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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

1999
FORM 10-K
ANNUAL REPORT UNDER SECTION 13 OR 15 (d) OF
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 COMMISSION FILE NUMBER 1-13805

HARRIS PREFERRED CAPITAL CORPORATION
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)



MARYLAND 36-418309
(State or other jurisdiction (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
of incorporation or organization)
111 WEST MONROE STREET, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60603
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)


(312) 461-2121
Registrant's telephone number, including area code

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:



NAME OF EACH EXCHANGE ON
TITLE OF EACH CLASS WHICH REGISTERED
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7 3/8% Noncumulative Exchangeable Preferred New York Stock Exchange
Stock, Series A, par value $1.00 per share


Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:
NONE

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during
the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was
required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing
requirements for the past 90 days. Yes [X] No [ ]

The number of shares of Common Stock, $1.00 par value, outstanding on March 22,
2000 was 1,000.
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HARRIS PREFERRED CAPITAL CORPORATION

TABLE OF CONTENTS



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PART I
Item 1. Business.................................................... 2
Item 2. Properties.................................................. 6
Item 3. Legal Proceedings........................................... 7
Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders......... 7

PART II
Market for the Registrant's Common Equity and Related
Item 5. Security Holder Matters..................................... 8
Item 6. Selected Financial Data..................................... 8
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition
Item 7. and Results of Operations................................... 9
Item
7a. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosure About Market Risk... 12
Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data................. 12
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting
Item 9. and Financial Disclosure.................................... 12

PART III
Item
10. Directors and Executive Officers of the Company............. 13
Item
11. Executive Compensation...................................... 14
Item Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and
12. Management.................................................. 14
Item
13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.............. 15

PART IV
Item Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports on Form
14. 8-K.........................................................
Signatures............................................................... 16


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PART I

Forward-Looking Information

Forward-looking statements contained in this Annual Report on Form 10-K
("Report") of Harris Preferred Capital Corporation (the "Company") may include
certain forward-looking information statements, within the meaning of Section
27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, including (without limitation) statements with
respect to the Company's expectations, intentions, beliefs or strategies
regarding the future. Forward-looking statements include the Company's
statements regarding tax treatment as a real estate investment trust (a "REIT"),
liquidity, provision for loan losses, capital resources, investment activities
and Year 2000 statements in "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operation". In addition, in those and other portions of
this document, the words "anticipate", "believe", "estimate", "expect", "intend"
and other similar expressions, as they relate to the Company or the Company's
management, are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Such statements
reflect the current views of the Company with respect to future events and are
subject to certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions. It is important to note
that the Company's actual results could differ materially from those described
herein as anticipated, believed, estimated or expected. Among the factors that
could cause the results to differ materially are the risks discussed in the
"Risk Factors" section included in the Company's Registration Statement on Form
S-11 (File No. 333-40257), with respect to the Preferred Shares declared
effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 5, 1998. The
Company assumes no obligation to update any such forward-looking statements.

ITEM 1. BUSINESS

General

Harris Preferred Capital Corporation is a Maryland Corporation incorporated
on September 24, 1997, pursuant to the Maryland General Corporation Law. The
Company's principal business objective is to acquire, hold, finance and manage
assets consisting of a limited recourse note or notes issued by Harris Trust and
Savings Bank (the "Bank") secured by real estate mortgage assets and other
obligations secured by real property, as well as certain other qualifying REIT
assets (the "Mortgage Assets"). The Company holds its assets through a Maryland
real estate investment trust subsidiary, Harris Preferred Capital Trust. The
Company has elected to be treated as a REIT under the Internal Revenue Code of
1986 (the "Code"), and will generally not be subject to federal income tax if it
distributes all of its taxable earnings and meets all of the qualifications
necessary to be a REIT. All of the shares of the Company's common stock, par
value $1.00 per share (the "Common Stock"), are owned by Harris Capital
Holdings, Inc. ("HCH"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Bank. The Company was
formed by the Bank to provide investors with the opportunity to invest in
residential mortgages and other real estate assets and to provide the Bank with
a cost-effective means of raising capital for federal regulatory purposes.

On February 11, 1998, the Company through a public offering (the
"Offering") issued 10,000,000 shares of its 7 3/8% Noncumulative Exchangeable
Preferred Stock, Series A (the "Preferred Shares"), $1.00 par value. The
Offering raised $250 million less $7.9 million of underwriting fees. The
Preferred Shares are traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "HBC
Pr A". Holders of Preferred Shares are entitled to receive, if declared by the
Company's Board of Directors, noncumulative dividends at a rate of 7 3/8% per
annum of the $25 per share liquidation preference (an amount equivalent to
$1.8438 per share per annum). Dividends on the Preferred Shares, if authorized
and declared, are payable quarterly in arrears on March 30, June 30, September
30 and December 30 of each year. Except upon the occurrence of certain events,
the Preferred Shares are not redeemable by the Company prior to March 30, 2003.
On or after such date, the Preferred Shares may be redeemed for cash at the
option of the Company, in whole or in part, at any time and from time to time,
at the principal amount thereof, plus the quarterly accrued and unpaid
dividends, if any, thereon. The Company may not redeem the Preferred Shares
without prior approval from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
or the appropriate successor federal regulatory agency.

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Each Preferred Share will be automatically exchanged for one newly issued
Bank Preferred Share in the event (i) the Bank becomes less than "adequately
capitalized" under regulations established pursuant to the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991, as amended, (ii) the Bank is
placed into conservatorship or receivership, (iii) the Board of Governors
directs such exchange in writing because, in its sole discretion and even if the
Bank is not less than "adequately capitalized", the Board of Governors
anticipates that the Bank may become less than adequately capitalized in the
near term, or (iv) the Board of Governors in its sole discretion directs in
writing an exchange in the event that the Bank has a Tier 1 risk-based capital
ratio of less than 5%. In the event of an exchange, the Bank Preferred Shares
would constitute a new series of preferred shares of the Bank, would have the
same dividend rights, liquidation preference, redemption options and other
attributes as the Preferred Shares, except that the Bank Preferred Shares would
not be listed on the New York Stock Exchange and would rank pari passu in terms
of cash dividend payments and liquidation preference with any outstanding shares
of preferred stock of the Bank.

Concurrent with the issuance of the Preferred Shares, the Bank contributed
additional capital of $241 million, net of acquisition costs to the Company. The
Company and the Bank undertook the Offering for two principal reasons: (i) the
qualification of the Series A Preferred Shares as Tier 1 capital of the Bank for
U.S. banking regulatory purposes under relevant regulatory capital guidelines,
as a result of the treatment of the Preferred Shares as a minority interest in a
consolidated subsidiary of the Bank, and (ii) lack of federal income tax on the
Company's earnings used to pay the dividends on the Series A Preferred Shares,
as a result of the Company's qualification as a REIT. On December 30, 1998, the
Bank contributed the common stock of the Company to HCH, a newly-formed and
wholly-owned subsidiary of the Bank. The Bank is required to maintain direct or
indirect ownership of at least 80% of the outstanding Common Stock of the
Company for as long as any Preferred Shares are outstanding.

The Company used the Offering proceeds and the additional capital
contributed by the Bank to purchase $356 million of notes (the "Notes") from the
Bank and $135 million of mortgage-backed securities at their estimated fair
value. The Notes are obligations issued by the Bank that are recourse only to
the underlying mortgage loans (the "Securing Mortgage Loans") and were acquired
pursuant to the terms of a loan agreement with the Bank. The principal amount of
the Notes equal approximately 80% of the principal amounts of the Securing
Mortgage Loans.

Business

The Company was formed for the purpose of raising capital for the Bank. One
of the Company's principal business objectives is to acquire, hold, finance and
manage Mortgage Assets, as well as other qualifying REIT Assets. These Mortgage
Assets generate interest income for distribution to stockholders. A substantial
portion of the Mortgage Assets of the Company consists of Notes issued by the
Bank that are recourse only to Securing Mortgage Loans that are secured by real
property. The Notes mature on October 1, 2027 and pay interest at 6.4% per
annum. Payments of interest are made to the Company from payments made on the
Securing Mortgage Loans. Pursuant to an agreement between the Company and the
Bank, the Company, through the Bank as agent, receives all scheduled payments
made on the Securing Mortgage Loans, retains a portion of any such payments
equal to the amount due on the Notes and remits the balance, if any, to the
Bank. The Company also retains approximately 80% of any prepayments of principal
in respect of the Securing Mortgage Loans and applies such amounts as a
prepayment on the Notes. The Company has a security interest in the real
property securing the Securing Mortgage Loans and will be entitled to enforce
payment on the loans in its own name if a mortgagor should default. In the event
of such default, the Company would have the same rights as the original
mortgagee to foreclose the mortgaged property and satisfy the obligations of the
Bank out of the proceeds.

The Company may from time to time acquire fixed-rate or variable-rate
mortgage-backed securities representing interest in pools of mortgage loans. The
Bank may have originated a portion of any such mortgage-backed securities by
exchanging pools of mortgage loans for the mortgage-backed securities. The
mortgage loans underlying the mortgage-backed securities will be secured by
single-family residential properties located throughout the United States. The
Company intends to acquire only investment grade mortgage-backed securities
issued by agencies of the federal government or government sponsored agencies,
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such as the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("FHLMC"), the Federal
National Mortgage Association ("Fannie Mae") and the Government National
Mortgage Association ("GNMA"). The Company does not intend to acquire any
interest-only, principal-only or similar speculative mortgage-backed securities.

