratings denote expectations of very low credit
risk. They indicate very strong capacity for payment of financial commitments.
This capacity is not significantly vulnerable to foreseeable events.


A
High credit quality. 'A' ratings denote expectations of low credit risk. The
capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered strong. This
capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to changes in circumstances or in
economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.


BBB
Good credit quality. 'BBB' ratings indicate that there is currently expectations
of low credit risk. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is
considered adequate but adverse changes in circumstances and economic conditions
are more likely to impair this capacity. This is the lowest investment grade
category.


BB
Speculative. 'BB' ratings indicate that there is a possibility of credit risk
developing, particularly as the result of adverse economic change over time;
however, business or financial alternatives may be available to allow financial
commitments to be met. Securities rated in this category are not investment
grade.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 64
<PAGE>


B
Highly speculative.

     .    For issuers and performing obligations, 'B' ratings indicate that
          significant credit risk is present, but a limited margin of safety
          remains. Financial commitments are currently being met; however,
          capacity for continued payment is contingent upon a sustained,
          favorable business and economic environment.

     .    For individual obligations, may indicate distressed or defaulted
          obligations with potential for extremely high recoveries. Such
          obligations would possess a Recovery Rating of 'R1' (outstanding).

CCC

     .    For issuers and performing obligations, default is a real possibility.
          Capacity for meeting financial commitments is solely reliant upon
          sustained, favorable business or economic conditions.

     .    For individual obligations, may indicate distressed or defaulted
          obligations with potential for average to superior levels of recovery.
          Differences in credit quality may be denoted by plus/minus
          distinctions. Such obligations typically would possess a Recovery
          Rating of 'R2' (superior), or 'R3' (good) or 'R4' (average).

CC

     .    For issuers and performing obligations, default of some kind appears
          probable.

     .    For individual obligations, may indicate distressed or defaulted
          obligations with a Recovery Rating of 'R4' (average) or 'R5' (below
          average).

C

     .    For issuers and performing obligations, default is imminent.

     .    For individual obligations, may indicate distressed or defaulted
          obligations with potential for below-average to poor recoveries. Such
          obligations would possess a Recovery Rating of 'R6' (poor).

RD
Indicates an entity that has failed to make due payments (within the applicable
grace period) on some but not all material financial obligations, but continues
to honor other classes of obligations.


D
Indicates an entity or sovereign that has defaulted on all of its financial
obligations. Default generally is defined as the following:

     The modifiers "+" or "-" may be appended to a rating to denote relative
     status within major rating categories. Such suffixes are not added to the
     'AAA' Long-term rating category, to categories below 'CCC', or to
     Short-term ratings other than 'F1'. (The +/- modifiers are only used to
     denote issues within the CCC category, whereas issuers are only rated CCC
     without the use of modifiers.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 65
<PAGE>


                    DESCRIPTION OF COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

MOODY'S
COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS (HIGHEST THREE RATINGS)

P-1
Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-1 have a superior ability to
repay short-term debt obligations.


P-2
Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-2 have a strong ability to
repay short-term debt obligations.


P-3
Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-3 have an acceptable ability to
repay short-term obligations.


STANDARD & POOR'S
COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS (HIGHEST THREE RATINGS)

A-1
A short-term obligation rated A-1 is rated in the highest category by Standard &
Poor's. The obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment on the
obligation is strong. Within this category, certain obligations are designated
with a plus sign (+). This indicates that the obligor's capacity to meet its
financial commitment on these obligations is extremely strong.


A-2
A short-term obligation rated A-2 is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse
effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than obligations in
higher rating categories. However, the obligor's capacity to meet its financial
commitment on the obligation is satisfactory.


A-3
A short-term obligation rated A-3 exhibits adequate protection parameters.
However, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely
to lead to a weakened capacity of the obligor to meet its financial commitment
on the obligation.


                   U.S. Government Securities Fund -- Page 66
 
...
 
[logo – American Funds®]


 

U.S. Government Securities FundSM
Investment portfolio

August 31, 2008


 
Principal amount
Value
Bonds & notes — 97.05%
(000)
(000)
     
