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    SEC Form N-CSR filed by MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust

    1/27/25 12:16:09 PM ET
    $CXH
    Investment Managers
    Finance
    Get the next $CXH alert in real time by email
    N-CSR 1 f40436d1.htm MFS INVESTMENT GRADE MUNICIPAL TRUST NCSR MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust NCSR

    UNITED STATES

    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549

    FORM N-CSR

    CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

    Investment Company Act file number 811-05785

    MFS INVESTMENT GRADE MUNICIPAL TRUST

    (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

    111 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02199 (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

    Christopher R. Bohane

    Massachusetts Financial Services Company

    111Huntington Avenue Boston, Massachusetts 02199

    (Name and address of agents for service)

    Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (617) 954-5000

    Date of fiscal year end: November 30

    Date of reporting period: November 30, 2024

    ITEM 1. REPORTS TO STOCKHOLDERS.

    Item 1(a):


    Annual Report
    November 30, 2024
    MFS®  Investment Grade Municipal Trust
    CXH-ANN


    MFS® Investment Grade Municipal Trust
    New York Stock Exchange Symbol: CXH
    Portfolio composition

    1
    Management review

    3
    Performance summary

    5
    Investment objective, principal investment strategies and principal risks

    7
    Effects of leverage

    17
    Portfolio managers’ profiles

    18
    Dividend reinvestment and cash purchase plan

    19
    Portfolio of investments

    20
    Statement of assets and liabilities

    45
    Statement of operations

    46
    Statements of changes in net assets

    47
    Statement of cash flows

    48
    Financial highlights

    49
    Notes to financial statements

    51
    Report of independent registered public accounting firm

    62
    Results of shareholder meeting

    64
    Trustees and officers

    65
    Board review of investment advisory agreement

    70
    Proxy voting policies and information

    74
    Quarterly portfolio disclosure

    74
    Further information

    74
    Information about fund contracts and legal claims

    74
    Federal tax information

    74
    MFS® privacy notice

    76
        
    Contact information

    back cover
        
    NOT FDIC INSURED  •  MAY LOSE VALUE  •  NO BANK GUARANTEE

    Table of Contents

    Table of Contents
    Portfolio Composition
    Portfolio structure (i)
    Top ten industries (i)
    Healthcare Revenue - Hospitals 23.0%
    Airport Revenue 14.1%
    General Obligations - General Purpose 13.4%
    Healthcare Revenue - Long Term Care 11.1%
    Miscellaneous Revenue - Other 10.9%
    Multi-Family Housing Revenue 9.6%
    Single Family Housing - State 8.9%
    Universities - Colleges 8.5%
    Utilities - Other 7.5%
    Sales & Excise Tax Revenue 5.3%
    Composition including fixed income credit quality (a)(i)
    AAA 6.4%
    AA 39.2%
    A 49.7%
    BBB 35.9%
    BB 6.9%
    B 1.6%
    CCC 0.5%
    CC 0.4%
    Not Rated 18.4%
    Non-Fixed Income (o) 0.0%
    Cash & Cash Equivalents
    (Less Liabilities) (b)
    (49.8)%
    Other (9.2)%
    Portfolio facts
    Average Duration (d) 12.1
    Average Effective Maturity (m) 21.5 yrs.
     
    1

    Table of Contents
    Portfolio Composition - continued
    (a) For all securities other than those specifically described below, ratings are assigned to underlying securities utilizing ratings from Moody’s, Fitch, and Standard & Poor’s rating agencies and applying the following hierarchy: If all three agencies provide a rating, the middle rating (after dropping the highest and lowest ratings) is assigned; if two of the three agencies rate a security, the lower of the two is assigned. If none of the 3 rating agencies above assign a rating, but the security is rated by DBRS Morningstar, then the DBRS Morningstar rating is assigned. If none of the 4 rating agencies listed above rate the security, but the security is rated by the Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA), then the KBRA rating is assigned. Ratings are shown in the S&P and Fitch scale (e.g., AAA). Securities rated BBB or higher are considered investment grade. All ratings are subject to change. Not Rated includes fixed income securities and fixed income derivatives that have not been rated by any rating agency. Non-Fixed Income includes equity securities (including convertible bonds and equity derivatives), ETFs and Options on ETFs, and/or commodity-linked derivatives. The fund may or may not have held all of these instruments on this date. The fund is not rated by these agencies.
    (b) Cash & Cash Equivalents (Less Liabilities) includes any cash, investments in money market funds, short-term securities, and other assets less liabilities. Liabilities include the value of the aggregate liquidation preference of the remarketable variable rate munifund term preferred shares (RVMTP shares) issued by the fund. Cash & Cash Equivalents (Less Liabilities) is negative due to the aggregate liquidation value of RVMTP shares. Please see the Statement of Assets and Liabilities for additional information related to the fund’s cash position and other assets and liabilities. Please see Note 8 in the Notes to Financial Statements for more information on the RVMTP shares issued by the fund.
    (d) Duration is a measure of how much a bond’s price is likely to fluctuate with general changes in interest rates, e.g., if rates rise 1.00%, a bond with a 5-year duration is likely to lose about 5.00% of its value due to the interest rate move. The Average Duration calculation reflects the impact of the equivalent exposure of derivative positions, if any. This calculation is based on net assets applicable to common shares as of November 30, 2024.
    (i) For purposes of this presentation, the components include the value of securities, and reflect the impact of the equivalent exposure of derivative positions, if any. These amounts may be negative from time to time. Equivalent exposure is a calculated amount that translates the derivative position into a reasonable approximation of the amount of the underlying asset that the portfolio would have to hold at a given point in time to have the same price sensitivity that results from the portfolio’s ownership of the derivative contract. When dealing with derivatives, equivalent exposure is a more representative measure of the potential impact of a position on portfolio performance than value. The bond component will include any accrued interest amounts.
    (m) In determining each instrument’s effective maturity for purposes of calculating the fund’s dollar-weighted average effective maturity, MFS uses the instrument’s stated maturity or, if applicable, an earlier date on which MFS believes it is probable that a maturity-shortening feature (such as a put, pre-refunding or prepayment) will cause the instrument to be repaid. Such an earlier date can be substantially shorter than the instrument’s stated maturity. This calculation is based on gross assets, which consists of net assets applicable to common shares plus the value of preferred shares, as of November 30, 2024.
    (o) Less than 0.1%.
    Other includes equivalent exposure from currency derivatives and/or any offsets to derivative positions and/or the leverage created through the issuance of self-deposited inverse floaters and may be negative.
    Percentages are based on net assets applicable to common shares as of November 30, 2024.
    The portfolio is actively managed and current holdings may be different.
    2

    Table of Contents
    Management Review
    Summary of Results
    For the twelve months ended November 30, 2024, common shares of the MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust (fund) provided a total return of 11.12%, at net asset value, and a total return of 17.81%, at market value. This compares with a return of 4.93% for the fund’s benchmark, the Bloomberg Municipal Bond Index.
    The performance commentary below is based on the net asset value performance of the fund, which reflects the performance of the underlying pool of assets held by the fund. The total return at market value represents the return earned by owners of the shares of the fund, which are traded publicly on the exchange.
    Market Environment
    With inflation subsiding, global central banks in recent months have changed gears, focusing more on supporting economic growth. In the United States, the U.S. Federal Reserve has eased interest rates 0.75% since September after several months of softer labor market data. In the eurozone, the European Central Bank lowered rates a total of 1% beginning in June as inflation fell back to target and growth nearly stalled. China recently loosened monetary policy and ramped up fiscal stimulus after a period of subpar growth amid ongoing weakness in the country’s property market and flagging business and consumer sentiment.
    Global equity markets have performed strongly, with several themes playing out at once. The most prominent has been continued investment in artificial intelligence, helping boost the share prices of a handful of megacap technology stocks. Enormous demand for GLP-1 weight-loss medications is another trend. A renewed focus on corporate governance, and greater attention paid to shareholder returns, helped boost share prices in Japan. Corporate earnings have been strong, but tighter labor markets, the potential for higher input costs due to deglobalization, and the likelihood that interest rates and inflation will remain more elevated than in the prepandemic period could weigh on margins in the future.
    Heightened geopolitical uncertainty lingers as Russia and Ukraine fight a seeming war of attrition while Israel continues to do battle with Iranian-backed proxy groups as well as withstanding several missile attacks from Iran itself, leading to bouts of market volatility and fears of energy disruptions. Equity markets reacted favorably to the result of the U.S. presidential election, anticipating a low-tax, pro-growth, lighter regulatory touch from a second Trump administration. However, rates markets are wary of a potential erosion of the U.S. government’s fiscal footing.
    Turning to the municipal market, the trailing one-year period was favorable for returns. With the economy showing sustained evidence of moderating and the Fed initiating a rate-cutting cycle, municipal yields declined (with the exception of 5 to 10-year maturities, which rose modestly), providing a tailwind to returns. The investment grade and high yield municipal markets delivered returns of 4.9% and 11.4%, respectively, over the period, with lower quality and longer maturity bonds generally outperforming higher quality and shorter maturity securities. The yields (yield-to-worst) on the investment grade and high yield municipal indices ended the period at 3.45% and 5.26%, respectively, well above their five-year averages of 2.52% and 4.80%; a positive for income-oriented investors.
    3

    Table of Contents
    Management Review - continued
    Factors Affecting Performance
    The fund’s exposure to “Not-Rated”, “D”, and “BB” rated(r) bonds, for which the benchmark has no exposure, and its overweight allocation to the “BBB” rated securities, contributed to performance relative to the Bloomberg Municipal Bond Index. From a sector perspective, the fund’s overweight allocation to both the industrial revenue and health care sectors also supported relative results. Favorable security selection within the health care and education sectors, particularly among “A” rated credit issues, further aided relative returns. The fund’s positioning along the yield curve(y) was another contributor to relative performance.
    There were no material factors that detracted from relative performance over the reporting period.
    The fund employs leverage, which has been created through the issuance of remarketable variable rate munifund term preferred shares and the use of tender option bonds. To the extent that investments are purchased through leverage, the fund’s net asset value will increase or decrease at a greater rate than a comparable unleveraged fund. During the reporting period, the fund’s use of leverage helped relative performance.
    Respectfully,
    Portfolio Manager(s)
    Michael Dawson, Jason Kosty, and Geoffrey Schechter
    Note to Shareholders: Geoffrey Schechter has announced his intention to retire effective September 30, 2025, and he will no longer be a portfolio manager of the fund as of that date.
    (r) Securities rated “BBB”, “Baa”, or higher are considered investment grade; securities rated “BB”, “Ba”, or below are considered non-investment grade. Ratings are assigned to underlying securities utilizing ratings from Moody's, Fitch, and Standard & Poor's and applying the following hierarchy: If all three agencies provide a rating, the middle rating (after dropping the highest and lowest ratings) is assigned; if two of the three agencies rate a security, the lower of the two is assigned. If none of the 3 rating agencies above assign a rating, but the security is rated by DBRS Morningstar, then the DBRS Morningstar rating is assigned. If none of the 4 rating agencies listed above rate the security, but the security is rated by the Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA), then the KBRA rating is assigned. Ratings are shown in the S&P and Fitch scale (e.g., AAA). For securities that are not rated by any of the rating agencies, the security is considered Not Rated.
    (y) A yield curve graphically depicts the yields of different maturity bonds of the same credit quality and type; a normal yield curve is upward sloping, with short-term rates lower than long-term rates.
    The views expressed in this report are those of the portfolio manager(s) only through the end of the period of the report as stated on the cover and do not necessarily reflect the views of MFS or any other person in the MFS organization. These views are subject to change at any time based on market or other conditions, and MFS disclaims any responsibility to update such views. These views may not be relied upon as investment advice or an indication of trading intent on behalf of any MFS portfolio. References to specific securities are not recommendations of such securities, and may not be representative of any MFS portfolio’s current or future investments.
    4

    Table of Contents
    Performance Summary THROUGH 11/30/24
    The following chart illustrates the fund’s historical performance in comparison to its benchmark(s). Performance results reflect the percentage change in net asset value and market value, including reinvestment of fund distributions. Benchmarks are unmanaged and may not be invested in directly. Benchmark returns do not reflect commissions or expenses. (See Notes to Performance Summary.)
    Performance data shown represents past performance and is no guarantee of future results. Investment return and principal value fluctuate so your shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than the original cost; current performance may be lower or higher than quoted. The performance shown does not reflect the deduction of taxes, if any, that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the sale of fund shares.
    Growth of a Hypothetical $10,000 Investment
    Average Annual Total Returns through 11/30/24
      Inception Date 1-yr 5-yr 10-yr
    Market Value (r) 5/16/1989 17.81% 0.83% 3.53%
    Net Asset Value (r) 5/16/1989 11.12% 0.79% 3.04%
    Comparative benchmark(s)
           
    Bloomberg Municipal Bond Index (f) 4.93% 1.35% 2.45%
        
    (f) Source: FactSet Research Systems Inc.
    (r) Includes reinvestment of all distributions. Market value references New York Stock Exchange Price.
    5

    Table of Contents
    Performance Summary  - continued
    Benchmark Definition(s)
    Bloomberg Municipal Bond Index(a) – a market capitalization-weighted index that measures the performance of the tax-exempt bond market.
    It is not possible to invest directly in an index.
    (a) Source: Bloomberg Index Services Limited. BLOOMBERG® is a trademark and service mark of Bloomberg Finance L.P. and its affiliates (collectively “Bloomberg”). Bloomberg or Bloomberg's licensors own all proprietary rights in the Bloomberg Indices. Bloomberg neither approves or endorses this material, or guarantees the accuracy or completeness of any information herein, or makes any warranty, express or implied, as to the results to be obtained therefrom and, to the maximum extent allowed by law, neither shall have any liability or responsibility for injury or damages arising in connection therewith.
    Notes to Performance Summary
    The fund’s shares may trade at a discount or premium to net asset value. When fund shares trade at a premium, buyers pay more than the net asset value of the underlying fund shares, and shares purchased at a premium would receive less than the amount paid for them in the event of the fund’s concurrent liquidation.
    The fund’s monthly distributions may include a return of capital to shareholders to the extent that distributions are in excess of the fund’s net investment income and net capital gains, determined in accordance with federal income tax regulations. Distributions that are treated for federal income tax purposes as a return of capital will reduce each shareholder’s basis in his or her shares and, to the extent the return of capital exceeds such basis, will be treated as gain to the shareholder from a sale of shares. Returns of shareholder capital may have the effect of reducing the fund’s assets and increasing the fund’s expense ratio.
    Performance results based on net asset value per share do not include adjustments made for financial reporting purposes in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles and may differ from amounts reported in the Financial Highlights.
    A portion of the fund’s monthly distributions may be subject to state, federal, and/or alternative minimum tax. Capital gains, if any, are subject to a capital gains tax.
    From time to time the fund may receive proceeds from litigation settlements, without which performance would be lower.
    In accordance with Section 23(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, the fund hereby gives notice that it may from time to time repurchase shares of the fund in the open market at the option of the Board of Trustees and on such terms as the Trustees shall determine.
    6

    Table of Contents
    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks
    Investment Objective
    The fund’s investment objective is to seek high current income exempt from U.S. federal income tax, but may also consider capital appreciation. The fund’s objective may be changed without shareholder approval.
    Principal Investment Strategies
    The fund invests, under normal market conditions, at least 80% of its net assets, including assets attributable to preferred shares and borrowings for investment purposes, in tax-exempt bonds and tax-exempt notes. This policy may not be changed without shareholder approval. Tax-exempt bonds and tax-exempt notes are municipal instruments, the interest of which is exempt from federal income tax. However, interest from the fund’s investments may be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax.
    MFS (Massachusetts Financial Services Company, the fund’s investment adviser) normally invests at least 80% of the fund’s net assets, including assets attributable to preferred shares and borrowings for investment purposes, in investment grade quality debt instruments. In determining the credit quality of debt instruments, MFS will use the following methodology:  if three Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations (“NRSROs”) have assigned a rating to a debt instrument, MFS will use the middle rating; if two NRSROs have assigned a rating to a debt instrument, MFS will use the lower rating; if only one NRSRO has assigned a rating to a debt instrument, MFS will use that rating; rating; if none of the three NSROs above assign a rating, but the security is rated by Dominion Bond Rating Service Limited (“DBRS”), then the DBRS rating is assigned. A debt instrument will be considered unrated if none of the NRSROs have assigned a rating.
    MFS may also invest in below investment grade quality debt instruments.
    MFS may invest 25% or more of the fund’s total assets in municipal instruments that finance similar types of projects, such as those relating to education, healthcare, housing, utilities, water, or sewers.  Although MFS seeks to invest the fund's assets in municipal instruments whose interest is exempt from federal personal income tax, MFS may also invest the fund's assets in taxable instruments, including derivatives.
    MFS may invest a significant percentage of the fund's assets in issuers in a single state, territory, or possession, or a small number of states, territories, or possessions.
    While MFS may use derivatives for any investment purpose, to the extent MFS uses derivatives, MFS expects to use derivatives primarily to increase or decrease exposure to a particular market, segment of the market, or security, to increase or decrease interest rate exposure, or as alternatives to direct investments.
    MFS uses an active bottom-up investment approach to buying and selling investments for the fund. Investments are selected primarily based on fundamental analysis of individual instruments and their issuers in light of the issuers’ financial condition and market, economic, political, and regulatory conditions. Factors considered may include the instrument’s credit quality and terms, any underlying assets and their credit quality,
    7

    Table of Contents
    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks - continued
    and the issuer’s management ability, capital structure, leverage, and ability to meet its current obligations. MFS may also consider environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors in its fundamental investment analysis where MFS believes such factors could materially impact the economic value of an issuer or instrument. ESG factors considered may include, but are not limited to, an issuer's governance structure and practices, social issues such as health and safety considerations, and environmental issues such as climate change impact, energy sources, and water and waste management.  Quantitative screening tools that systematically evaluate the structure of a debt instrument and its features may also be considered. In structuring the fund, MFS also considers top-down factors, including sector allocations, yield curve positioning, duration, macroeconomic factors, and risk management factors.
    The fund uses leverage through the issuance of preferred shares and/or the creation of tender option bonds, and then investing the proceeds pursuant to its investment strategies. If approved by the fund’s Board of Trustees, the fund may use leverage by other methods.
    Principal Investment Types
    The principal investment types in which the fund may invest are:
    Debt Instruments: Debt instruments represent obligations of corporations, governments, and other entities to repay money borrowed, or other instruments believed to have debt-like characteristics. The issuer or borrower usually pays a fixed, variable, or floating rate of interest, and must repay the amount borrowed, usually at the maturity of the instrument. Debt instruments generally trade in the over-the-counter market and can be less liquid than other types of investments, particularly during adverse market and economic conditions.  During certain market conditions, debt instruments in some or many segments of the debt market can trade at a negative interest rate (i.e., the price to purchase the debt instrument is more than the present value of expected interest payments and principal due at the maturity of the instrument). Some debt instruments, such as zero coupon bonds or payment-in-kind bonds, do not pay current interest. Other debt instruments, such as certain mortgage-backed securities and other securitized instruments, make periodic payments of interest and/or principal. Some debt instruments are partially or fully secured by collateral supporting the payment of interest and principal.
    Municipal Instruments: Municipal instruments are issued by or for states, territories, or possessions of the United States or by their political subdivisions, agencies, authorities, or other government entities, to raise money for a variety of public and private purposes, including general financing for state and local governments, or financing for a specific project or public facility. Municipal instruments include general obligation bonds of municipalities, state or local governments, project or revenue-specific bonds, municipal lease obligations, and prerefunded or escrowed bonds. Municipal instruments may be fully or partially supported by the state or local governments, by the credit of a private issuer, by the current or anticipated revenues from a specific project or assets, by the issuer’s pledge to make annual appropriations for lease payments, or by domestic or foreign entities providing credit support, such as insurance, letters of credit, or guarantees. Many municipal instruments are supported by insurance, which typically guarantees the timely payment of all principal and interest due on the underlying municipal instrument.
    8

    Table of Contents
    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks - continued
    Tender Option Bonds: Tender option bonds are created when municipal instruments are transferred to a special purpose trust which issues two classes of certificates.  The first class, commonly called floating rate certificates, pays an interest rate that is typically reset weekly based on a specified index. Each holder of a floating rate certificate has the option at specified times, and/or may be required under specified circumstances, to tender its certificate to the issuer or a specified third party acting as agent for the issuer for purchase at the stated amount of the certificate plus accrued interest. The second class, commonly called inverse floaters, pays an interest rate based on the difference between the interest rate earned on the underlying municipal instruments and the interest rate paid on the floating rate certificates after expenses.
    Derivatives: Derivatives are financial contracts whose value is based on the value of one or more underlying indicators or the difference between underlying indicators. Underlying indicators may include a security or other financial instrument, asset, interest rate, credit rating, commodity, volatility measure, or index. Derivatives involve a counterparty to the transaction. Derivatives include futures, forward contracts, options, inverse floating rate instruments, swaps, and certain complex structured securities.
    Principal Risks
    The yield and share price of the fund will change daily based on changes in interest rates and market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions. As with any mutual fund, the fund may not achieve its objective and/or you could lose money on your investment in the fund. An investment in the fund is not a bank deposit and is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other governmental agency. The significance of any specific risk to an investment in the fund will vary over time depending on the composition of the fund's portfolio, market conditions, and other factors. You should read all of the risk information below carefully, because any one or more of these risks may result in losses to the fund.
    The principal risks of investing in the fund are:
    Investment Selection Risk: MFS' investment analysis and its selection of investments may not produce the intended results and/or can lead to an investment focus that results in the fund underperforming other funds with similar investment strategies and/or underperforming the markets in which the fund invests. In addition, to the extent MFS considers quantitative tools in managing the fund, such tools may not work as expected or produce the intended results. In addition, MFS or the fund's other service providers may experience disruptions or operating errors that could negatively impact the fund.
    Debt Market Risk: Debt markets can be volatile and can decline significantly in response to changes in, or investor perceptions of, issuer, market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions.  These conditions can affect a single instrument, issuer, or borrower, a particular type of instrument, issuer, or borrower, a segment of the debt markets, or debt markets generally.  Certain changes or events, such as political, social, or economic developments, including increasing and negative interest rates or the U.S. government's inability at times to agree on a long-term budget and deficit reduction plan (which has in the past resulted and may in the future result in a government shutdown); market closures and/or trading halts; government or regulatory actions,
    9

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    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks - continued
    including sanctions, the imposition of tariffs or other protectionist actions and changes in fiscal, monetary, or tax policies; natural disasters; outbreaks of pandemic and epidemic diseases; terrorist attacks; war; and other geopolitical changes or events can have a dramatic adverse effect on debt markets and may lead to periods of high volatility and reduced liquidity in a debt market or a segment of a debt market.
    Interest Rate Risk: The price of a debt instrument typically changes in response to interest rate changes. Interest rates can change in response to the supply and demand for credit, government and/or central bank monetary policy and action, inflation rates, general economic and market conditions, and other factors. In general, the price of a debt instrument falls when interest rates rise and rises when interest rates fall. Inflationary price movements may cause fixed income securities markets to experience heightened levels of interest rate volatility and liquidity risk. Potential future changes in government and/or central bank monetary policy and action may also affect the level of interest rates. Monetary policy measures have in the past, and may in the future, exacerbate risks associated with rising interest rates. Interest rate risk is generally greater for fixed-rate instruments than floating-rate instruments and for instruments with longer maturities or durations, or that do not pay current interest. In addition, short-term and long-term interest rates do not necessarily move in the same direction or by the same amount. An instrument’s reaction to interest rate changes depends on the timing of its interest and principal payments and the current interest rate for each of those time periods. The price of an instrument trading at a negative interest rate responds to interest rate changes like other debt instruments; however, an instrument purchased at a negative interest rate is expected to produce a negative return if held to maturity. Fluctuations in the market price of fixed-rate instruments held by the fund may not affect interest income derived from those instruments, but may nonetheless affect the fund's share price, especially if an instrument has a longer maturity or duration and is therefore more sensitive to changes in interest rates.
    Credit Risk:  The price of a debt instrument depends, in part, on the issuer's or borrower's credit quality or ability to pay principal and interest when due. The price of a debt instrument is likely to fall if an issuer or borrower defaults on its obligation to pay principal or interest, if the instrument's credit rating is downgraded by a credit rating agency, or based on other changes in, or perceptions of, the financial condition of the issuer or borrower. Debt instruments may be more susceptible to downgrades or defaults during economic downturns or similar periods of economic stress, which in turn could negatively affect the market value and liquidity of a debt instrument. For certain types of instruments, including derivatives, the price of the instrument depends in part on the credit quality of the counterparty to the transaction. For other types of debt instruments, including mortgage-backed securities and other securitized instruments and some municipal instruments, the price of the debt instrument also depends on the credit quality and adequacy of the underlying assets or collateral as well as whether there is a security interest in the underlying assets or collateral. Enforcing rights, if any, against the underlying assets or collateral may be difficult.
    Below investment grade quality debt instruments can involve a substantially greater risk of default or can already be in default, and their values can decline significantly over short periods of time. Below investment grade quality debt instruments are regarded as having predominantly speculative characteristics with respect to capacity to pay interest and principal. Below investment grade quality debt instruments tend to be more
    10