The Bank may from time to time acquire or originate both conforming and
nonconforming residential mortgage loans. Conventional conforming residential
mortgage loans comply with the requirements for inclusion in a loan guarantee
program sponsored by either FHLMC or Fannie Mae. Nonconforming residential
mortgage loans are residential mortgage loans that do not qualify in one or more
respects for purchase by Fannie Mae or FHLMC under their standard programs. The
nonconforming residential mortgage loans that the Company purchases will be
nonconforming because they have original principal balances which exceed the
limits for FHLMC or Fannie Mae under their standard programs. The Company
believes that all residential mortgage loans will meet the requirements for sale
to national private mortgage conduit programs or other investors in the
secondary mortgage market. As of December 31, 1999 and 1998 and for each of the
years then ended, the Company did not directly hold any residential mortgage
loans.

The Company may from time to time acquire commercial mortgage loans secured
by industrial and warehouse properties, recreational facilities, office
buildings, retail space and shopping malls, hotels and motels, hospitals,
nursing homes or senior living centers. The Company's current policy is not to
acquire any interest in a commercial mortgage loan if commercial mortgage loans
would constitute more than 5% of the Company's Mortgage Assets at the time of
its acquisition. Unlike residential mortgage loans, commercial mortgage loans
generally lack standardized terms. Commercial real estate properties themselves
tend to be unique and are more difficult to value than residential real estate
properties. Commercial mortgage loans may also not be fully amortizing, meaning
that they may have a significant principal balance or "balloon" payment due on
maturity. Moreover, commercial properties, particularly industrial and warehouse
properties, are generally subject to relatively greater environmental risks than
non-commercial properties, generally giving rise to increased costs of
compliance with environmental laws and regulations. There is no requirement
regarding the percentage of any commercial real estate property that must be
leased at the time the Bank acquires a commercial mortgage loan secured by such
commercial real estate property, and there is no requirement that commercial
mortgage loans have third party guarantees. The credit quality of a commercial
mortgage loan may depend on, among other factors, the existence and structure of
underlying leases, the physical condition of the property (including whether any
maintenance has been deferred), the creditworthiness of tenants, the historical
and anticipated level of vacancies and rents on the property and on other
comparable properties located in the same region, potential or existing
environmental risks, the availability of credit to refinance the commercial
mortgage loan at or prior to maturity and the local and regional economic
climate in general. Foreclosures of defaulted commercial mortgage loans are
generally subject to a number of complicated factors, including environmental
considerations, which are generally not present in foreclosures of residential
mortgage loans. As of December 31, 1999 and 1998 and for each of the years then
ended, the Company did not hold any commercial mortgage loans.

The Company may invest up to 5% of the total value of its portfolio in
assets eligible to be held by REIT's other than those described above. In
addition to commercial mortgage loans and mortgage loans secured by multi-family
properties, such assets could include cash, cash equivalents and securities,
including shares or interests in other REIT's and partnership interests.

The Company intends to continue to acquire Mortgage Assets from the Bank
and/or affiliates of the Bank on terms that are comparable to those that could
be obtained by the Company if such Mortgage Assets were purchased from unrelated
third parties. The Company may also from time to time acquire Mortgage Assets
from unrelated third parties.

The Company intends to maintain at least 90% of its portfolio in
Bank-secured obligations and mortgage-backed securities. The Company may,
however, invest in other assets eligible to be held by a REIT. The Company's
current policy and the Servicing Agreement (defined below) prohibit the
acquisition of any Mortgage Asset constituting an interest in a mortgage loan
(other than an interest resulting from the acquisition of mortgage-backed
securities), which mortgage loan (i) is delinquent (more than 30 days past

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due) in the payment of principal or interest at the time of proposed
acquisition; (ii) is or was at any time during the preceding 12 months (a) on
nonaccrual status or (b) renegotiated due to financial deterioration of the
borrower; or (iii) has been, more than once during the preceding 12 months, more
than 30 days past due in payment of principal or interest. Loans that are on
"nonaccrual status" are generally loans that are past due 90 days or more in
principal or interest. The Company maintains a policy of disposing of any
mortgage loan which (i) falls into nonaccrual status, (ii) has to be
renegotiated due to the financial deterioration of the borrower, or (iii) is
more than 30 days past due in the payment of principal or interest more than
once in any 12 month period. The Company may choose, at any time subsequent to
its acquisition of any Mortgage Assets, to require the Bank (as part of the
Servicing Agreement) to dispose of the mortgage loan for any of these reasons or
for any other reason.

The Bank services the Securing Mortgage Loans and the other mortgage loans
purchased by the Company on behalf of, and as agent for, the Company and is
entitled to receive fees in connection with the servicing thereof pursuant to
the servicing agreement (the "Servicing Agreement"). The Bank receives a fee
equal to 0.25% per annum on the principal balances of the loans serviced.
Payment of such fees is subordinate to payments of dividends on the Series A
Preferred Shares. The Servicing Agreement requires the Bank to service the loans
in a manner generally consistent with accepted secondary market practices, with
any servicing guidelines promulgated by the Company and, in the case of
residential mortgage loans, with Fannie Mae and FHLMC guidelines and procedures.
The Servicing Agreement requires the Bank to service the loans solely with a
view toward the interest of the Company and without regard to the interest of
the Bank or any of its affiliates. The Bank will collect and remit principal and
interest payments, administer mortgage escrow accounts, submit and pursue
insurance claims and initiate and supervise foreclosure proceedings on the loans
it services. The Bank may, with the approval of a majority of the Company's
Board of Directors, as well as a majority of the Company's Independent
Directors, subcontract all or a portion of its obligations under the Servicing
Agreement to unrelated third parties. An "Independent Director" is a director
who is not a current officer or employee of the Company or a current director,
officer or employee of the Bank or of its affiliates. The Bank will not, in
connection with the subcontracting of any of its obligations under the Servicing
Agreement, be discharged or relieved in any respect from its obligations under
the Servicing Agreement. The Company may terminate the Servicing Agreement upon
the occurrence of such events as they relate to the Bank's proper and timely
performance of its duties and obligations under the Servicing Agreement. As long
as any Preferred Shares remain outstanding, the Company may not terminate, or
elect to renew, the Servicing Agreement without the approval of a majority of
the Company's Independent Directors.

The Company entered into an advisory agreement with the Bank (the "Advisory
Agreement") pursuant to which the Bank administers the day-to-day operations of
the Company. The Bank is responsible for (i) monitoring the credit quality of
Mortgage Assets held by the Company, (ii) advising the Company with respect to
the reinvestment of income from and payments on, and with respect to the
acquisition, management, financing and disposition of the Mortgage Assets held
by the Company, and (iii) monitoring the Company's compliance with the
requirements necessary to qualify as a REIT, and other financial and tax-
related matters. The Bank may from time to time subcontract all or a portion of
its obligations under the Advisory Agreement to one or more of its affiliates.
The Bank may, with the approval of a majority of the Company's Board of
Directors, as well as a majority of the Company's Independent Directors,
subcontract all or a portion of its obligations under the Advisory Agreement to
unrelated third parties. The Bank will not, in connection with the
subcontracting of any of its obligations under the Advisory Agreement, be
discharged or relieved in any respect from its obligations under the Advisory
Agreement. The Advisory Agreement is renewed annually. The Company may terminate
the Advisory Agreement at any time upon 60 days' prior written notice. As long
as any Preferred Shares remain outstanding, any decision by the Company either
to renew the Advisory Agreement or to terminate the Advisory Agreement must be
approved by a majority of the Board of Directors, as well as by a majority of
the Company's Independent Directors.

The Advisory Agreements in effect in 1999 and from inception (January 2,
1998) through December 31, 1998 entitled the Bank to receive advisory fees of
$50,000 and $43,000, respectively. In 2000, advisory fees of $60,000 have been
approved.

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The Company may from time to time purchase additional Mortgage Assets out
of proceeds received in connection with the repayment or disposition of Mortgage
Assets, the issuance of additional shares of Preferred Stock or additional
capital contributions with respect to the Common Stock. The Company may also
issue additional series of Preferred Stock. However, the Company may not issue
additional shares of Preferred Stock senior to the Series A Preferred Shares
either in the payment of dividends or in the distribution of assets on
liquidation without the consent of holders of at least 67% of the outstanding
shares of Preferred Stock at that time or without approval of a majority of the
Company's Independent Directors. The Company does not currently intend to issue
any additional shares of Preferred Stock unless it simultaneously receives
additional capital contributions from HCH or other affiliates sufficient to
support the issuance of such additional shares of Preferred Stock.

Although the Company does not currently intend to incur any indebtedness in
connection with the acquisition and holding of Mortgage Assets, the Company may
do so at any time (although indebtedness in excess of 25% of the Company's total
stockholders' equity may not be incurred without the approval of a majority of
the Company's Independent Directors). To the extent the Company were to change
its policy with respect to the incurrence of indebtedness, the Company would be
subject to risks associated with leverage, including, without limitation,
changes in interest rates and prepayment risk.