MORTGAGE-BACKED OBLIGATIONS — 48.20%
   
Federal agency mortgage-backed obligations1 — 42.52%
   
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2009
$         3
$         3
Fannie Mae 9.00% 2009
1
1
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2010
41
41
Fannie Mae 8.50% 2010
3
4
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2011
12
12
Fannie Mae 9.50% 2011
9
10
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2017
133
139
Fannie Mae 10.50% 2018
1,292
1,486
Fannie Mae 12.00% 2019
438
496
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2020
20,029
19,739
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2020
18,321
18,018
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2020
6,448
6,354
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2020
7,456
7,501
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2021
440
452
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2021
405
415
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2021
341
349
Fannie Mae 9.50% 2022
40
44
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2024
3,533
3,594
Fannie Mae 11.013% 20252
3,145
3,617
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2026
191
195
Fannie Mae 9.50% 2026
275
312
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2027
17,944
18,257
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2027
16,594
17,096
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2027
8,006
8,248
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2027
7,287
7,507
Fannie Mae 8.50% 2027
16
17
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2028
9,900
9,616
Fannie Mae 7.50% 2029
294
315
Fannie Mae 7.50% 2030
42
45
Fannie Mae 7.50% 2030
14
15
Fannie Mae 7.50% 2031
203
218
Fannie Mae 7.50% 2031
79
84
Fannie Mae 7.50% 2031
74
80
Fannie Mae 7.50% 2031
45
48
Fannie Mae 8.00% 2031
2,587
2,792
Fannie Mae 4.404% 20332
1,782
1,799
Fannie Mae 5.50% 2033
13,489
13,399
Fannie Mae 4.47% 20352
3,942
3,980
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2035
30,616
28,525
Fannie Mae 4.50% 20352
2,072
2,074
Fannie Mae 4.543% 20352
2,970
2,974
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2035
  9,647
  9,308
Fannie Mae 5.50% 2035
9,161
9,083
Fannie Mae 5.50% 2035
4,886
4,850
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2035
44,254
45,896
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2036
9,534
9,199
Fannie Mae 5.42% 20362
6,667
6,749
Fannie Mae 5.50% 2036
10,197
10,085
Fannie Mae 5.50% 2036
323
319
Fannie Mae 5.512% 20362
7,306
7,406
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2036
349
354
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2036
29,909
31,033
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2037
3,729
3,590
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2037
3,199
3,078
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2037
2,191
2,110
Fannie Mae 5.378% 20372
10,567
10,694
Fannie Mae 5.50% 2037
6,690
6,541
Fannie Mae 5.50% 2037
4,574
4,472
Fannie Mae 5.632% 20372
3,213
3,266
Fannie Mae 5.853% 20372
4,630
4,740
Fannie Mae 6.00% 20373
2,562
2,565
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2037
1,525
1,543
Fannie Mae 6.019% 20372
1,062
1,075
Fannie Mae 6.032% 20372
3,297
3,380
Fannie Mae 6.172% 20372
1,777
1,821
Fannie Mae 6.353% 20372
13,654
14,032
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2037
14,427
14,769
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2037
13,193
13,505
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2037
10,493
10,742
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2037
8,795
9,003
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2037
7,555
7,786
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2037
6,183
6,397
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2037
5,880
6,019
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2037
5,621
5,789
Fannie Mae 6.50% 2037
2,647
2,738
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
12,773
13,260
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
11,718
12,164
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
9,181
9,530
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
7,547
7,835
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
5,048
5,281
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
3,331
3,485
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
2,745
2,850
Fannie Mae 7.00% 20373
2,219
2,288
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
1,732
1,798
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
1,383
1,436
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2037
684
710
Fannie Mae 7.50% 2037
2,088
2,184
Fannie Mae 7.50% 2037
1,209
1,264
Fannie Mae 4.443% 20382
4,876
4,801
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2038
20,364
18,903
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2038
19,971
18,539
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2038
5,000
4,641
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2038
1,651
1,533
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2038
500
464
Fannie Mae 4.50% 2038
483
448
Fannie Mae 4.539% 20382
1,856
1,838
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2038
26,522
25,495
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2038
15,765
15,155
Fannie Mae 5.45% 20382
13,168
13,353
Fannie Mae 5.486% 20382
2,883
2,925
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2038
8,669
8,761
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2038
6,931
6,966
Fannie Mae 7.00% 2038
15,508
16,099
Fannie Mae 6.459% 20472
12,415
12,702
Fannie Mae 6.496% 20472
5,538
5,675
Fannie Mae, Series 2003-T1, Class B, 4.491% 2012
27,750
27,785
Fannie Mae, Series 35, Class 2, 12.00% 2018
18
19
Fannie Mae, Series 2003-48, Class TJ, 4.50% 2022
5,391
5,353
Fannie Mae, Series 1992-119, Class Z, 8.00% 2022
203
221
Fannie Mae, Series 2001-4, Class NA, 11.873% 20252
2,504
2,770
Fannie Mae, Series 2002-W3, Class A-5, 7.50% 2028
678
724
Fannie Mae, Series 2002-W7, Class A-5, 7.50% 2029
2,679
2,882
Fannie Mae, Series 2001-25, Class ZA, 6.50% 2031
1,281
1,328
Fannie Mae, Series 2001-20, Class E, 9.621% 20312
81
89
Fannie Mae, Series 2001-20, Class C, 12.045% 20312
311
352
Fannie Mae, Series 2005-29, Class AK, 4.50% 2035
10,452
10,265
Fannie Mae, Series 2005-68, Class PG, 5.50% 2035
18,610
18,765
Fannie Mae, Series 2006-56, Class OG, principal only, 0% 2036
6,241
4,672
Fannie Mae, Series 2006-83, Class AO, principal only, 0% 2036
4,991
3,617
Fannie Mae, Series 2006-65, Class PF, 2.752% 20362
6,882
6,730
Fannie Mae, Series 2006-49, Class PA, 6.00% 2036
1,138
1,162
Fannie Mae, Series 2007-33, Class HE, 5.50% 2037
7,252
7,257
Fannie Mae, Series 2007-40, Class PT, 5.50% 2037
4,606
4,626
Fannie Mae, Series 2007-24, Class P, 6.00% 2037
32,676
33,253
Fannie Mae, Series 1999-T2, Class A-1, 7.50% 20392
924
985
Fannie Mae, Series 2002-W1, Class 2A, 7.50% 2042
691
728
Freddie Mac 7.00% 2008
Freddie Mac 8.50% 2009
6
6
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2014
151
156
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2017
552
570
Freddie Mac 8.00% 2017
184
196
Freddie Mac 8.50% 2018
Freddie Mac 4.50% 2019
8,106
7,960
Freddie Mac 4.50% 2019
1,724
1,697
Freddie Mac 8.50% 2020
140
151
Freddie Mac 8.50% 2021
51
55
Freddie Mac 5.00% 2023
17,880
17,716
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2023
89,293
90,109
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2023
14,586
14,715
Freddie Mac 10.00% 2025
1,164
1,324
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2026
11,876
12,084
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2027
22,713
23,109
Freddie Mac 4.638% 20352
9,162
9,167
Freddie Mac 4.50% 2036
2,212
2,061
Freddie Mac 5.876% 20362
42,618
43,321
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2036
25,228
25,491
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2036
12,067
12,188
Freddie Mac 4.50% 2037
1,498
1,392
Freddie Mac 4.779% 20372
3,536
3,527
Freddie Mac 5.00% 2037
23,904
22,982
Freddie Mac 5.474% 20372
4,468
4,539
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2037
13,072
12,901
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2037
9,517
9,392
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2037
9,330
9,209
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2037
9,161
9,048
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2037
  8,263
  8,157
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2037
4,709
4,645
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2037
1,847
1,824
Freddie Mac 5.676% 20372
4,671
4,732
Freddie Mac 5.803% 20372
4,605
4,688
Freddie Mac 5.993% 20372
2,750
2,806
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2037
9,424
9,521
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2037
6,648
6,708
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2037
5,627
5,683
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2037
3,735
3,769
Freddie Mac 6.068% 20372
2,475
2,533
Freddie Mac 6.087% 20372
2,821
2,879
Freddie Mac 6.266% 20372
4,739
4,801
Freddie Mac 6.32% 20372
3,539
3,625
Freddie Mac 6.376% 20372
3,903
3,996
Freddie Mac 6.50% 2037
4,112
4,204
Freddie Mac 6.50% 2037
2,042
2,088
Freddie Mac 4.50% 2038
9,984
9,270
Freddie Mac 4.50% 2038
599
556
Freddie Mac 4.653% 20382
5,780
5,711
Freddie Mac 4.817% 20382
4,988
4,893
Freddie Mac 4.944% 20382
1,609
1,604
Freddie Mac 5.00% 2038
9,977
9,585
Freddie Mac 5.00% 2038
6,892
6,621
Freddie Mac 5.00% 2038
5,160
4,957
Freddie Mac 5.00% 2038
1,750
1,681
Freddie Mac 5.138% 20382
23,000
23,008
Freddie Mac 5.17% 20382
4,997
4,956
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2038
46,398
45,792
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2038
7,999
7,890
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2038
6,771
6,684
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2038
6,490
6,402
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2038
5,000
4,932
Freddie Mac 5.541% 20382
4,817
4,883
Freddie Mac 6.00% 2038
7,000
7,063
Freddie Mac, Series 2356, Class GD, 6.00% 2016
4,785
4,935
Freddie Mac, Series 2289, Class NA, 11.96% 20202
1,385
1,544
Freddie Mac, Series 178, Class Z, 9.25% 2021
54
60
Freddie Mac, Series 2289, Class NB, 11.426% 20222
318
361
Freddie Mac, Series 1567, Class A, 2.90% 20232
58
54
Freddie Mac, Series 2626, Class NG, 3.50% 2023
1,485
1,387
Freddie Mac, Series 1617, Class PM, 6.50% 2023
1,762
1,833
Freddie Mac, Series 2153, Class GG, 6.00% 2029
3,424
3,486
Freddie Mac, Series T-041, Class 3-A, 7.50% 2032
573
584
Freddie Mac, Series 3061, Class PN, 5.50% 2035
4,262
4,296
Freddie Mac, Series 3156, Class PO, principal only, 0% 2036
9,330
6,873
Freddie Mac, Series 3171, Class MO, principal only, 0% 2036
4,880
3,652
Freddie Mac, Series 3146, Class PO, principal only, 0% 2036
4,378
3,252
Freddie Mac, Series 3213, Class OG, principal only, 0% 2036
2,854
2,147
Freddie Mac, Series 3156, Class PF, 2.717% 20362
11,080
10,810
Freddie Mac, Series 3257, Class PA, 5.50% 2036
5,141
5,139
Freddie Mac, Series 3233, Class PA, 6.00% 2036
6,761
6,900
Freddie Mac, Series 3272, Class PA, 6.00% 2037
8,970
9,155
Government National Mortgage Assn. 7.50% 2009
4
4
Government National Mortgage Assn. 7.50% 2009
2
2
Government National Mortgage Assn. 9.00% 2009
9
9
Government National Mortgage Assn. 9.50% 2009
7
7
Government National Mortgage Assn. 7.50% 2011
       32
       33
Government National Mortgage Assn. 7.50% 2011
2
2
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2013
29
30
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.00% 2013
322
332
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.00% 2014
234
242
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.00% 2014
152
157
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.00% 2014
70
72
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
130
135
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
114
118
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
105
109
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
96
100
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
95
98
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
83
86
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
64
67
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
63
65
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
57
60
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
23
24
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
12
12
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2014
10
10
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
538
546
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
371
377
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
341
346
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
320
325
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
294
299
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
240
244
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
240
243
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
223
227
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
208
212
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
165
168
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
156
159
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
124
126
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
99
100
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
75
76
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2016
70
71
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.00% 2016
694
715
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2016
332
345
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.50% 2016
280
291
Government National Mortgage Assn. 9.00% 2016
51
56
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2017
3,215
3,266
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.50% 2017
2,508
2,548
Government National Mortgage Assn. 10.00% 2019
858
975
Government National Mortgage Assn. 8.50% 2021
49
54
Government National Mortgage Assn. 8.50% 2021
12
13
Government National Mortgage Assn. 10.00% 2021
317
363
Government National Mortgage Assn. 8.50% 2022
17
19
Government National Mortgage Assn. 8.50% 2022
17
18
Government National Mortgage Assn. 8.50% 2022
6
6
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.00% 2035
26
26
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.00% 2038
55,681
53,888
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.00% 2038
94,990
96,248
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.00% 2038
11,992
12,196
Government National Mortgage Assn. 5.75% 20583
5,507
5,500
Government National Mortgage Assn. 6.22% 20583
8,743
8,732
Government National Mortgage Assn., Series 2004-19, 5.00% 2031
13,911
13,967
Government National Mortgage Assn., Series 2003-116, Class JD, 5.00% 2032
10,000
9,550
Government National Mortgage Assn., Series 2003-46, 5.00% 2033
10,000
9,445
Government National Mortgage Assn., Series 2003, Class A, 5.612% 20582,3
16,207
     16,293
   