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    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks - continued
    sensitive to adverse news about the issuer, or the market or economy in general, than higher quality debt instruments. The market for below investment grade quality debt instruments can be less liquid, especially during periods of recession or general market decline.
    The credit quality of, and the ability to pay principal and interest when due by, an issuer of a municipal instrument depends on the credit quality of the entity supporting the municipal instrument, how essential any services supported by the municipal instrument are, the sufficiency of any revenues or taxes that support the municipal instrument, and/or the willingness or ability of the appropriate government entity to approve any appropriations necessary to support the municipal instrument. In addition, the price of a municipal instrument also depends on its credit quality and ability to meet the credit support obligations of any insurer or other entity providing credit support to a municipal instrument.
    Municipal Risk:  The price of a municipal instrument can be volatile and significantly affected by adverse tax changes or court rulings, legislative or political changes, market and economic conditions and developments, issuer, industry-specific and other conditions, including as the result of events that cannot be reasonably anticipated or controlled such as social conflict or unrest, labor disruption and natural disasters.  Municipal instruments can be less liquid than other types of investments and there may be less publicly available information about the issuers of municipal instruments compared to other issuers. If the Internal Revenue Service or a state taxing authority determines that an issuer of a municipal instrument has not complied with applicable tax requirements, interest from the instrument could become taxable (including retroactively) and the instrument could decline significantly in price. Because many municipal instruments are issued to finance similar projects, especially those relating to education, health care, housing, utilities, and water and sewer, conditions in these industries can significantly affect the fund and the overall municipal market. In addition, changes in the financial condition of an individual municipal insurer can affect the overall municipal market.
    Municipal instruments may be more susceptible to downgrades or defaults during economic downturns or similar periods of economic stress, which in turn could affect the market values and marketability of many or all municipal obligations of issuers in a state, U.S. territory, or possession. Factors contributing to the economic stress on municipal issuers may include a decrease in revenues supporting the issuer's bonds due to factors such as lower sales tax revenue as a result of decreased consumer spending, lower income tax revenue due to higher unemployment, and a decrease in the value of collateral backing revenue bonds due to closures and/or curtailment of services and/or changes in consumer behavior.
    Focus Risk: The fund’s performance will be closely tied to the issuer, market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions in the states, territories, and possessions of the United States in which the fund's assets are invested.  These conditions include constitutional or statutory limits on an issuer's ability to raise revenues or increase taxes, anticipated or actual budget deficits or other financial difficulties, or changes in the credit quality of municipal issuers in such states, territories, and possessions.  If MFS invests a significant percentage of the fund's assets in a single state, territory, or possession, or a small number of states, territories, or possessions, these conditions will have a significant
    11

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    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks - continued
    impact on the fund's performance and the fund's performance may be more volatile than the performance of more geographically-diversified funds. A prolonged increase in unemployment or a significant decline in the local and/or national economies could result in decreased tax revenues.
    Prepayment/Extension Risk: Many types of debt instruments, including mortgage-backed securities, securitized instruments, certain corporate bonds, and municipal housing bonds, and certain derivatives, are subject to the risk of prepayment and/or extension. Prepayment occurs when unscheduled payments of principal are made or the instrument is called or redeemed prior to an instrument’s maturity. When interest rates decline, the instrument is called, or for other reasons, these debt instruments may be repaid more quickly than expected. As a result, the holder of the debt instrument may not be able to reinvest the proceeds at the same interest rate or on the same terms, reducing the potential for gain. When interest rates increase or for other reasons, these debt instruments may be repaid more slowly than expected, increasing the potential for loss. In addition, prepayment rates are difficult to predict and the potential impact of prepayment on the price of a debt instrument depends on the terms of the instrument.
    Market Discount/Premium Risk:  The market price of common shares of the fund will be based on factors such as the supply and demand for common shares in the market and general market, economic, industry, political or regulatory conditions.  Whether shareholders will realize gains or losses upon the sale of common shares of the fund will depend on the market price of common shares at the time of the sale, not on the fund’s net asset value.  The market price may be lower or higher than the fund’s net asset value. Common shares of closed-end funds frequently trade at a discount to their net asset value.
    Leveraging Risk: If the fund utilizes investment leverage, there can be no assurance that such a leveraging strategy will be successful during any period in which it is employed. The use of leverage is a speculative investment technique that results in greater volatility in the fund’s net asset value. To the extent that investments are purchased with the proceeds from the borrowings from a bank, the issuance of preferred shares, or the creation of tender option bonds, the fund’s net asset value will increase or decrease at a greater rate than a comparable unleveraged fund. If the investment income or gains earned from the investments purchased with the proceeds from the borrowings from a bank, the issuance of preferred shares, or the creation of tender option bonds, fails to cover the expenses of leveraging, the fund’s net asset value is likely to decrease more quickly than if the fund was not leveraged. In addition, the fund’s distributions could be reduced. The fund is currently required under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“1940 Act”) to maintain asset coverage of at least 200% on outstanding preferred shares and at least 300% on outstanding indebtedness; however, the fund may be required to abide by asset coverage or other requirements that are more stringent than those imposed by the 1940 Act. The fund may be required to sell a portion of its investments at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so in order to redeem preferred shares or to reduce outstanding indebtedness to comply with asset coverage or other restrictions including those imposed by the 1940 Act, any applicable loan agreement, any applicable offering documents for preferred shares issued by the fund, and the rating agencies that rate the preferred shares. The fund may be prohibited from declaring and paying common share dividends and distributions if the fund fails to satisfy the 1940 Act’s asset
    12

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    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks - continued
    coverage requirements or other agreed upon asset coverage requirements. In these situations, the fund may choose to repurchase or redeem any outstanding leverage to the extent necessary in order to maintain compliance with such asset coverage requirements. The expenses of leveraging are paid by the holders of common shares. Borrowings from a bank or preferred shares may have a stated maturity. If this leverage is not extended prior to maturity or replaced with the same or a different form of leverage, distributions to common shareholders may be decreased.
    Certain transactions and investment strategies can result in leverage. Because movements in a fund’s share price generally correlate over time with the fund’s net asset value, the market price of a leveraged fund will also tend to be more volatile than that of a comparable unleveraged fund. The costs of an offering of preferred shares and/or borrowing program would be borne by shareholders.
    Under the terms of any loan agreement or of a purchase agreement between the fund and the investor in the preferred shares, as the case may be, the fund may be required to, among other things, limit its ability to pay dividends and distributions on common shares in certain circumstances, incur additional debts, engage in certain transactions, and pledge some or all of its assets at an inopportune time. Such agreements could limit the fund’s ability to pursue its investment strategies. The terms of any loan agreement or purchase agreement could be more or less restrictive than those described.
    Under guidelines generally required by a rating agency providing a rating for any preferred shares, the fund may be required to, among other things, maintain certain asset coverage requirements, restrict certain investments and practices, and adopt certain redemption requirements relating to preferred shares.  Such guidelines or the terms of a purchase agreement between a fund and the investor in the preferred shares could limit the fund’s ability to pursue its investment strategies. The guidelines imposed with respect to preferred shares by a rating agency or an investor in the preferred shares could be more or less restrictive than those described.
    In addition, the management fee paid to the Adviser is calculated based on net assets, including assets applicable to preferred shares, so the fee will be higher when leverage through the issuance of preferred shares is utilized, which may create an incentive for the Adviser to use leverage through the issuance of preferred shares.
    Tender Option Bond Risk: The underlying municipal instruments held by the special purpose trust are sold or distributed in-kind by the trustee if specified events occur, such as a downgrade in the rating of the underlying municipal instruments, a specified decline in the value of the underlying municipal instruments, a failed remarketing of the floating rate certificates, the bankruptcy of the issuer of the underlying municipal instruments and, if the municipal instruments are insured, of both the issuer and the insurer, and the failure of the liquidity provider to pay in accordance with the trust agreement. In the event the trustee sells or distributes in-kind the underlying municipal instruments to pay amounts owed to the floating rate certificate holders, with the remaining amount paid to the inverse floater holders, the fund’s leverage will be reduced.
    Derivatives Risk: Derivatives can be highly volatile and involve risks in addition to, and potentially greater than, the risks of the underlying indicator(s). Gains or losses from derivatives can be substantially greater than the derivatives’ original cost and can
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    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks - continued
    sometimes be unlimited.  Derivatives can involve leverage. Derivatives can be complex instruments and can involve analysis and processing that differs from that required for other investment types used by the fund. If the value of a derivative does not change as expected relative to the value of the market or other indicator to which the derivative is intended to provide exposure, the derivative may not have the effect intended. Derivatives can also reduce the opportunity for gains or result in losses by offsetting positive returns in other investments. Derivatives can be less liquid than other types of investments.
    Counterparty and Third Party Risk: Transactions involving a counterparty other than the issuer of the instrument, including clearing organizations, or a third party responsible for servicing the instrument or effecting the transaction, are subject to the credit risk of the counterparty or third party, and to the counterparty’s or third party’s ability or willingness to perform in accordance with the terms of the transaction.  If a counterparty or third party fails to meet its contractual obligations, goes bankrupt, or otherwise experiences a business interruption, the fund could miss investment opportunities, lose value on its investments, or otherwise hold investments it would prefer to sell, resulting in losses for the fund.
    Liquidity Risk: Certain investments and types of investments are subject to restrictions on resale, may trade in the over-the-counter market, or may not have an active trading market due to adverse market, economic, industry, political, regulatory, geopolitical, environmental, public health, and other conditions, including trading halts, sanctions, or wars. Investors trying to sell large quantities of a particular investment or type of investment, or lack of market makers or other buyers for a particular investment or type of investment may also adversely affect liquidity.  At times, all or a significant portion of a market may not have an active trading market. Without an active trading market, it may be difficult to value, and it may not be possible to sell, these investments and the fund could miss other investment opportunities and hold investments it would prefer to sell, resulting in losses for the fund.  In addition, the fund may have to sell certain of these investments at prices or times that are not advantageous in order to meet redemptions or other cash needs, which could result in dilution of remaining investors' interests in the fund.  The prices of illiquid securities may be more volatile than more liquid investments.
    Anti-Takeover Provisions Risk: The fund’s declaration of trust includes provisions that could limit the ability of other persons or entities to acquire control of the fund, to convert the fund to an open-end fund, or to change the composition of the fund’s Board of Trustees.  These provisions could reduce the opportunities for shareholders to sell their common shares at a premium over the then-current market price.
    Other Investment Strategies and Risks
    Active and Frequent Trading: MFS may engage in active and frequent trading in pursuing the fund's principal investment strategies. Frequent trading may increase transaction costs, which can reduce the fund's return. Frequent trading can also increase the possibility of capital gain and ordinary distributions. Frequent trading can also result in the realization of a higher percentage of short-term capital gains and a lower percentage of long-term capital gains as compared to a fund that trades less frequently.  Because short-term capital gains are distributed as ordinary income, this would generally increase your tax liability unless you hold your shares through a tax-advantaged or tax-exempt vehicle.
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    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks - continued
    Operational and Cybersecurity Risk: The fund and its service providers, and your ability to transact in fund shares, may be negatively impacted due to operational matters arising from, among other issues, human errors, systems and technology disruptions or failures, fraudulent activities, or cybersecurity incidents.  Operational issues and cybersecurity incidents may cause the fund or its service providers, as well as securities trading venues and other market participants, to suffer data corruption and/or lose operational functionality, and could, among other things, impair the ability to calculate the fund's net asset value per share, impede trading of portfolio securities, and result in the theft, misuse, and/or improper release of confidential information relating to the fund or its shareholders.  Such operational issues and cybersecurity incidents may result in losses to the fund and its shareholders. Because technology is frequently changing, new ways to carry out cyberattacks continue to develop. Therefore, there is a chance that certain risks have not been identified or prepared for, or that an attack may not be detected, which puts limitations on the ability of the fund and its service providers to plan for or respond to a cyberattack. Furthermore, geopolitical tensions could increase the scale and sophistication of deliberate cybersecurity attacks, particularly those from nation-states or from entities with nation-state backing.
    Temporary Defensive Strategy: In response to adverse market, economic, industry, political, or other conditions, MFS may depart from the fund’s principal investment strategies by temporarily investing for defensive purposes. When MFS invests defensively, different factors could affect the fund’s performance and the fund may not achieve its investment objective. In addition, the defensive strategy may not work as intended.
    Investment Restrictions
    The Fund has adopted the following policies which cannot be changed without the approval of a “majority of its outstanding voting securities” as such term is defined by the 1940 Act.  Under the 1940 Act, the vote of a “majority of its outstanding voting securities” means the vote of the lesser of (i) 67% or more of the voting securities present at a meeting at which holders of voting securities representing more than 50% of the outstanding voting securities are present or represented by proxy, or (ii) more than 50% of the outstanding voting securities. Except for fundamental investment restriction (1), these investment restrictions are adhered to at the time of purchase or utilization of assets; a subsequent change in circumstances will not be considered to result in a violation of policy.
    The Fund may not:
    (1) borrow money except to the extent not prohibited by the 1940 Act and exemptive orders granted under such Act.
    (2) underwrite securities issued by other persons, except that all or any portion of the assets of the Fund may be invested in one or more investment companies, to the extent not prohibited by the 1940 Act and exemptive orders granted under such Act, and except insofar as the Fund may technically be deemed an underwriter under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, in selling a portfolio security.
    (3) issue any senior securities except to the extent not prohibited by the 1940 Act and exemptive orders granted under such Act. For purposes of this restriction, collateral
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    Investment Objective, Principal Investment Strategies and Principal Risks - continued
    arrangements with respect to any type of swap, option, Forward Contracts and Futures Contracts and collateral arrangements with respect to initial and variation margin are not deemed to be the issuance of a senior security.
    (4) make loans except to the extent not prohibited by the 1940 Act and exemptive orders granted under such Act.
    (5) purchase or sell real estate (excluding securities secured by real estate or interests therein and securities of companies, such as real estate investment trusts, which deal in real estate or interests therein), interests in oil, gas or mineral leases, commodities or commodity contracts (excluding currencies and any type of option, Futures Contracts and Forward Contracts or other derivative instruments whose value is related to commodities or other commodity contracts) in the ordinary course of its business. The Fund reserves the freedom of action to hold and to sell real estate, mineral leases, commodities or commodity contracts (including currencies and any type of option, Futures Contracts and Forward Contracts) acquired as a result of the ownership of securities.
    (6) purchase any securities of an issuer in a particular industry if as a result 25% or more of its total assets (taken at market value at the time of purchase) would be invested in securities of issuers whose principal business activities are in the same industry.
    For purposes of fundamental investment restriction (6), investments in securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities and tax-exempt obligations issued or guaranteed by a U.S. territory or possession, a state or local government, or a political subdivision of any of the foregoing, are not considered an investment in any particular industry.
    For purposes of fundamental investment restriction (6), investments in other investment companies are not considered an investment in any particular industry and portfolio securities held by an underlying fund in which the Fund may invest are not considered to be securities purchased by the Fund.
    For purposes of fundamental investment restriction (6), MFS uses a customized set of industry groups for classifying securities based on classifications developed by third party providers.
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    Effects of Leverage
    The following table is furnished in response to requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”). It is designed to, among other things, illustrate the effects of leverage through the use of senior securities, as that term is defined under Section 18 of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”), on common share total return, assuming investment portfolio total returns (consisting of income and changes in the value of investments held in a fund’s portfolio) of –10%, –5%, 0%, 5% and 10%. The table below assumes the fund’s continued use of leverage through Preferred Shares issued and outstanding (currently RVMTP shares) and Self-Deposited Inverse Floaters (together, “leverage”), as applicable, as of November 30, 2024, as a percentage of total assets (including assets attributable to such leverage), the estimated annual effective Preferred Share dividend rate (based on market conditions and other factors as of November 30, 2024), and the annual return that the fund’s portfolio would need to experience (net of expenses) in order to cover such costs. The information below does not reflect the fund’s possible use of certain other forms of economic leverage through the use of other instruments or transactions not considered to be senior securities under the 1940 Act, if any.
    The assumed investment portfolio returns in the table below are hypothetical figures and are not necessarily indicative of the investment portfolio returns experienced or expected to be experienced by the fund. Your actual returns may be greater or less than those appearing below. In addition, the actual dividend rate payable on the Preferred Shares may vary frequently and may be significantly higher or lower than the rate used for the example below.
    RVMTP Shares as a Percentage of Total Assets (Including Assets Attributable to Leverage) 31.65%
    Estimated Annual Effective RVMTP Shares Dividend Rate 4.06%
    Self-Deposited Inverse Floaters as a Percentage of Total Assets (Including Assets Attributable to Leverage) 5.76%
    Estimated Annual Effective Interest Expense Rate Payable by Fund on Self-Deposited Inverse Floaters 2.98%
    Annual Return Fund Portfolio Must Experience (net of expenses) to Cover Estimated Annual Effective RVMTP Shares Dividend Rate and Interest Expense on Self-Deposited Inverse Floaters 1.46%
    Assumed Return on Portfolio (Net of Expenses) -10.00% -5.00% 0.00% 5.00% 10.00%
    Corresponding Return to Common Shareholder -18.30% -10.32% -2.33% 5.66% 13.65%
    The table reflects hypothetical performance of the fund’s portfolio and not the actual performance of the fund’s common shares, the value of which is determined by market forces and other factors.
    Should the fund elect to add additional leverage to its portfolio, any benefits of such additional leverage cannot be fully achieved until the proceeds resulting from the use of such leverage have been received by the fund and invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objectives and policies. The fund’s willingness to use additional leverage, and the extent to which leverage is used at any time, will depend on many factors.
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    Portfolio Managers' Profiles
    Portfolio Manager Primary Role Since Title and Five Year History
    Michael Dawson Portfolio Manager 2007 Investment Officer of MFS; employed in the investment management area of MFS since 1998.
    Jason Kosty Portfolio Manager 2022 Investment Officer of MFS; employed in the investment management area of MFS since 2014.
    Geoffrey Schechter Portfolio Manager 2007 Investment Officer of MFS; employed in the investment management area of MFS since 1993.
    The following information in this annual report is a summary of certain changes since November 30, 2023. This information may not reflect all of the changes that have occurred since you purchased this fund.
    Geoffrey Schechter has announced his intention to retire effective September 30, 2025, and he will no longer be a portfolio manager of the fund as of that date. 
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    Dividend Reinvestment And Cash Purchase Plan
    The fund offers a Dividend Reinvestment and Cash Purchase Plan (the “Plan”) that allows common shareholders to reinvest either all of the distributions paid by the fund or only the long-term capital gains. Generally, purchases are made at the market price unless that price exceeds the net asset value (the shares are trading at a premium). If the shares are trading at a premium, the fund will issue shares at a price of either the net asset value or 95% of the market price, whichever is greater. You can also buy shares on a quarterly basis in any amount $100 and over. Computershare Trust Company, N.A. (the Transfer Agent for the fund) (the “Plan Agent”) will purchase shares under the Plan on the 15th of January, April, July, and October or shortly thereafter. You may obtain a copy of the Plan by contacting the Plan Agent at 1-800-637-2304 any business day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern time or by visiting the Plan Agent's Web site at www.computershare.com/investor.
    If shares are registered in your own name, new shareholders will automatically participate in the Plan, unless you have indicated that you do not wish to participate. If your shares are in the name of a brokerage firm, bank, or other nominee, you can ask the firm or nominee to participate in the Plan on your behalf. If the nominee does not offer the Plan, you may wish to request that your shares be re-registered in your own name so that you can participate. There is no service charge to reinvest distributions, nor are there brokerage charges for shares issued directly by the fund. However, when shares are bought on the New York Stock Exchange or otherwise on the open market, each participant pays a pro rata share of the transaction expenses, including commissions. The tax status of dividends and capital gain distributions does not change whether received in cash or reinvested in additional shares – the automatic reinvestment of distributions does not relieve you of any income tax that may be payable (or required to be withheld) on the distributions.
    If your shares are held directly with the Plan Agent, you may withdraw from the Plan at any time by contacting the Plan Agent. Please have available the name of the fund and your account number. For certain types of registrations, such as corporate accounts, instructions must be submitted in writing. Please call for additional details. When you withdraw from the Plan, you can receive the value of the reinvested shares in one of three ways: your full shares will be held in your account, the Plan Agent will sell your shares and send the proceeds to you, or you may transfer your full shares to your investment professional who can hold or sell them. Additionally, the Plan Agent will sell your fractional shares and send the proceeds to you.
    If you have any questions, contact the Plan Agent by calling 1-800-637-2304, visit the Plan Agent’s Web site at www.computershare.com/investor, or by writing to the Plan Agent at P.O. Box 43078, Providence, RI 02940-3078.
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    Portfolio of Investments
    11/30/24
    The Portfolio of Investments is a complete list of all securities owned by your fund. It is categorized by jurisdiction.
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – 156.0%
    Alabama – 2.6%
    Birmingham, AL, Special Care Facilities Financing Authority Rev. (Methodist Home for the Aging), 5.25%, 6/01/2025   $ 15,000 $14,962
    Black Belt Energy Gas District, AL, Gas Project Rev., “C-1”, 5.25%, 2/01/2053 (Put Date 6/01/2029)     750,000 795,910
    Black Belt Energy Gas District, AL, Gas Project Rev., “F”, 5.5%, 11/01/2053 (Put Date 12/01/2028)     170,000 180,860
    Jacksonville, AL, Public Educational Building Authority Higher Education Facilities Rev. (Jacksonville State University Foundation), “A”, AGM, 5.5%, 8/01/2058     115,000 124,325
    Jefferson County, AL, Sewer Rev. Warrants, 5.5%, 10/01/2053     395,000 435,657
    Southeast Alabama Energy Authority Commodity Supply Rev. (Project No. 3), “A-1”, 5.5%, 1/01/2053 (Put Date 12/01/2029)     325,000 350,954
            $1,902,668
    Alaska – 0.5%
    Alaska Housing Finance Corp., General Mortgage Rev. II, “C”, 5.75%, 12/01/2052   $ 325,000 $345,224
    Arizona – 4.3%
    Arizona Industrial Development Authority Education Rev. (Academies of Math & Science Projects), 5%, 7/01/2038   $ 300,000 $308,630
    Arizona Industrial Development Authority Education Rev. (Benjamin Franklin Charter School Projects), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2043     110,000 110,780
    Arizona Industrial Development Authority Education Rev. (KIPP Nashville Projects), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2057     35,000 35,497
    Maricopa County, AZ, Higley Unified School District No. 60, Certificates of Participation, AGM, 4.25%, 6/01/2047     95,000 95,670
    Maricopa County, AZ, Higley Unified School District No. 60, Certificates of Participation, AGM, 5%, 6/01/2053     640,000 679,055
    Phoenix, AZ, Industrial Development Authority, Education Facility Rev. (Great Hearts Academies Project), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2036     60,000 60,269
    Phoenix, AZ, Industrial Development Authority, Education Facility Rev. (Great Hearts Academies Project), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2046     80,000 80,150
    Phoenix, AZ, Industrial Development Authority, Education Facility Rev. (Legacy Traditional Schools Project), 5%, 7/01/2035 (n)     70,000 70,350
    Phoenix, AZ, Industrial Development Authority, Education Facility Rev. (Legacy Traditional Schools Project), 5%, 7/01/2045 (n)     80,000 80,156
    Phoenix, AZ, Industrial Development Authority, Hotel Rev. (Provident Group - Falcon Properties LLC, Project), “A”, 4%, 12/01/2051 (n)     300,000 225,404
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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Arizona – continued
    Phoenix, AZ, Industrial Development Authority, Hotel Rev. (Provident Group - Falcon Properties LLC, Project), “B”, 5.75%, 12/15/2057 (n)   $ 100,000 $79,104
    Pima County, AZ, Industrial Development Authority Education Facility Rev. (American Leadership Academy Project), 4%, 6/15/2051 (n)     120,000 101,683
    Pima County, AZ, Industrial Development Authority Senior Living Rev. (La Posada at Pusch Ridge Project), “A”, 7%, 11/15/2057 (n)     140,000 153,073
    Pima County, AZ, Industrial Development Authority Senior Living Rev. (La Posada at Pusch Ridge Project), “B3”, 5.125%, 11/15/2029 (n)     70,000 70,514
    Salt Verde Financial Corp., AZ, Senior Gas Rev., 5%, 12/01/2032     795,000 864,858
    Sierra Vista, AZ, Industrial Development Authority, Education Facility Rev. (American Leadership Academy Project), 5.75%, 6/15/2058     150,000 156,554
            $3,171,747
    Arkansas – 0.8%
    Pulaski County, AR, Hospital Rev. (Arkansas Children's Hospital), 5.25%, 3/01/2053   $ 435,000 $473,337
    Pulaski County, AR, Public Facilities Board, Healthcare Rev. (Baptist Health), 5%, 12/01/2042     120,000 120,031
            $593,368
    California – 8.1%
    Burbank, Glendale & Pasadena, CA, Airport Authority Rev., “B”, 4.25%, 7/01/2043 (u)   $ 455,000 $461,056
    Burbank, Glendale & Pasadena, CA, Airport Authority Rev., “B”, 4.5%, 7/01/2054 (u)     850,000 859,223
    California Community Choice Financing Authority, Clean Energy Project Rev., “C”, 5.25%, 1/01/2054 (Put Date 10/01/2031)     735,000 791,184
    California Community Choice Financing Authority, Clean Energy Project Rev., “C”, 5%, 8/01/2055 (Put Date 10/01/2032)     160,000 173,322
    California Housing Finance Agency Municipal Certificates, “A”, 4.375%, 9/20/2036     478,739 499,847
    California Housing Finance Agency Municipal Certificates, “X”, 0.798%, 11/20/2035 (i)     1,744,115 79,879
    California Municipal Finance Authority, COP (Palomar Health), “A”, AGM, 5.25%, 11/01/2052     95,000 101,586
    California Municipal Special Finance Agency, Essential Housing Rev. (Solana at Grand), “A-1”, 4%, 8/01/2056 (n)     100,000 89,996
    California Public Finance Authority, Senior Living Rev. (Enso Village Project), “B-1”, 3.125%, 5/15/2029 (n)     55,000 54,156
    California Public Finance Authority, Senior Living Rev. (Enso Village Project), “B-2”, 2.375%, 11/15/2028 (n)     15,000 14,791
    California School Finance Authority, Charter School Rev. (Aspire Public Schools - Obligated Group - Issue No. 6), “A”, 5%, 8/01/2052 (n)     235,000 238,557
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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    California – continued
    California School Finance Authority, School Facility Rev. (Alliance for College-Ready Public Schools Projects), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2045 (n)   $ 100,000 $100,412
    California Statewide Communities Development Authority Rev. (Enloe Medical Center), “A”, AGM, 5.375%, 8/15/2057     130,000 141,271
    California Statewide Communities Development Authority Rev. (Loma Linda University Medical Center), “A”, 5%, 12/01/2041 (n)     365,000 369,779
    California Statewide Communities Development Authority Rev. (Loma Linda University Medical Center), “A”, 5.25%, 12/01/2044     245,000 245,003
    California Statewide Communities Development Authority Rev. (Loma Linda University Medical Center), “A”, 5%, 12/01/2046 (n)     120,000 121,274
    California Statewide Communities Development Authority Rev. (Loma Linda University Medical Center), “A”, 5.25%, 12/01/2056 (n)     250,000 252,560
    California Statewide Communities Development Authority, College Housing Rev. (NCCD-Hooper Street LLC College of the Arts Project), 5.25%, 7/01/2049 (n)     100,000 101,588
    Indio, CA, Public Financing Authority Lease Rev., “A”, BAM, 4.5%, 11/01/2052     125,000 129,724
    Mount San Antonio, CA, Community College District Rev. (Election of 2008), “A”, 5.875%, 8/01/2028     140,000 153,874
    River Islands, CA, Public Finance Authority Improvement Area No. 1, Special Tax Community Facilities District No. 2003-1, “A-1”, AGM, 5.25%, 9/01/2052     205,000 222,506
    San Francisco, CA, City & County Redevelopment Successor Agency, Tax Allocation (Mission Bay South Redevelopment Project), “A”, 5%, 8/01/2043     25,000 25,018
    State of California, Veterans General Obligation, “CU”, 4.85%, 12/01/2046     255,000 269,936
    University of California, Hastings Campus Housing Finance Authority, Campus Housing Rev., “A”, 5%, 7/01/2061 (n)     325,000 306,260
    University of California, Hastings Campus Housing Finance Authority, Campus Housing Rev., Convertible Capital Appreciation, “B”, 0% to 7/01/2035, 6.75% to 7/01/2061 (n)     330,000 161,263
            $5,964,065
    Colorado – 4.5%
    Aurora, CO, Science & Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 1, Special Rev., “A”, AGM, 5%, 12/01/2054   $ 80,000 $85,662
    Aurora, CO, Science & Technology Park Metropolitan District No. 1, Special Rev., “B”, AGM, 4.75%, 12/15/2054     185,000 191,680
    Broomfield, CO, Midcities Metropolitan District No. 2 Special Rev., AGM, 4%, 12/01/2046     353,000 345,624
    Colorado Educational & Cultural Facilities Authority Rev. (Classical Academy Project), “A”, 5%, 12/01/2038     75,000 75,036
    22