Employees

As of December 31, 1999, the Company had no paid employees.

Environmental Matters

In the event that the Company is forced to foreclose on a defaulted
Securing Mortgage Loan to recover its investment in such loan, the Company may
be subject to environmental liabilities in connection with the underlying real
property, which could exceed the value of the real property. Although the
Company intends to exercise due diligence to discover potential environmental
liabilities prior to the acquisition of any property through foreclosure,
hazardous substances or wastes, contaminants, pollutants or sources thereof (as
defined by state and federal laws and regulations) may be discovered on
properties during the Company's ownership or after a sale thereof to a third
party. If such hazardous substances are discovered on a property which the
Company has acquired through foreclosure or otherwise, the Company may be
required to remove those substances and clean up the property. There can be no
assurance that in such a case the Company would not incur full recourse
liability for the entire costs of any removal and clean-up, that the cost of
such removal and clean-up would not exceed the value of the property or that the
Company could recoup any of such costs from any third party. The Company may
also be liable to tenants and other users of neighboring properties. In
addition, the Company may find it difficult or impossible to sell the property
prior to or following any such clean-up.

Qualification as a REIT

The Company elected to be taxed as a REIT commencing with its taxable year
ended December 31, 1998 and intends to comply with the provisions of the Code
with respect thereto. The Company will not be subject to Federal income tax to
the extent it distributes 100% of its adjusted REIT taxable income to
stockholders and as long as certain assets, income and stock ownership tests are
met. For 1999 as well as 1998 the Company met all Internal Revenue Code
requirements for a REIT, including the asset, income, stock ownership and
distribution tests. Cash distributions in the amount of $1.8438 cents per
Preferred Share were paid in 1999 compared to $1.6389 cents in 1998. A cash
dividend on common stock of $12 million was declared on December 15, 1999 and
paid on December 30, 1999 compared to $9.7 million declared on December 10, 1998
and paid on January 28, 1999. In addition, on September 8, 1999, the Company
paid a cash dividend of $332 thousand on the outstanding common shares to the
stockholder of record on December 30, 1998.

ITEM 2. PROPERTIES

None as of December 31, 1999.

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ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

The Company is not currently involved in any material litigation nor, to
the Company's knowledge is any material litigation currently threatened against
the Company, the Bank or any affiliate of the Bank other than routine litigation
arising in the ordinary course of business. See Note 8 to Financial Statements
on page 27.

ITEM 4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

No matters were submitted to a vote of security holders during the fourth
quarter of 1999.

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PART II

ITEM 5. MARKET FOR THE REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED SECURITY HOLDER
MATTERS

HCH presently owns all 1,000 shares of the common stock of the Company,
which are not listed or traded on any securities exchange. In 1999, the Company
declared $12.3 million in cash dividends on common stock, which were paid in
December 1999 compared to $9.7 million declared on December 10, 1998 paid in
January 1999. On September 8, 1999, the Company paid a cash dividend of $332
thousand on the outstanding common shares to the stockholder of record on
December 30, 1998.

The Preferred Shares are traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the
symbol "HBC Pr A". During 1999, the Company declared and paid cash dividends to
preferred stockholders of approximately $18.4 million compared to $16.3 million
for the period from January 2, 1998 through December 31, 1998. Although the
Company declared cash dividends on the Preferred Shares for 1999 and 1998, no
assurances can be made as to the declaration of, or if declared, the amount of,
future distributions since such distributions are subject to the Company's
financial condition and capital needs, the impact of legislation and regulations
as then in effect or as may be proposed, economic conditions, and such other
factors as the Board of Directors may deem relevant. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, to remain qualified as a REIT, the Company must distribute annually
at least 95% of its taxable income to preferred and/or common stockholders.

ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

The following table sets forth selected financial data for the Company and
should be read in conjunction with the Financial Statements and notes thereto
and Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations contained in this Report.



FROM INCEPTION
(JANUARY 2, 1998)
YEAR ENDED THROUGH
DECEMBER 31, 1999 DECEMBER 31, 1998
----------------- -----------------
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)

Statement of Operations Data:
Interest income............................... $ 31,588 $ 27,467
Operating expenses:
Loan servicing fees......................... 511 756
Advisory fees............................... 50 43
General & administrative.................... 300 187
---------- ----------
Total operating expenses............... 861 986
---------- ----------
Net income.................................... 30,727 26,481
Preferred stock dividends..................... 18,438 16,389
---------- ----------
Net income available to common stockholder.... $ 12,289 $ 10,092
========== ==========
Basic and diluted net income per common
share....................................... $12,289.00 $10,092.00
========== ==========
Distributions per preferred share............. $ 1.8438 $ 1.6389
========== ==========
Balance Sheet Data (end of period):
Total assets.................................. $ 473,988 $ 503,390
========== ==========
Total liabilities............................. $ 97 $ 9,762
========== ==========
Total stockholders' equity.................... $ 473,891 $ 493,628
========== ==========
Cash Flows Data:
Operating activities.......................... $ 30,821 $ 23,897
========== ==========
Investing activities.......................... $ 10,290 $ (497,621)
========== ==========
Financing activities.......................... $ (40,470) $ 474,345
========== ==========


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ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS
OF OPERATIONS

The following discussion should be read in conjunction with the Financial
Statements and notes thereto appearing later in this Report.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS - YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 COMPARED TO THE PERIOD FROM
INCEPTION (JANUARY 2, 1998) THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 1998

While the Company's inception date was January 2, 1998 substantial
operations did not commence until February 11, 1998.

The Company's net income for 1999 was $30.7 million. This represented a
$4.2 million or 16% increase from the period February 11, 1998 through December
31, 1998 of $26.5 million.

Interest income on the Notes for 1999 totaled $10.8 million and yielded
6.4% on $169 million of average principal outstanding compared to $16.3 million
and a 6.4% yield on $288 million average principal outstanding for the period
February 11, 1998 through December 31, 1998. The reduction in income was
attributable to the reduction in the Note balance because of increased payoffs
due to refinancings. Interest income on securities available-for-sale for 1999
was $19.8 million, resulting in a yield of 6.7% on an average balance of $294
million compared to $10.2 million with a yield of 6.1% on an average balance of
$188 million for the period from February 11, 1998 through December 31, 1998.
The increase is attributable to an increase in the investment security
portfolio. The average outstanding balance of the Securing Mortgage Loans was
$208 million during the year ended December 31, 1999 and $329 million for the
period February 11, 1998 through December 31, 1998. There were no Company
borrowings during these periods.

Operating expenses for the year ended December 31, 1999 totaled $861
thousand, a decrease of $125 thousand from the period February 11, 1998 through
December 31, 1998. Loan servicing expenses for the year ended December 31, 1999
totaled $511 thousand, a decrease of $245 thousand or 32% from the period
February 11, 1998 through December 31, 1998. This decrease is attributable to
the reduction in the principal balance of the Notes. Advisory fees for the year
ended December 31, 1999 were $50 thousand compared to $43 thousand over the
period from February 11, 1998 through December 31, 1998. General and
administrative expenses for the same period totaled $300 thousand, an increase
of $113 thousand or 60% over the period from February 11, 1998 through September
30, 1998. Generally, the higher general and administrative expenses in 1999
attributable to substantial operating activities not commencing until February
11, 1998 and to costs related to the filing of the initial 1998 Form 10K in
1999.

On December 30, 1999, the Company paid a cash dividend of $0.46094 cents
per share on the outstanding Preferred Shares to the stockholders of record on
December 15, 1999 as declared on December 2, 1999. On December 30, 1998, the
Company paid a cash dividend of $0.46094 cents per share on the outstanding
Preferred Shares to the stockholders of record on December 17, 1998. On a
year-to-date basis, the Company declared and paid $18.4 million of dividends to
holders of Preferred Shares for 1999 compared to $16.3 million of dividends paid
for the period from inception (January 2, 1998) through December 31, 1998. On
December 31, 1999 the Company paid a cash dividend of $12 million on the
outstanding common shares to the stockholder of record on December 15, 1999 as
declared on December 2, 1999. On January 28, 1999, the Company paid cash
dividends of $9.7 million on the outstanding common shares to the stockholder of
record on December 30, 1998, as declared on December 10, 1998. On September 8,
1999, the Company paid a cash dividend of $332 thousand on the outstanding
common shares to the stockholder of record on December 30, 1998, as declared on
September 2, 1999. The Company elected under Section 858 of the Internal Revenue
Code to treat this dividend as having been paid in 1998. At December 31, 1999,
there were no Securing Mortgage Loans on nonaccrual status.

QUARTER ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 COMPARED TO QUARTER ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998

The Company's net income for the fourth quarter of 1999 was $7.9 million
compared to $7.5 million in the fourth quarter 1998.

9
11

Fourth quarter 1999 interest income on the Notes totaled $2.3 million and
yielded 6.4% on $143 million of average principal outstanding for the quarter
compared to $3.7 million and a 6.4% yield on $235 million average principal
outstanding for the fourth quarter 1998. The decrease is attributable to the
reduction in the Note balance because of increased payoffs due to refinancing.
The average outstanding balance of the securing mortgage loans for the fourth
quarter 1999 and 1998 was $177 million and $286 million, respectively. Interest
income on securities available-for-sale for the current quarter was $5.5 million
resulting in a yield of 6.9% on an average balance of $319 million, compared to
$3.6 million with a yield of 6.2% on an average balance of $235 million for the
same period a year ago. There were no Company borrowings during the quarter.