1,684,262
     
Commercial mortgage-backed securities1 — 3.24%
   
J.P. Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2004-CIBC10, Class A-3, 4.184% 2037
5,000
4,955
J.P. Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2004-CIBC10, Class A-4, 4.529% 2037
2,000
1,951
J.P. Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2005-CIBC11, Class A-2, 5.016% 2037
3,000
2,972
J.P. Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2004-C3, Class A-3, 4.545% 2042
5,000
4,827
J.P. Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2005-LDP2, Class A-4, 4.738% 2042
2,000
1,844
J.P. Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2005-LDP3, Class A-4A, 4.936% 20422
5,000
4,649
J.P. Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2006-CIBC14, Class A-4, 5.481% 20442
3,000
2,885
J.P. Morgan Chase Commercial Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2006-LDP7, Class A-4, 6.065% 20452
2,000
1,901
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2005-C16, Class A-PB, 4.692% 2041
5,500
5,296
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2004-C12, Class M-AD, 5.439% 20412,4
7,350
7,335
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2005-C18, Class A-PB, 4.807% 2042
5,500
5,295
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2005-C20, Class A-7, 5.118% 20422
5,000
4,702
Wachovia Bank Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2006-C23, Class A-PB, 5.446% 2045
3,000
2,848
CS First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2004-C5, Class A-2, 4.183% 2037
2,804
2,795
CS First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2005-C3, Class A-4, 4.686% 2037
2,250
2,071
CS First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2002-CKN2, Class A-3, 6.133% 2037
3,000
3,041
CS First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2005-C5, Class A-AB, 5.10% 20382
5,000
4,836
CS First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2006-C1, Class A-AB, 5.681% 20392
4,800
4,627
CS First Boston Mortgage Securities Corp., Series 2005-C6, Class A-M, 5.23% 20402
2,000
1,803
American Tower Trust I, Series 2007-1A, Class A-FX, 5.42% 20374
10,750
10,250
Fannie Mae, Series 2003-M2, Class D, 4.68% 20332
11,000
9,931
GE Commercial Mortgage Corp., Series 2005-C2, Class A-4, 4.978% 20432
2,000
1,879
GE Commercial Mortgage Corp., Series 2006-C1, Class A-AB, 5.518% 20442
5,000
4,765
GE Commercial Mortgage Corp., Series 2006-C1, Class A-4, 5.518% 20442
2,000
1,845
Greenwich Capital Commercial Funding Corp., Series 2005-GG5, Class A-5, 5.224% 20372
5,000
4,728
Greenwich Capital Commercial Funding Corp., Series 2005-GG5, Class A-4-1, 5.243% 20372
3,000
2,938
Morgan Stanley Capital I Trust, Series 2005-HQ7, Class A-2, 5.378% 20422
5,000
4,905
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage Inc., Series 2001-1, Class A-2, 6.503% 2036
1,261
1,287
Banc of America Commercial Mortgage Inc., Series 2006-2, Class A-3, 5.901% 20452
3,000
2,892
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Trust, Series 2005-LC1, Class A-3, 5.289% 20442
3,000
2,935
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Trust, Series 2005-LC1, Class AM, 5.442% 20442
1,000
908
Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2003-LNB1, Class A-2, 4.084% 2038
3,000
2,807
Bear Stearns Commercial Mortgage Securities Trust, Series 2006-PWR13, Class A-4, 5.54% 2041
2,000
1,847
GMAC Commercial Mortgage Securities, Inc., Series 2005-C1, Class A-M, 4.754% 2043
2,000
1,808
COBALT CMBS Commerical Mortgage Trust, Series 2006-C1, Class A-2, 5.174% 2048
1,000
968
LB-UBS Commercial Mortgage Trust, Series 2004-C8, Class A-2, 4.201% 2029
840
838
   
128,164
     
Collateralized mortgage-backed obligations (privately originated)1 — 2.34%
   
WaMu Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Trust, Series 2003-S12, Class A-3, 5.00% 2018
1,623
1,546
WaMu Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Trust, Series 2006-AR18, Class 1-A1, 5.343% 20372
2,728
2,375
WaMu Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Trust, Series 2007-HY4, Class 1-A1, 5.544% 20372
8,766
7,328
WaMu Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Trust, Series 2007-HY7, Class 2-A1, 5.874% 20372,3
9,346
6,552
Wells Fargo Alternative Loan Trust, Series 2007-PA3, Class II-A-4, 6.00% 2037
3,250
2,162
Wells Fargo Alternative Loan Trust, Series 2007-PA3, Class V-A-1, 7.00% 2037
15,704
10,974
Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2007-6, Class 3-A-1, 5.892% 20372
1,865
1,270
Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2007-8, Class 2-A3, 5.991% 20372
4,363
3,319
Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2007-9, Class 2-A1, 5.996% 20472
9,061
6,819
Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc., Series 2003-1, Class I-A1, 4.75% 2018
8,427
7,815
Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Inc., Series 2003-UST1, Class A-3, 5.00% 2018
2,118
1,986
Countrywide Alternative Loan Trust, Series 2007-HY4, Class 3-A-1, 5.873% 20472
5,125
3,152
Countrywide Alternative Loan Trust, Series 2007-HY4, Class 4-A-1, 5.94% 20472
4,343
2,667
Structured Asset Securities Corp., Series 2003-29, Class 1-A-1, 4.75% 2018
5,665
5,339
Chase Mortgage Finance Trust, Series 2003-S10, Class A-1, 4.75% 2018
  4,834
       4,555
Cendant Mortgage Capital LLC, Series 2003-4, Class II-A-1, 5.00% 2033
5,015
4,442
J.P. Morgan Mortgage Trust, Series 2004-S1, Class 1-A-7, 5.00% 2019
4,370
4,077
GSR Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2004-10F, Class 1-A-5, 4.50% 2019
4,340
4,044
Merrill Lynch Mortgage Investors, Inc., Series 2006-A1, Class II-A-1, 6.129% 20362
4,402
2,861
Wells Fargo Mortgage-backed Securities Trust, Series 2003-16, Class II-A-1, 4.50% 2018
2,512
2,340
Residential Accredit Loans, Inc., Series 2007-QS11, Class A-1, 7.00% 2037
2,695
1,936
CHL Mortgage Pass-Through Trust, Series 2007-HY4, Class 1-A-1, 6.093% 20472
1,793
1,401
Citicorp Mortgage Securities, Inc., Series 2003-10, Class A-1, 4.50% 2018
1,374
1,280
Lehman Mortgage Trust, Series 2007-7, Class 6-A4, 7.00% 2037
1,780
1,243
MASTR Alternative Loan Trust, Series 2004-10, Class 2-A-1, 5.50% 2019
900
845
Paine Webber CMO, Series O, Class 5, 9.50% 2019
188
206
   