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Colorado – continued
    Colorado Educational & Cultural Facilities Authority Rev. (Twin Peaks Charter Academy Project), 5%, 11/15/2031   $ 145,000 $145,140
    Colorado Health Facilities Authority Rev. (CommonSpirit Health), “A”, 5.25%, 11/01/2052     365,000 396,238
    Colorado Health Facilities Authority Rev. (CommonSpirit Health), “A-2”, 4%, 8/01/2049     80,000 74,709
    Denver, CO, City & County Airport System Rev., “A”, 4.125%, 11/15/2047     80,000 79,666
    Denver, CO, City & County Airport System Rev., “A”, 4.125%, 11/15/2053     80,000 78,235
    Denver, CO, Convention Center Hotel Authority Rev., 5%, 12/01/2040     120,000 121,441
    Denver, CO, Health & Hospital Authority Rev., “A”, 4%, 12/01/2040     425,000 410,257
    Denver, CO, Health & Hospital Authority Rev., “A”, 5.25%, 12/01/2045     95,000 95,050
    Denver, CO, Multi-Family Housing Authority Rev. (FLO Senior Apartment Project), “A”, 4.5%, 7/01/2041     290,000 296,498
    Loveland, CO, Lakes at Centerra Metropolitan District No. 2, General Obligation., “A”, AGM, 5%, 12/01/2049     500,000 535,918
    Park Creek Metropolitan District, CO, Senior Limited Property Tax Supported Rev., “A”, NPFG, 5%, 12/01/2045     405,000 408,178
            $3,339,332
    Connecticut – 2.5%
    Connecticut Health & Educational Facilities Authority Rev. (Masonicare), “F”, 5%, 7/01/2037   $ 675,000 $678,775
    Great Pond, CT, Improvement District Special Obligation Rev. (Great Pond Phase II Project), 5%, 10/01/2035 (n)     890,000 924,462
    Mohegan Tribal Finance Authority, CT, Economic Development Bonds, 7%, 2/01/2045 (n)     265,000 267,147
            $1,870,384
    District of Columbia – 2.4%
    Metropolitan Washington, D.C., Airport Authority System Refunding Rev., “A”, 4.5%, 10/01/2053   $ 290,000 $294,613
    Metropolitan Washington, D.C., Airport Authority System Refunding Rev., “A”, 5.5%, 10/01/2054 (u)     1,355,000 1,490,066
            $1,784,679
    23

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Florida – 10.3%
    Bellalago, FL, Educational Facilities Benefit District Capital Improvement Refunding Rev., 4.375%, 5/01/2030   $ 80,000 $80,044
    Bellalago, FL, Educational Facilities Benefit District Capital Improvement Refunding Rev., 4.5%, 5/01/2033     35,000 35,013
    Collier County, FL, Industrial Development Authority, Healthcare Facilities Rev. (NCH Healthcare System Projects), “A”, AGM, 5%, 10/01/2054     90,000 96,670
    Florida Development Finance Corp. Educational Facilities Rev. (Drs. Kiran & Pallavi Patel 2017 Foundation for Global Understanding, Inc. Project), “A”, 4%, 7/01/2051 (n)     100,000 87,912
    Florida Development Finance Corp. Educational Facilities Rev. (Mater Academy Projects), “A”, 5%, 6/15/2056     60,000 60,173
    Florida Development Finance Corp. Educational Facilities Rev. (River City Science Academy Projects), “A”, 4%, 7/01/2055     25,000 21,605
    Florida Development Finance Corp. Rev. (Brightline Florida Passenger Rail Project), AGM, 5.25%, 7/01/2053 (u)     1,355,000 1,424,213
    Florida Development Finance Corp. Senior Living Rev. (Glenridge on Palmer Ranch Project), 5%, 6/01/2051 (n)     200,000 196,142
    Florida Development Finance Corp. Senior Living Rev. (Mayflower Retirement Community Project), “A”, 4%, 6/01/2055 (n)     165,000 126,921
    Florida Development Finance Corp., Solid Waste Disposal Rev. (GFL Solid Waste Southeast LLC Project), “A”, 4.375%, 10/01/2054 (Put Date 10/01/2031)     250,000 252,709
    Florida Higher Educational Facilities Financing Authority Rev. (Jacksonville University Project), “A”, 5%, 6/01/2048 (n)     100,000 93,750
    Hillsborough County FL, Industrial Development Authority, Hospital Rev. (Tampa General Hospital Project), “A”, 4%, 8/01/2050     1,000,000 967,263
    Lee County, FL, Airport Rev., AGM, 5.25%, 10/01/2054     35,000 37,904
    Lee County, FL, Airport Rev., AGM, 5.25%, 10/01/2054     85,000 91,839
    Lee County, FL, Industrial Development Authority Healthcare Facilities Rev. (Shell Point Alliance), 5%, 11/15/2044     100,000 103,118
    Lee County, FL, Industrial Development Authority Healthcare Facilities Rev. (Shell Point Alliance), 5%, 11/15/2049     160,000 163,769
    Lee County, FL, Industrial Development Authority Healthcare Facilities Rev. (Shell Point Obligated Group Project), “C”, 5%, 11/15/2054     165,000 170,566
    Miami Beach, FL, Health Facilities Authority Hospital Rev. (Mount Sinai Medical Center of Florida), “B”, 4%, 11/15/2051     440,000 418,231
    Miami-Dade County, FL, Seaport Refunding Rev., “A”, 5.25%, 10/01/2052     45,000 48,107
    Orange County, FL, Health Facilities Authority Hospital Rev. (Orlando Health Obligated Group), “A”, 5%, 10/01/2053     240,000 255,333
    24

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Florida – continued
    Orange County, FL, Health Facilities Authority Rev. (Presbyterian Retirement Communities Obligated Group Project), “A”, 4%, 8/01/2047   $ 580,000 $534,842
    Osceola County, FL, Transportation Improvement and Refunding Rev. (Osceola Parkway), Capital Appreciation, “A-2”, 0%, 10/01/2037     105,000 61,018
    Osceola County, FL, Transportation Improvement and Refunding Rev. (Osceola Parkway), Capital Appreciation, “A-2”, 0%, 10/01/2042     175,000 77,779
    Palm Beach County, FL, Educational Facilities Authority Rev. (Palm Beach Atlantic University, Inc.), 5.25%, 10/01/2053     120,000 123,967
    Palm Beach County, FL, Health Facilities Authority Hospital Rev. (Jupiter Medical Center Project), “A”, 5%, 11/01/2052     55,000 56,885
    Palm Beach County, FL, Health Facilities Authority Rev. (Toby & Leon Cooperman Sinai Residences of Boca Raton), 4.25%, 6/01/2056     130,000 113,061
    Pasco County, FL, Capital Improvement Cigarette Tax Allocation, “A”, AGM, 5.75%, 9/01/2054     390,000 438,258
    Pasco County, FL, Del Webb Bexley Community Development District, Special Assessment Rev., 5.4%, 5/01/2049     100,000 101,990
    Pompano Beach, FL, Refunding Rev. (John Knox Village Project), “A”, 4%, 9/01/2051     40,000 34,966
    Pompano Beach, FL, Refunding Rev. (John Knox Village Project), “A”, 4%, 9/01/2056     170,000 144,657
    South Miami, FL, Health Facilities Authority Hospital Refunding Rev. (Baptist Health South Florida Obligated Group), 4%, 8/15/2047     355,000 347,206
    St. John's County, FL, Industrial Development Authority, Senior Living Rev. (Vicars Landing Project), “A”, 4%, 12/15/2050     40,000 32,010
    Sumter County, FL, Industrial Development Authority Hospital Rev. (Central Florida Health Alliance Projects), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2029     20,000 20,023
    Sumter County, FL, Industrial Development Authority Hospital Rev. (Central Florida Health Alliance Projects), “A”, 5.125%, 7/01/2034     40,000 40,042
    Sumter County, FL, Industrial Development Authority Hospital Rev. (Central Florida Health Alliance Projects), “A”, 5.25%, 7/01/2044     120,000 120,087
    Tallahassee, FL, Health Facilities Rev. (Tallahassee Memorial Healthcare, Inc.), “A”, 5%, 12/01/2055     25,000 24,896
    Tampa, FL (University of Tampa Project), 5%, 4/01/2040     85,000 85,269
    Tampa, FL, Sports Authority Rev. (Tampa Bay Arena), NPFG, 5.75%, 10/01/2025     225,000 228,570
    Venice, FL, Retirement Community Improvement Rev. (Village on the Isle Project), “A”, 5.625%, 1/01/2060 (w)     100,000 103,339
    Westridge, FL, Community Development District, Capital Improvement Rev., 5.8%, 5/01/2037     50,000 50,037
    Wildwood, FL, Special Assessment Rev. (Village Community Development District No. 15), 5.25%, 5/01/2054     100,000 103,850
            $7,574,034
    25

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Georgia – 3.6%
    Atlanta, GA, Development Authority Senior Rev. (Westside Gulch Area Project), “A-2”, 5.5%, 4/01/2039 (n)   $ 110,000 $114,237
    Atlanta, GA, Development Authority, Convertible Capital Appreciation Economic Development (Gulch Enterprise Zone Project), “A-1”, 0% to 6/15/2028, 6.5% to 12/15/2048     117,000 100,791
    Atlanta, GA, Geo. L. Smith II World Congress Center Authority Convention Center Hotel Rev., “B”, 5%, 1/01/2054 (n)     100,000 98,178
    Georgia Main Street Natural Gas, Inc., Gas Project Rev., “A”, 5.5%, 9/15/2026     120,000 123,934
    Georgia Main Street Natural Gas, Inc., Gas Project Rev., “A”, 5.5%, 9/15/2028     250,000 266,713
    Georgia Main Street Natural Gas, Inc., Gas Project Rev., “A”, 5%, 5/15/2043     75,000 77,868
    Georgia Main Street Natural Gas, Inc., Gas Supply Rev., “C”, 5%, 9/01/2053 (Put Date 9/01/2030)     390,000 417,910
    Georgia Municipal Electric Authority (Plant Vogtle Units 3 & 4 Project J), “A”, AGM, 5%, 7/01/2064     245,000 258,822
    Georgia Municipal Electric Authority (Plant Vogtle Units 3 & 4 Project P), “A”, 5.5%, 7/01/2064     130,000 141,290
    Georgia Ports Authority Rev., 4%, 7/01/2052     145,000 145,763
    Georgia Private Colleges & Universities Authority Rev. (Mercer University Project), 5.25%, 10/01/2051     560,000 603,579
    Hall County and Gainesville, GA, Hospital Authority Rev. (Northeast Georgia Health System, Inc. Project), “A”, 5.5%, 8/15/2054 (Prerefunded 2/15/2025)     320,000 321,564
            $2,670,649
    Guam – 0.0%
    Guam International Airport Authority Rev., Taxable (A.B. Won Pat Airport), “A”, 4.46%, 10/01/2043   $ 35,000 $29,935
    Illinois – 11.3%
    Bolingbrook, IL, Sales Tax Rev., 6.25%, 1/01/2024   $ 34,686 $34,686
    Bridgeview, IL, Stadium and Redevelopment Projects, Taxable, AAC, 5.14%, 12/01/2036     360,000 329,883
    Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Dedicated Capital Improvement Tax Bond, 5%, 4/01/2045     85,000 88,956
    Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Dedicated Capital Improvement Tax Bond, 5%, 4/01/2046     100,000 100,564
    Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Dedicated Capital Improvement Tax Bond, 6%, 4/01/2046     555,000 574,948
    Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Dedicated Capital Improvement Tax Bond, 5.75%, 4/01/2048     175,000 191,798
    26

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Illinois – continued
    Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Unlimited Tax General Obligation Dedicated Rev., “A”, 7%, 12/01/2044   $ 190,000 $193,997
    Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Unlimited Tax General Obligation Refunding Dedicated Rev., “A”, 5%, 12/01/2042     100,000 99,486
    Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Unlimited Tax General Obligation Refunding Dedicated Rev., “B”, 4%, 12/01/2039     100,000 92,124
    Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Unlimited Tax General Obligation Refunding Dedicated Rev., “B”, 4%, 12/01/2041     230,000 206,738
    Chicago, IL, Board of Education, Unlimited Tax General Obligation Refunding Dedicated Rev., “H”, 5%, 12/01/2046     180,000 180,010
    Chicago, IL, General Obligation (Chicago Works), “A”, 5.5%, 1/01/2043     750,000 784,402
    Chicago, IL, General Obligation, “A”, 5%, 1/01/2039     70,000 71,849
    Chicago, IL, General Obligation, “A”, 5%, 1/01/2044     210,000 213,388
    Chicago, IL, General Obligation, “A”, 5.5%, 1/01/2049     275,000 283,206
    Chicago, IL, General Obligation, “D”, 5.5%, 1/01/2033     70,000 70,035
    Chicago, IL, Metropolitan Pier & Exposition Authority Rev. (McCormick Place Expansion Project), Capital Appreciation, “A”, AGM, 0%, 12/15/2056     220,000 54,392
    Chicago, IL, O'Hare International Airport Rev., Senior Lien, “A”, 5%, 1/01/2048     140,000 143,277
    Chicago, IL, O'Hare International Airport Rev., Senior Lien, “A”, 5%, 1/01/2053     75,000 76,751
    Chicago, IL, O'Hare International Airport Rev., Senior Lien, “A”, 5.5%, 1/01/2055     560,000 602,045
    Cook County, IL, Community College District No. 508 (City Colleges), BAM, 5%, 12/01/2047     455,000 464,980
    Illinois Finance Authority Rev. (Lake Forest College), “A”, 5.25%, 10/01/2052     280,000 286,748
    Illinois Finance Authority Rev. (Plymouth Place, Inc.), “A”, 6.75%, 5/15/2058     250,000 270,544
    Illinois Finance Authority, Health Services Facility Lease Rev. (Provident Group - UIC Surgery Center LLC - University of Illinois Health Services Facility Project), 4%, 10/01/2050     230,000 213,207
    Illinois Housing Development Authority Rev., “A”, GNMA, 4.9%, 4/01/2047     485,000 505,510
    Lincolnshire, IL, Special Service Area No. 1 (Sedgebrook Project), 6.25%, 3/01/2034     116,000 116,105
    Romeoville, IL, Rev. (Lewis University Project), “A”, 5%, 10/01/2042     130,000 129,997
    Romeoville, IL, Rev. (Lewis University Project), “B”, 5%, 10/01/2039     60,000 60,014
    St. Clair County, IL, Cahokia Community Unit School District No. 187, General Obligation, “B”, AGM, 5%, 1/01/2044     175,000 188,196
    State of Illinois, General Obligation, 5.5%, 5/01/2039     495,000 539,689
    27

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Illinois – continued
    State of Illinois, General Obligation, 5.75%, 5/01/2045   $ 475,000 $520,799
    State of Illinois, General Obligation, “A”, 5.5%, 3/01/2047     560,000 609,059
            $8,297,383
    Indiana – 3.1%
    Fishers, IN, Town Hall Building Corp., Lease Rental Rev., “A”, BAM, 5.75%, 1/15/2063   $ 350,000 $405,978
    Indiana Finance Authority Rev. (Marquette Project), “A”, 5%, 3/01/2039     100,000 100,028
    Indiana Finance Authority, Educational Facilities Rev. (Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Project), 5.75%, 6/01/2053     145,000 160,458
    Indiana Finance Authority, Environmental Refunding Rev. (Duke Energy Indian, Inc. Project), “A-2”, 4.5%, 5/01/2035 (Put Date 6/01/2032)     425,000 428,857
    Indiana Finance Authority, Health Facilities Rev. (Baptist Healthcare System Obligated Group), 5%, 8/15/2051     295,000 301,276
    Indiana Finance Authority, Hospital Rev. (Reid Health), AGM, 5%, 1/01/2052     495,000 518,900
    Indiana Finance Authority, Student Housing Rev. (CHF - Tippecanoe LLC - Student Housing Project), “A”, 5.375%, 6/01/2064     120,000 125,704
    Indianapolis, IN, Local Public Improvement Bond Bank Senior Rev. (Convention Center Hotel), “E”, BAM, 5.25%, 3/01/2067     180,000 194,613
    Indianapolis, IN, Local Public Improvement Bond Bank Subordinate Rev. (Convention Center Hotel), “E”, 6.125%, 3/01/2057     35,000 38,147
            $2,273,961
    Iowa – 0.2%
    Iowa Student Loan Liquidity Corp. Rev., “C”, 3.5%, 12/01/2044   $ 170,000 $142,575
    Kansas – 1.1%
    Coffeyville, KS, Electric Utility System Rev., “B”, NPFG, 5%, 6/01/2038 (Prerefunded 6/01/2025) (n)   $ 300,000 $301,422
    Coffeyville, KS, Electric Utility System Rev., “B”, NPFG, 5%, 6/01/2042 (Prerefunded 6/01/2025) (n)     100,000 100,474
    Hutchinson, KS, Hospital Facilities Rev. (Hutchinson Regional Medical Center, Inc.), 5%, 12/01/2036     45,000 44,182
    Hutchinson, KS, Hospital Facilities Rev. (Hutchinson Regional Medical Center, Inc.), 5%, 12/01/2041     45,000 39,927
    Wichita, KS, Health Care Facilities Rev. (Presbyterian Manors, Inc.), “I”, 5%, 5/15/2038     100,000 100,291
    Wyandotte County/Kansas City, KS, Unified Government Community Improvement District Sales Tax Rev. (Legends Apartments Garage & West Lawn Project), 4.5%, 6/01/2040     20,000 20,026
    28

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Kansas – continued
    Wyandotte County/Kansas City, KS, Unified Government Utility System Improvement Rev., “A”, 5%, 9/01/2044   $ 195,000 $195,076
            $801,398
    Kentucky – 0.7%
    Kentucky Economic Development Finance Authority Hospital Rev. (Baptist Healthcare System), “B”, 5%, 8/15/2041   $ 230,000 $236,895
    Kentucky Higher Education Student Loan Corp. Rev., “B-1”, 5%, 6/01/2036     250,000 260,345
            $497,240
    Louisiana – 1.8%
    Louisiana Local Government, Environmental Facilities & Community Development Authority, Healthcare Refunding Rev. (St. James Place of Baton Rouge Project), “A”, 6.25%, 11/15/2045   $ 240,000 $240,529
    Louisiana Public Facilities Authority Rev. (Loyola University Project), 5.25%, 10/01/2046     450,000 479,654
    Louisiana Public Facilities Authority Rev. (Provident Group - HSC Properties, Inc., LSU Health Foundation, New Orleans Project), “A-1”, 5.1%, 1/01/2057 (n)     445,000 375,002
    Louisiana Public Facilities Authority Senior Lien Rev. (I-10 Calcasieu River Bridge Public-Private Partnership Project), 5.75%, 9/01/2064     170,000 186,887
            $1,282,072
    Maine – 1.0%
    Maine Finance Authority, Student Loan Rev. (Supplemental Education Loan Program), “A”, AGM, 5%, 12/01/2045   $ 365,000 $375,368
    Maine Health & Higher Educational Facilities Authority Rev., “A”, AGM, 4.375%, 7/01/2053     375,000 377,909
            $753,277
    Maryland – 0.9%
    Maryland Economic Development Corp., Subordinate Parking Facilities Rev. (Baltimore City Project), “C”, 4%, 6/01/2058   $ 70,000 $56,129
    Maryland Health & Higher Educational Facilities Authority Rev. (Doctors Community Hospital), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2033     100,000 102,550
    Maryland Health & Higher Educational Facilities Authority Rev. (Doctors Community Hospital), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2038     280,000 285,467
    Maryland Stadium Authority Rev., Baltimore City Public Schools Construction & Revitalization Program, Capital Appreciation, “C”, 0%, 5/01/2053     630,000 173,602
    Rockville, MD, Mayor & Council Economic Development Rev. (Ingleside at King Farm Project), “B”, 5%, 11/01/2047     15,000 14,534
            $632,282
    29