Fourth quarter 1999 operating expenses totaled $215 thousand, a decrease of
$38 thousand or 21% from the fourth quarter of 1998. Loan servicing expenses
totaled $109 thousand, a decrease of $24 thousand or 18% from the prior year's
fourth quarter, attributable to the reduction in loan servicing fees payable to
the Bank, resulting from the reduction in the principal balance of the Notes.
General and administrative expenses totaled $97 thousand, an increase of $65
thousand over fourth quarter 1998. Generally the higher general and
administrative expenses in 1999 attributable to costs related to the filing of
the 1999 Form 10K being included in the fourth quarter 1999, whereas the 1998
costs were included in the first quarter 1999.

ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN LOSSES

The Company does not currently maintain an allowance for loan losses due to
the over-collateralization of the Securing Mortgage Loans and the prior and
expected credit performance of the collateral pool.

CONCENTRATIONS OF CREDIT RISK

A majority of the collateral underlying the Securing Mortgage Loans is
located in Illinois and Arizona. The financial viability of customers in these
states is, in part, dependent on the states' economies. The collateral may be
subject to a greater risk of default than other comparable loans in the event of
adverse economic, political or business developments or natural hazards that may
affect such region and the ability of property owners in such region to make
payments of principal and interest on the underlying mortgages. The Company's
maximum risk of accounting loss, should all customers in Illinois and Arizona
fail to perform according to contract terms and all collateral prove to be
worthless, was approximately $106 million and $23 million, respectively at
December 31, 1999 and $161 million and $34 million, respectively, at December
31, 1998.

INTEREST RATE RISK

The Company's income consists primarily of interest payments on the
Mortgage Assets it holds. If there is a decline in interest rates during a
period of time when the Company must reinvest payments of interest and principal
with respect to its Mortgage Assets, the Company may find it difficult to
purchase additional Mortgage Assets that generate sufficient income to support
payment of dividends on the Preferred Shares. Because the rate at which
dividends, if, when and as authorized and declared, are payable on the Preferred
Shares is fixed, there can be no assurance that an interest rate environment in
which there is a decline in interest rates would not adversely affect the
Company's ability to pay dividends on the Preferred Shares.

COMPETITION

The Company does not engage in the business of originating mortgage loans.
While the Company will acquire additional Mortgage Assets, it anticipates that
such Mortgage Assets will be acquired from the Bank and affiliates of the Bank.
Accordingly, the Company does not expect to compete with mortgage conduit
programs, investment banking firms, savings and loan associations, banks, thrift
and loan associations, finance companies, mortgage bankers or insurance
companies in acquiring its Mortgage Assets.

10
12

LIQUIDITY RISK MANAGEMENT

The objective of liquidity management is to ensure the availability of
sufficient cash flows to meet all of the Company's financial commitments. In
managing liquidity, the Company takes into account various legal limitations
placed on a REIT.

The Company's principal liquidity needs are to maintain the current
portfolio size through the acquisition of additional notes or other qualifying
assets and to pay dividends to its stockholders after satisfying obligations to
creditors. The acquisition of additional notes or other qualifying assets is
funded with the proceeds obtained from repayment of principal balances by
individual mortgagees. The payment of dividends on the Preferred Shares will be
made from legally available funds, principally arising from operating activities
of the Company. The Company's cash flows from operating activities principally
consist of the collection of interest on the Notes and mortgage-backed
securities. The Company does not have and does not anticipate having any
material capital expenditures.

In order to remain qualified as a REIT, the Company must distribute
annually at least 95% of its adjusted REIT taxable income, as provided for under
the Code, to its common and preferred stockholders. The Company currently
expects to distribute dividends annually equal to 95% or more of its adjusted
REIT taxable income.

The Company anticipates that cash and cash equivalents on hand and the cash
flow from the Notes and mortgage-backed securities will provide adequate
liquidity for its operating, investing and financing needs.

As presented in the accompanying Statement of Cash Flows, the primary
sources of funds during 1999 was $71 million provided by principal payments on
the Notes and $22 million from the maturities of securities available-for-sale.
In the period from inception (January 2, 1998) through December 31, 1998, the
primary sources of funds were $250 million from the issuance of Preferred Shares
and $241 million additional capital contributed by the Bank, net of acquisition
costs. Additional significant sources of funds were $148 million provided by
principal payments on the Notes. In 1999 the primary uses of funds were $96
million in purchases of securities available-for-sale and $18 and $22 million in
preferred stock dividends and common stock dividends paid, respectively. For the
period from inception (January 2, 1998) through December 31, 1998, the primary
uses of funds were $208 million in purchases of Notes, net of repayments and the
change in securing mortgage collections due from the Bank, $259 million in net
purchases of securities available-for-sale, and $16 million in preferred stock
dividends paid.

YEAR 2000

The Company utilizes and is dependent upon the Bank's data processing
systems and software to conduct its business. The Bank's systems and other date
sensitive assets successfully transitioned to the Year 2000. Since the
identification of the Year 2000 issue, the Bank's objective was to ensure that
all aspects of the Year 2000 issue affecting the Corporation were fully
resolved. Therefore, the Bank continues to monitor the compliance of its own
actions, as well as third parties that it interfaces with, such as vendors,
counterparties, customers, and payment systems, to mitigate the potential risks
that Year 2000 poses.

ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

In June 1998, the FASB issued SFAS No. 133, "Accounting for Derivative
Instruments and Hedging Activities." The Statement establishes accounting and
reporting standards for derivative instruments and for hedging activities. It
requires all derivatives to be recognized as either assets or liabilities in the
statement of financial position and to be measured at fair value. The Statement
is effective for all fiscal quarters of fiscal years beginning after June 15,
2000, starting January 1, 2001 for the Company. The Company will adopt this
Statement in 2001 and does not expect its adoption to have a material effect on
its financial position or results of operations.

OTHER MATTERS

As of December 31, 1999, the Company believes that it is in full compliance
with the REIT tax rules, and expects to qualify as a REIT under the provisions
of the Code.

11
13

The Company expects to meet all REIT requirements regarding the ownership
of its stock and anticipates meeting the annual distribution requirements.

ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURE ABOUT MARKET RISK

As of December 31, 1999, the Company had $137 million invested in Notes, a
decrease of $71 million from December 31, 1998, attributable to the reduction in
the Note balance because of increased payoffs due to refinancing. At December
31, 1999, the Company holds $315 million in mortgage-backed securities compared
to $261 million at December 31, 1998. At December 31, 1999, the Company holds an
investment of $15 million in securities purchased from the Bank under agreement
to resell compared to $17 million at December 31, 1998. The Company is subject
to exposure for fluctuations in interest rates. Adverse changes in interest
rates could impact negatively the value of mortgage-backed securities, as well
as the levels of interest income to be derived from these assets.

The Company's investments held in mortgage-backed securities are secured by
adjustable and fixed interest rate residential mortgage loans. The yield to
maturity on each security depends on, among other things, the price at which
such security is purchased, the rate and timing of principal payments (including
prepayments, repurchases, defaults and liquidations), the pass-through rate and
interest rate fluctuations. Changes in interest rates could impact prepayment
rates as well as default rates, which in turn would impact the value and yield
to maturity of the Company's mortgage-backed securities.

The Company currently has no outstanding borrowings.

ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

Refer to the Index to Financial Statements on page 18 for the required
information.

ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

There have been no changes in or disagreements with accountants on any
matter of accounting principles, practices or financial statement disclosure.

12
14

PART III

ITEM 10. DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE COMPANY

The Company's Board of Directors consists of six members. The Company does
not anticipate that it will require any additional employees because it has
retained the Bank to perform certain functions pursuant to the Advisory
Agreement described above. Each officer of the Company currently is also an
officer of the Bank and/or affiliates of the Bank. The Company maintains
corporate records and audited financial statements that are separate from those
of the Bank or any of the Bank's affiliates. None of the officers, directors or
employees of the Company will have a direct or indirect pecuniary interest in
any Mortgage Asset to be acquired or disposed of by the Company or in any
transaction in which the Company has an interest or will engage in acquiring,
holding and managing Mortgage Assets.

Pursuant to terms of the Preferred Shares, the Company's Independent
Directors will consider the interests of the holders of both the Preferred
Shares and the Common Stock in determining whether any proposed action requiring
their approval is in the best interests of the Company.

The persons who are directors and executive officers of the Company are as
follows:



NAME AGE POSITION AND OFFICES HELD
---- --- -------------------------

Michael D. Williams......................... 44 Chairman of the Board
Paul R. Skubic.............................. 51 President, Director
Pierre O. Greffe............................ 47 Chief Financial Officer
Thomas R. Sizer............................. 61 Secretary, Director
Frank M. Novosel............................ 53 Treasurer, Director
John F. Faulhaber........................... 53 Vice President of Operations
Margaret M. Sulkin.......................... 41 Assistant Treasurer
Delbert J. Wacker........................... 68 Director
David J. Blockowicz......................... 57 Director


The following is a summary of the experience of the executive officers and
directors of the Company:

Mr. Williams has been Senior Vice President, Community Bank Management, of
the Bank since June 1996. Prior to that he was Senior Vice President, Retail
Banking, of Household Bank, f.s.b., a company he joined in April of 1978.
Household Bank's 54 Illinois branches were acquired by the Bank in June 1996.