92,534
     
Other mortgage-backed securities1 — 0.10%
   
Bank of America 5.50% 20124
3,970
4,057
     
Total mortgage-backed obligations
 
1,909,017
     
     
U.S. TREASURY BONDS & NOTES — 38.13%
   
U.S. Treasury 3.875% 2009
6,000
6,073
U.S. Treasury 3.875% 20093,5
17,228
17,380
U.S. Treasury 5.75% 2010
11,435
12,187
U.S. Treasury 6.50% 2010
10,000
10,623
U.S. Treasury 2.375% 20113,5
2,175
2,257
U.S. Treasury 4.625% 2011
20,500
21,733
U.S. Treasury 4.875% 2011
19,250
20,440
U.S. Treasury 3.00% 20123,5
7,568
8,140
U.S. Treasury 3.875% 2012
4,000
4,152
U.S. Treasury 4.25% 2012
166,510
175,252
U.S. Treasury 4.625% 2012
21,675
23,014
U.S. Treasury 2.75% 2013
10,000
9,904
U.S. Treasury 3.375% 2013
15,000
15,208
U.S. Treasury 3.625% 2013
5,000
5,130
U.S. Treasury 4.25% 2013
55,307
58,308
U.S. Treasury 2.00% 20143,5
16,356
16,993
U.S. Treasury 4.00% 2014
48,375
50,510
U.S. Treasury 4.25% 2014
20,000
21,144
U.S. Treasury 4.25% 2014
16,100
17,042
U.S. Treasury 1.875% 20153,5
11,183
11,517
U.S. Treasury 11.25% 2015
31,500
45,965
U.S. Treasury 4.50% 2016
70,250
75,071
U.S. Treasury 5.125% 2016
210,400
233,199
U.S. Treasury 7.25% 2016
8,835
10,980
U.S. Treasury 2.375% 20173,5
12,114
12,870
U.S. Treasury 4.625% 2017
189,525
202,761
U.S. Treasury 8.875% 2017
42,000
57,904
U.S. Treasury 3.875% 2018
12,000
12,078
U.S. Treasury 8.125% 2019
25,000
33,879
U.S. Treasury 8.50% 2020
25,750
35,968
U.S. Treasury 7.875% 2021
16,500
22,306
U.S. Treasury 6.25% 2023
39,070
47,159
U.S. Treasury 7.125% 2023
28,000
36,347
U.S. Treasury 2.375% 20253,5
4,320
4,465
U.S. Treasury 6.25% 2030
13,000
16,239
U.S. Treasury 3.375% 20323,5
    2,722
       3,372
U.S. Treasury 4.50% 2036
38,400
38,850
U.S. Treasury 5.00% 2037
16,905
18,508
U.S. Treasury Principal Strip 0% 2014
62,010
51,468
U.S. Treasury Principal Strip 0% 2014
26,410
22,160
U.S. Treasury Principal Strip 0% 2014
11,075
9,094
U.S. Treasury Principal Strip 0% 2019
13,000
8,340
U.S. Treasury Principal Strip 0% 2037
15,250
4,301
   
1,510,291
     
FEDERAL AGENCY BONDS & NOTES — 7.90%
   
Fannie Mae 5.316% 20092
1,730
1,732
Fannie Mae 5.00% 2011
16,935
17,613
Fannie Mae 6.00% 2011
15,000
15,959
Fannie Mae 6.125% 2012
65,670
70,639
Fannie Mae 3.625% 2013
13,000
12,832
Freddie Mac 5.25% 2011
45,865
47,964
Freddie Mac 4.50% 2014
10,000
10,196
Freddie Mac 5.25% 2016
12,000
12,571
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2016
7,000
7,441
Freddie Mac 5.50% 2017
9,000
9,573
Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corp. 4.875% 20114
6,750
6,962
Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corp. 5.125% 2011
3,500
3,632
Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corp. 5.50% 20114
20,010
20,843
Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corp. 5.125% 20174
10,225
10,641
United States Agency for International Development, Republic of Egypt 4.45% 2015
19,000
19,214
United States Agency for International Development, State of Israel, Class 1-A, 5.50% 2023
5,000
5,449
Small Business Administration, Series SBIC-PS 2006-10A, Participating Securities, 5.408% 20161
9,477
9,395
Small Business Administration, Series 2001-20K, 5.34% 20211
2,459
2,464
Small Business Administration, Series 2001-20J, 5.76% 20211
1,223
1,237
Small Business Administration, Series 2001-20F, 6.44% 20211
3,593
3,692
Small Business Administration, Series 2003-20B, 4.84% 20231
7,598
7,308
Federal Home Loan Bank 2.50% 2009
5,000
4,971
United States Government-Guaranteed Certificates of Participation, Overseas Private Investment Corp.,
   
     Series 2000-044-A, 3.74% 20151
4,828
4,911
United States Government-Guaranteed, Perforadora Centrale SA de CV (Title XI) 4.92% 20181
2,102
2,241
Tennessee Valley Authority, Series 2008, Class A, 4.875% 2048
2,255
2,129
United States Government-Guaranteed Ship Financing Obligations, Rowan Companies, Inc. (Title XI) 5.88% 20121
1,273
1,341
   
312,950
     
ASSET-BACKED OBLIGATIONS1 — 2.82%
   
CPS Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2007-A, Class A-4, MBIA insured, 5.05% 20134
5,000
4,196
CPS Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2006-D, Class A-4, FSA insured, 5.115% 20134
2,000
1,875
CPS Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2007-B, Class A-4, FSA insured, 5.60% 20144
5,500
4,955
Hyundai Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2006-B, Class A-4, 5.15% 2013
10,000
9,806
John Deere Owner Trust, Series 2008, Class A-4, 4.89% 2015
8,000
7,616
Washington Mutual Master Note Trust, Series 2006-A3A, Class A-3, 2.497% 20132,4
5,500
5,225
Washington Mutual Master Note Trust, Series 2006-A2A, Class A, 2.517% 20152,4
2,000
1,736
Irwin Home Equity, Series 2006-P1, Class 2-A4, AMBAC insured, 5.80% 20372,4
6,578
5,578
Prestige Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2007-1, Class A-3, FSA insured, 5.58% 20144
5,500
5,267
AEP Texas Central Transitioning Funding II LLC, Senior Secured Transition Bonds, Series A, Class A-3, 5.09% 2015
5,450
5,252
Discover Card Execution Note Trust, Series 2008-2, Class A, 3.467% 20122
3,000
2,984
Discover Card Execution Note Trust, Series 2008-3, Class A, 5.10% 2013
2,000
2,018
PSE&G Transition Funding II LLC, Series 2005-1, Class A-2, 4.34% 2014
4,990
4,961
PG&E Energy Recovery Funding LLC, Series 2005-2, Class A-2, 5.03% 2014
4,600
4,682
Reliant Energy Transition Bond Company LLC, Series 2001-1, Class A-4, 5.63% 2015
200
201
CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company III, LLC, Series 2008, Class A-1, 4.192% 2020
3,000
2,852
CenterPoint Energy Transition Bond Company III, LLC, Series 2008, Class A-2, 5.234% 2023
     625
          603
CPL Transition Funding LLC, Series 2002-1, Class A-4, 5.96% 2015
3,000
3,202
J.P. Morgan Mortgage Acquisition Trust, Series 2007-CH1, Class A-F-6, 5.501% 20362
4,000
3,179
FPL Recovery Funding LLC,  Series 2007-A, Class A-2, 5.044% 20153
3,000
3,055
Susquehanna Auto Lease Trust, Series 2007-1, Class A-3, 5.25% 20104
3,000
3,030
Nissan Auto Lease Trust, Series 2008-A, Class A-3a, 5.14% 2011
3,000
2,968
Nissan Auto Receivables Owner Trust, Series 2008-A, Class A-4, 4.28% 2014
3,000
2,909
Drive Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2006-1, Class A-4, FSA insured, 5.54% 20134
3,000
2,909
Drivetime Auto Owner Trust, Series 2006-B, Class A-3, MBIA insured, 5.227% 20122,4
3,000
2,907
Residential Funding Mortgage Securities II, Inc., Series 2007-HSA3, Class A-I-3, MBIA insured, 6.03% 20372
4,000
1,781
Residential Funding Mortgage Securities II, Inc., Series 2007-HSA2, Class A-1F, MBIA insured, 8.47% 20372
1,176
1,125
Ford Credit Auto Owner Trust, Series 2008-A, Class A-4, 4.37% 2012
3,000
2,855
Long Beach Acceptance Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2007-A, Class A-4, FSA insured, 5.025% 2014
3,000
2,850
Oncor Electric Delivery Transition Bond Co. LLC, Series 2003-1, Class A-3, 4.95% 2015
1,895
1,891
World Omni Auto Receivables Trust, Series 2008-A, Class A-4, 4.74% 2013
2,000
1,882
PE Environmental Funding LLC, Series 2007-A, Class A-1, 4.982% 2016
1,860
1,826
Capital One Multi-asset Execution Trust, Series 2006-3, Class A, 5.05% 2018
2,000
1,820
AmeriCredit Automobile Receivables Trust, Series 2007-C-M, Class A-4-A, MBIA insured, 5.55% 2014
2,000
1,772
   
111,768
     
Total bonds & notes (cost: $3,850,435,000)
 
3,844,026
     
     
     
     
     
Short-term securities — 4.38%
   
     
Federal Home Loan Bank 1.95%–2.18% due 9/2–9/5/2008
96,637
96,618
U.S. Treasury Bills 1.51%–1.88% due 9/15–10/16/2008
76,800
76,676
     
     
Total short-term securities (cost: $173,298,000)
 
173,294
     
     
Total investment securities (cost: $4,023,733,000)
 
4,017,320
Other assets less liabilities
 
(56,519)
     
Net assets
 
$3,960,801


1Principal payments may be made periodically. Therefore, the effective maturity date may be earlier than the stated maturity date.
2Coupon rate may change periodically.
3Valued under fair value procedures adopted by authority of the board of trustees. The total value of all such securities was $121,979,000, which represented 3.08% of the net assets of the fund.
4Purchased in a transaction exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933. May be resold in the United States in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. The total value of all such securities was $97,766,000, which represented 2.47% of the net assets of the fund.
5Index-linked bond whose principal amount moves with a government retail price index.