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Massachusetts – 2.8%
    Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, Sales Tax Rev., “A-1”, 5.25%, 7/01/2029   $ 350,000 $391,445
    Massachusetts Development Finance Agency Rev. (Boston Medical Center), “G”, 4.375%, 7/01/2052     80,000 79,621
    Massachusetts Development Finance Agency Rev. (Milford Regional Medical Center), “F”, 5.75%, 7/15/2043     40,000 40,045
    Massachusetts Development Finance Agency Rev. (Newbridge on the Charles, Inc.), 5%, 10/01/2057 (n)     100,000 99,929
    Massachusetts Development Finance Agency Rev. (UMass Memorial Health Care Obligated Group), “K”, 5%, 7/01/2038     80,000 81,672
    Massachusetts Educational Financing Authority, Education Loan Subordinate Rev., “C”, 3%, 7/01/2051     80,000 57,887
    Massachusetts Educational Financing Authority, Education Loan Subordinate Rev., “C”, 4.125%, 7/01/2052     250,000 222,661
    Massachusetts Educational Financing Authority, Education Loan Subordinate Rev., “D”, 5%, 7/01/2054     130,000 131,232
    Massachusetts Port Authority Refunding Rev., “B”, 5%, 7/01/2038     750,000 806,004
    Tisbury, MA, General Obligation, Municipal Purpose Loan, Unlimited Tax, 3%, 8/15/2047     145,000 123,238
            $2,033,734
    Michigan – 4.9%
    Board of Regents of Eastern Michigan University, General Rev., “A”, 4%, 3/01/2047   $ 240,000 $232,149
    Michigan Building Authority Rev. (Facilities Program), 4%, 10/15/2052     40,000 39,222
    Michigan Finance Authority ACT 38 Facilities Senior Rev. (Henry Ford Health Detroit Utility Plant Project), 4.375%, 2/28/2054     30,000 29,910
    Michigan Finance Authority ACT 38 Facilities Senior Rev. (Henry Ford Health Detroit Utility Plant Project), 5.5%, 2/28/2057     25,000 27,604
    Michigan Finance Authority Hospital Rev. (Henry Ford Health System), 3.25%, 11/15/2042     570,000 471,290
    Michigan State Housing Development Authority, Rental Housing Rev., “A”, 4.75%, 10/01/2059     455,000 466,527
    Michigan Technological University Board of Trustees, General Rev., “A”, AGM, 5.25%, 10/01/2052     1,675,000 1,777,879
    Wayne County, MI, Airport Authority Rev. (Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport), “D”, AGM, 5%, 12/01/2040     570,000 576,158
            $3,620,739
    30

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Minnesota – 0.6%
    Duluth, MN, Economic Development Authority Rev. (Benedictine Health System), “A”, 4%, 7/01/2041   $ 55,000 $48,148
    Duluth, MN, Economic Development Authority, Health Care Facilities Rev. (Essentia Health), “A”, 4.25%, 2/15/2043     75,000 75,164
    Duluth, MN, Economic Development Authority, Health Care Facilities Rev. (Essentia Health), “A”, 5%, 2/15/2043     105,000 108,054
    Duluth, MN, Economic Development Authority, Health Care Facilities Rev. (Essentia Health), “A”, 4.25%, 2/15/2048     85,000 84,898
    Duluth, MN, Economic Development Authority, Health Care Facilities Rev. (Essentia Health), “A”, 5%, 2/15/2048     85,000 86,931
            $403,195
    Mississippi – 2.3%
    Mississippi Development Bank Special Obligation (Jackson Water and Sewer System Rev. Bond Project), AGM, 6.875%, 12/01/2040   $ 90,000 $91,489
    Mississippi Home Corp., Single Family Mortgage Rev., “C”, GNMA, 4.65%, 12/01/2048     1,000,000 1,027,603
    University of Mississippi Medical Center, Educational Building Corp. Rev. (Colony Park Teaching Campus), “A”, 4%, 6/01/2053     580,000 572,728
            $1,691,820
    Missouri – 2.3%
    Jackson County, MO, Special Obligations, “A”, 5.25%, 12/01/2058 (u)   $ 1,160,000 $1,257,649
    Kansas City, MO, Industrial Development Authority, Airport Rev. (Kansas City International Airport Terminal Modernization Project), “B”, 5%, 3/01/2054     435,000 444,139
            $1,701,788
    Nebraska – 0.7%
    Omaha, NE, Airport Authority Facilities Rev., AGM, 5.25%, 12/15/2049 (w)   $ 500,000 $543,249
    Nevada – 0.0%
    Reno, NV, Sales Tax Rev. (Retrac-Reno Transportation Rail Access Corridor Project), “B”, AGM, 4.125%, 6/01/2058   $ 25,000 $24,843
    New Hampshire – 1.6%
    National Finance Authority, NH, Lease Rent Rev. (Centurion Foundation West Main Street LLC), “A”, 5%, 5/15/2034   $ 370,000 $376,152
    National Finance Authority, NH, Lease Rev. (NCCD - UNR Properties LLC - University of Nevada, Reno Project), “A”, BAM, 5.25%, 6/01/2051     95,000 103,336
    National Finance Authority, NH, Municipal Certificates, “1-A”, 4.375%, 9/20/2036     283,871 286,463
    31

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    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    New Hampshire – continued
    National Finance Authority, NH, Municipal Certificates, “2-A”, 4%, 10/20/2036   $ 190,448 $186,784
    National Finance Authority, NH, Rev. (Abilene Christian University Energy Projects), “A” , 5.25%, 11/01/2054     195,000 205,332
            $1,158,067
    New Jersey – 2.9%
    Camden County, NJ, Improvement Authority, School Rev. (KIPP Cooper Norcross Academy), 6%, 6/15/2062   $ 95,000 $102,006
    New Jersey Economic Development Authority Rev. (Goethals Bridge Replacement Project), 5.5%, 1/01/2027     40,000 40,055
    New Jersey Economic Development Authority Rev. (Goethals Bridge Replacement Project), 5%, 1/01/2028     40,000 40,036
    New Jersey Economic Development Authority Rev. (Goethals Bridge Replacement Project), 5.375%, 1/01/2043     225,000 225,181
    New Jersey Economic Development Authority Rev. (Goethals Bridge Replacement Project), AGM, 5%, 1/01/2031     115,000 115,133
    New Jersey Economic Development Authority Rev. (Goethals Bridge Replacement Project), AGM, 5.125%, 7/01/2042     35,000 35,029
    New Jersey Economic Development Authority, Special Facilities Rev. (Continental Airlines, Inc.), “A”, 5.625%, 11/15/2030     155,000 155,615
    New Jersey Higher Education Student Assistance Authority, Senior Student Loan Rev., “B”, 4%, 12/01/2041     495,000 491,680
    New Jersey Higher Education Student Assistance Authority, Senior Student Loan Rev., ”B“, 3.5%, 12/01/2039     145,000 140,036
    New Jersey Higher Education Student Assistance Authority, Senior Student Loan Rev., ”C“, 3.25%, 12/01/2051     20,000 15,102
    New Jersey Housing & Mortgage Finance Agency, Multi-Family Conduit Rev. (Riverview Towers Apartments), “B”, GNMA, 5.25%, 12/20/2065     305,663 322,029
    New Jersey Transportation Trust Fund Authority, “AA”, 4.25%, 6/15/2044     260,000 266,404
    New Jersey Transportation Trust Fund Authority, “AA”, 4%, 6/15/2045     70,000 69,802
    New Jersey Transportation Trust Fund Authority, “CC”, 5.5%, 6/15/2050     70,000 83,372
            $2,101,480
    New York – 14.8%
    Build NYC Resource Corp. Rev. (Albert Einstein School of Medicine, Inc.), 5.5%, 9/01/2045 (n)   $ 395,000 $395,949
    Build NYC Resource Corp. Rev. (Grand Concourse Academy Charter School Project), “B”, 5%, 7/01/2062     75,000 75,589
    Build NYC Resource Corp. Rev. (KIPP NYC Public Schools Facilities - Canal West Project), 5.25%, 7/01/2052     1,000,000 1,049,323
    32

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    New York – continued
    Genesse County, NY, Funding Corp. Rev. (Rochester Regional Health Project), “A”, 5.25%, 12/01/2052   $ 280,000 $295,700
    Long Beach, NY, General Obligation, “B”, BAM, 4.625%, 7/15/2052     250,000 258,216
    New York City Water Finance Authority, Water and Sewer System Second General Resolution Rev., “CC-1”, 5.25%, 6/15/2054 (u)     1,355,000 1,513,237
    New York Dormitory Authority Rev., State Personal Income Tax, “A”, 4%, 3/15/2048     220,000 218,433
    New York Dormitory Authority, White Plains Hospital Obligated Group Rev., AGM, 5.5%, 10/01/2054     105,000 117,584
    New York Liberty Development Corp., Liberty Rev. (3 World Trade Center Project), “1”, 5%, 11/15/2044 (n)     800,000 800,435
    New York Transportation Development Corp., Special Facilities Rev. (American Airlines, Inc. John F. Kennedy International Airport Project), 5.375%, 8/01/2036     285,000 300,448
    New York Transportation Development Corp., Special Facilities Rev. (Delta Airlines, Inc. LaGuardia Airport Terminals C&D Redevelopment Project), 5%, 1/01/2031     320,000 331,012
    New York Transportation Development Corp., Special Facilities Rev. (Delta Airlines, Inc. LaGuardia Airport Terminals C&D Redevelopment Project), 5%, 10/01/2040     200,000 207,918
    New York Transportation Development Corp., Special Facilities Rev. (JFK Airport Terminal 6 Redevelopment Project), “A”, 5.5%, 12/31/2060     245,000 263,849
    New York Transportation Development Corp., Special Facilities Rev. (JFK Airport Terminal 6 Redevelopment Project), “A”, AGM, 5.25%, 12/31/2054     490,000 527,741
    New York Transportation Development Corp., Special Facilities Rev. (John F. Kennedy International Airport New Terminal One Project), 6%, 6/30/2054     465,000 507,356
    New York Transportation Development Corp., Special Facilities Rev. (John F. Kennedy International Airport New Terminal One Project), AGM, 5.125%, 6/30/2060 (u)     680,000 706,302
    New York Transportation Development Corp., Special Facilities Rev. (John F. Kennedy International Airport New Terminal One Project), AGM, 5.25%, 6/30/2060 (u)     695,000 738,340
    New York Transportation Development Corp., Special Facilities Rev. (Terminal 4 John F. Kennedy International Airport Project), “A”, 4%, 12/01/2038     45,000 45,025
    New York, NY, City Housing Development Corp., Multi-Family Housing Rev., “G”, 4.95%, 11/01/2058     505,000 522,571
    New York, NY, Housing Development Corp., Housing Impact (Sustainable Development Bonds), “A”, 4.8%, 2/01/2053     165,000 170,003
    33

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    New York – continued
    New York, NY, Housing Development Corp., Multi-Family Housing Rev. (8 Spruce Street), “F”, 4.5%, 2/15/2048   $ 570,000 $569,729
    New York, NY, Mortgage Agency Homeowner Rev., 4.7%, 10/01/2038     140,000 144,308
    Niagara, NY, Area Development Corp. Rev. (Catholic Health System, Inc. Project), 4.5%, 7/01/2052     105,000 95,362
    Port Authority of NY & NJ (234th Series), 5.5%, 8/01/2052     355,000 388,901
    Syracuse, NY, Industrial Development Agency PILOT Rev. (Carousel Center Project), “A”, 5%, 1/01/2031     110,000 85,261
    Syracuse, NY, Industrial Development Agency PILOT Rev. (Carousel Center Project), “A”, 5%, 1/01/2035     215,000 165,091
    Tobacco Settlement Asset Securitization Corp., NY, “A”, 5%, 6/01/2041     385,000 391,304
            $10,884,987
    North Carolina – 1.1%
    North Carolina Medical Care Commission, Health Care Facilities First Mortgage Rev. (Lutheran Services for the Aging), “A”, 4%, 3/01/2041   $ 10,000 $9,434
    North Carolina Medical Care Commission, Health Care Facilities First Mortgage Rev. (Lutheran Services for the Aging), “A”, 4%, 3/01/2051     130,000 113,616
    North Carolina Turnpike Authority, Triangle Expressway System Senior Lien Rev., “A”, AGM, 5%, 1/01/2058     655,000 705,483
            $828,533
    Ohio – 5.0%
    Buckeye, OH, Tobacco Settlement Financing Authority Senior Asset-Backed Refunding, 2020B-2, “2”, 5%, 6/01/2055   $ 320,000 $292,986
    Cuyahoga County, OH, Hospital Rev. (MetroHealth System), 4.75%, 2/15/2047     220,000 220,452
    Cuyahoga County, OH, Hospital Rev. (MetroHealth System), 5.5%, 2/15/2057     580,000 592,551
    Cuyahoga County, OH, Metropolitan Housing Authority, General Rev. (2045 Initiative Project), 2%, 12/01/2031     75,000 64,665
    Greene County, OH, Port Authority Economic Development Faciliites Rev. (Community First Solutions Obligated Group), “B”, 5%, 5/15/2059     140,000 143,344
    Miami County, OH, Hospital Facilities Rev. (Kettering Health), “A”, 5%, 8/01/2049     405,000 415,176
    Middleburg Heights, OH, Hospital Facilities Improvement Rev. (Southwest General Health Center Project), “A”, 4%, 8/01/2041     90,000 88,519
    Ohio Air Quality Development Authority Refunding Rev. (Duke Energy Corp. Project), “A”, 4.25%, 11/01/2039 (Put Date 6/01/2027)     80,000 81,237
    Ohio Higher Educational Facility Commission Rev. (Cleveland Institute of Music 2022 Project), 5.125%, 12/01/2042     70,000 73,413
    34

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Ohio – continued
    Ohio Higher Educational Facility Commission Rev. (Xavier University Project), 5.25%, 5/01/2054   $ 105,000 $112,649
    Ohio Housing Finance Agency Multi-Family Mortgage-Backed, (Macarthur Park Apartments Project), “A”, FNMA, 4.5%, 5/01/2039     316,041 324,181
    Ohio Housing Finance Agency Residential Mortgage Rev. (Mortgage-Backed Securities Program), “A”, 4.9%, 9/01/2053     340,000 348,494
    Ohio Tax Exempt Private Activity (Portsmouth Bypass Project), AGM, 5%, 12/31/2035     395,000 397,353
    Warren County, OH, Healthcare Facilities Rev. (Otterbein Homes Obligated Group) , 5%, 7/01/2054     500,000 521,247
            $3,676,267
    Oklahoma – 2.5%
    Norman, OK, Regional Hospital Authority Rev., 4%, 9/01/2045   $ 85,000 $72,454
    Norman, OK, Regional Hospital Authority Rev., 5%, 9/01/2045     45,000 44,044
    Oklahoma Development Finance Authority, Health System Rev. (OU Medicine Project), “A”, 5.5%, 8/15/2041     185,000 194,370
    Oklahoma Development Finance Authority, Health System Rev. (OU Medicine Project), “A”, 5.5%, 8/15/2044     185,000 191,635
    Oklahoma Development Finance Authority, Health System Rev. (OU Medicine Project), “B”, 5%, 8/15/2038     50,000 51,359
    Oklahoma Development Finance Authority, Health System Rev. (OU Medicine Project), “B”, 5.25%, 8/15/2043     30,000 30,867
    Oklahoma Development Finance Authority, Health System Rev. (OU Medicine Project), “B”, 5.25%, 8/15/2048     50,000 51,125
    Oklahoma Development Finance Authority, Health System Rev. (OU Medicine Project), “B”, 5.5%, 8/15/2057     165,000 169,686
    Tulsa County, OK, Industrial Authority, Senior Living Community Refunding Rev. (Montereau, Inc. Project), “A”, 5.25%, 11/15/2045     1,050,000 1,063,010
            $1,868,550
    Oregon – 0.5%
    Union County, OR, Hospital Facility Authority Rev. (Grande Ronde Hospital Project), 5%, 7/01/2047   $ 70,000 $70,234
    Union County, OR, Hospital Facility Authority Rev. (Grande Ronde Hospital Project), 5%, 7/01/2052     160,000 158,700
    Yamhill County, OR, Hospital Authority Rev. (Friendsview Retirement), “A”, 5%, 11/15/2056     155,000 133,773
            $362,707
    35

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Pennsylvania – 12.9%
    Allegheny County, PA, Hospital Development Authority Rev. (Allegheny Health Network Obligated Group), “A”, 4%, 4/01/2044   $ 555,000 $537,088
    Berks County, PA, Municipal Authority Rev. (Tower Health Project), “A-2”, 6%, 6/30/2034     106,000 114,869
    Berks County, PA, Municipal Authority Rev. (Tower Health Project), “A-3”, 5%, 6/30/2039     508,000 505,148
    Berks County, PA, Municipal Authority Rev., Convertible Capital Appreciation (Tower Health Project), “B-1”, 0% to 11/15/2029, 6% to 6/30/2044     254,000 183,144
    Doylestown, PA, Hospital Authority Rev., 5.375%, 7/01/2039     100,000 109,551
    Doylestown, PA, Hospital Authority Rev., “A”, 4%, 7/01/2045     20,000 18,859
    Lehigh County, PA, Water & Sewer Authority Rev. (Allentown Concession), Capital Appreciation, “B”, 0%, 12/01/2036     940,000 566,648
    Montgomery County, PA, Higher Education & Health Authority Rev. (Thomas Jefferson University), “B”, AGM, 3.125%, 5/01/2053     75,000 59,595
    Montgomery County, PA, Industrial Development Authority Rev. (Whitemarsh Continuing Care Retirement Community Project), 5.375%, 1/01/2050     205,000 196,578
    Pennsylvania Economic Development Financing Authority Rev. (Presbyterian Senior Living Project), “B-1”, 5.25%, 7/01/2049     105,000 111,572
    Pennsylvania Economic Development Financing Authority Rev. (Rapid Bridge Replacement Project), 5%, 12/31/2038     1,000,000 1,016,414
    Pennsylvania Economic Development Financing Authority, Guaranteed Parking Rev. (Capitol Region Parking System), Capital Appreciation, “B-2”, 0%, 1/01/2044     375,000 158,609
    Pennsylvania Economic Development Financing Authority, Guaranteed Parking Rev. (Capitol Region Parking System), Capital Appreciation, “B-3”, 0%, 1/01/2049     175,000 34,643
    Pennsylvania Economic Development Financing Authority, Private Activity Rev. (PennDOT Major Bridges Package One Project), 5.25%, 6/30/2053     350,000 364,716
    Pennsylvania Economic Development Financing Authority, Private Activity Rev. (PennDOT Major Bridges Package One Project), AGM, 5.5%, 6/30/2042     290,000 316,220
    Pennsylvania Economic Development Financing Authority, Private Activity Rev. (PennDOT Major Bridges Package One Project), AGM, 5%, 12/31/2057     405,000 420,794
    Pennsylvania Economic Development Financing Authority, Private Activity Rev. (Pennsylvania Rapid Bridge Replacement Project), 5%, 6/30/2042     365,000 369,750
    Pennsylvania Higher Educational Assistance Agency, Education Loan Rev., “1C”, 5%, 6/01/2051     78,000 78,631
    36

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Pennsylvania – continued
    Pennsylvania Higher Educational Assistance Agency, Education Loan Rev., “A”, 4.5%, 6/01/2043   $ 205,000 $207,515
    Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency, Single Family Mortgage Rev., “146A”, 6.25%, 10/01/2054 (u)     2,360,000 2,618,491
    Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency, Single Family Mortgage Rev., “141A”, 5.75%, 10/01/2053     327,745 349,543
    Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency, Single Family Mortgage Rev., “142A”, 5.5%, 10/01/2053     205,000 217,576
    Pennsylvania Public School Building Authority, College Rev. (Delaware County Community College Project), BAM, 5.25%, 10/01/2044     110,000 118,542
    Philadelphia, PA, Authority for Industrial Development Charter School Rev. (Green Woods Charter School Project), “A”, 5.375%, 6/15/2057     100,000 101,452
    Philadelphia, PA, Authority for Industrial Development Rev. (Thomas Jefferson University), “A”, 5%, 9/01/2042     645,000 658,738
    West Shore, PA, Area Authority Rev. (Messiah Village Project), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2030     30,000 30,103
    West Shore, PA, Area Authority Rev. (Messiah Village Project), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2035     35,000 35,084
            $9,499,873
    Puerto Rico – 5.2%
    AES Puerto Rico LP, Taxable, 12.5%, 3/04/2026   $ 14,030 $13,609
    Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, General Obligation Restructured Bonds, “A”, 4%, 7/01/2041     280,000 269,400
    Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority Rev., “A”, 5%, 7/01/2029 (a)(d)     10,000 5,225
    Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority Rev., “NN”, NPFG, 4.75%, 7/01/2033     40,000 39,678
    Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority Rev., “TT”, 5%, 7/01/2032 (a)(d)     685,000 357,912
    Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority Rev., “VV”, NPFG, 5.25%, 7/01/2025     25,000 24,954
    Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority Rev., “VV”, NPFG, 5.25%, 7/01/2029     175,000 172,996
    Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority Rev., “VV”, NPFG, 5.25%, 7/01/2030     205,000 203,196
    Puerto Rico Industrial, Tourist, Educational, Medical & Environmental Control Facilities Financing Authority (AES Puerto Rico Project), 6.625%, 1/01/2027     26,280 26,052
    Puerto Rico Industrial, Tourist, Educational, Medical & Environmental Control Facilities Financing Authority (AES Puerto Rico Project), 6.625%, 1/01/2028     200,433 198,528
    Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Restructured Sales Tax Rev., “2019A-2”, 4.536%, 7/01/2053     1,000 984
    37

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Puerto Rico – continued
    Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Restructured Sales Tax Rev., “A-1”, 4.55%, 7/01/2040   $ 29,000 $29,090
    Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Restructured Sales Tax Rev., “A-1”, 4.75%, 7/01/2053     69,000 69,029
    Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Restructured Sales Tax Rev., “A-1”, 5%, 7/01/2058     1,816,000 1,823,250
    Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Restructured Sales Tax Rev., “A-2”, 4.329%, 7/01/2040     194,000 193,672
    Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Restructured Sales Tax Rev., “A-2”, 4.784%, 7/01/2058     153,000 153,234
    Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing Corp., Restructured Sales Tax Rev., Capital Appreciation, “A-1”, 0%, 7/01/2046     527,000 177,572
    University of Puerto Rico Rev., “P”, NPFG, 5%, 6/01/2025     30,000 30,037
            $3,788,418
    Rhode Island – 0.8%
    Rhode Island Student Loan Authority, Education Loan Rev., “A”, 4.125%, 12/01/2042   $ 505,000 $492,315
    Rhode Island Student Loan Authority, Student Loan Rev., ”A“, 3.625%, 12/01/2037     125,000 119,193
            $611,508
    South Carolina – 2.9%
    South Carolina Jobs & Economic Development Authority Rev. (Bishop Gadsden Episcopal Retirement Community), “A”, 5%, 4/01/2044   $ 130,000 $133,017
    South Carolina Jobs & Economic Development Authority, Educational Facilities Rev. (Green Charter Schools Project), “A”, 4%, 6/01/2046 (n)     100,000 78,144
    South Carolina Jobs & Economic Development Authority, Healthcare Rev. (Beaufort Memorial Hospital & South of Broad Healthcare Project), 5.5%, 11/15/2044     100,000 107,592
    South Carolina Jobs & Economic Development Authority, Hospital Rev. (Prisma Health Obligated Group), “A”, 5%, 5/01/2048     270,000 276,629
    South Carolina Public Service Authority Refunding Rev. (Santee Cooper), “B”, AGM, 5%, 12/01/2054 (u)     1,420,000 1,525,179
            $2,120,561
    38