Mr. Skubic has been Vice President and Controller of the Bank and Chief
Accounting Officer for Harris Bankcorp, Inc., and the Bank since 1990. Prior to
joining Harris Bankcorp, Inc., Mr. Skubic was employed by Arthur Andersen & Co.
He is a certified public accountant.

Mr. Greffe has been Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of
Harris Bankcorp, Inc. and the Bank since June 1994. Prior to that he was Vice
President of Finance, Corporate and Institutional Financial Services, of Bank of
Montreal in Toronto. Mr. Greffe has been with the Bank of Montreal group of
companies since November 1974. Mr. Greffe is a member of the Certified
Management Accountant Institute of Canada.

Mr. Sizer has been Vice President and Secretary of the Bank since 1983.
Prior to that time he was a Vice President of the Bank. He holds a Juris Doctor
degree from Fordham University, New York.

Mr. Novosel has been a Vice President in the Treasury Group of the Bank
since 1995. Previously, he served as Treasurer of Harris Bankcorp, Inc.,
managing financial planning. Mr. Novosel is a Chartered Financial Analyst and a
member of the Investment Analysts' Society of Chicago.

Mr. Faulhaber has been Vice President and Division Administrator,
Residential Mortgages, at the Bank since 1994. Prior to this position, he was
Manager, Secondary Mortgage Market, since 1991. He currently serves on the
Bank's Asset/Liability Committee.

13
15

Ms. Sulkin has been a Vice President in the Taxation Department of the Bank
since 1992. Ms. Sulkin has been employed by the Bank since 1984. Prior to
joining the Bank, she was employed by KPMG Peat Marwick LLP. She is a certified
public accountant.

Mr. Wacker retired as a partner from Arthur Andersen & Co. in 1987 after 34
years. From July 1988 to November 1990, he was Vice President--Treasurer,
Parkside Medical Services--a subsidiary of Lutheran General Health System. From
November 1990 to September 1993, he completed various financial consulting
projects for Lutheran General.

Mr. Blockowicz is a certified public accountant and is a partner with
Blockowicz & Del Guidicie LLC. Prior to forming his firm, Mr. Blockowicz was a
partner with Arthur Andersen & Co. through 1990.

INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS

The terms of the Preferred Shares require that, as long as any Preferred
Shares are outstanding, certain actions by the Company be approved by a majority
of the Company's Independent Directors. Delbert J. Wacker and David J.
Blockowicz are the Company's Independent Directors. As long as there are only
two Independent Directors, any action that requires the approval of a majority
of Independent Directors must be approved by both Independent Directors.

If at any time the Company fails to declare and pay a quarterly dividend
payment on the Preferred Shares, the number of directors then constituting the
Board of Directors of the Company will be increased by two at the Company's next
annual meeting and the holders of Preferred Shares, voting together with the
holders of any other outstanding series of Preferred Stock as a single class,
will be entitled to elect two additional directors to serve on the Company's
Board of Directors. Any member of the Board of Directors elected by holders of
the Company's Preferred Stock will be deemed to be an Independent Director for
purposes of the actions requiring the approval of a majority of the Independent
Directors.

AUDIT COMMITTEE

The Board of Directors of the Company has established an audit committee
which will review the engagement of independent accountants and review their
independence. The audit committee will also review the adequacy of the Company's
internal accounting controls. The audit committee is comprised of Delbert J.
Wacker and David J. Blockowicz.

COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

The Company pays the Independent Directors of the Company fees for their
services as directors. The Independent Directors receive annual compensation of
$10,000 plus a fee of $750 for attendance (in person or by telephone) at each
meeting of the Board of Directors or a committee.

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

The Company will not pay any compensation to its officers or employees or
to directors who are not Independent Directors.

ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

(a) No person owns of record or is known by the Registrant to own beneficially
more than 5% of the outstanding 7 3/8% Noncumulative Exchangeable Preferred
Stock, Series A.



AMOUNT
OF PERCENT
NAME OF BENEFICIAL OF
TITLE OF CLASS BENEFICIAL OWNER OWNERSHIP CLASS
(B) --------------- ---------------- ---------- -------

Preferred Stock Paul R. Skubic 300 shs. .003%


14
16

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

(A) TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGEMENT AND OTHERS

The Bank, through its wholly-owned subsidiary, HCH, indirectly owns 100% of
the common stock of the Company.

As described on page 4 of this report, a substantial portion of the assets
of the Company consists of Notes issued by the Bank. The Notes mature on October
1, 2027 and pay interest at 6.4% per annum. During 1999, the Company received
repayments of $71 million compared to the 1998 repayments of $148 million. In
1998, the Company purchased $356 million of Notes, none in 1999. In year ended
December 31, 1999 and the period from inception through December 31, 1998, the
Bank paid interest on the Notes in the amount of $10.8 million and $16.3
million, respectively, to the Company.

The Company purchases U.S. Treasury and Federal agency securities from the
Bank under agreements to resell identical securities. At December 31, 1999, the
Company held $15 million of such assets and had earned $984 thousand of interest
from the Bank during 1999 compared to $17 million at December 31, 1998 and $943
thousand of interest for the period from February 11,1998 through December 31,
1998. The Company receives rates on these assets comparable to the rates that
the Bank offers to unrelated counterparties under similar circumstances.

During 1999 and 1998, the Company acquired $96 million and $310 million,
respectively, of GNMA securities at fair value from the Bank.

The Bank and the Company have entered into a Servicing Agreement and an
Advisory Agreement, the terms of which are described in further detail on page 5
of this Report. In 1999, the Bank received payments of $511 thousand and $50
thousand, respectively, compared to $756 thousand and $43 thousand, for the
period from February 11, 1998 through December 31, 1998, under the terms of
these agreements.

The Company entered into an agreement with the Bank to act as Transfer
Agent and Registrar for the 7 3/8% Noncumulative Exchangeable Preferred stock,
Series A, issued by the Company. For these services, the Bank received in 1999
and 1998, $25 thousand and $13 thousand, respectively.

(B) CERTAIN BUSINESS RELATIONSHIPS

Michael D. Williams, Chairman of the Board of the Company, and all of its
executive officers, Paul R. Skubic, Pierre O. Greffe, Thomas R. Sizer, Frank M.
Novosel, John F. Faulhaber and Margaret M. Sulkin, are also officers of the
Bank.

(C) INDEBTEDNESS OF MANAGEMENT

None.

15
17

PART IV

ITEM 14. EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES, AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

(a) Documents filed with Report:

(1) Financial Statements (See page 18 for a listing of all financial
statements included in Item 8)

(2) Financial Statement Schedules

All schedules normally required by Form 10-K are omitted since they are either
not applicable or because the required information is shown in the financial
statements or notes thereto.

(3) Exhibits:



*3(a)(I) Articles of Incorporation of the Company
*3(a)(ii) Form of Articles of Amendment and Restatement of the Company
establishing the Series A Preferred Shares
*3(b) Bylaws of the Company
*4 Specimen of certificate representing Series A Preferred
Shares
*10(a) Form of Servicing Agreement between the Company and the Bank
*10(b) Form of Advisory Agreement between the Company and the Bank
*10(c) Form of Bank Loan Agreement between the Company and the Bank
*10(d) Form of Mortgage Loan Assignment Agreement between the
Company and the Bank
24 Power of attorney
27 Financial Data Schedule


- -------------------------
* Incorporated by reference to the exhibit of the same number filed with the
Company's Registration Statement on Form S-11 (Securities and Exchange
Commission file number 333-40257)

(b) No reports on Form 8-K were filed.

16
18

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, Harris Preferred Capital Corporation has duly caused this
Report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized
on the 22nd day of March 2000.

/s/ MICHAEL D. WILLIAMS
--------------------------------------
Michael D. Williams
Chairman of the Board

/s/ PIERRE O. GREFFE
--------------------------------------
Pierre O. Greffe
Chief Financial Officer

/s/ PAUL R. SKUBIC
--------------------------------------
Paul R. Skubic
President

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this
report has been signed by Michael D. Williams, Chairman of the Board of the
Company, as attorney-in-fact for the following Directors on behalf of Harris
Preferred Capital Corporation of the 22nd day of March 2000.

David J. Blockowicz
Frank M. Novosel
Thomas R. Sizer
Paul R. Skubic
Delbert J. Wacker

Michael D. Williams
Attorney-In-Fact

Supplemental Information

No proxy statement will be sent to security holders in 2000.

17
19

INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The following financial statements are included in Item 8 of this Annual
Report on Form 10-K:

HARRIS PREFERRED CAPITAL CORPORATION

Financial Statements

Independent Auditors Report
Balance Sheets
Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Income
Statements of Changes in Stockholders' Equity
Statements of Cash Flows
Notes to Financial Statements

HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK

Financial Review

Financial Statements

Joint Independent Auditors
Independent Auditors Report
Consolidated Statements of Condition
Consolidated Statements of Income
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholder's Equity
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
Notes to Financial Statements

All other schedules are omitted since the required information is not
present or is not present in amounts sufficient to require submission of the
schedule or because the information required is included in the financial
statements and notes hereof.