Investments are not FDIC-insured, nor are they deposits of or guaranteed by a bank or any other entity, so you may lose money.

Investors should carefully consider the investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses of the American Funds. This and other important information
is contained in each fund’s prospectus, which can be obtained from your financial professional and should be read carefully before investing.
 
 
 
MFGEFP-922-1008O-S15849
 
 
 
 
Financial statements
           
             
Statement of assets and liabilities
           
at August 31, 2008
  (dollars in thousands)  
             
Assets:
           
 Investment securities, at value: (cost: $4,023,733)
        $ 4,017,320  
 Cash
          72  
 Receivables for:
             
  Sales of investments
    4,355          
  Sales of fund's shares
    13,308          
  Interest
    24,123       41,786  
              4,059,178  
Liabilities:
               
 Payables for:
               
  Purchases of investments
    88,320          
  Repurchases of fund's shares
    4,198          
  Dividends on fund's shares
    1,852          
  Investment advisory services
    846          
  Services provided by affiliates
    2,974          
  Trustees' deferred compensation
    161          
  Other
    26       98,377  
Net assets at August 31, 2008
          $ 3,960,801  
                 
Net assets consist of:
               
 Capital paid in on shares of beneficial interest
          $ 3,992,684  
 Distributions in excess of net investment income
            (170 )
 Accumulated net realized loss
            (25,300 )
 Net unrealized depreciation
            (6,413 )
Net assets at August 31, 2008
          $ 3,960,801  
                 
    (dollars and shares in thousands, except per-share amounts)  
Shares of beneficial interest issued and outstanding (no stated par value) - unlimited shares authorized (292,128 total shares outstanding)
               

   
Net assets
   
Shares outstanding
   
Net asset value per share*
 
Class A
  $ 2,602,521       191,948     $ 13.56  
Class B
    202,922       14,967       13.56  
Class C
    243,664       17,972       13.56  
Class F-1
    142,064       10,478       13.56  
Class F-2
    780       57       13.56  
Class 529-A
    67,996       5,015       13.56  
Class 529-B
    16,046       1,184       13.56  
Class 529-C
    39,603       2,921       13.56  
Class 529-E
    4,697       346       13.56  
Class 529-F-1
    4,967       366       13.56  
Class R-1
    8,631       636       13.56  
Class R-2
    136,333       10,055       13.56  
Class R-3
    118,273       8,723       13.56  
Class R-4
    91,110       6,720       13.56  
Class R-5
    281,194       20,740       13.56  
 
* Maximum offering price and redemption price per share were equal to the net asset value per share for all share classes, except for Classes A and 529-A, for which the maximum offering prices per share were $14.09 each.

See Notes to Financial Statements
           
             
Statement of operations
           
for the year ended August 31, 2008
  (dollars in thousands)  
             
Investment income:
           
 Income:
           
  Interest
        $ 153,997  
 Fees and expenses*:
             
  Investment advisory services
    9,781          
  Distribution services
    12,672          
  Transfer agent services
    3,311          
  Administrative services
    1,943          
  Reports to shareholders
    157          
  Registration statement and prospectus
    374          
  Postage, stationery and supplies
    347          
  Trustees' compensation
    38          
  Auditing and legal
    99          
  Custodian
    17          
  State and local taxes
    27          
  Other
    36          
  Total fees and expenses before reimbursements/waivers
    28,802          
 Less reimbursements/waivers of fees and expenses:
               
  Investment advisory services
    978          
  Administrative services
    150          
  Total fees and expenses after reimbursements/waivers
            27,674  
 Net investment income
            126,323  
                 
Net realized gain and unrealized
               
 appreciation on investments:
               
 Net realized gain on investments
            24,821  
 Net unrealized appreciation on investments
            715  
   Net realized gain and unrealized appreciation on investments
            25,536  
Net increase in net assets resulting
               
 from operations
          $ 151,859  
                 
* Additional information related to class-specific fees and expenses is included in the Notes to Financial Statements.
               

Statements of changes in net assets
 
(dollars in thousands)
 
             
             
   
Year ended August 31
 
   
2008
   
2007
 
Operations:
           
 Net investment income
  $ 126,323     $ 101,341  
 Net realized gain (loss) on investments
    24,821       (5,616 )
 Net unrealized appreciation on investments
    715       11,729  
  Net increase in net assets resulting from operations
    151,859       107,454  
                 
Dividends paid or accrued to
               
 shareholders from net investment income
    (127,252 )     (101,883 )
                 
Net capital share transactions
    1,366,130       208,991  
                 
Total increase in net assets
    1,390,737       214,562  
                 
Net assets:
               
 Beginning of year
    2,570,064       2,355,502  
 End of year (including distributions in excess of
               
  net investment income: $(170) and $(166), respectively)
  $ 3,960,801     $ 2,570,064  
                 
                 
See Notes to Financial Statements
               
                 



Notes to financial statements

1.  
Organization and significant accounting policies

Organization – The American Funds Income Series (the "trust") is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end, diversified management investment company and has initially issued one series of shares, U.S. Government Securities Fund (the "fund"). The fund seeks a high level of current income, as well as preservation of capital, by investing primarily in securities guaranteed or sponsored by the United States government. The fund may also invest in nongovernment issues rated Aaa/AAA or equivalent.

The fund offers 15 share classes consisting of five retail share classes, five 529 college savings plan share classes and five retirement plan share classes. The 529 college savings plan share classes (529-A, 529-B, 529-C, 529-E and 529-F-1) can be used to save for college education. The five retirement plan share classes (R-1, R-2, R-3, R-4 and R-5) are generally only offered through eligible employer-sponsored retirement plans. The fund’s share classes are described below:

Share class
 
Initial sales charge
 
Contingent deferred sales charge upon redemption
 
Conversion feature
Classes A and 529-A
 
Up to 3.75%
 
None (except 1% for certain redemptions within one year of purchase without an initial sales charge)
 
None
Classes B and 529-B
 
None
 
Declines from 5% to 0% for redemptions within six years of purchase
 
Classes B and 529-B convert to Classes A and 529-A, respectively, after eight years
Class C
 
None
 
1% for redemptions within one year of purchase
 
Class C converts to Class F-1 after 10 years
Class 529-C
 
None
 
1% for redemptions within one year of purchase
 
None
Class 529-E
 
None
 
None
 
None
Classes F-1, F-2 and 529-F-1
 
None
 
None
 
None
Classes R-1, R-2, R-3, R-4 and R-5
 
None
 
None
 
None
 

On August 1, 2008, the fund made an additional retail share class (Class F-2) available for sale pursuant to an amendment to its registration statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). In addition, Class F shares were renamed Class F-1 and Class 529-F shares were renamed Class 529-F-1. Refer to the fund’s prospectus for more details.

Holders of all share classes have equal pro rata rights to assets, dividends and liquidation proceeds. Each share class has identical voting rights, except for the exclusive right to vote on matters affecting only its class. Share classes have different fees and expenses ("class-specific fees and expenses"), primarily due to different arrangements for distribution, administrative and shareholder services. Differences in class-specific fees and expenses will result in differences in net investment income and, therefore, the payment of different per-share dividends by each class.