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Tennessee – 3.4%
    Knox County, TN, Health, Educational & Housing Facility Board, Student Housing Rev. (Provident Group - UTK Properties LLC - University of Tennessee Project), “A-1”, BAM, 5.5%, 7/01/2059   $ 80,000 $87,185
    Knox County, TN, Health, Educational & Housing Facility Board, Student Housing Rev. (Provident Group - UTK Properties LLC - University of Tennessee Project), “B-1”, BAM, 5.25%, 7/01/2064     185,000 195,591
    Metropolitan Nashville, TN, Airport Authority Improvement Rev., “B”, 5.5%, 7/01/2052     150,000 162,564
    Nashville and Davidson County, TN, Health & Education Facilities, Board of Metropolitan Government, Multi-Family Tax-Exempt Mortgage-Backed (Ben Allen Ridge Apartments Project), “A”, 4.75%, 2/01/2048     234,178 237,017
    Tennergy Corp., TN, Gas Supply Rev., “A”, 5.5%, 10/01/2053 (Put Date 12/01/2030)     515,000 557,342
    Tennessee Energy Acquisition Corp., Gas Project Rev., “A”, 5.25%, 9/01/2026     610,000 621,950
    Tennessee Energy Acquisition Corp., Gas Project Rev., “C”, 5%, 2/01/2025     185,000 185,183
    Tennessee Housing Development Agency, Residential Finance Program Rev., “2A”, 4.7%, 7/01/2053     450,000 461,702
            $2,508,534
    Texas – 16.0%
    Arlington, TX, Higher Education Finance Corp. Education Rev. (Trinity Basin Preparatory, Inc.), Texas PSF, 4.25%, 8/15/2047   $ 250,000 $254,909
    Austin, TX, Airport System Rev., 5%, 11/15/2052     185,000 193,288
    Conroe, TX, Local Government Corp., First Lien Hotel Rev. (Convention Center Hotel), “A”, 4%, 10/01/2050     45,000 37,238
    Conroe, TX, Local Government Corp., Second Lien Hotel Rev. (Convention Center Hotel), “B”, 5%, 10/01/2050 (n)     100,000 81,403
    Cypress-Fairbanks, TX, Independent School District, Unlimited Tax School Building, Texas PSF, 4%, 2/15/2048     55,000 55,146
    Dallas, TX, Senior Lien Special Tax Rev. (Fair Park Venue Project), 6.25%, 8/15/2053 (Put Date 8/15/2028)     160,000 160,388
    Denton County, TX, Northlake Municipal Management District No. 2, AGM, 4.5%, 3/01/2044     1,125,000 1,130,428
    El Paso, TX, Residential Development Rev. (EL Paso Royal Apartments Project), 4.25%, 10/01/2039     50,000 50,392
    Fort Bend County, TX, Municipal Utility District No. 170, Taxable, BAM, 4.375%, 9/01/2039     1,080,000 1,090,506
    Galveston County, TX, Municipal Utility District No. 56, AGM, 4.5%, 6/01/2047     500,000 502,738
    39

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Texas – continued
    Gulf Coast, TX, Industrial Development Authority Rev. (CITGO Petroleum Corp.), 8%, 4/01/2028   $ 250,000 $250,335
    Harris County, TX, Cultural Education Facilities Finance Corp., Hospital Rev. (Memorial Hermann Health System), “A”, 4.125%, 7/01/2052     230,000 229,027
    Harris County-Houston, TX, Sports Authority Rev., Capital Appreciation, “A”, AGM, 0%, 11/15/2041     70,000 32,463
    Harris County-Houston, TX, Sports Authority Rev., Capital Appreciation, “A”, AGM, 0%, 11/15/2046     210,000 74,947
    Houston, TX, Airport System Refunding Rev., Subordinate Lien, “A”, AGM, 5.25%, 7/01/2053     180,000 192,047
    Houston, TX, Higher Education Finance Corp. University Rev. (Houston Baptist University Project), 4%, 10/01/2051     30,000 25,760
    Kaufman County, TX, Fresh Water Supply District No. 4A, BAM, 4.5%, 9/01/2045     1,000,000 1,008,482
    Matagorda County, TX, Navigation District No. 1 (Houston Lighting), AAC, 5.125%, 11/01/2028     2,000,000 2,088,230
    Montgomery County, TX, Water Control & Improvement District No. 1, BAM, 4.625%, 3/01/2043     1,115,000 1,131,189
    Red River, TX, Education Finance Corp., Higher Education Rev. (Houston Baptist University Project), 5.5%, 10/01/2046     160,000 161,865
    Tarrant County, TX, Cultural Education Facilities Finance Corp., Retirement Facility Rev. (Barton Creek Senior Living Center, Inc., Querencia Project), 5%, 11/15/2035     60,000 60,105
    Tarrant County, TX, Cultural Education Facilities Finance Corp., Retirement Facility Rev. (Stayton at Museum Way), 5.75%, 12/01/2054 (a)(d)     539,834 340,096
    Texas Department of Housing & Community Affairs, Single Family Mortgage Rev., “A”, GNMA, 5.25%, 9/01/2053     435,000 456,307
    Texas Private Activity Surface Transportation Corp., Senior Lien Rev. (NTE Mobility Partners Segments 3 LLC), 5.5%, 6/30/2043     180,000 193,463
    Texas State Technical College System Rev., Financing System Improvement, “A”, AGM, 6%, 8/01/2054     170,000 193,807
    Texas Transportation Commission, State Highway 249 System Rev., “A”, 5%, 8/01/2057     165,000 169,099
    Texas Transportation Commission, State Highway 249 System Rev., Capital Appreciation, “A”, 0%, 8/01/2037     20,000 11,574
    Texas Transportation Commission, State Highway 249 System Rev., Capital Appreciation, “A”, 0%, 8/01/2038     10,000 5,485
    Texas Transportation Commission, State Highway 249 System Rev., Capital Appreciation, “A”, 0%, 8/01/2041     30,000 13,901
    Texas Transportation Commission, State Highway 249 System Rev., Capital Appreciation, “A”, 0%, 8/01/2042     40,000 17,538
    40

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Texas – continued
    Texas Water Development Board, Water Implementation Rev., 5%, 10/15/2057   $ 1,000,000 $1,077,402
    Tomball, TX, Independent School District, Unlimited Tax School Building, Texas PSF, 3.875%, 2/15/2043     500,000 502,500
            $11,792,058
    Utah – 0.6%
    Salt Lake City, UT, Airport Rev. (Salt Lake City International Airport), “A”, 5%, 7/01/2043   $ 265,000 $272,144
    Utah Charter School Finance Authority, Charter School Rev. (Da Vinci Academy of Science & Arts), 4%, 4/15/2047     165,000 151,895
            $424,039
    Vermont – 0.2%
    Vermont Student Assistance Corp., Education Loan Rev., “A”, 4.375%, 6/15/2040   $ 130,000 $125,944
    Virginia – 2.9%
    Henrico County, VA, Economic Development Authority Rev., Residential Care Facility (Westminster-Canterbury of Richmond), “A”, 5%, 10/01/2052   $ 225,000 $236,007
    Virginia Beach, VA, Development Authority, Residential Care Facility Rev. (Westminster - Canterbury on Chesapeake Bay), “A”, 7%, 9/01/2059     285,000 325,070
    Virginia Housing Development Authority, Rental Housing, “D”, 4.875%, 8/01/2065     920,000 943,307
    Williamsburg, VA, Economic Development Authority Student Housing Rev. (Provident Group - Williamsburg Properties LLC - William & Mary Project), “A”, AGM, 5.25%, 7/01/2053     560,000 613,459
            $2,117,843
    Washington – 1.5%
    Everett, WA, Housing Authority Refunding Rev. (Huntington Park Apartments Project), 4%, 7/01/2037   $ 300,000 $299,694
    Grays Harbor County, WA, Public Hospital District No. 2, Limited Tax General Obligation Refunding, 5%, 12/15/2033     80,000 81,868
    Grays Harbor County, WA, Public Hospital District No. 2, Limited Tax General Obligation Refunding, 5%, 12/15/2038     100,000 101,418
    Grays Harbor County, WA, Public Hospital District No. 2, Limited Tax General Obligation Refunding, 5%, 12/15/2048     195,000 194,332
    Seattle, WA, Port Intermediate Lien Refunding Rev., “B”, 4%, 8/01/2047     35,000 33,570
    Vancouver, WA, Multi-Family Housing Authority Rev. (Cougar Creek Project), “A”, 4.5%, 10/01/2042     165,000 167,761
    41

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    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Washington – continued
    Washington Health Care Facilities Authority Rev. (Virginia Mason Medical Center), 4%, 8/15/2042   $ 140,000 $133,405
    Washington Housing Finance Commission Municipal Certificates, “1-A”, 4.221%, 3/20/2040     70,914 69,423
            $1,081,471
    Wisconsin – 7.9%
    Wisconsin Center District Junior Dedicated Tax Rev., Capital Appreciation, “D”, AGM, 0%, 12/15/2040   $ 405,000 $207,166
    Wisconsin Center District Senior Dedicated Tax Rev., Capital Appreciation, “C”, AGM, 0%, 12/15/2040     175,000 89,236
    Wisconsin Health & Educational Facilities Authority Rev. (Aspirus, Inc. Obligated Group), 4%, 8/15/2048     700,000 684,797
    Wisconsin Health & Educational Facilities Authority Rev. (Bellin Memorial Hospital, Inc.), “A”, 5.5%, 12/01/2052     130,000 143,237
    Wisconsin Health & Educational Facilities Authority Rev. (St. Camillus Health System, Inc.), “A”, 5%, 11/01/2054     325,000 296,660
    Wisconsin Housing & Economic Development Authority Housing Rev., “A”, 4.8%, 11/01/2048     215,000 221,563
    Wisconsin Housing & Economic Development Authority Housing Rev., “A”, 4.9%, 11/01/2053     205,000 211,461
    Wisconsin Housing & Economic Development Authority Housing Rev., “A”, 4.95%, 11/01/2057     230,000 237,628
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Education Rev. (Triad Educational Services, Inc.), 5.5%, 6/15/2062     85,000 88,822
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Health Care System Rev. (Cone Health), “A”, 5%, 10/01/2052     420,000 447,487
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Healthcare Facility Rev. (Appalachian Regional Healthcare System Obligated Group), “A”, 4%, 7/01/2051     70,000 56,782
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Hospital Rev. (WakeMed), “A”, 4%, 10/01/2049     700,000 670,675
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Hotel & Conference Center Facilities Rev. (Foundation of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Inc.), “A”, 4%, 9/01/2051 (n)     255,000 192,945
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Limited Obligation Grant Rev. (American Dream at Meadowlands Project), “A”, 6.25%, 8/01/2027 (a)(d)(n)     255,000 246,713
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Project Rev. (Eastern Michigan University Student Housing Project), “A-1”, 5.625%, 7/01/2055     635,000 688,492
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Retirement Facilities First Mortgage Rev. (United Methodist Retirement Homes), “A”, 4%, 10/01/2051     35,000 31,216
    42

    Table of Contents
    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Municipal Bonds – continued
    Wisconsin – continued
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Rev. (Obligated Group of National Senior Communities, Inc.), 4%, 1/01/2047   $ 195,000 $179,812
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Rev. (Obligated Group of National Senior Communities, Inc.), 4%, 1/01/2052     330,000 295,374
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Senior Living Refunding Bonds Rev. (Mary's Woods at Marylhurst Project), “A”, 5.25%, 5/15/2037 (n)     35,000 35,540
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Senior Living Refunding Bonds Rev. (Mary's Woods at Marylhurst Project), “A”, 5.25%, 5/15/2042 (n)     10,000 10,086
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Senior Living Refunding Bonds Rev. (Mary's Woods at Marylhurst Project), “A”, 5.25%, 5/15/2047 (n)     115,000 115,327
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Senior Living Refunding Bonds Rev. (Mary's Woods at Marylhurst Project), “A”, 5.25%, 5/15/2052 (n)     75,000 74,954
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Senior Secured Rev. (McLemore Hotel & Conference Center), “A”, 4.5%, 6/01/2056 (n)     155,000 127,908
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Student Housing Rev. (CHF - Manoa LLC UH Residences for Graduate Students), “A”, 5.75%, 7/01/2063 (n)     165,000 177,953
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority Student Housing Rev. (University of Hawai'i Foundation Project), “A-1”, 4%, 7/01/2061 (n)     125,000 102,168
    Wisconsin Public Finance Authority, Multi-Family Affordable Housing Certificates (Dominium Holdings I), “B-1”, 6.81%, 4/28/2036     195,000 201,007
            $5,835,009
    Total Municipal Bonds (Identified Cost, $113,180,517)   $114,731,490
    Other Municipal Bonds – 0.7%
    Multi-Family Housing Revenue – 0.7%  
    Affordable Housing Pass-Thru Trust Certificates, 6%, 10/05/2040    $ 308,990 $325,897
    FRETE 2021-ML12 Trust, “X-US”, FHLMC, 1.304%, 7/25/2041  (i)(n)     363,936 33,816
    FRETE 2023-ML16 Trust, “A”, 4.632%, 7/25/2038      138,075 143,213
    Total Other Municipal Bonds (Identified Cost, $478,504)   $502,926
    Bonds – 0.1%
    Transportation - Services – 0.1%  
    Toll Road Investors Partnership II LP, Capital Appreciation, NPFG, 0%, 2/15/2033 (n) (Identified Cost, $80,814)   $ 120,000 $64,027
    Preferred Stocks – 0.0%        
    Utilities - Electric Power – 0.0%        
    AES Guayama Holdings B.V. (x) (Identified Cost, $11,461)     4,408 $11,461
    43

    Table of Contents
    Portfolio of Investments – continued
    Issuer     Shares/Par Value ($)
    Investment Companies (h) – 1.9%
    Money Market Funds – 1.9%  
    MFS Institutional Money Market Portfolio, 4.66% (v) (Identified Cost, $1,413,872)     1,413,787 $1,413,928
    Other Assets, Less Liabilities – (8.1)%   (5,955,822)
    Remarketable Variable Rate MuniFund Term Preferred Shares (RVMTP shares), at liquidation value (issued by the fund) – (50.6)% (37,200,000)
    Net assets applicable to common shares – 100.0%   $73,568,010
        
    (a) Non-income producing security.
    (d) In default.
    (h) An affiliated issuer, which may be considered one in which the fund owns 5% or more of the outstanding voting securities, or a company which is under common control. At period end, the aggregate values of the fund's investments in affiliated issuers and in unaffiliated issuers were $1,413,928 and $115,309,904, respectively.
    (i) Interest only security for which the fund receives interest on notional principal (Par amount). Par amount shown is the notional principal and does not reflect the cost of the security.
    (n) Securities exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. These securities may be sold in the ordinary course of business in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. At period end, the aggregate value of these securities was $7,913,864, representing 10.8% of net assets applicable to common shares.
    (u) Underlying security deposited into special purpose trust upon creation of self-deposited inverse floaters.
    (v) Affiliated issuer that is available only to investment companies managed by MFS. The rate quoted for the MFS Institutional Money Market Portfolio is the annualized seven-day yield of the fund at period end.
    (w) When-issued security.
    (x) The security was valued using significant unobservable inputs and is considered level 3 under the fair value hierarchy. For further information about the fund’s level 3 holdings, please see Note 2 in the Notes to Financial Statements.
        
    The following abbreviations are used in this report and are defined:
    AAC Ambac Assurance Corp.
    AGM Assured Guaranty Municipal
    BAM Build America Mutual
    COP Certificate of Participation
    FHLMC Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.
    FNMA Federal National Mortgage Assn.
    GNMA Government National Mortgage Assn.
    NPFG National Public Finance Guarantee Corp.
    PSF Permanent School Fund
    44

    Table of Contents
    Financial Statements
    Statement of Assets and Liabilities
    At 11/30/24
    This statement represents your fund’s balance sheet, which details the assets and liabilities comprising the total value of the fund.
    Assets  
    Investments in unaffiliated issuers, at value (identified cost, $113,751,296) $115,309,904
    Investments in affiliated issuers, at value (identified cost, $1,413,872) 1,413,928
    Cash 31,456
    Receivables for  
    Investments sold 73,312
    Interest 1,661,009
    Receivable from investment adviser 17,385
    Other assets 2,008
    Total assets $118,509,002
    Liabilities  
    Payables for  
    Distributions on common shares $8,259
    When-issued investments purchased 637,891
    Interest expense and fees 209,717
    Payable to the holders of the floating rate certificates 6,769,503
    Payable to affiliates  
    Administrative services fee 286
    Transfer agent and dividend disbursing costs 483
    Accrued expenses and other liabilities 114,853
    RVMTP shares, at liquidation value of $37,200,000 37,200,000
    Total liabilities $44,940,992
    Net assets applicable to common shares $73,568,010
    Net assets consist of  
    Paid-in capital - common shares $78,355,439
    Total distributable earnings (loss) (4,787,429)
    Net assets applicable to common shares $73,568,010
    RVMTP shares, at liquidation value of $37,200,000 (372 shares issued and outstanding at $100,000 per share) 37,200,000
    Net assets including preferred shares $110,768,010
    Common shares of beneficial interest issued and outstanding (unlimited number of shares authorized) 8,199,220
    Net asset value per common share (net assets of $73,568,010 / 8,199,220 shares of beneficial interest outstanding) $8.97
    See Notes to Financial Statements
    45

    Table of Contents
    Financial Statements
    Statement of Operations
    Year ended 11/30/24
    This statement describes how much your fund earned in investment income and accrued in expenses. It also describes any gains and/or losses generated by fund operations.
    Net investment income (loss)  
    Income  
    Interest $5,219,570
    Dividends from affiliated issuers 87,143
    Other 1,420
    Total investment income $5,308,133
    Expenses  
    Management fee $736,486
    Transfer agent and dividend disbursing costs 13,548
    Administrative services fee 26,497
    Independent Trustees' compensation 7,346
    Stock exchange fee 23,758
    Custodian fee 4,553
    Shareholder communications 15,809
    Audit and tax fees 98,904
    Legal fees 35,351
    Interest expense and fees and amortization of RVMTP shares debt issuance costs 1,994,126
    Miscellaneous 66,662
    Total expenses $3,023,040
    Reduction of expenses by investment adviser (212,938)
    Net expenses $2,810,102
    Net investment income (loss) $2,498,031
    Realized and unrealized gain (loss)
    Realized gain (loss) (identified cost basis)  
    Unaffiliated issuers $(530,872)
    Affiliated issuers 1,156
    Net realized gain (loss) $(529,716)
    Change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation  
    Unaffiliated issuers $5,284,849
    Affiliated issuers (32)
    Net unrealized gain (loss) $5,284,817
    Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) $4,755,101
    Change in net assets from operations $7,253,132
    See Notes to Financial Statements
    46

    Table of Contents
    Financial Statements
    Statements of Changes in Net Assets
    These statements describe the increases and/or decreases in net assets resulting from operations, any distributions, and any shareholder transactions.
      Year ended
      11/30/24 11/30/23
    Change in net assets    
    From operations    
    Net investment income (loss) $2,498,031 $2,268,395
    Net realized gain (loss) (529,716) (3,767,735)
    Net unrealized gain (loss) 5,284,817 3,072,270
    Change in net assets from operations $7,253,132 $1,572,930
    Distributions to common shareholders $(2,480,264) $(2,508,051)
    Share transactions applicable to common shares    
    Change in net assets from the tender and repurchase of common shares of beneficial interest $— $(6,954,765)
    Total change in net assets $4,772,868 $(7,889,886)
    Net assets applicable to common shares    
    At beginning of period 68,795,142 76,685,028
    At end of period $73,568,010 $68,795,142
    See Notes to Financial Statements
    47

    Table of Contents
    Financial Statements
    Statement of Cash Flows
    Year ended 11/30/24
    This statement provides a summary of cash flows from investment activity for the fund.
    Cash flows from operating activities:  
    Change in net assets from operations $7,253,132
    Adjustments to reconcile change in net assets from operations to net cash provided by operating activities:  
    Purchase of investment securities (25,167,528)
    Proceeds from disposition of investment securities 25,555,385
    Purchase of short-term investments, net (631,262)
    Realized gain/loss on investments 530,872
    Unrealized appreciation/depreciation on investments (5,284,817)
    Net amortization/accretion of income 161,582
    Amortization of RVMTP shares debt issuance costs 25,116
    Increase in interest receivable (64,043)
    Increase in accrued expenses and other liabilities 14,166
    Increase in receivable from investment adviser (4,192)
    Decrease in other assets 8
    Increase in payable for interest expense and fees 43,973
    Net cash provided by operating activities $2,432,392
    Cash flows from financing activities:  
    Decrease in RVMTP shares, at liquidation value $(6,600,000)
    Cash distributions paid on common shares (2,479,075)
    Decrease in payable for common shares tender and repurchase costs (86,861)
    Proceeds from the issuance of floating rate certificates 6,765,000
    Net cash used by financing activities $(2,400,936)
    Net increase in cash and restricted cash $31,456
    Cash and restricted cash:  
    Beginning of period $—
    End of period $31,456
    Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
    Cash paid during the year ended November 30, 2024 for interest was $1,925,037.
    See Notes to Financial Statements
    48

    Table of Contents
    Financial Statements
    Financial Highlights
    The financial highlights table is intended to help you understand the fund's financial performance for the past 5 years. Certain information reflects financial results for a single fund share. The total returns in the table represent the rate that an investor would have earned (or lost) on an investment in the fund share class (assuming reinvestment of all distributions) held for the entire period.
    Common Shares Year ended
      11/30/24 11/30/23 11/30/22 11/30/21 11/30/20
    Net asset value, beginning of period $8.39 $8.42 $10.84 $10.76 $10.74
    Income (loss) from investment operations
    Net investment income (loss) (d) $0.30 $0.25 $0.33 $0.41 $0.42
    Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) 0.58 (0.02) (2.33) 0.13 0.06
     Total from investment operations  $0.88  $0.23  $(2.00)  $0.54  $0.48
    Less distributions declared to common shareholders
    From net investment income $(0.30) $(0.28) $(0.35) $(0.43) $(0.44)
    From net realized gain — — (0.07) (0.03) (0.02)
     Total distributions declared to shareholders  $(0.30)  $(0.28)  $(0.42)  $(0.46)  $(0.46)
     Net increase resulting from the tender and repurchase of common shares of beneficial interest  $—  $0.02  $—  $—  $—
     Net asset value, end of period (x)  $8.97  $8.39  $8.42  $10.84  $10.76
     Market value, end of period  $8.24  $7.27  $7.30  $9.87  $9.60
     Total return at market value (%) 17.81 3.51 (22.36) 7.63 2.26
     Total return at net asset value (%) (j)(r)(s)(x) 11.12 3.50 (18.41) 5.46 5.12
    Ratios (%) (to average net assets
    applicable to common shares) and
    Supplemental data:
    Expenses before expense reductions 4.22 4.43 2.58 1.84 2.30
    Expenses after expense reductions 3.92 4.26 2.46 1.77 2.18
    Net investment income (loss) 3.49 2.99 3.62 3.73 3.99
    Portfolio turnover rate 21 34 27 22 27
    Net assets at end of period (000 omitted)  $73,568  $68,795  $76,685  $98,774  $98,014
    Supplemental Ratios (%):
    Ratios of expenses to average net assets applicable to common shares after expense reductions and excluding interest expense and fees (l) 1.14 1.25 1.23 1.16 1.18
    Ratios of expenses to average net assets applicable to common and preferred shares after expense reductions and excluding interest expense and fees (l) 0.72 0.76 0.78 0.78 0.78
    49

    Table of Contents
    Financial Highlights – continued
      Year ended
      11/30/24 11/30/23 11/30/22 11/30/21 11/30/20
    Senior Securities:
    RVMTP shares 372 438 488 488 —
    VMTP shares — — — — 1,950
    Asset coverage per preferred share (k) $297,763 $257,067 $257,141 $302,407 $75,263
    Asset coverage per $1 liquidation
    preference (v)
    $2.98 $2.57 $2.57 $3.02 $3.01
    Involuntary liquidation preference per preferred share (m) $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $25,000
    Average market value per preferred share (m)(u) $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $25,000
        