18
20

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS REPORT

To the Stockholder and Board of Directors
of Harris Preferred Capital Corporation

In our opinion, the accompanying balance sheets and the related statements
of operations and comprehensive income, of stockholders' equity and of cash
flows present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Harris
Preferred Capital Corporation (the " Company") at December 31, 1999 and 1998,
and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the year ended December
31, 1999 and for the period January 2, 1998 (inception) to December 31, 1998, in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States.
These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management;
our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based
on our audits. We conducted our audits of these statements in accordance with
auditing standards generally accepted in the United States, which require that
we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial
statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis
for the opinion expressed above.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Chicago, Illinois
January 21, 2000

19
21

HARRIS PREFERRED CAPITAL CORPORATION
BALANCE SHEETS
DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998



1999 1998
--------- ---------
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT
SHARE DATA)

ASSETS
Cash on deposit with Harris Trust and Savings Bank.......... $ 1,262 $ 621
Securities purchased from Harris Trust and Savings Bank
under agreement to resell................................. 15,000 17,004
Notes receivable from Harris Trust and Savings Bank......... 136,749 207,935
Securities available-for-sale: Mortgage-backed.............. 315,265 261,494
Securing mortgage collections due from Harris Trust and
Savings Bank.............................................. 3,125 13,690
Other assets................................................ 2,587 2,646
-------- --------
TOTAL ASSETS........................................... $473,988 $503,390
======== ========
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Accrued expenses............................................ $ 97 $ 62
Dividends on common stock payable to parent................. - 9,700
-------- --------
TOTAL LIABILITIES...................................... 97 9,762
-------- --------
Commitments and contingencies............................... - -
STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
7 3/8% Noncumulative Exchangeable Preferred Stock, Series A
($1 par value); liquidation value of $250,000; 20,000,000
shares authorized,10,000,000 shares issued and
outstanding............................................... 250,000 250,000
Common stock ($1 par value); 1,000 shares authorized, issued
and outstanding........................................... 1 1
Additional paid-in capital.................................. 240,733 240,733
Earnings in excess of distributions......................... 349 392
Accumulated other comprehensive income -- unrealized gains
(losses) on available-for-sale securities................. (17,192) 2,502
-------- --------
TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY............................. 473,891 493,628
-------- --------
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY............. $473,988 $503,390
======== ========


The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

20
22

HARRIS PREFERRED CAPITAL CORPORATION
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS AND COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND
FROM INCEPTION (JANUARY 2, 1998) THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 1998


1999 1998
---------- ----------
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT
PER
SHARE DATA)

INTEREST INCOME:
Securities purchased from Harris Trust and Savings Bank
under agreement to resell................................. $ 984 $ 943
Notes receivable from Harris Trust and Savings Bank......... 10,808 16,321
Securities available-for-sale:
Mortgage-backed........................................... 19,796 9,771
U.S. Treasury............................................. - 432
---------- ----------
Total interest income..................................... 31,588 27,467
---------- ----------
OPERATING EXPENSES:
Loan servicing fees paid to Harris Trust and Savings
Bank................................................... 511 756
Advisory fees paid to Harris Trust and Savings Bank....... 50 43
General and administrative................................ 300 187
---------- ----------
Total operating expenses.................................. 861 986
---------- ----------
Net income.................................................. 30,727 26,481
Preferred dividends......................................... 18,438 16,389
---------- ----------
NET INCOME AVAILABLE TO COMMON STOCKHOLDER.................. $ 12,289 $ 10,092
========== ==========
Basic and diluted earnings per common share................. $12,289.00 $10,092.00
========== ==========
Net income.................................................. $ 30,727 $ 26,481
Other comprehensive income - unrealized gains (losses) on
available-for-sale securities............................. (19,694) 2,502
---------- ----------
Comprehensive income........................................ $ 11,033 $ 28,983
========== ==========


The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

21
23

HARRIS PREFERRED CAPITAL CORPORATION
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND
FROM INCEPTION (JANUARY 2, 1998) THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 1998



ACCUMULATED
OTHER
ADDITIONAL EARNINGS IN COMPREHENSIVE
PREFERRED COMMON PAID-IN EXCESS OF INCOME
STOCK STOCK CAPITAL DISTRIBUTIONS (LOSS) TOTAL
--------- ------ ---------- ------------- ------------- --------
(IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)

Balance at inception................. $ -- $ -- $ -- $ -- $ -- $ --
Issuance of common stock........... -- 1 -- -- -- 1
Initial public offering of 7 3/8%
Noncumulative Exchangeable
Preferred Stock, Series A, par
value $1, on February 11,
1998........................... 250,000 -- -- -- -- 250,000
Contribution to additional paid-in
capital, net of acquisition
costs............................ -- -- 240,733 -- -- 240,733
Net income......................... -- -- -- 26,481 -- 26,481
Other comprehensive income(loss)... -- -- -- -- 2,502 2,502
Dividends declared on common stock
($9,700.00 per share)............ -- -- -- (9,700) -- (9,700)
Dividends paid on preferred stock
($1.6389 per share).............. -- -- -- (16,389) -- (16,389)
-------- ---- -------- -------- --------- --------
Balance at December 31, 1998......... $250,000 $ 1 $240,733 $ 392 $ 2,502 $493,628
Net income......................... -- -- -- 30,727 -- 30,727
Other comprehensive income(loss)... -- -- -- -- (19,694) (19,694)
Dividends declared on common stock
($12,332.00 per share)........... -- -- -- (12,332) -- (12,332)
Dividends paid on preferred stock
($1.8438 per share).............. -- -- -- (18,438) -- (18,438)
-------- ---- -------- -------- --------- --------
Balance at December 31, 1999......... $250,000 $ 1 $240,733 $ 349 $ (17,192) $473,891
======== ==== ======== ======== ========= ========


The accompanying notes are an integral part of the financial statements.

22
24

HARRIS PREFERRED CAPITAL CORPORATION
STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND
FROM INCEPTION (JANUARY 2, 1998) THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 1998



1999 1998
-------- --------------
(IN THOUSANDS)

OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
Net Income.................................................. $ 30,727 $ 26,481
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by
operating activities:
Net decrease (increase) in other assets................... 59 (2,646)
Net increase in accrued expenses.......................... 35 62
-------- ---------
Net cash provided by operating activities.............. 30,821 23,897
-------- ---------
INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
Net decrease (increase) in securities purchased from Harris
Trust and Savings Bank under agreement to resell.......... 2,004 (17,004)
Purchases of notes receivable from Harris Trust and Savings
Bank...................................................... -- (356,000)
Repayments of notes receivable from Harris Trust and Savings
Bank...................................................... 71,186 148,065
Decrease (increase) in securing mortgage collections due
from Harris Trust and Savings Bank........................ 10,565 (13,690)
Purchases of securities available-for-sale.................. (95,628) (309,790)
Proceeds from maturities of securities available-for-sale... 22,163 50,798
-------- ---------
Net cash provided (used) by investing activities....... 10,290 (497,621)
-------- ---------
FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
Proceeds from issuance of preferred stock................... -- 250,000
Proceeds from issuance of common stock...................... -- 1
Contribution to additional paid-in capital, net of
acquisition costs......................................... -- 240,733
Cash dividends paid on preferred stock...................... (18,438) (16,389)
Cash dividends paid on common stock......................... (22,032) --
-------- ---------
Net cash (used) provided by financing activities....... (40,470) 474,345
-------- ---------
Net increase in cash on deposit with Harris Trust and
Savings Bank.............................................. 641 621
Cash on deposit with Harris Trust and Savings Bank at
beginning of period....................................... 621 --
-------- ---------
Cash on deposit with Harris Trust and Savings Bank at end of
period.................................................... $ 1,262 $ 621
======== =========


The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

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25

HARRIS PREFERRED CAPITAL CORPORATION

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

1. ORGANIZATION AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION

Harris Preferred Capital Corporation (the "Company") is a Maryland
Corporation incorporated on September 24, 1997, pursuant to the Maryland General
Corporation Law. The Company's principal business objective is to acquire, hold,
finance and manage qualifying Real Estate Investment Trust ("REIT") assets (the
"Mortgage Assets"), consisting of a limited recourse note or notes issued by
Harris Trust and Savings Bank (the "Bank") secured by real estate mortgage
assets and other obligations secured by real property, as well as certain other
qualifying REIT assets. The Company holds its assets through a Maryland real
estate investment trust subsidiary, Harris Preferred Capital Trust. The Company
has elected to be a REIT under sections 856 through 860 of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), and will generally not be subject to
Federal income tax to the extent that it meets all of the REIT requirements in
the Internal Revenue Code Section 856-860. All of the one thousand shares of the
Company's common stock, par value $1.00 per share (the "Common Stock"), are
owned by Harris Capital Holdings, Inc. ("HCH"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the
Bank. On December 30, 1998, the Bank transferred its ownership of the common
stock of the Company to HCH. The Bank is required to maintain direct or indirect
ownership of at least 80% of the outstanding Common Stock of the Company for as
long as any 7 3/8% Noncumulative Exchangeable Preferred Stock, Series A (the
"Preferred Shares"), $1.00 par value, are outstanding. The Company was formed by
the Bank to provide investors with the opportunity to invest in residential
mortgages and other real estate assets and to provide the Bank with a
cost-effective means of raising capital for federal regulatory purposes.