Significant accounting policies – The financial statements have been prepared to comply with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These principles require management to make estimates and assumptions that affect reported amounts and disclosures. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The following is a summary of the significant accounting policies followed by the fund:

Security valuation – Fixed-income securities, including short-term securities purchased with more than 60 days left to maturity, are valued at prices obtained from an independent pricing service when such prices are available. However, where the investment adviser deems it appropriate, such securities will be valued at the mean quoted bid and asked prices (or bid prices, if asked prices are not available) or at prices for securities of comparable maturity, quality and type.  Short-term securities purchased within 60 days to maturity are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value. The value of short-term securities originally purchased with maturities greater than 60 days is determined based on an amortized value to par when they reach 60 days or less remaining to maturity. The ability of the issuers of debt securities held by the fund to meet their obligations may be affected by economic developments in a specific industry, state or region.

Securities and other assets for which representative market quotations are not readily available or are considered unreliable by the investment adviser are fair valued as determined in good faith under procedures adopted by authority of the fund's board of trustees. Various factors may be reviewed in order to make a good faith determination of a security’s fair value. These factors include, but are not limited to, the type and cost of the security; contractual or legal restrictions on resale of the security; relevant financial or business developments of the issuer; actively traded similar or related securities; conversion or exchange rights on the security; related corporate actions; significant events occurring after the close of trading in the security; and changes in overall market conditions.

Security transactions and related investment income – Security transactions are recorded by the fund as of the date the trades are executed with brokers. Realized gains and losses from security transactions are determined based on the specific identified cost of the securities. In the event a security is purchased with a delayed payment date, the fund will segregate liquid assets sufficient to meet its payment obligations. Interest income is recognized on an accrual basis. Market discounts, premiums and original issue discounts on fixed-income securities are amortized daily over the expected life of the security.

Class allocations  Income, fees and expenses (other than class-specific fees and expenses) are allocated daily among the various share classes based on the relative value of their settled shares. Realized and unrealized gains and losses are allocated daily among the various share classes based on their relative net assets. Class-specific fees and expenses, such as distribution, administrative and shareholder services, are charged directly to the respective share class.

Dividends and distributions to shareholders Dividends paid to shareholders are declared daily after the determination of the fund’s net investment income and are paid to shareholders monthly. Distributions paid to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

2. Federal income taxation and distributions                                                                                                

The fund complies with the requirements under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to mutual funds and intends to distribute substantially all of its net taxable income and net capital gains each year. The fund is not subject to income taxes to the extent such distributions are made. Therefore, no federal income tax provision is required.

As of and during the period ended August 31, 2008, the fund did not have a liability for any unrecognized tax benefits. The fund recognizes interest and penalties, if any, related to unrecognized tax benefits as income tax expense in the statement of operations. During the period, the fund did not incur any interest or penalties.

The fund is not subject to examination by U.S. federal tax authorities for tax years before 2004 and by state tax authorities for tax years before 2003.

Distributions – Distributions paid to shareholders are based on net investment income and net realized gains determined on a tax basis, which may differ from net investment income and net realized gains for financial reporting purposes. These differences are due primarily to differing treatment for items such as short-term capital gains and losses; capital losses related to sales of certain securities within 30 days of purchase; paydowns on fixed-income securities; and net capital losses. The fiscal year in which amounts are distributed may differ from the year in which the net investment income and net realized gains are recorded by the fund for financial reporting purposes.

During the year ended August 31, 2008, the fund reclassified $934,000 from accumulated net realized loss to distributions in excess of net investment income and $9,000 from distributions in excess of net investment income to capital paid in on shares of beneficial interest to align financial reporting with tax reporting.

As of August 31, 2008, the tax basis components of distributable earnings, unrealized appreciation (depreciation) and cost of investment securities were as follows:

     
(dollars in thousands)
Undistributed ordinary income
   
$1,843
Capital loss carryforward expiring in 2015*
   
(24,808)
Gross unrealized appreciation on investment securities
   
39,530
Gross unrealized depreciation on investment securities
   
(46,435)
Net unrealized depreciation on investment securities
   
(6,905)
Cost of investment securities
   
4,024,225
*Reflects the utilization of capital loss carryforwards of $18,276,000. The remaining capital loss carryforward will be used to offset any capital gains realized by the fund in future years through the expiration date. The fund will not make distributions from capital gains while a capital loss carryforward remains.

Ordinary income distributions paid or accrued to shareholders from net investment income were as follows (dollars in thousands):

 
   
Year ended August 31
 
Share class
 
2008
   
2007
 
Class A
  $ 87,199     $ 73,884  
Class B
    5,959       5,895  
Class C
    5,823       4,098  
Class F-1
    5,126       3,660  
Class F-2*
    2       -  
Class 529-A
    2,227       1,788  
Class 529-B
    469       472  
Class 529-C
    1,053       908  
Class 529-E
    152       145  
Class 529-F-1
    176       126  
Class R-1
    205       148  
Class R-2
    3,865       3,593  
Class R-3
    3,946       4,163  
Class R-4
    3,385       1,856  
Class R-5
    7,665       1,147  
Total
  $ 127,252     $ 101,883  
                 
                 
*Class F-2 was offered beginning August 1, 2008.
 



3. Fees and transactions with related parties

Capital Research and Management Company ("CRMC"), the fund’s investment adviser, is the parent company of American Funds Service Company® ("AFS"), the fund’s transfer agent, and American Funds Distributors,® Inc. ("AFD"), the principal underwriter of the fund’s shares.

Investment advisory services - The Investment Advisory and Service Agreement with CRMC provides for monthly fees accrued daily. These fees are based on a declining series of annual rates beginning with 0.30% on the first $60 million of daily net assets and decreasing to 0.15% on such assets in excess of $3 billion. The agreement also provides for monthly fees, accrued daily, based on a declining series of rates beginning with 3.00% on the first $3,333,333 of the fund's monthly gross income and decreasing to 2.00% on such income in excess of $8,333,333. CRMC is currently waiving 10% of investment advisory services fees. During the year ended August 31, 2008, total investment advisory services fees waived by CRMC were $978,000. As a result, the fee shown on the accompanying financial statements of $9,781,000, which was equivalent to an annualized rate of 0.298%, was reduced to $8,803,000, or 0.268% of average daily net assets.

Class-specific fees and expenses – Expenses that are specific to individual share classes are accrued directly to the respective share class. The principal class-specific fees and expenses are described below:

Distribution services – The fund has adopted plans of distribution for all share classes, except Classes F-2 and R-5. Under the plans, the board of trustees approves certain categories of expenses that are used to finance activities primarily intended to sell fund shares and service existing accounts. The plans provide for payments, based on an annualized percentage of average daily net assets, ranging from 0.30% to 1.00% as noted on the following page. In some cases, the board of trustees has limited the amounts that may be paid to less than the maximum allowed by the plans. All share classes may use up to 0.25% of average daily net assets to pay service fees, or to compensate AFD for paying service fees, to firms that have entered into agreements with AFD to provide certain shareholder services. The remaining amounts available to be paid under each plan are paid to dealers to compensate them for their sales activities.

For Classes A and 529-A, the board of trustees has also approved the reimbursement of dealer and wholesaler commissions paid by AFD for certain shares sold without a sales charge. These classes reimburse AFD for amounts billed within the prior 15 months but only to the extent that the overall annual expense limit of 0.30% is not exceeded. As of August 31, 2008, there were no unreimbursed expenses subject to reimbursement for Classes A or 529-A.

Share class
Currently approved limits
Plan limits
Class A
0.30%
0.30%
Class 529-A
0.30
0.50
Classes B and 529-B
1.00
1.00
Classes C, 529-C and R-1
1.00
1.00
Class R-2
0.75
1.00
Classes 529-E and R-3
0.50
0.75
Classes F-1, 529-F-1 and R-4
0.25
0.50

Transfer agent services The fund has a transfer agent agreement with AFS for Classes A and B. Under this agreement, these share classes compensate AFS for transfer agent services including shareholder recordkeeping, communications and transaction processing. AFS is also compensated for certain transfer agent services provided to all other share classes from the administrative services fees paid to CRMC described below.

Administrative services – The fund has an administrative services agreement with CRMC to provide transfer agent and other related shareholder services for all share classes other than Classes A and B. Each relevant share class pays CRMC annual fees up to 0.15% (0.10% for Class R-5) based on its respective average daily net assets. Each relevant share class also pays AFS additional amounts for certain transfer agent services. CRMC and AFS may use these fees to compensate third parties for performing these services. CRMC has agreed to pay AFS on the fund's behalf for a portion of the transfer agent services fees for some of the retirement plan share classes. For the year ended August 31, 2008, the total administrative services fees paid by CRMC were $150,000 for Class R-2. Administrative services fees are presented gross of any payments made by CRMC. Each 529 share class is subject to an additional annual administrative services fee of 0.10% of its respective average daily net assets; this fee is payable to the Commonwealth of Virginia for the maintenance of the 529 college savings plan. Although these amounts are included with administrative services fees on the accompanying financial statements, the Commonwealth of Virginia is not considered a related party. 