    (d) Per share data is based on average shares outstanding.
    (j) Total return at net asset value is calculated using the net asset value of the fund, not the publicly traded price and therefore may be different than the total return at market value.
    (k) Calculated by subtracting the fund’s total liabilities (not including liquidation preference of preferred shares) from the fund's total assets and dividing by the total number of preferred shares outstanding.
    (l) Interest expense and fees include payments made to the holders of the floating rate certificates, interest expense paid to shareholders of RVMTP and VMTP (Variable Rate Municipal Term Preferred) shares, and amortization of RVMTP and VMTP shares debt issuance costs, as applicable. For the year ended November 30, 2023, the expense ratio also excludes fees and expenses related to the tender and repurchase of a portion of the fund’s common shares of beneficial interest.
    (m) Amount excludes accrued unpaid distributions on preferred shares.
    (r) Certain expenses have been reduced without which performance would have been lower.
    (s) From time to time the fund may receive proceeds from litigation settlements, without which performance would be lower.
    (u) Average market value represents the approximate fair value of each of the fund’s preferred shares held at period end.
    (v) Calculated by subtracting the fund's total liabilities (not including liquidation preference of preferred shares) from the fund's total assets and dividing by the aggregate liquidation preference of preferred shares outstanding.
    (x) The net asset values and total returns at net asset value have been calculated on net assets which include adjustments made in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles required at period end for financial reporting purposes.
    See Notes to Financial Statements
    50

    Table of Contents
    Notes to Financial Statements
    (1) Business and Organization
    MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust (the fund) is organized as a Massachusetts business trust and is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, as a diversified closed-end management investment company.
    The fund is an investment company and accordingly follows the investment company accounting and reporting guidance of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Accounting Standards Codification Topic 946 Financial Services - Investment Companies.
    (2) Significant Accounting Policies
    General — The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of increases and decreases in net assets from operations during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. In the preparation of these financial statements, management has evaluated subsequent events occurring after the date of the fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities through the date that the financial statements were issued. The fund invests primarily in municipal instruments, which generally trade in the over-the-counter market. The value of municipal instruments can be affected by changes in their actual or perceived credit quality. The credit quality of, and the ability to pay principal and interest when due by, an issuer of a municipal instrument depends on the credit quality of the entity supporting the municipal instrument, how essential any services supported by the municipal instrument are, the sufficiency of any revenues or taxes that support the municipal instrument, and/or the willingness or ability of the appropriate government entity to approve any appropriations necessary to support the municipal instrument. Municipal instruments may be supported by insurance which typically guarantees the timely payment of all principal and interest due on the underlying municipal instrument. The value of a municipal instrument can be volatile and significantly affected by adverse tax changes or court rulings, legislative or political changes, changes in specific or general market and economic conditions in the region where the instrument is issued, and the financial condition of municipal issuers and of municipal instrument insurers of which there are a limited number. Also, because many municipal instruments are issued to finance similar projects, conditions in certain industries can significantly affect the fund and the overall municipal market. If the Internal Revenue Service determines an issuer of a municipal instrument has not complied with the applicable tax requirements, interest from the security could become taxable, the security could decline in value, and certain distributions made by the fund could be taxable to shareholders. The fund invests in high-yield securities rated below investment grade. Investments in below investment grade quality securities can involve a substantially greater risk of default or can already be in default, and their values can decline significantly. Below investment grade quality securities tend to be more sensitive to adverse news about the issuer, or the market or economy in general, than higher quality debt instruments.
    In November 2023, the FASB issued Accounting Standards Update 2023-07, Segment Reporting (Topic 280) – Improvements to Reportable Segment Disclosures (“ASU 2023-07”), which affects all public entities that are required to report segment information in accordance with Topic 280. ASU 2023-07 is effective for fiscal years
    51

    Table of Contents
    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    beginning after December 15, 2023 and interim periods within fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2024. The intent of ASU 2023-07 is, through improved segment disclosures, to enable investors to better understand an entity’s overall performance and to assess its potential future cash flows. Although management is still evaluating the disclosures required by ASU 2023-07, adoption of the standard will not affect the fund's financial position or its results of operations.
    Balance Sheet Offsetting — The fund's accounting policy with respect to balance sheet offsetting is that, absent an event of default by the counterparty or a termination of the agreement, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) Master Agreement, or similar agreement, does not result in an offset of reported amounts of financial assets and financial liabilities in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities across transactions between the fund and the applicable counterparty. The fund's right to setoff may be restricted or prohibited by the bankruptcy or insolvency laws of the particular jurisdiction to which a specific master netting agreement counterparty is subject. Balance sheet offsetting disclosures, to the extent applicable to the fund, have been included in the fund’s Significant Accounting Policies note under the captions for each of the fund’s in-scope financial instruments and transactions.
    Investment Valuations — Subject to its oversight, the fund's Board of Trustees has delegated primary responsibility for determining or causing to be determined the value of the fund’s investments to MFS as the fund's adviser, pursuant to the fund’s valuation policy and procedures which have been adopted by the adviser and approved by the Board. In accordance with Rule 2a-5 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Board of Trustees designated the adviser as the “valuation designee” of the fund. If the adviser, as valuation designee, determines that reliable market quotations are not readily available for an investment, the investment is valued at fair value as determined in good faith by the adviser in accordance with the adviser’s fair valuation policy and procedures.
    Under the fund's valuation policy and procedures, equity securities, including restricted equity securities, are generally valued at the last sale or official closing price on their primary market or exchange as provided by a third-party pricing service. Equity securities, for which there were no sales reported that day, are generally valued at the last quoted daily bid quotation on their primary market or exchange as provided by a third-party pricing service. Debt instruments and floating rate loans, including restricted debt instruments, are generally valued at an evaluated or composite bid as provided by a third-party pricing service. Short-term instruments with a maturity at issuance of 60 days or less may be valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value.
    Open-end investment companies are generally valued at net asset value per share. The values of foreign securities and other assets and liabilities expressed in foreign currencies are converted to U.S. dollars using the mean of bid and asked prices for rates provided by a third-party pricing service.
    Under the fund’s valuation policy and procedures, market quotations are not considered to be readily available for debt instruments, floating rate loans, and many types of derivatives. These investments are generally valued at fair value based on information from third-party pricing services or otherwise determined by the adviser in accordance with the adviser’s fair valuation policy and procedures. Securities and other assets generally valued on the basis of information from a third-party pricing service may also be valued at a broker/dealer bid quotation. In determining values, third-party pricing services can utilize both transaction data and market information such as yield,
    52

    Table of Contents
    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    quality, coupon rate, maturity, type of issue, trading characteristics, spreads and other market data. Pricing services generally value debt instruments assuming orderly transactions of institutional round lot sizes, but a fund may hold or transact in such securities in smaller, odd lot sizes. Odd lots may trade at lower prices than institutional round lots, and the fund may receive different prices when it sells odd lot positions than it would receive for sales of institutional round lot positions. An investment may also be valued at fair value if the adviser determines that the investment’s value has been materially affected by events occurring after the close of the exchange or market on which the investment is principally traded (such as foreign exchange or market) and prior to the determination of the fund’s net asset value, or after the halt of trading of a specific security where trading does not resume prior to the close of the exchange or market on which the security is principally traded. The adviser generally relies on third-party pricing services or other information (such as the correlation with price movements of similar securities in the same or other markets; the type, cost and investment characteristics of the security; the business and financial condition of the issuer; and trading and other market data) to assist in determining whether to fair value and at what value to fair value an investment. The value of an investment for purposes of calculating the fund’s net asset value can differ depending on the source and method used to determine value. When fair valuation is used, the value of an investment used to determine the fund’s net asset value may differ from quoted or published prices for the same investment. There can be no assurance that the fund could obtain the fair value assigned to an investment if it were to sell the investment at the same time at which the fund determines its net asset value per share.
    Various inputs are used in determining the value of the fund's assets or liabilities. These inputs are categorized into three broad levels. In certain cases, the inputs used to measure fair value may fall into different levels of the fair value hierarchy. In such cases, an investment's level within the fair value hierarchy is based on the lowest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement. The fund's assessment of the significance of a particular input to the fair value measurement in its entirety requires judgment, and considers factors specific to the investment. Level 1 includes unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities. Level 2 includes other significant observable market-based inputs (including quoted prices for similar securities, interest rates, prepayment speed, and credit risk). Level 3 includes significant unobservable inputs, which may include the adviser's own assumptions in determining the fair value of investments. The following is a summary of the levels used as of November 30, 2024 in valuing the fund's assets and liabilities:
    Financial Instruments Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
    Equity Securities:        
    Netherlands $— $— $11,461 $11,461
    Municipal Bonds — 115,234,416 — 115,234,416
    U.S. Corporate Bonds — 64,027 — 64,027
    Mutual Funds 1,413,928 — — 1,413,928
    Total $1,413,928 $115,298,443 $11,461 $116,723,832
    For further information regarding security characteristics, see the Portfolio of Investments. 
    53

    Table of Contents
    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    The following is a reconciliation of level 3 assets for which significant unobservable inputs were used to determine fair value. The table presents the activity of level 3 securities held at the beginning and the end of the period.
      Equity
    Securities
    Balance as of 11/30/23 $—
    Received as part of a corporate action 11,461
    Balance as of 11/30/24 $11,461
    At November 30, 2024, the fund held one level 3 security.
    Inverse Floaters — The fund invests in municipal inverse floating rate securities in the form of self-deposited secondary market inverse floaters which have variable rates of interest that typically move in the opposite direction of short-term rates. A self-deposited secondary market inverse floater is created when the fund transfers a municipal bond from its portfolio to a special purpose trust (“the trust”) and causes the trust to issue (a) inverse floaters to be held by the fund and (b) floating rate certificates to be held by third parties. The floating rate certificates usually pay tax-exempt interest at short-term rates that reset weekly and the holders of those certificates typically have the option to tender at par plus accrued interest. Self-deposited secondary market inverse floaters are accounted for as secured borrowings, with the municipal bonds transferred to the trust being reflected as fund investments and the amounts owed to floating rate certificate holders being reflected as fund liabilities in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities as “Payable to the holders of the floating rate certificates”. The carrying value of that liability as reported in the fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities approximates its fair value which would be considered level 2 under the fair value hierarchy.
    At November 30, 2024, the fund’s payable to the holders of the floating rate certificates was $6,769,503 and the related weighted average interest rate on the settled floating rate certificates issued by the trust was 2.98%. For the year ended November 30, 2024, the average payable to the holders of the settled floating rate certificates was $2,389,309 at a weighted average interest rate of 3.17%. Interest expense and fees, which are recorded as incurred, include interest payments made to the holders of the floating rate certificates and associated fees. For the year ended November 30, 2024, the related interest expense and fees amounted to $87,664 which is included in “Interest expense and fees and amortization of RVMTP shares debt issuance costs” in the Statement of Operations. 
    Statement of Cash Flows — Information on financial transactions which have been settled through the receipt or disbursement of cash or restricted cash is presented in the Statement of Cash Flows. Cash as presented in the fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities includes cash on hand at the fund's custodian bank and does not include any short-term investments. Restricted cash is presented in the fund's Statement of Assets and Liabilities as restricted cash for uncleared derivatives and/or deposits with brokers for cleared derivatives and represents cash that has been segregated or delivered to cover the fund's collateral or margin obligations under derivative contracts.
    54

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    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    The following table provides a reconciliation of cash and restricted cash reported within the Statement of Assets and Liabilities with that shown in the Statement of Cash Flows:
      11/30/24
    Cash $31,456
    Restricted cash —
    Restricted cash included in deposits with brokers —
    Total cash and restricted cash in the Statement of Cash Flows $31,456
    Indemnifications — Under the fund's organizational documents, its officers and Trustees may be indemnified against certain liabilities and expenses arising out of the performance of their duties to the fund. Additionally, in the normal course of business, the fund enters into agreements with service providers that may contain indemnification clauses. The fund's maximum exposure under these agreements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may be made against the fund that have not yet occurred.
    Investment Transactions and Income —  Interest income is recorded on the accrual basis. All premium and discount is amortized or accreted for financial statement purposes in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. Dividend and interest payments received in additional securities are recorded on the ex-dividend or ex-interest date in an amount equal to the value of the security on such date. Debt obligations may be placed on non-accrual status or set to accrue at a rate of interest less than the contractual coupon when the collection of all or a portion of interest has become doubtful. Interest income for those debt obligations may be further reduced by the write-off of the related interest receivables when deemed uncollectible.
    The fund may receive proceeds from litigation settlements. Any proceeds received from litigation involving portfolio holdings are reflected in the Statement of Operations in realized gain/loss if the security has been disposed of by the fund or in unrealized gain/loss if the security is still held by the fund. Any other proceeds from litigation not related to portfolio holdings are reflected as other income in the Statement of Operations.
    Investment transactions are recorded on the trade date.  In determining the net gain or loss on securities sold, the cost of securities is determined on the identified cost basis.
    The fund may purchase or sell securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis. In these extended settlement transactions, the receipt or delivery of the securities by the fund and related payments occur at a future date, usually beyond the customary settlement period. The price of such security and the date that the security will be settled are generally fixed at the time the transaction is negotiated. The value of the security varies with market fluctuations and for debt securities no interest accrues to the fund until settlement takes place. When the fund sells securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis, the fund typically owns or has the right to acquire securities equivalent in kind and amount to the securities sold. Purchase and sale commitments for when-issued or delayed delivery securities are held at carrying amount, which approximates fair value and are categorized as level 2 within the fair value hierarchy, and included in When-issued investments purchased and When-issued investments sold in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities, as applicable. Losses may arise due to changes in the value of the underlying securities prior to settlement date or if the counterparty does not perform under the contract’s terms, or if the issuer does not issue the securities. 
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    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    Legal fees and other related expenses incurred to preserve and protect the value of a security owned are added to the cost of the security; other legal fees are expensed. Capital infusions made directly to the security issuer, which are generally non-recurring, incurred to protect or enhance the value of high-yield debt securities, are reported as additions to the cost basis of the security. Costs that are incurred to negotiate the terms or conditions of capital infusions or that are expected to result in a plan of reorganization are reported as realized losses. Ongoing costs incurred to protect or enhance an investment, or costs incurred to pursue other claims or legal actions, are expensed.
    Tax Matters and Distributions — The fund intends to qualify as a regulated investment company, as defined under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code, and to distribute all of its taxable and tax-exempt income, including realized capital gains. As a result, no provision for federal income tax is required. The fund’s federal tax returns, when filed, will remain subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service for a three year period. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal and state tax returns for all open tax years and does not believe that there are any uncertain tax positions that require recognition of a tax liability.
    Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with income tax regulations, which may differ from U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. Certain capital accounts in the financial statements are periodically adjusted for permanent differences in order to reflect their tax character. These adjustments have no impact on net assets or net asset value per share. Temporary differences which arise from recognizing certain items of income, expense, gain or loss in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes will reverse at some time in the future.
    Book/tax differences primarily relate to defaulted bonds, amortization of premium and accretion of discount of debt securities, accounting for secured borrowings, and non-deductible expenses that result from the treatment of preferred shares as equity for tax purposes.
    The tax character of distributions declared to shareholders for the last two fiscal years is as follows:
      Year ended
    11/30/24
    Year ended
    11/30/23
    Ordinary income (including any short-term capital gains) $131,498 $238,319
    Tax-exempt income 4,235,867 4,340,592
    Total distributions $4,367,365 $4,578,911
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    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    The federal tax cost and the tax basis components of distributable earnings were as follows:
    As of 11/30/24  
    Cost of investments $115,298,575
    Gross appreciation 3,319,917
    Gross depreciation (1,894,660)
    Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) $1,425,257
    Undistributed ordinary income 140,274
    Undistributed tax-exempt income 742,256
    Capital loss carryforwards (6,954,652)
    Other temporary differences (140,564)
    Total distributable earnings (loss) $(4,787,429)
    As of November 30, 2024, the fund had capital loss carryforwards available to offset future realized gains. These net capital losses may be carried forward indefinitely and their character is retained as short-term and/or long-term losses. Such losses are characterized as follows:
    Short-Term $(1,635,972)
    Long-Term (5,318,680)
    Total $(6,954,652)
    (3) Transactions with Affiliates
    Investment Adviser — The fund has an investment advisory agreement with MFS to provide overall investment management and related administrative services and facilities to the fund. The management fee is computed daily and paid monthly at an annual rate of 0.65% of the fund’s average daily net assets (including the value of preferred shares). The investment adviser has agreed in writing to reduce its management fee to 0.63% of the fund’s average daily net assets (including the value of preferred shares). This written agreement will continue until modified by the fund’s Board of Trustees, but such agreement will continue at least until November 30, 2025. For the year ended November 30, 2024, this management fee reduction amounted to $22,661, which is included in the reduction of total expenses in the Statement of Operations. The management fee incurred for the year ended November 30, 2024 was equivalent to an annual effective rate of 0.63% of the fund's average daily net assets (including the value of preferred shares).
    The investment adviser has agreed in writing to pay a portion of the fund’s total annual operating expenses, excluding interest expense on RVMTP shares, taxes, extraordinary expenses, brokerage and transaction costs, certain tax reclaim recovery expenses (including contingency fees and closing agreement expenses), other interest expense, and investment-related expenses (including interest expense and fees associated with investments in inverse floating rate instruments), such that total fund operating expenses do not exceed 0.72% annually of the fund’s average daily net assets (including the value of preferred shares). This written agreement will continue until modified by the fund’s Board of Trustees, but such agreement will continue at least until November 30, 2025. For the year ended November 30, 2024, this reduction amounted to $190,277, which is included in the reduction of total expenses in the Statement of Operations.
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    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    Transfer Agent — The fund engages Computershare Trust Company, N.A. (“Computershare”) as the sole transfer agent for the fund's common shares. MFS Service Center, Inc. (MFSC) monitors and supervises the activities of Computershare for an agreed upon fee approved by the Board of Trustees. For the year ended November 30, 2024, fees paid to MFSC amounted to $3,116.
    Administrator – MFS provides certain financial, legal, shareholder communications, compliance, and other administrative services to the fund. Under an administrative services agreement, the fund reimburses MFS the costs incurred to provide these services. The fund is charged an annual fixed amount of $17,500 plus a fee based on average daily net assets (including the value of preferred shares). The administrative services fee is computed daily and paid monthly. The administrative services fee incurred for the year ended November 30, 2024 was equivalent to an annual effective rate of 0.0234% of the fund’s average daily net assets (including the value of preferred shares).
    Trustees’ and Officers’ Compensation — The fund pays compensation to independent Trustees in the form of a retainer, attendance fees, and additional compensation to Board and Committee chairpersons. Independent Trustees’ compensation is accrued daily and paid subsequent to each Trustee Board meeting. The fund does not pay compensation directly to Trustees or officers of the fund who are also officers of the investment adviser, all of whom receive remuneration from MFS for their services to the fund.  Certain officers and Trustees of the fund are officers or directors of MFS and MFSC.
    Other — The fund invests in the MFS Institutional Money Market Portfolio which is managed by MFS and seeks current income consistent with preservation of capital and liquidity. This money market fund does not pay a management fee to MFS but does incur investment and operating costs.
    During the year ended November 30, 2024, pursuant to a policy adopted by the Board of Trustees and designed to comply with Rule 17a-7 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “Act”) and relevant guidance, the fund engaged in purchase and sale transactions with funds and accounts for which MFS serves as investment adviser or sub-adviser (“cross-trades”) which amounted to $20,767 and $841,826, respectively. The sales transactions resulted in net realized gains (losses) of $(87,413).
    (4) Portfolio Securities
    For the year ended November 30, 2024, purchases and sales of investments, other than short-term obligations, aggregated $22,875,333 and $24,143,997, respectively.
    (5) Shares of Beneficial Interest
    The fund’s Declaration of Trust permits the Trustees to issue an unlimited number of full and fractional shares of beneficial interest. The fund reserves the right to repurchase shares of beneficial interest of the fund subject to Trustee approval.
    On October 6, 2023, the fund commenced a cash tender offer for up to 10% of the fund’s outstanding common shares at a price per share equal to 98% of the fund’s net asset value per share calculated at the close of regular trading on the New York Stock Exchange on the expiration date of the offer. This tender offer expired on November 6, 2023, at which time the offer was oversubscribed. The fund purchased the maximum number of shares offered in the tender offer (911,025 common shares representing 10% of the fund’s then outstanding common shares). The purchase price of the
    58

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    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    properly tendered shares was equal to $7.634 per share for an aggregate purchase price of $6,954,765. As a result of this tender offer, payment was made by the fund on November 15, 2023. The Trustees authorized the tender offer as part of an agreement with a large shareholder of the fund. Pursuant to the agreement, the Trustees also agreed to propose a liquidity event at the fund’s 2025 annual meeting of shareholders, unless the average trading discount of the shares is equal to or less than 7.5% for the entirety of any consecutive 30 calendar day period between November 6, 2023 and July 15, 2025.
    During the years ended November 30, 2024 and November 30, 2023, the average trading discount of the shares was not equal to or less than 7.5% for the entirety of any consecutive 30 calendar day period, the fund did not repurchase any additional shares other than through this tender offer and there were no other transactions in fund shares.
    (6) Line of Credit
    The fund and certain other funds managed by MFS participate in a $1.45 billion unsecured committed line of credit of which $1.2 billion is reserved for use by the fund and certain other MFS U.S. funds. The line of credit is provided by a syndicate of banks under a credit agreement. Borrowings may be made for temporary financing needs. Interest is charged to each fund, based on its borrowings, generally at a rate equal to the highest of 1) Daily Simple SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate) plus 0.10%, 2) the Federal Funds Effective Rate, or 3) the Overnight Bank Funding Rate, each plus an agreed upon spread. A commitment fee, based on the average daily unused portion of the committed line of credit, is allocated among the participating funds. The line of credit expires on March 13, 2025 unless extended or renewed. In addition, the fund and other funds managed by MFS have established unsecured uncommitted borrowing arrangements with certain banks for temporary financing needs. Interest is charged to each fund, based on its borrowings, at rates equal to customary reference rates plus an agreed upon spread. For the year ended November 30, 2024, the fund’s commitment fee and interest expense were $349 and $0, respectively, and are included in “Interest expense and fees and amortization of RVMTP shares debt issuance costs” in the Statement of Operations.
    (7) Investments in Affiliated Issuers
    An affiliated issuer may be considered one in which the fund owns 5% or more of the outstanding voting securities, or a company which is under common control. For the purposes of this report, the following were affiliated issuers for the year ended November 30, 2024:
    Affiliated Issuers Beginning
    Value
    Purchases Sales
    Proceeds
    Realized
    Gain
    (Loss)
    Change in
    Unrealized
    Appreciation or
    Depreciation
    Ending
    Value
    MFS Institutional Money Market Portfolio  $782,698  $29,295,736  $28,665,630  $1,156  $(32)  $1,413,928
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    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    Affiliated Issuers Dividend
    Income
    Capital Gain
    Distributions
    MFS Institutional Money Market Portfolio  $87,143  $—
    (8) Preferred Shares
    As of August 1, 2024, the fund had 438 shares issued and outstanding of RVMTP shares. On August 2, 2024 and August 30, 2024, to reduce leverage attributable to preferred shares, the fund optionally redeemed 56 RVMTP shares and 10 RVMTP shares, respectively, at a redemption price equal to the liquidation preference of $100,000 per share, plus accumulated and unpaid dividends.  Effective August 30, 2024, the fund has 372 shares issued and outstanding of RVMTP shares. The outstanding RVMTP shares are redeemable at the option of the fund in whole or in part at the liquidation preference of $100,000 per share, plus accumulated and unpaid dividends, but generally for the purpose of decreasing the leverage of the fund. The RVMTP shares have a stated maturity date of 2051 but are subject to a mandatory early term redemption date of January 20, 2028, and at each 42 month anniversary from that date and subsequent extensions of the RVMTP shares, unless the holder(s) of the RVMTP shares agrees to retain the RVMTP shares. Otherwise, the RVMTP shares are subject to mandatory tender for remarketing to another purchaser. In the event the remarketing is unsuccessful, the RVMTP shares would be subject to redemption at the liquidation preference of $100,000 per share, plus accumulated and unpaid dividends. There is no assurance that the term of the RVMTP shares will be extended or that the RVMTP shares will be replaced with any other preferred shares or other form of leverage upon the redemption of the RVMTP shares. Dividends on the RVMTP shares are cumulative and reset weekly to a fixed spread against the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) Municipal Swap Index. During the year ended November 30, 2024, the dividend rates on the RVMTP shares ranged from 2.90% to 5.55%. For the year ended November 30, 2024, the average dividend rate was 4.47%.
    In the fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities, the RVMTP shares aggregate liquidation preference is shown as a liability since they have a stated mandatory redemption date. Dividends paid on the RVMTP shares are treated as interest expense and recorded as incurred. For the year ended November 30, 2024, interest expense related to the dividends paid on RVMTP shares amounted to $1,887,101 and is included in “Interest expense and fees and amortization of RVMTP shares debt issuance costs” in the Statement of Operations. Costs directly related to the issuance of the RVMTP shares are considered debt issuance costs. Debt issuance costs are presented as a direct deduction from the carrying amount of the related debt liability and are amortized into interest expense over the life of the RVMTP shares. The period-end carrying value for the RVMTP shares in the fund’s Statement of Assets and Liabilities is its liquidation value less any unamortized debt issuance costs, which approximates its fair value. Its fair value would be considered level 2 under the fair value hierarchy.
    Under the terms of a purchase agreement between the fund and the investor in the RVMTP shares, the fund is subject to various investment restrictions. These investment-related requirements are in various respects more restrictive than those to which the fund is otherwise subject in accordance with its investment objectives and policies. In addition, the fund is subject to certain restrictions on its investments imposed by guidelines of the rating agency that rates the RVMTP shares, which
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    Notes to Financial Statements  - continued 
    guidelines may be changed by the applicable rating agency, in its sole discretion, from time to time. These guidelines may impose asset coverage or portfolio composition requirements that are more stringent than those imposed on the fund by the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”).
    The fund is required to maintain certain asset coverage with respect to the RVMTP shares as defined in the fund’s governing documents and the 1940 Act. One of a number of asset coverage-related requirements is that the fund is not permitted to declare or pay common share dividends unless immediately thereafter the fund has a minimum asset coverage ratio of at least 200% with respect to the RVMTP shares after deducting the amount of such common share dividends. The fund may be subject to more stringent asset coverage levels which exceed the requirements under the 1940 Act and may change from time to time as agreed to by the fund and the holders of the RVMTP shares.
    The 1940 Act requires that the preferred shareholders of the fund, voting as a separate class, have the right to elect at least two trustees at all times, and elect a majority of the trustees at any time when dividends on the preferred shares are unpaid for two full years. Unless otherwise required by law or under the terms of the preferred shares, each preferred share is entitled to one vote and preferred shareholders will vote together with common shareholders as a single class.
    Leverage involves risks and special considerations for the fund’s common shareholders. To the extent that investments are purchased by the fund with proceeds from the issuance of preferred shares, the fund’s net asset value will increase or decrease at a greater rate than a comparable unleveraged fund. Changes in the value of the fund’s portfolio will be borne entirely by the common shareholders. It is possible that the fund will be required to sell assets at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so in order to redeem preferred shares to comply with asset coverage or other restrictions including those imposed by the 1940 Act and the rating agency that rates the preferred shares. There is no assurance that the fund’s leveraging strategy will be successful.
    61

    Table of Contents
    Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
    To the Shareholders and the Board of Trustees of
    MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust
    Opinion on the Financial Statements
    We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust (the “Fund”), including the portfolio of investments, as of November 30, 2024, and the related statements of operations and cash flows for the year then ended, the statements of changes in net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended, the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended and the related notes (collectively referred to as the “financial statements”). In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Fund at November 30, 2024, the results of its operations and its cash flows for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and its financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.
    Basis for Opinion
    These financial statements are the responsibility of the Fund’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Fund’s financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (“PCAOB”) and are required to be independent with respect to the Fund in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.
    We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Fund is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of the Fund’s internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audits, we are required to obtain an understanding of internal control over financial reporting 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.
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    Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm – continued
    Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of November 30, 2024, by correspondence with the custodian, brokers and others; when replies were not received from brokers and others, we performed other auditing procedures. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
    /s/ Ernst & Young LLP
    We have served as the auditor of one or more MFS investment companies since 1993.
    Boston, Massachusetts
    January 14, 2025
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    Table of Contents
    Results of Shareholder Meeting (unaudited)
    At the annual meeting of shareholders of MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust, which was held on October 3, 2024, the following actions were taken:
    Item 1: To elect the following individuals as Trustees, elected by the holders of common and preferred shares together:
        Number of Shares
    Nominee   For   Against/Withheld
    John A. Caroselli   6,242,825.338   899,020.683
    James W. Kilman Jr.   6,224,137.114   917,708.907
    Clarence Otis Jr.   6,224,137.114   917,708.907
    Item 2: To elect the following individuals as Trustees, elected by the holders of preferred shares only:
        Number of Shares
    Nominee   For   Against/Withheld
    John P. Kavanaugh   438   0
    Laurie J. Thomsen   438   0
    64

    Table of Contents
    Trustees and Officers — Identification and Background
    The Trustees and Officers of the Trust, as of January 1, 2025, are listed below, together with their principal occupations during the past five years. (Their titles may have varied during that period.)  The address of each Trustee and Officer is 111 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02199-7618.
    Name, Age   Position(s) Held with Fund   Trustee/Officer Since(h)   Term
    Expiring
      Number
    of MFS
    Funds
    overseen
    by the
    Trustee
      Principal
    Occupations
    During
    the Past
    Five Years
      Other
    Directorships
    During
    the Past
    Five Years (j)
    INTERESTED TRUSTEE                        
    Michael W. Roberge (k)
    (age 58)
      Trustee   January 2021   2026   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Chairman (since January 2021); Chief Executive Officer (until 2024); Director; Chairman of the Board (since January 2022)   N/A
    INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES                        
    John P. Kavanaugh
    (age 70)
      Trustee and Chair of Trustees   January 2009   2025(l)   140   Private investor   N/A
    Steven E. Buller
    (age 73)
      Trustee   February 2014   2026   140   Private investor   N/A
    John A. Caroselli
    (age 70)
      Trustee   March 2017   2027   140   Private investor; JC Global Advisors, LLC (management consulting), President (since 2015)   N/A
    Maureen R. Goldfarb
    (age 69)
      Trustee   January 2009   2025   140   Private investor   N/A
    Peter D. Jones
    (age 69)
      Trustee   January 2019   2026   140   Private investor   N/A
    James W. Kilman, Jr.
    (age 63)
      Trustee   January 2019   2027   140   Burford Capital Limited (finance and investment management), Senior Advisor (since 2021), Chief Financial Officer (2019-2021); KielStrand Capital LLC (family office), Chief Executive Officer (since 2016)   Alpha-En Corporation, Director (2016-2019)
    65

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    Trustees and Officers - continued
    Name, Age   Position(s) Held with Fund   Trustee/Officer Since(h)   Term
    Expiring
      Number
    of MFS
    Funds
    overseen
    by the
    Trustee
      Principal
    Occupations
    During
    the Past
    Five Years
      Other
    Directorships
    During
    the Past
    Five Years (j)
    Clarence Otis, Jr.
    (age 68)
      Trustee   March 2017   2027   140   Private investor   VF Corporation, Director; Verizon Communications, Inc., Director; The Travelers Companies, Director
    Maryanne L. Roepke
    (age 68)
      Trustee   May 2014   2025   140   Private investor   N/A
    Paula E. Smith
    (age 61)
      Trustee   January 2025   2025   140   PricewaterhouseCoopers
    LLP (accounting), Partner (until June 2023)
      N/A
    Laurie J. Thomsen
    (age 67)
      Trustee   March 2005   2025(l)   140   Private investor   The Travelers Companies, Director; Dycom Industries, Inc., Director
    Darrell A. Williams
    (age 65)
      Trustee   January 2025   2026   140   DuSable Group, LLC (financial advisory and consulting services), Founder & Managing Member (since June 2023), Loop Capital LLC (investment banking, brokerage and advisory services), Managing Partner (2018 – 2020) and Managing Director (2020 – March 2023)    
        
    Name, Age   Position(s) Held with
    Fund
      Trustee/Officer Since(h)   Term Expiring   Number
    of MFS
    Funds for
    which the Person is an Officer
      Principal
    Occupations
    During
    the Past
    Five Years
    OFFICERS                    
    William T. Allen (k)
    (age 57)
      Deputy Assistant Treasurer   April 2024   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Vice President
    66

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    Trustees and Officers - continued
    Name, Age   Position(s) Held with
    Fund
      Trustee/Officer Since(h)   Term Expiring   Number
    of MFS
    Funds for
    which the Person is an Officer
      Principal
    Occupations
    During
    the Past
    Five Years
    Brian Balasco (k)
    (age 47)
      Assistant Treasurer   April 2024   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Vice President
    Christopher R. Bohane (k)
    (age 50)
      Assistant Secretary and Assistant Clerk   July 2005   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Senior Vice President and Deputy General Counsel
    James L. Byrne (k)
    (age 48)
      Assistant Treasurer   April 2024   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Vice President
    John W. Clark, Jr. (k)
    (age 57)
      Deputy Treasurer   April 2017   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Vice President
    David L. DiLorenzo (k)
    (age 56)
      President   July 2005   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Senior Vice President
    Heidi W. Hardin (k)
    (age 57)
      Secretary and Clerk   April 2017   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Executive Vice President and General Counsel
    Brian E. Langenfeld (k)
    (age 51)
      Assistant Secretary and Assistant Clerk   June 2006   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Vice President and Managing Counsel
    Rosa E. Licea-Mailloux (k)
    (age 48)
      Chief Compliance Officer   March 2022   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Vice President (since 2018); Director of Corporate Compliance (2018-2021), Senior Director Compliance (2021-2022), Senior Managing Director of North American Compliance & Chief Compliance Officer (since March 2022)
    Amanda S. Mooradian (k)
    (age 45)
      Assistant Secretary and Assistant Clerk   September 2018   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Vice President and Senior Counsel
    Susan A. Pereira (k)
    (age 54)
      Assistant Secretary and Assistant Clerk   July 2005   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Vice President and Managing Counsel
    Kasey L. Phillips (k)
    (age 53)
      Treasurer   September 2012   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Vice President
    67

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    Trustees and Officers - continued
    Name, Age   Position(s) Held with
    Fund
      Trustee/Officer Since(h)   Term Expiring   Number
    of MFS
    Funds for
    which the Person is an Officer
      Principal
    Occupations
    During
    the Past
    Five Years
    Matthew A. Stowe (k)
    (age 50)
      Assistant Secretary and Assistant Clerk   October 2014   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Senior Vice President and Senior Managing Counsel
    William B. Wilson (k)
    (age 42)
      Assistant Secretary and Assistant Clerk   October 2022   N/A   140   Massachusetts Financial Services Company, Assistant Vice President and Senior Counsel
    (h) Date first appointed to serve as Trustee/Officer of an MFS Fund. Each Trustee has served continuously since appointment unless indicated otherwise.  From January 2012 through December 2016, Mr. DiLorenzo served as Treasurer of the Funds. From September 2012 through March 2024, Ms. Phillips served as Assistant Treasurer of the Funds.  From April 2017 through March 2024, Mr. Clark served as Assistant Treasurer of the Funds.
    (j) Directorships or trusteeships of companies required to report to the Securities and Exchange Commission (i.e., “public companies”).
    (k) “Interested person” of the Trust within the meaning of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (referred to as the 1940 Act), which is the principal federal law governing investment companies like the fund, as a result of a position with MFS.  The address of MFS is 111 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02199-7618.
    (l) Mr. Kavanaugh and Ms. Thomsen serve as Trustees elected by the holders of preferred shares for a one-year term.
    The Trust holds annual shareholder meetings for the purpose of electing Trustees, and Trustees are elected for fixed terms. Two Trustees (Mr. Kavanaugh and Ms. Thomsen), each holding a term of one year, are elected annually by holders of the Trust's preferred shares. The remaining Trustees are currently divided into three classes, each having a term of three years which term expires on the date of the third annual meeting following the election to office of the Trustee’s class.  Each year the term of one class expires. Each Trustee and officer will serve until next elected or his or her earlier death, resignation, retirement or removal. Under the terms of the Board's retirement policy, an Independent Trustee shall retire at the end of the calendar year in which he or she reaches the earlier of 75 years of age or 15 years of service on the Board (or, in the case of any Independent Trustee who joined the Board prior to 2015, 20 years of service on the Board).
    Messrs. Buller, Caroselli, Jones, Otis, and Williams are members of the Trust’s Audit Committee.
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    Trustees and Officers - continued
    Each of the Interested Trustees and certain Officers hold comparable officer positions with certain affiliates of MFS.

    Investment Adviser Custodian
    Massachusetts Financial Services Company
    111 Huntington Avenue
    Boston, MA 02199-7618
    State Street Bank and Trust Company
    1 Congress Street, Suite 1
    Boston, MA 02114-2016
        
    Portfolio Manager(s) Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
    Michael Dawson
    Jason Kosty
    Geoffrey Schechter
    Ernst & Young LLP
    200 Clarendon Street
    Boston, MA 02116
    69

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    MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust
    Board Review of Investment Advisory Agreement
    MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust
    The Investment Company Act of 1940 requires that both the full Board of Trustees and a majority of the non-interested (“independent”) Trustees, voting separately, annually approve the continuation of the Fund’s investment advisory agreement with MFS.  The Trustees consider matters bearing on the Fund and its advisory arrangements at their meetings throughout the year, including a review of performance data at each regular meeting.  In addition, the independent Trustees met several times over the course of three months beginning in May and ending in July, 2024 (“contract review meetings”) for the specific purpose of considering whether to approve the continuation of the investment advisory agreement for the Fund and the other investment companies that the Board oversees (the “MFS Funds”).  The independent Trustees were assisted in their evaluation of the Fund’s investment advisory agreement by independent legal counsel, from whom they received separate legal advice and with whom they met separately from MFS during various contract review meetings.  The independent Trustees were also assisted in this process by an independent consultant who was retained by and reported to the independent Trustees.
    In connection with their deliberations regarding the continuation of the investment advisory agreement, the Trustees, including the independent Trustees, considered such information and factors as they believed, in light of the legal advice furnished to them and their own business judgment, to be relevant.  The investment advisory agreement for the Fund was considered separately, although the Trustees also took into account the common interests of all MFS Funds in their review.  As described below, the Trustees considered the nature, quality, and extent of the various investment advisory, administrative, and shareholder services performed by MFS under the existing investment advisory agreement and other arrangements with the Fund.
    In connection with their contract review meetings, the Trustees received and relied upon materials that included, among other items: (i) information provided by Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (“Broadridge”), an independent third party, on the investment performance (based on net asset value) of the Fund for various time periods ended December 31, 2023 and the investment performance (based on net asset value) of a group of funds with substantially similar investment classifications/objectives (the “Broadridge performance universe”), (ii) information provided by Broadridge on the Fund’s advisory fees and other expenses and the advisory fees and other expenses of comparable funds identified by Broadridge as well as all other funds in the same investment classification/category (the “Broadridge expense group and universe”), (iii) information provided by MFS on the advisory fees of portfolios of other clients of MFS, including institutional separate accounts and other clients, (iv) information as to whether and to what extent applicable expense waivers, reimbursements or fee “breakpoints” are observed for the Fund, (v) information regarding MFS’ financial results and financial condition, including MFS’ and certain of its affiliates’ estimated profitability from services performed for the Fund and the MFS Funds as a whole, and compared to MFS’ institutional business, (vi) MFS’ views regarding the outlook for the mutual fund industry and the strategic business plans of MFS, (vii) descriptions of various functions performed by MFS for the Funds, such as compliance monitoring and
    70

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    Board Review of Investment Advisory Agreement - continued
    portfolio trading practices, and (viii) information regarding the overall organization of MFS, including information about MFS’ senior management and other personnel providing investment advisory, administrative and other services to the Fund and the other MFS Funds.  The comparative performance, fee and expense information prepared and provided by Broadridge was not independently verified and the independent Trustees did not independently verify any information provided to them by MFS.
    The Trustees’ conclusion as to the continuation of the investment advisory agreement was based on a comprehensive consideration of all information provided to the Trustees and not the result of any single factor.  Some of the factors that figured particularly in the Trustees’ deliberations are described below, although individual Trustees may have evaluated the information presented differently from one another, giving different weights to various factors.  It is also important to recognize that the fee arrangements for the Fund and other MFS Funds are the result of years of review and discussion between the independent Trustees and MFS, that certain aspects of such arrangements may receive greater scrutiny in some years than in others, and that the Trustees’ conclusions may be based, in part, on their consideration of these same arrangements during the course of the year and in prior years.  
    Based on information provided by Broadridge and MFS, the Trustees reviewed the Fund’s total return investment performance as well as the Broadridge performance universe over various time periods.  The Trustees placed particular emphasis on the total return performance of the Fund’s common shares in comparison to the performance of funds in its Broadridge performance universe over the five-year period ended December 31, 2023, which the Trustees believed was a long enough period to reflect differing market conditions.  The total return performance of the Fund’s common shares ranked 30th out of a total of 35 funds in the Broadridge performance universe for this five-year period (a ranking of first place out of the total number of funds in the performance universe indicating the best performer and a ranking of last place out of the total number of funds in the performance universe indicating the worst performer).  The total return performance of the Fund’s common shares ranked 21st out of a total of 39 funds for the one-year period and 28th out of a total of 37 funds for the three-year period ended December 31, 2023.  Given the size of the Broadridge performance universe and information previously provided by MFS regarding differences between the Fund and other funds in its Broadridge performance universe, the Trustees also reviewed the Fund’s performance in comparison to the Bloomberg Municipal Bond Index.  The Fund outperformed its benchmark for the one-year period and underperformed its benchmark for each of the three- and five-year periods ended December 31, 2023 (one-year: 8.5% total return for the Fund versus 6.4% total return for the benchmark; three-year: -2.9% total return for the Fund versus -0.4% total return for the benchmark; five-year: 1.4% total return for the Fund versus 2.3% total return for the benchmark).  Because of the passage of time, these performance results may differ from the performance results for more recent periods, including those shown elsewhere in this report. 
    The Trustees expressed concern to MFS about the substandard investment performance of the Fund. In the course of their deliberations, the Trustees took into account information provided by MFS in connection with the contract review meetings, as well as during investment review meetings conducted with portfolio management personnel during the course of the year, as to MFS’ efforts to improve the Fund’s performance.  In addition, the Trustees requested that they receive a separate update
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    Board Review of Investment Advisory Agreement - continued
    on the Fund’s performance at each of their regular meetings.  After reviewing these and related factors, the Trustees concluded, within the context of their overall conclusions regarding the investment advisory agreement, that MFS’ responses and efforts and plans to improve investment performance were sufficient to support approval of the continuance of the investment advisory agreement for an additional one-year period, but that they would continue to closely monitor the performance of the Fund.
    In assessing the reasonableness of the Fund’s advisory fee, the Trustees considered, among other information, the Fund’s advisory fee and the total expense ratio of the Fund’s common shares as a percentage of average daily net assets (including the value of preferred shares) and the advisory fee and total expense ratios of the Broadridge expense group based on information provided by Broadridge.  The Trustees considered that MFS has agreed in writing to reduce its advisory fee, and that MFS currently observes an expense limitation for the Fund, each of which may not be changed without the Trustees’ approval.  The Trustees also considered that, according to the data provided by Broadridge (which takes into account any fee reductions or expense limitations that were in effect during the Fund’s last fiscal year), the Fund’s effective advisory fee rate was approximately at the Broadridge expense group median and the Fund’s total expense ratio was higher than the Broadridge expense group median.
    The Trustees also considered the advisory fees charged by MFS to any institutional separate accounts advised by MFS (“separate accounts”) and unaffiliated investment companies for which MFS serves as subadviser (“subadvised funds”) that have comparable investment strategies to the Fund, if any.  In comparing these fees, the Trustees considered information provided by MFS as to the generally broader scope of services provided by MFS to the Fund, as well as the more extensive regulatory burdens imposed on MFS in managing the Fund, in comparison to separate accounts and subadvised funds.
    The Trustees considered that, as a closed-end fund, the Fund is unlikely to experience meaningful asset growth.  As a result, the Trustees did not view the potential for realization of economies of scale as the Fund’s assets grow to be a material factor in their deliberations.  The Trustees noted that they would consider economies of scale in the future in the event the Fund experiences significant asset growth, such as through a material increase in the market value of the Fund’s portfolio securities.
    The Trustees also considered information prepared by MFS relating to MFS’ costs and profits with respect to the Fund, the MFS Funds considered as a group, and other investment companies and accounts advised by MFS, as well as MFS’ methodologies used to determine and allocate its costs to the MFS Funds, the Fund and other accounts and products for purposes of estimating profitability.
    After reviewing these and other factors described herein, the Trustees concluded, within the context of their overall conclusions regarding the investment advisory agreement, that the advisory fees charged to the Fund represent reasonable compensation in light of the services being provided by MFS to the Fund.
    In addition, the Trustees considered MFS’ resources and related efforts to continue to retain, attract and motivate capable personnel to serve the Fund.  The Trustees also considered current and developing conditions in the financial services industry, including the presence of large and well-capitalized companies which are spending, and appear to be prepared to continue to spend, substantial sums to engage personnel
    72

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    Board Review of Investment Advisory Agreement - continued
    and to provide services to competing investment companies.  In this regard, the Trustees also considered the financial resources of MFS and its ultimate parent, Sun Life Financial Inc.  The Trustees also considered the advantages and possible disadvantages to the Fund of having an adviser that also serves other investment companies as well as other accounts. 
    The Trustees also considered the nature, quality, cost, and extent of administrative services provided to the Fund by MFS under agreements other than the investment advisory agreement.  The Trustees also considered the nature, extent and quality of certain other services MFS performs or arranges for on the Fund’s behalf, which may include securities lending programs, directed expense payment programs, class action recovery programs, and MFS’ interaction with third-party service providers, principally custodians and sub-custodians.  The Trustees concluded that the various non-advisory services provided by MFS and its affiliates on behalf of the Fund were satisfactory.
    The Trustees considered so-called “fall-out benefits” to MFS such as reputational value derived from serving as investment manager to the MFS Funds.  The Trustees also considered that MFS discontinued its historic practice of obtaining investment research from portfolio brokerage commissions paid by certain MFS Funds effective January 2018, and directly pays or voluntarily reimburses a Fund, if applicable, for the costs of external research acquired through the use of the Fund’s portfolio brokerage commissions.
    Based on their evaluation of factors that they deemed to be material, including those factors described above, the Board of Trustees, including the independent Trustees, concluded that the Fund’s investment advisory agreement with MFS should be continued for an additional one-year period, commencing August 1, 2024.
    73

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    Proxy Voting Policies and Information
    MFS votes proxies on behalf of the fund pursuant to proxy voting policies and procedures that are available without charge, upon request, by calling 1-800-225-2606, by visiting mfs.com/proxyvoting, or by visiting the SEC’s Web site at http://www.sec.gov.
    Information regarding how the fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent twelve-month period ended June 30 is available by August 31 of each year without charge by visiting mfs.com/proxyvoting, or by visiting the SEC’s Web site at http://www.sec.gov.
    Quarterly Portfolio Disclosure
    The fund files a complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the SEC for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year as an exhibit to its reports on Form N-PORT.  The fund’s Form N-PORT reports are available on the SEC’s Web site at  http://www.sec.gov.  A shareholder can obtain the portfolio holdings report for the first and third quarters of the fund's fiscal year at  mfs.com/closedendfunds by choosing the fund's name and then scrolling to the “Resources” section and clicking on the “Reports and Other Documents” tab.
    Further Information
    From time to time, MFS may post important information about the fund or the MFS Funds on the MFS Web site (mfs.com). This information is available at https://www.mfs.com/announcements or at mfs.com/closedendfunds by choosing the fund's name and then scrolling to the “Resources” section and clicking on the “Announcements” tab, if any.
    Additional information about the fund (e.g., performance, dividends and the fund’s price history)  is also available at mfs.com/closedendfunds by choosing the fund's name, if any.
    INFORMATION ABOUT FUND CONTRACTS AND LEGAL CLAIMS
    The fund has entered into contractual arrangements with an investment adviser, administrator, transfer agent, and custodian who each provide services to the fund. Unless expressly stated otherwise, shareholders are not parties to, or intended beneficiaries of these contractual arrangements, and these contractual arrangements are not intended to create any shareholder right to enforce them against the service providers or to seek any remedy under them against the service providers, either directly or on behalf of the fund.
    Under the Trust’s By-Laws, any claims asserted against or on behalf of the MFS Funds, including claims against Trustees and Officers, must be brought in state and federal courts located within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
    Federal Tax Information (unaudited)
    The fund will notify shareholders of amounts for use in preparing 2024 income tax forms in January 2025. The following information is provided pursuant to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.
    74

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    Federal Tax Information (unaudited) - continued
    Of the dividends paid from net investment income during the fiscal year, 96.99% is designated as exempt interest dividends for federal income tax purposes. If the fund has earned income on private activity bonds, a portion of the dividends paid may be considered a tax preference item for purposes of computing a shareholder’s alternative minimum tax.
    The fund intends to pass through the maximum amount allowable as Section 163(j) Interest Dividends as defined in Treasury Regulation §1.163(j)-1(b).
    75

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    rev. 3/16
    FACTS WHAT DOES MFS DO WITH YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION?
        