Expenses under the agreements described above for the year ended August 31, 2008, were as follows (dollars in thousands):

Share class
Distribution services
Transfer agent services
Administrative services
CRMC administrative services
Transfer agent services
Commonwealth of Virginia administrative services
Class A
$6,427
$3,074
Not applicable
Not applicable
Not applicable
Class B
 1,807
237
Not applicable
Not applicable
Not applicable
Class C
 1,808
 
 
 
 
Included
in
administrative services
$257
$53
Not applicable
Class F-1
318
132
33
Not applicable
Class F-2
 Not applicable
 -*
-*
Not applicable
Class 529-A
 121
 65
14
$57
Class 529-B
 148
 18
6
15
Class 529-C
 331
 39
11
33
Class 529-E
 20
 5
 1
4
Class 529-F-1
 -
 5
1
4
Class R-1
 64
7
 9
Not applicable
Class R-2
 885
 173
 466
Not applicable
Class R-3
 534
 151
108
Not applicable
Class R-4
209
 115
6
Not applicable
Class R-5
Not applicable
 152
3
Not applicable
Total
$12,672
$3,311
$1,119
$711
$113
*Amount less than one thousand.

Trustees’ deferred compensation – Since the adoption of the deferred compensation plan in 1993, trustees who are unaffiliated with CRMC may elect to defer the cash payment of part or all of their compensation. These deferred amounts, which remain as liabilities of the fund, are treated as if invested in shares of the fund or other American Funds. These amounts represent general, unsecured liabilities of the fund and vary according to the total returns of the selected funds. Trustees’ compensation of $38,000, shown on the accompanying financial statements, includes $48,000 in current fees (either paid in cash or deferred) and a net decrease of $10,000 in the value of the deferred amounts.

Affiliated officers and trustees – Officers and certain trustees of the fund are or may be considered to be affiliated with CRMC, AFS and AFD. No affiliated officers or trustees received any compensation directly from the fund.

4. Capital share transactions

Capital share transactions in the fund were as follows (dollars and shares in thousands):
 
 
 
Sales*
   
Reinvestments of dividends
   
Repurchases*
   
Net increase (decrease)
 
Share class  
Amount
   
Shares
   
Amount
   
Shares
   
Amount
   
Shares
   
Amount
   
Shares
 
Year ended August 31, 2008
                                           
Class A
  $ 1,499,821       109,722     $ 79,245       5,830     $ (751,724 )     (55,277 )   $ 827,342       60,275  
Class B
    89,751       6,554       5,436       400       (51,555 )     (3,792 )     43,632       3,162  
Class C
    188,535       13,792       5,285       389       (75,769 )     (5,576 )     118,051       8,605  
Class F-1
    114,287       8,367       3,926       289       (76,162 )     (5,606 )     42,051       3,050  
Class F-2
    775       57       1       -       -       -       776       57  
Class 529-A
    30,432       2,231       2,215       163       (9,664 )     (711 )     22,983       1,683  
Class 529-B
    3,974       291       467       34       (1,888 )     (139 )     2,553       186  
Class 529-C
    18,428       1,353       1,048       77       (7,576 )     (558 )     11,900       872  
Class 529-E
    1,591       116       151       11       (616 )     (45 )     1,126       82  
Class 529-F-1
    1,982       145       175       13       (476 )     (35 )     1,681       123  
Class R-1
    6,897       506       199       15       (3,311 )     (242 )     3,785       279  
Class R-2
    74,308       5,440       3,826       281       (45,644 )     (3,356 )     32,490       2,365  
Class R-3
    79,304       5,818       3,918       288       (53,806 )     (3,954 )     29,416       2,152  
Class R-4
    42,799       3,126       3,379       248       (30,448 )     (2,238 )     15,730       1,136  
Class R-5
    231,550       16,999       7,555       556       (26,491 )     (1,944 )     212,614       15,611  
Total net increase
                                                               
   (decrease)
  $ 2,384,434       174,517     $ 116,826       8,594     $ (1,135,130 )     (83,473 )   $ 1,366,130       99,638  
                                                                 
Year ended August 31, 2007
                                                         
Class A
  $ 449,880       33,761     $ 65,732       4,930     $ (446,653 )     (33,525 )   $ 68,959       5,166  
Class B
    22,141       1,661       5,311       398       (39,127 )     (2,936 )     (11,675 )     (877 )
Class C
    49,217       3,690       3,649       274       (37,215 )     (2,793 )     15,651       1,171  
Class F-1
    46,916       3,524       2,404       180       (26,057 )     (1,959 )     23,263       1,745  
Class 529-A
    10,677       800       1,779       134       (6,703 )     (503 )     5,753       431  
Class 529-B
    1,420       107       470       35       (1,692 )     (127 )     198       15  
Class 529-C
    8,131       609       904       68       (5,258 )     (395 )     3,777       282  
Class 529-E
    871       65       144       11       (923 )     (69 )     92       7  
Class 529-F-1
    1,135       85       125       9       (266 )     (20 )     994       74  
Class R-1
    2,414       181       146       11       (1,785 )     (134 )     775       58  
Class R-2
    38,659       2,899       3,559       267       (33,202 )     (2,492 )     9,016       674  
Class R-3
    49,007       3,675       4,121       309       (72,684 )     (5,443 )     (19,556 )     (1,459 )
Class R-4
    64,729       4,847       1,836       138       (12,595 )     (947 )     53,970       4,038  
Class R-5
    60,531       4,562       1,040       78       (3,797 )     (285 )     57,774       4,355  
Total net increase
                                                               
   (decrease)
  $ 805,728       60,466     $ 91,220       6,842     $ (687,957 )     (51,628 )   $ 208,991       15,680  
                                                                 
                                                                 
* Includes exchanges between share classes of the fund.
                                         
† Class F-2 was offered beginning August 1, 2008.
                                         

5. Investment transactions

The fund made purchases and sales of investment securities, excluding short-term securities and U.S. government obligations, if any, of $1,846,435,000 and $1,236,018,000, respectively, during the year ended August 31, 2008.


Financial highlights1
                                                               
                                                                       
          Income from investment operations(2)                                            
   
Net asset
value,
beginning
of period
   
Net
investment
income
   
Net gains
(losses) on
securities
(both
realized and
unrealized)
   
Total from investment operations
   
Dividends (from net investment income)
   
Net asset value, end of period
   
Total return (3) (4)
   
Net assets, end of period (in millions)
   
Ratio of
expenses
to average
net assets
before reim-bursements/
waivers
   
Ratio of
expenses
to average
net assets
after reim-bursements/
waivers (4)
   
Ratio of net income to average net assets (4)
 
Class A:
                                                                     
 Year ended 8/31/2008
  $ 13.35     $ .54     $ .22         $ .76     $ (.55 )   $ 13.56       5.73 %   $ 2,602       .77 %     .74 %     3.95 %
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .59       .03           .62       (.59 )     13.35       4.72       1,758       .79       .76       4.38  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .52       (.39 )         .13       (.53 )     13.32       1.04       1,685       .77       .74       3.89  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .44       -   (5 )     .44       (.46 )     13.72       3.23       1,801       .76       .74       3.17  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .43       .17           .60       (.45 )     13.74       4.49       1,900       .71       .71       3.14  
Class B:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .44       .22           .66       (.45 )     13.56       4.99       203       1.46       1.44       3.27  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .49       .03           .52       (.49 )     13.35       3.99       158       1.51       1.47       3.66  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .43       (.39 )         .04       (.44 )     13.32       .32       169       1.49       1.46       3.17  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .34       -   (5 )     .34       (.36 )     13.72       2.51       196       1.48       1.46       2.45  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .33       .17           .50       (.35 )     13.74       3.72       221       1.47       1.47       2.38  
Class C:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .43       .22           .65       (.44 )     13.56       4.95       244       1.50       1.47       3.19  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .49       .03           .52       (.49 )     13.35       3.94       125       1.55       1.52       3.62  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .42       (.39 )         .03       (.43 )     13.32       .27       109       1.55       1.52       3.11  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .33       -   (5 )     .33       (.35 )     13.72       2.45       120       1.53       1.51       2.40  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .32       .17           .49       (.34 )     13.74       3.65       122       1.53       1.53       2.32  
Class F-1:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .54       .22           .76       (.55 )     13.56       5.79       142       .70       .67       4.01  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .60       .03           .63       (.60 )     13.35       4.80       99       .72       .69       4.44  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .53       (.39 )         .14       (.54 )     13.32       1.10       76       .71       .68       3.98  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .44       -   (5 )     .44       (.46 )     13.72       3.24       54       .75       .73       3.18  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .43       .17           .60       (.45 )     13.74       4.45       33       .75       .75       3.04  
Class F-2:
                                                                                           