    Why? Financial companies choose how they share your personal information. Federal law gives consumers the right to limit some but not all sharing. Federal law also requires us to tell you how we collect, share, and protect your personal information. Please read this notice carefully to understand what we do.
        
    What? The types of personal information we collect and share depend on the product or service you have with us. This information can include:
    • Social Security number and account balances
    • Account transactions and transaction history
    • Checking account information and wire transfer instructions
    When you are no longer our customer, we continue to share your information as described in this notice.
        
    How? All financial companies need to share customers' personal information to run their everyday business. In the section below, we list the reasons financial companies can share their customers' personal information; the reasons MFS chooses to share; and whether you can limit this sharing.
        
    Reasons we can share your
    personal information
    Does MFS share? Can you limit
    this sharing?
    For our everyday business purposes –
    such as to process your transactions, maintain your
    account(s), respond to court orders and legal
    investigations, or report to credit bureaus
    Yes No
    For our marketing purposes –
    to offer our products and services to you
    No We don't share
    For joint marketing with other
    financial companies
    No We don't share
    For our affiliates' everyday business purposes –
    information about your transactions and experiences
    No We don't share
    For our affiliates' everyday business purposes –
    information about your creditworthiness
    No We don't share
    For nonaffiliates to market to you No We don't share
        
    Questions? Call 800-225-2606 or go to mfs.com.
    76

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    Page 2
    Who we are
    Who is providing this notice? MFS Funds, MFS Investment Management, MFS Institutional Advisors, Inc., and MFS Heritage Trust Company.
        
    What we do
    How does MFS
    protect my personal
    information?
    To protect your personal information from unauthorized access and use, we use security measures that comply with federal law. These measures include procedural, electronic, and physical safeguards for the protection of the personal information we collect about you.
    How does MFS
    collect my personal
    information?
    We collect your personal information, for example, when you
    • open an account or provide account information
    • direct us to buy securities or direct us to sell your securities
    • make a wire transfer
    We also collect your personal information from others, such as credit bureaus, affiliates, or other companies.
    Why can't I limit all sharing? Federal law gives you the right to limit only
    • sharing for affiliates' everyday business purposes – information about your creditworthiness
    • affiliates from using your information to market to you
    • sharing for nonaffiliates to market to you
    State laws and individual companies may give you additional rights to limit sharing.
        
    Definitions
    Affiliates Companies related by common ownership or control. They can be financial and nonfinancial companies.
    • MFS does not share personal information with affiliates, except for everyday business purposes as described on page one of this notice.
    Nonaffiliates Companies not related by common ownership or control. They can be financial and nonfinancial companies.
    • MFS does not share with nonaffiliates so they can market to you.
    Joint marketing A formal agreement between nonaffiliated financial companies that together market financial products or services to you.
    • MFS doesn't jointly market.
        
    Other important information
    If you own an MFS product or receive an MFS service in the name of a third party such as a bank or broker-dealer, their privacy policy may apply to you instead of ours.
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    CONTACT US
    COMPUTERSHARE TRUST COMPANY, N.A.
    TRANSFER AGENT, REGISTRAR, AND
    DIVIDEND DISBURSING AGENT
    CALL
    1-800-637-2304
    9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern time
    WRITE
    Computershare Trust Company, N.A.
    P.O. Box 43078
    Providence, RI 02940-3078
    New York Stock Exchange Symbol: CXH

    Item 1(b):

    A copy of the notice transmitted to the Registrant’s shareholders in reliance on Rule 30e-3 of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended that contains disclosure specified by paragraph (c)(3) of Rule 30e-3 is attached hereto as EX-99.30e-3Notice.

    ITEM 2. CODE OF ETHICS.

    The Registrant has adopted a Code of Ethics (the “Code”) pursuant to Section 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and as defined in Form N-CSR that applies to the Registrant’s principal executive officer and principal financial and accounting officer. During the period covered by this report, the Registrant has not amended any provision in the Code that relates to an element of the Code’s definition enumerated in paragraph

    (b)of Item 2 of this Form N-CSR. During the period covered by this report, the Registrant did not grant a waiver, including an implicit

    waiver, from any provision of the Code. David L. DiLorenzo (Principal Executive Officer) and James O. Yost (Principal Financial Officer) were the two persons covered by the Code prior to April 1, 2024. Beginning April 1, 2024, David L. DiLorenzo (Principal Executive Officer) and Kasey L. Phillips (Principal Financial Officer) are the two persons covered by the Code.

    A copy of the Code is attached hereto as EX-99.COE.

    ITEM 3. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT.

    Messrs. Steven E. Buller, Clarence Otis, Jr., and Darrell A. Williams, members of the Audit Committee, have been determined by the Board of Trustees in their reasonable business judgment to meet the definition of “audit committee financial expert” as such term is defined in Form N-CSR. In addition, Messrs. Buller, Otis, and Williams are “independent” members of the Audit Committee (as such term has been defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission in regulations implementing Section 407 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002). The Securities and Exchange Commission has stated that the designation of a person as an audit committee financial expert pursuant to this Item 3 on the Form N-CSR does not impose on such a person any duties, obligations or liability that are greater than the duties, obligations or liability imposed on such person as a member of the Audit Committee and the Board of Trustees in the absence of such designation or identification.

    ITEM 4. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES.

    Items 4(a) through 4(d) and 4(g):

    The Board of Trustees has appointed Ernst & Young LLP (“E&Y”) to serve as independent accountants to the Registrant (hereinafter the “Registrant” or the “Fund”). The tables below set forth the audit fees billed to the Fund as well as fees for non-audit services provided to the Fund and/or to the Fund’s investment adviser, Massachusetts Financial Services Company (“MFS”), and to various entities either controlling, controlled by, or under common control with MFS that provide ongoing services to the Fund (“MFS Related Entities”).

    For the fiscal years ended November 30, 2024 and 2023, audit fees billed to the Fund by E&Y were as follows:

    Fees billed by E&Y:

     

    Audit Fees

     

    2024

     

    2023

    MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust

    74,167

     

    71,549

    For the fiscal years ended November 30, 2024 and 2023, fees billed by E&Y for audit-related, tax and other services provided to the Fund and for audit-related, tax and other services provided to MFS and MFS Related Entities were as follows:

    Fees billed by E&Y:

    Audit-Related Fees1

     

    Tax Fees2

    All Other Fees3

     

    2024

    2023

     

    2024

    2023

    2024

     

    2023

    To MFS Investment Grade

    14,482

    13,965

     

    0

    0

     

    0

     

    0

    Municipal Trust

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Fees billed by E&Y:

    Audit-Related Fees1

     

    Tax Fees2

    All Other Fees3

     

    2024

    2023

     

    2024

    2023

    2024

     

    2023

    To MFS and MFS Related

    0

    0

     

    0

    0

     

    3,600

     

    3,600

    Entities of MFS Investment

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Grade Municipal Trust *

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Fees Billed by E&Y:

     

     

     

    Aggregate Fees for Non-audit Services

     

     

     

     

     

    2024

     

     

    2023

     

    To MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust,

     

     

    324,022

     

     

    192,315

     

    MFS and MFS Related Entities#

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    *This amount reflects the fees billed to MFS and MFS Related Entities for non-audit services relating directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Fund (portions of which services also related to the operations and financial reporting of other funds within the MFS Funds complex).

    # This amount reflects the aggregate fees billed by E&Y for non-audit services rendered to the Fund and for non- audit services rendered to MFS and the MFS Related Entities.

    1 The fees included under “Audit-Related Fees” are fees related to assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance of the audit or review of financial statements, but not reported under ‘‘Audit Fees,’’ including accounting consultations, agreed-upon procedure reports, attestation reports, comfort letters and internal control reviews.

    2 The fees included under “Tax Fees” are fees associated with tax compliance, tax advice and tax planning, including services relating to the filing or amendment of federal, state or local income tax returns, regulated investment company qualification reviews and tax distribution and analysis.

    3 The fees included under “All Other Fees” are fees for products and services provided by E&Y other than those reported under “Audit Fees,” “Audit-Related Fees” and “Tax Fees”.

    Item 4(e)(1):

    Set forth below are the policies and procedures established by the Audit Committee of the Board of Trustees relating to the pre-approval of audit and non-audit related services:

    To the extent required by applicable law, pre-approval by the Audit Committee of the Board is needed for all audit and permissible non-audit services rendered to the Fund and all permissible non-audit services rendered to MFS or MFS Related Entities if the services relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Registrant. Pre- approval is currently on an engagement-by-engagement basis. In the event pre-approval of such services is necessary between regular meetings of the Audit Committee and it is not practical to wait to seek pre-approval at the next regular meeting of the Audit Committee, pre-approval of such services may be referred to the Chair of the Audit Committee for approval; provided that the Chair may not pre-approve any individual engagement for such services exceeding $50,000 or multiple engagements for such services in the aggregate exceeding $100,000 between such regular meetings of the Audit Committee. Any engagement pre-approved by the Chair between regular meetings of the Audit Committee shall be presented for ratification by the entire Audit Committee at its next regularly scheduled meeting.

    Item 4(e)(2):

    None, or 0%, of the services relating to the Audit-Related Fees, Tax Fees and All Other Fees paid by the Fund and MFS and MFS Related Entities relating directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Registrant disclosed above were approved by the audit committee pursuant to paragraphs (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X (which permits audit committee approval after the start of the engagement with respect to services other than audit, review or attest services, if certain conditions are satisfied).

    Item 4(f):

    Not applicable.

    Item 4(h):

    The Registrant’s Audit Committee has considered whether the provision by a Registrant’s independent registered public accounting firm of non-audit services to MFS and MFS Related Entities that were not pre-approved by the Committee (because such services were provided prior to the effectiveness of SEC rules requiring pre-approval or because such services did not relate directly to the operations and financial reporting of the Registrant) was compatible with maintaining the independence of the independent registered public accounting firm as the Registrant’s principal auditors.

    Item 4(i):

    Not applicable.

    Item 4(j):

    Not applicable.

    ITEM 5. AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS.

    The Registrant has an Audit Committee established in accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Effective January 1, 2025, the members of the Audit Committee are Messrs. Steven E. Buller, John A. Caroselli, Peter D. Jones, Clarence Otis, Jr, and Darrell A. Williams.

    ITEM 6. INVESTMENTS

    A schedule of investments of the Registrant is included as part of the report to shareholders of the Registrant under Item 1(a) of this Form N-CSR.

    ITEM 7. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR OPEN-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

    Not applicable to the Registrant.

    ITEM 8. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS FOR OPEN-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

    Not applicable to the Registrant.

    ITEM 9. PROXY DISCLOSURES FOR OPEN-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

    Not applicable to the Registrant.

    ITEM 10. RENUMERATION PAID TO DIRECTORS, OFFICERS, AND OTHERS OF OPEN-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

    Not applicable to the Registrant.

    ITEM 11. STATEMENT REGARDING BASES FOR APPROVAL OF INVESTMENT ADVISORY CONTRACT.

    This information is disclosed as part of the financial statements included in Item 1 above.

    ITEM 12. DISCLOSURE OF PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

    A copy of the proxy voting policies and procedures are attached hereto as Ex-99.PROXYPOL.

    Item 13. PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT

    INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

    Portfolio Manager(s)

    Information regarding the portfolio manager(s) of the MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust (the "Fund"), is set forth below. Each portfolio manager is primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the Fund.

    Geoffrey Schechter has announced his intention to retire effective September 30, 2025, and he will no longer be a portfolio manager of the Fund as of that date.

    Portfolio Manager

    Primary Role

    Since

    Title and Five Year History

    Michael Dawson

    Portfolio Manager

    2007

    Investment Officer of MFS; employed in the investment area of

     

     

     

    MFS since 1998.

    Jason Kosty

    Portfolio Manager

    2022

    Investment Officer of MFS; employed in the investment area of

     

     

     

    MFS since 2003.

    Geoffrey Schechter

    Portfolio Manager

    2007

    Investment Officer of MFS; employed in the investment

     

     

     

    management area of MFS since 1993.

    Compensation

    MFS’ philosophy is to align portfolio manager compensation with the goal to provide shareholders with long-term value through a collaborative investment process. Therefore, MFS uses long-term investment performance as well as contribution to the overall investment process and collaborative culture as key factors in determining portfolio manager compensation. In addition, MFS seeks to maintain total compensation programs that are competitive in the asset management industry in each geographic market where it has employees. MFS uses competitive compensation data to ensure that compensation practices are aligned with its goals of attracting, retaining, and motivating the highest-quality professionals.

    MFS reviews portfolio manager compensation annually. In determining portfolio manager compensation, MFS uses quantitative means and qualitative means to help ensure a durable investment process. As of December 31, 2023, portfolio manager total cash compensation is a combination of base salary and performance bonus:

    Base Salary – Base salary generally represents a smaller percentage of portfolio manager total cash compensation than performance bonus. Performance Bonus – Generally, the performance bonus represents more than a majority of portfolio manager total cash compensation.

    The performance bonus is based on a combination of quantitative and qualitative factors, generally with more weight given to the former and less weight given to the latter. The quantitative portion is primarily based on the pre-tax performance of accounts managed by the portfolio manager over a range of fixed-length time periods, intended to provide the ability to assess performance over time periods consistent with a full market cycle and a strategy's investment horizon. The fixed-length time periods include the portfolio manager's full tenure on each Fund/strategy and, when available, 10-, 5-, and 3-year periods. For portfolio managers who have served for less than three years, shorter- term periods, including the one-year period, will also be considered, as will performance in previous roles, if any, held at the firm. Emphasis is generally placed on longer performance periods when multiple performance periods are available. Performance is evaluated across the full set of strategies and portfolios managed by a given portfolio manager, relative to appropriate peer group universes and/or representative indices (“benchmarks”). As of December 31, 2023, the following benchmarks were used to measure the following portfolio manager's performance for the Fund:

    Fund

    Portfolio Manager

    Benchmark(s)

    MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust

    Michael Dawson

    Bloomberg Municipal Bond Index

     

    Jason Kosty

    Bloomberg Municipal Bond Index

     

    Geoffrey Schechter

    Bloomberg Municipal Bond Index

    Benchmarks may include versions and components of indices, custom indices, and linked indices that combine performance of different indices for different portions of the time period, where appropriate.

    The qualitative portion is based on the results of an annual internal peer review process (where portfolio managers are evaluated by other portfolio managers, analysts, and traders) and management’s assessment of overall portfolio manager contributions to the MFS investment process and the client experience (distinct from fund and other account performance).

    The performance bonus may be in the form of cash and/or a deferred cash award, at the discretion of management. A deferred cash award is issued for a cash value and becomes payable over a three-year vesting period if the portfolio manager remains in the continuous employ of MFS or its affiliates. During the vesting period, the value of the unfunded deferred cash award will fluctuate as though the portfolio manager had invested the cash value of the award in an MFS fund(s) selected by the portfolio manager. A selected fund may, but is not required to, be a fund that is managed by the portfolio manager.

    MFS Equity Plan – Portfolio managers also typically benefit from the opportunity to participate in the MFS Equity Plan. Equity interests are awarded by management, on a discretionary basis, taking into account tenure at MFS, contribution to the investment process, and other factors.

    Finally, portfolio managers also participate in benefit plans (including a defined contribution plan and health and other insurance plans) and programs available generally to other employees of MFS. The percentage such benefits represent of any portfolio manager’s compensation depends upon the length of the individual’s tenure at MFS and salary level, as well as other factors.

    Ownership of Fund Shares

    The following table shows the dollar range of equity securities of the Fund beneficially owned by the Fund’s portfolio manager(s) as of the Fund's fiscal year ended November 30, 2024. The following dollar ranges apply:

    N. None

    A. $1 – $10,000

    B. $10,001 – $50,000

    C. $50,001 – $100,000

    D. $100,001 – $500,000

    E. $500,001 – $1,000,000

    F. Over $1,000,000

    Name of Portfolio Manager

    Dollar Range of Equity Securities in Fund

    Michael Dawson

    N

    Jason Kosty

    N

    Geoffrey Schechter

    N

    Other Accounts

    In addition to the Fund, each portfolio manager of the Fund is named as a portfolio manager of certain other accounts managed or sub- advised by MFS or an affiliate. The number and assets of these accounts were as follows as of the Fund's fiscal year ended November 30, 2024:

     

    Registered Investment Companies*

    Other Pooled Investment Vehicles

    Other Accounts

     

    Number of Accounts

    Total

    Number of

    Total Assets

    Number of

    Total Assets

    Name

     

    Assets

    Accounts

     

    Accounts

     

    Michael Dawson

    18

    $6.5 billion

    0

    N/A

    0

    N/A

    Jason Kosty

    9

    $15.6 billion

    1

    $197.4 million

    4

    $614.1 million

    Geoffrey Schechter

    15

    $22.0 billion

    4

    $683.8 million

    4

    $614.1 million

    * Includes the Fund.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Advisory fees are not based upon performance of any of the accounts identified in the table above.

    Potential Conflicts of Interest

    MFS seeks to identify potential conflicts of interest resulting from a portfolio manager’s management of both the Fund and other accounts, and has adopted policies and procedures reasonably designed to address such potential conflicts. There is no guarantee that MFS will be successful in identifying or mitigating conflicts of interest.

    The management of multiple funds and accounts (including accounts in which MFS, an affiliate, an employee, an officer, or a director has an interest) gives rise to conflicts of interest if the funds and accounts have different objectives and strategies, benchmarks, time horizons, and fees, as a portfolio manager must allocate his or her time and investment ideas across multiple funds and accounts. In certain instances, there are securities which are suitable for the Fund’s portfolio as well as for one or more other accounts advised by MFS or its subsidiaries (including accounts in which MFS, an affiliate, an employee, an officer, or a director has an interest). MFS' trade allocation policies could have a detrimental effect on the Fund if the Fund’s orders do not get fully executed or are delayed in getting executed due to being aggregated with those of other accounts advised by MFS or its subsidiaries. A portfolio manager may execute transactions for another fund or account that may adversely affect the value of the Fund’s investments. Investments selected for funds or accounts other than the Fund may outperform investments selected for the Fund.

    When two or more accounts are simultaneously engaged in the purchase or sale of the same security, the securities are allocated among clients in a manner believed by MFS to be fair and equitable to each over time. Allocations may be based on many factors and may not always be pro rata based on assets managed. The allocation methodology could have a detrimental effect on the price or availability of a security with respect to the Fund.

    MFS and/or a portfolio manager may have a financial incentive to allocate favorable or limited opportunity investments or structure the timing of investments to favor accounts other than the Fund; for instance, those that pay a higher advisory fee and/or have a performance adjustment, those that include an investment by the portfolio manager, and/or those in which MFS, its affiliates, its employees, its officers, and/or its directors own or have an interest.

    To the extent permitted by applicable law, certain accounts may invest their assets in other accounts advised by MFS or its affiliates,

    including accounts that are advised by one or more of the same portfolio manager(s), which could result in conflicts of interest relating to asset allocation, timing of purchases and redemptions, and increased profitability for MFS, its affiliates, and/or its personnel, including portfolio managers.

    ITEM 14. PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS.

    MFS Investment Grade Municipal Trust

     

     

     

     

    (c) Total

    (d) Maximum

     

     

     

     

    Number of

    Number (or

     

     

    (a) Total number

    (b)

    Shares

    Approximate

     

    Period

    of Shares

    Average

    Purchased as

    Dollar Value) of

     

     

    Purchased

    Price

    Part of Publicly

    Shares that May

     

     

     

    Paid per

    Announced

    Yet Be Purchased

     

     

     

    Share

    Plans or

    under the Plans

     

     

     

     

    Programs

    or Programs

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    12/01/23-12/31/23

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    01/01/24-01/31/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    02/01/24-02/28/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    03/01/24-03/31/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    04/01/24-04/30/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    05/01/24-05/31/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    06/01/24-06/30/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    07/01/24-07/31/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    08/01/24- 8/31/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    09/01/24-09/30/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    0

     

    10/01/24-10/31/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    819,922

     

    11/01/24-11/30/24

    0

    N/A

    0

    819,922

     

    Total

    0

    N/A

    0

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Note: The Board approved procedures to repurchase shares and reviews the results periodically. The notification to shareholders of the program is part of the semi-annual and annual reports sent to shareholders. These annual programs begin on October 1st of each year. The programs conform to the conditions of Rule 10b-18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and limit the aggregate number of shares that may be purchased in each annual period (October 1 through the following September 30) to 10% of the Registrant’s outstanding shares as of the first day of the plan year (October 1). The aggregate number of shares available for purchase for the October 1, 2024, plan year is 819,922.

    Section (d) above reflects zero shares available for purchase through 9/30/24 because 911,025 shares were purchased pursuant to a tender offer dated November 15, 2023.

    ITEM 15. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.

    There were no material changes to the procedures by which shareholders may send recommendations to the Board for nominees to the Registrant’s Board since the Registrant last provided disclosure as to such procedures in response to the requirements of Item 407 (c)(2)(iv) of Regulation S-K or this Item.

    ITEM 16. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

    (a)Based upon their evaluation of the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “Act”)) as conducted within 90 days of the filing date of this report on Form N-CSR, the Registrant’s principal financial officer and principal executive officer have concluded that those disclosure controls and procedures provide reasonable assurance that the material information required to be disclosed by the Registrant on this report is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission’s rules and forms.

    (b)There were no changes in the Registrant’s internal controls over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Act) that occurred during the period covered by the report that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, the Registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

    ITEM 17. DISCLOSURE OF SECURITIES LENDING ACTIVITIES FOR CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

    During the fiscal year ended November 30, 2024, there were no fees or income related to securities lending activities of the Registrant.

    ITEM 18. RECOVERY OF ERRONEOUSLY AWARDED COMPENSATION.

    Not applicable.

    ITEM 19. EXHIBITS.

    (a)(1) Any code of ethics, or amendment thereto, that is the subject of the disclosure required by Item 2, to the extent that the registrant intends to satisfy the Item 2 requirements through filing of an exhibit: Attached hereto as EX-99.COE.

    (2)A separate certification for each principal executive officer and principal financial officer of the registrant as required by Rule 30a-2(a) under the Act (17 CFR 270.30a-2): Attached hereto as EX-99.302CERT.

    (3)Any written solicitation to purchase securities under Rule 23c-1 under the Act (17 CFR 270.23c-1) sent or given during the period covered by the report by or on behalf of the registrant to 10 or more persons. Not applicable.

    (4)Change in the registrant’s independent public accountant. Not applicable.

    (b)If the report is filed under Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act, provide the certifications required by Rule 30a-2(b) under the Act (17 CFR 270.30a-2(b)), Rule 13a-14(b) or Rule 15d-14(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13a-14(b) or 240.15d-14(b)) and Section 1350 of Chapter 63 of Title 18 of the United States Code (18 U.S.C. 1350) as an exhibit. A certification furnished pursuant to this paragraph will not be deemed “filed” for the purposes of Section 18 of the Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. 78r), or otherwise subject to the liability of that section. Such certification will not be deemed to be incorporated by reference into any filing under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Exchange Act, except to the extent that the registrant specifically incorporates it by reference. Attached hereto as EX-99.906CERT.

    (c)Registrant’s Rule 30e-3 Notice pursuant to Item 1(b) of Form N-CSR. Attached hereto as EX-99.30e-3Notice.

    (d)Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures pursuant to Item 7 of Form N-CSR. Attached hereto as EX-99.PROXYPOL.

    Notice

    A copy of the Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust, as amended, of the Registrant is on file with the Secretary of State of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts and notice is hereby given that this instrument is executed on behalf of the Registrant by an officer of the Registrant as an officer and not individually and the obligations of or arising out of this instrument are not binding upon any of the Trustees or shareholders individually, but are binding only upon the assets and property of the respective constituent series of the Registrant.

    SIGNATURES

    Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

    (Registrant) MFS INVESTMENT GRADE MUNICIPAL TRUST

    By (Signature and Title)*

    /S/ DAVID L. DILORENZO

    David L. DiLorenzo, President

    Date: January 14, 2025

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

    By (Signature and Title)*

    /S/ DAVID L. DILORENZO

    David L. DiLorenzo, President (Principal Executive Officer)

    Date: January 14, 2025

    By (Signature and Title)*

    /S/ KASEY L. PHILLIPS

    Kasey L. Phillips, Treasurer (Principal Financial Officer and Accounting Officer) Date: January 14, 2025

    * Print name and title of each signing officer under his or her signature.


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