 Period from 8/7/2008 to 8/31/2008
    13.48       .03       .08           .11       (.03 )     13.56       .85       1       .03       .03       .25  
Class 529-A:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .53       .22           .75       (.54 )     13.56       5.70       68       .79       .76       3.93  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .58       .03           .61       (.58 )     13.35       4.66       44       .84       .81       4.33  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .52       (.39 )         .13       (.53 )     13.32       1.00       39       .81       .78       3.86  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .43       -   (5 )     .43       (.45 )     13.72       3.18       38       .81       .79       3.13  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .42       .17           .59       (.44 )     13.74       4.40       34       .80       .80       3.02  
Class 529-B:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .42       .22           .64       (.43 )     13.56       4.85       16       1.60       1.57       3.14  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .48       .03           .51       (.48 )     13.35       3.85       13       1.64       1.60       3.53  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .41       (.39 )         .02       (.42 )     13.32       .19       13       1.63       1.60       3.03  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .32       -   (5 )     .32       (.34 )     13.72       2.34       14       1.65       1.63       2.29  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .31       .17           .48       (.33 )     13.74       3.54       13       1.64       1.64       2.20  
Class 529-C:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .42       .22           .64       (.43 )     13.56       4.87       40       1.58       1.55       3.14  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .48       .03           .51       (.48 )     13.35       3.86       27       1.63       1.60       3.54  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .41       (.39 )         .02       (.42 )     13.32       .20       24       1.62       1.59       3.06  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .32       -   (5 )     .32       (.34 )     13.72       2.35       23       1.64       1.61       2.30  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .31       .17           .48       (.33 )     13.74       3.55       21       1.63       1.63       2.20  
Class 529-E:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .49       .22           .71       (.50 )     13.56       5.40       5       1.07       1.04       3.66  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .54       .03           .57       (.54 )     13.35       4.38       4       1.12       1.09       4.05  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .48       (.39 )         .09       (.49 )     13.32       .73       3       1.09       1.06       3.60  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .39       -   (5 )     .39       (.41 )     13.72       2.88       3       1.11       1.09       2.83  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .38       .17           .55       (.40 )     13.74       4.08       2       1.11       1.11       2.71  
Class 529-F-1:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .56       .22           .78       (.57 )     13.56       5.93       5       .57       .54       4.15  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .61       .03           .64       (.61 )     13.35       4.90       3       .62       .59       4.56  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .54       (.39 )         .15       (.55 )     13.32       1.20       2       .60       .57       4.09  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .43       -   (5 )     .43       (.45 )     13.72       3.20       2       .78       .75       3.18  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .41       .17           .58       (.43 )     13.74       4.33       1       .86       .86       2.94  
Class R-1:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .43       .22           .65       (.44 )     13.56       4.89       9       1.56       1.53       3.16  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .48       .03           .51       (.48 )     13.35       3.89       5       1.65       1.57       3.57  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .42       (.39 )         .03       (.43 )     13.32       .30       4       1.63       1.49       3.17  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .33       -   (5 )     .33       (.35 )     13.72       2.46       3       1.66       1.50       2.43  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .32       .17           .49       (.34 )     13.74       3.66       2       1.74       1.52       2.26  
Class R-2:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .44       .22           .66       (.45 )     13.56       4.97       136       1.61       1.46       3.24  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .49       .03           .52       (.49 )     13.35       3.98       103       1.73       1.48       3.66  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .43       (.39 )         .04       (.44 )     13.32       .32       94       1.93       1.47       3.18  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .34       -   (5 )     .34       (.36 )     13.72       2.50       85       1.94       1.47       2.46  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .33       .17           .50       (.35 )     13.74       3.70       68       2.02       1.48       2.32  
Class R-3:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .49       .22           .71       (.50 )     13.56       5.40       118       1.07       1.04       3.67  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .54       .03           .57       (.54 )     13.35       4.39       88       1.11       1.08       4.05  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .48       (.39 )         .09       (.49 )     13.32       .69       107       1.20       1.09       3.56  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .39       -   (5 )     .39       (.41 )     13.72       2.88       91       1.20       1.08       2.84  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .38       .17           .55       (.40 )     13.74       4.09       73       1.23       1.10       2.71  
Class R-4:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .54       .22           .76       (.55 )     13.56       5.77       91       .72       .69       4.02  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .59       .03           .62       (.59 )     13.35       4.79       75       .72       .69       4.50  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .53       (.39 )         .14       (.54 )     13.32       1.06       21       .75       .72       3.96  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .44       -   (5 )     .44       (.46 )     13.72       3.25       13       .74       .72       3.21  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .43       .17           .60       (.45 )     13.74       4.45       8       .74       .74       3.05  
Class R-5:
                                                                                           
 Year ended 8/31/2008
    13.35       .58       .22           .80       (.59 )     13.56       6.10       281       .41       .38       4.26  
 Year ended 8/31/2007
    13.32       .63       .03           .66       (.63 )     13.35       5.07       68       .45       .41       4.79  
 Year ended 8/31/2006
    13.72       .56       (.39 )         .17       (.57 )     13.32       1.36       10       .45       .42       4.24  
 Year ended 8/31/2005
    13.74       .48       -   (5 )     .48       (.50 )     13.72       3.56       8       .43       .41       3.50  
 Year ended 8/31/2004
    13.59       .47       .17           .64       (.49 )     13.74       4.78       7       .42       .42       3.39  



   
Year ended August 31
 
   
2008
   
2007
   
2006
   
2005
   
2004
 
                               
Portfolio turnover rate for all classes of shares
    92 %     110 %     146 %     104 %     72 %
                                         
(1) Based on operations for the periods shown (unless otherwise noted) and, accordingly, may not be representative of a full year.
(2) Based on average shares outstanding.
                                       
(3) Total returns exclude any applicable sales charges, including contingent deferred sales charges.
(4) This column reflects the impact, if any, of certain reimbursements/waivers from CRMC. During some of the periods shown, CRMC reduced fees for investment advisory services. In addition, during some of the periods shown, CRMC paid a portion of the fund's transfer agent fees for certain retirement plan share classes.
(5) Amount less than $.01.
                                       
                                         
See Notes to Financial Statements
                                       


 


REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Shareholders and Board of Trustees of
The American Funds Income Series — U.S. Government Securities Fund:

We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of The American Funds Income Series — U.S. Government Securities Fund (the “Fund”), including the investment portfolio, as of August 31, 2008, and the related statement of operations for the year then ended, the statements of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, and the financial highlights for each of the periods presented.  These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Fund's management.  Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States).  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial highlights are free of material misstatement.  The Fund is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting.  Our audits included consideration of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Fund’s internal control over financial reporting.  Accordingly, we express no such opinion.  An audit also includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.  Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of August 31, 2008, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers; where replies were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing procedures.  We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of The American Funds Income Series — U.S. Government Securities Fund as of August 31, 2008, 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 then ended, and the financial highlights for each of the periods presented, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
 

DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

Costa Mesa, California
October 14, 2008





Tax information
unaudited

We are required to advise you within 60 days of the fund’s fiscal year-end regarding the federal tax status of certain distributions received by shareholders during such fiscal year. The fund hereby designates the following amount for the fund’s fiscal year ended August 31, 2008:

U.S. government income that may be exempt from state taxation
$44,573,000

Individual shareholders should refer to their Form 1099 or other tax information, which will be mailed in January 2009, to determine the calendar year amounts to be included on their 2008 tax returns. Shareholders should consult their tax advisers.