On February 11, 1998, the Company completed an initial public offering (the
"Offering") of 10,000,000 shares of the Company's Preferred Shares, receiving
proceeds of $242,125,000, net of underwriting fees. The Preferred Shares are
traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Concurrent with the issuance of the
Preferred Shares, the Bank contributed additional capital of $250 million to the
Company.

The Company used the proceeds raised from the initial public offering of
the Preferred Shares and the additional capital contributed by the Bank to
purchase $356 million of notes (the "Notes") from the Bank and $135 million of
mortgage-backed securities at their estimated fair value.

2. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

Cash and Cash Equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents include cash on deposit with the Bank.

Allowance for Possible Loan Losses

The allowance for possible loan losses is maintained at a level considered
adequate to provide for potential loan losses. The allowance is increased by
provisions charged to operating expense and reduced by net charge-offs. Known
losses of principal on impaired loans are charged off. The provision for loan
losses is based on past loss experience, management's evaluation of the loan
portfolio securing the Mortgage Assets under current economic conditions and
management's estimate of anticipated, but as yet not specifically identified,
loan losses. Such estimates are reviewed periodically and adjustments, if
necessary, are recorded during the periods in which they become known. At
December 31, 1999 and 1998, no allowance for possible loan losses was recorded
under this policy.

Income Taxes

The Company has elected to be taxed as a REIT commencing with its taxable
year ended December 31, 1998 and intends to comply with the provisions of the
Code with respect thereto. The Company does not expect to be subject to Federal
income tax because assets, income distribution and stock ownership tests in
Internal Revenue Code Sections 856-860 are met. Accordingly, no provision for
income taxes is included in the accompanying financial statements.

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26

Securities

The Company classifies all securities as available-for-sale, even if the
Company has no current plans to divest. Available-for-sale securities are
reported at fair value with unrealized gains and losses included as a separate
component of stockholders' equity.

Interest income on securities, including amortization of discount or
premium, is included in earnings. Realized gains and losses, as a result of
securities sales, are included in securities gains, with the cost of securities
sold determined on the specific identification basis.

The Company purchases U.S. Treasury and Federal agency securities from the
Bank under agreements to resell identical securities. The amounts advanced under
these agreements represent short-term loans and are reflected as receivables in
the Balance Sheet. Securities purchased under agreement to resell totaled $15
million at December 31, 1999 compared to $17 million at December 31, 1998. The
securities underlying the agreements are book-entry securities. Securities are
transferred by appropriate entry into the Company's account with the Bank under
a written custodial agreement with the Bank that explicitly recognizes the
Company's interest in these securities.

The Company's investment securities are exposed to various risks such as
interest rate, market and credit. Due to the level of risk associated with
certain investment securities and the level of uncertainty related to changes in
the value of investment securities, it is at least reasonably possible that
changes in risks in the near term would materially affect the carrying value of
investments in securities available-for-sale currently reported in the balance
sheets.

New Accounting Pronouncements

In June 1998, the FASB issued SFAS No. 133, "Accounting for Derivative
Instruments and Hedging Activities". The Statement establishes accounting and
reporting standards for derivative instruments and for hedging activities. It
requires all derivatives to be recognized as either assets or liabilities in the
balance sheet and to be measured at fair value. The Statement is effective for
all fiscal quarters of fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2000. The Company
will adopt this Statement in 2001 and does not expect its adoption to have a
material effect on its financial position or results of operations.

Management's Estimates

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with 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 revenues and expenses during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

3. NOTES RECEIVABLE FROM THE BANK

On February 11, 1998, proceeds received from the Offering were used in part
to purchase $356 million of Notes at a rate of 6.4%. The Notes are secured by
mortgage loans originated by the Bank. The principal amount of the Notes equals
approximately 80% of the aggregate outstanding principal amount of the
collateralizing mortgage loans.

The Notes are recourse only to the securing mortgage loans that are secured
by real property. The Notes mature on October 1, 2027. Payments of principal and
interest on the Notes are recorded monthly from payments received on the
securing mortgage loans. The Company has a security interest in the real
property securing the underlying mortgage loans and is entitled to enforce
payment on the securing mortgage loans in its own name if a mortgagor should
default. In the event of default, the Company has the same rights as the
original mortgagee to foreclose the mortgaged property and satisfy the
obligations of the Bank out of the proceeds. The securing mortgage loans are
serviced by the Bank, as agent of the Company.

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27

The Company intends that each mortgage loan securing the Notes will
represent a first lien position and will be originated in the ordinary course of
the Bank's real estate lending activities based on the underwriting standards
generally applied (at the time of origination) for the Bank's own account. The
Company also intends that all Mortgage Assets held by the Company will meet
market standards, and servicing guidelines promulgated by the Company, and
Federal National Mortgage Association ("Fannie Mae") and Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation ("FHLMC") guidelines and procedures.

The balance of securing mortgage loans at December 31, 1999 and 1998 was
$171 million and $260 million, respectively. The weighted average interest rate
on those loans at December 31, 1999 and 1998 was 7.442% and 7.408%,
respectively.

None of the mortgage loans collateralizing the Notes were on nonaccrual
status at December 31, 1999 or 1998.

A majority of the collateral securing the underlying mortgage loans is
located in Illinois and Arizona. The financial viability of customers in these
states is, in part, dependent on those states' economies. The Company's maximum
risk of accounting loss, should all customers in Illinois and Arizona fail to
perform according to contract terms and all collateral prove to be worthless,
was approximately $106 million and $23 million, respectively at December 31,
1999 and $161 million and $34 million, respectively, at of December 31, 1998.

4. SECURITIES



DECEMBER 31, 1999 DECEMBER 31, 1998
---------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------
AMORTIZED UNREALIZED UNREALIZED FAIR AMORTIZED UNREALIZED UNREALIZED FAIR
COST GAINS LOSSES VALUE COST GAINS LOSSES VALUE
--------- ---------- ---------- ----- --------- ---------- ---------- -----
(IN THOUSANDS)

AVAILABLE-FOR-SALE
SECURITIES
Mortgage-backed........... $332,457 $-- $17,192 $315,265 $258,992 $2,502 $-- $261,494
-------- --- ------- -------- -------- ------ --- --------
Total Securities.......... $332,457 $-- $17,192 $315,265 $258,992 $2,502 $-- $261,494
======== === ======= ======== ======== ====== === ========


Mortgage-backed securities include Government National Mortgage Association
Platinum Certificates. The contractual maturities of the mortgage-backed
securities exceed ten years. Expected maturities can differ from contractual
maturities since borrowers may have the right to call or prepay obligations with
or without call or prepayment penalties.

5. COMMON AND PREFERRED STOCK

On February 11, 1998, the Company issued 10,000,000 Preferred Shares,
Series A, at a price of $25 per share pursuant to its Registration Statement on
Form S-11. Proceeds from this issuance, net of underwriting fees, totaled
$242,125,000. The liquidation value of each Preferred Share is $25 plus any
authorized, declared and unpaid dividends. Except upon the occurrence of certain
events, the Preferred Shares are not redeemable by the Company prior to March
30, 2003. On or after such date, the Preferred Shares will be redeemable at the
option of the Company, in whole or in part, at the liquidation preference
thereof, plus the quarterly accrued and unpaid dividends, if any, to the date of
redemption. Except under certain limited circumstances, as defined, the holders
of the Preferred Shares have no voting rights. The Preferred Shares are
automatically exchangeable for a new series of preferred stock of the Bank upon
the occurrence of certain events.

Holders of Preferred Shares are entitled to receive, if declared by the
Board of Directors of the Company, noncumulative dividends at a rate of 7 3/8%
per annum of the $25 per share liquidation preference (an amount equivalent to
$1.84375 per share per annum). Dividends on the Preferred Shares, if authorized
and declared, are payable quarterly in arrears on March 30, June 30, September
30, and December 30 of each year. Dividends paid to the holders of the Preferred
Shares for the year ended December 31, 1999 and the period from inception
(January 2, 1998) through December 31, 1998 were $18,438,000 and $16,389,001,
respectively. The allocations of the distributions declared and paid for income
tax purposes were 100% of ordinary income and none of capital gain.

26
28

On December 30, 1998, the Bank contributed the common stock of the Company
to HCH. The Bank is required to maintain direct or indirect ownership of at
least 80% of the outstanding Common Stock of the Company for as long as any
Preferred Shares are outstanding. Dividends on Common Stock are paid if and when
authorized and declared by the Board of Directors out of funds legally available
after all preferred dividends have been paid. A Common Stock dividend of $12,000
per common share was declared on December 2, 1999, to stockholders of record on
December 15, 1999 paid on December 31, 1999. On January 28, 1999, the Company
paid cash dividends of $9,700 per common share to the stockholder of record on
December 10, 1998, to stockholders of record on December 30, 1998. On September
8, 1999, the Company paid a cash dividend of $332 thousand on the outstanding
common shares to the stockholder of record on December 30, 1998, as declared on
September 2, 1999. The Company elected under Section 858 of the Internal Revenue
Code to treat this dividend as having been paid in 1998.

6. TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES

The Company entered into an advisory agreement (the "Advisory Agreement")
with the Bank pursuant to which the Bank administers the day-to-day operations
of the Company. The Bank is responsible for (i) monitoring the credit quality of
Mortgage Assets held by the Company, (ii) advising the Company with respect to
the reinvestment of income from and payments on, and with respect to the
acquisition, management, financing, and disposition of the Mortgage Assets held
by the Company, and (iii) monitoring the Company's compliance with the
requirements necessary to qualify as a REIT.

The Advisory Agreements in effect in 1999 and from inception (January 2,
1998) through December 31, 1998 entitled the Bank to receive advisory fees of
$50,000 and $43,000, respectively. In 2000, advisory fees of $60,000 have been
approved.

The securing mortgage loans are serviced by the Bank pursuant to the terms
of a servicing agreement (the "Servicing Agreement"). The Bank receives a fee
equal to 0.25% per annum on the principal balances of the loans serviced. The
Servicing Agreement requires the Bank to service the mortgage loans in a manner
generally consistent with accepted secondary market practices, and servicing
guidelines promulgated by the Company and with Fannie Mae and FHLMC guidelines
and procedures.

The Company entered into an agreement with the Bank to act as Transfer
Agent and Registrar for the 7 3/8% Noncumulative Exchangeable Preferred Stock,
Series A, issued by the Company.

7. OPERATING SEGMENT

The Company's operations consist of monitoring and evaluating the
investments in Mortgage Assets. Accordingly, the Company operates in only one
segment. The Company has no external customers and transacts most of its
business with the Bank.

8. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

Legal proceedings in which the Company is a defendant may arise in the
normal course of business. At December 31, 1999 and 1998, there is no pending
litigation against the Company.

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29

9. QUARTERLY FINANCIAL INFORMATION (UNAUDITED)

The following table sets forth selected quarterly financial data for the
Company:



PERIOD FROM INCEPTION (JANUARY 2, 1998)
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 1998
--------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------
FIRST SECOND THIRD FOURTH FIRST SECOND THIRD FOURTH
QUARTER QUARTER QUARTER QUARTER QUARTER QUARTER QUARTER QUARTER
------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- ------- -------
(IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)

Total interest income..... $ 7,705 $ 7,833 $ 7,948 $ 8,102 $ 4,365 $ 7,680 $ 7,715 $ 7,707
Total operating
expenses................ 238 227 183 213 172 294 343 177
--------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Net income................ 7,467 7,606 7,765 7,889 4,193 7,386 7,372 7,530
Preferred dividends....... 4,609 4,609 4,609 4,611 2,561 4,609 4,609 4,610
--------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Net income available to
common stockholder...... $ 2,858 $ 2,997 $ 3,156 $ 3,278 $ 1,632 $ 2,777 $ 2,763 $ 2,920
========= ========= ========= ========= ========= ========= ========= =========
Basic and diluted income
per common share........ $2,858.00 $2,997.00 $3,156.00 $3,278.00 $1,632.00 $2,777.00 $2,763.00 $2,920.00
========= ========= ========= ========= ========= ========= ========= =========


FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK

The following unaudited financial information and audited financial statements
for Harris Trust and Savings Bank are included because the Preferred Shares are
automatically exchangeable for a new series of preferred stock of the Bank upon
the occurrence of certain events.

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30

HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK

CERTAIN INFORMATION REGARDING HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK

Harris Trust and Savings Bank ("the Bank") is an Illinois banking operation
located at 111 West Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois 60603. The Bank is a wholly
owned subsidiary of Harris Bankcorp, Inc., a multibank holding company
incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware and headquartered in
Chicago and registered under the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended.
Harris Bankcorp, Inc. also owns 13 other banks, 12 in the counties surrounding
Chicago and one in Arizona. Another Chicago metropolitan area multibank holding
company, Harris Bankmont, Inc. was purchased in 1994 by Bankmont Financial Corp.
("Bankmont"), which is also the parent company of Harris Bankcorp, Inc. Harris
Bankmont, Inc. owns 13 banks and, together with Harris Bankcorp, is collectively
referred to as "Harris Bank." Bankmont is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Bank of
Montreal. At December 31, 1999, Harris Bank's assets amounted to $27.18 billion,
with the Bank representing approximately 74 percent of that total.

The Bank, an Illinois state-chartered bank has its principal office, 58
domestic branch offices and 97 automated teller machines ("ATMs") located in the
Chicago area. The Bank also has representative offices in Los Angeles, New York,
Houston, Dallas, San Francisco and Tokyo; a foreign branch office in Nassau; and
an Edge Act subsidiary, Harris Bank International Corporation ("HBIC"), engaged
in international banking and finance in New York. At December 31, 1999, the Bank
had total assets of $20.04 billion, total deposits of $11.13 billion, total
loans of $10.06 billion and equity capital of $1.25 billion.

The Bank provides a broad range of banking and financial services to
individuals and corporations domestically and abroad, including corporate
banking, personal financial services, corporate and personal trust services,
charge cards and investment services. The Bank also offers (i) demand and time
deposit accounts; (ii) various types of loans (including term, real estate,
revolving credit facilities and lines of credit); (iii) sales and purchases of
foreign currencies; (iv) interest rate management products (including swaps,
forward rate agreements and interest rate guarantees); (v) cash management
services; (vi) underwriting of municipal bonds; (vii) financial consulting; and
(viii) a wide variety of trust and trust-related services.

Competitors of the Bank include commercial banks, savings and loan
associations, consumer and commercial finance companies, credit unions and other
financial services companies. Based on legislation passed in 1986 that allows
Illinois banks to be acquired by banks or holding companies in states with a
reciprocal law in effect together with the Federal Interstate Banking Efficiency
Act of 1994, that allows for both interstate banking and interstate branching in
certain circumstances, the Bank believes that the level of competition will
increase in the future.

The Bank is subject to regulation by the Board of Governors and the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation. As a state-chartered bank, it is also regulated
by the Illinois Office of Banks and Real Estate. These regulatory bodies examine
the Bank and supervise numerous aspects of its business. The Federal Reserve
System regulates money and credit conditions and interest rates in order to
influence general economic conditions, primarily through open market operations
in U.S. Government securities, varying the discount rate on bank borrowings,
setting reserve requirements against financial institution deposits and
prescribing minimum capital requirements for member banks. These policies have a
significant influence on overall growth and distribution of bank loans,
investments and deposits, and affect interest rates charged on loans and earned
on investments or paid for time, savings and other deposits. Board of Governors
monetary policies have had a significant effect on the operating results of
commercial banks in the past and this is expected to continue.

Although primarily focusing on U.S. domestic customers, identifiable
foreign assets accounted for 1 percent of the Bank's total consolidated assets
at December 31, 1999, foreign net income was approximately 13 percent of the
Bank's consolidated net income. Foreign net income is generated from three
primary sources: (i) lending to foreign banks and other financial institutions;
(ii) time deposits held in foreign banks; and (iii) foreign exchange trading
profits of approximately $8.3 million.

29
31

Credit Card Portfolio Sale. On January 29, 1998, the Bank sold its credit
card portfolio to a company owned by BankBoston Corporation, First Annapolis
Consulting, Inc. and Bankmont. The assets sold had a carrying value of $693.0
million, representing less than 5 percent of the Bank's total consolidated
assets. Upon completion of the transfer, the Bank received cash and an equity
interest in the newly formed company, which it immediately sold for cash to
Bankmont.

On February 1, 2000, Bankcorp announced the sale of its corporate trust
businesses. In separate and unrelated transactions, the indenture trust business
is being sold to a subsidiary of The Bank of New York Company, Inc., and the
shareholder services business to Computershare Limited. The combined sales will
result in an estimated pre-tax gain to Bankcorp of approximately $50 million in
first quarter 2000, not including revenue contingent upon the outcome of certain
events, expected in second half 2000 (of that gain approximately 95 percent will
be recorded by the Bank). The sales are subject to regulatory approval and are
expected to close during the first quarter of 2000. In 1999, noninterest revenue
from the corporate trust business amounted to $51.7 million. The Corporation
does not believe that the sale of these businesses will have a material impact
on the results of operations for future periods.

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32

HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK AND SUBSIDIARIES

MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

1999 COMPARED TO 1998

SUMMARY

The Bank's 1999 net income was $144.3 million, up $14.7 million, or 11
percent from 1998. Return on average common equity ("ROE") for 1999 was 11.21
percent and return on average assets ("ROA") was 0.77 percent. For 1998, ROE was
10.02 percent and ROA was 0.78 percent.

Earnings before amortization of goodwill and other valuation intangibles
("cash earnings") were $157.9 million in 1999, an 11 percent increase compared
to 1998. With the Bank's June 1996 acquisition of Household Bank's Chicagoland
network, earnings on a cash basis is the most relevant measure of performance.
Cash return on average common stockholder's equity ("Cash ROE") represents net
income applicable to common stock plus after-tax amortization expenses of
goodwill and other valuation intangibles, divided by average common
stockholder's equity less gross average intangible assets. For the year ended
December 31, 1999, cash ROE was 15.23 percent compared to cash ROE of 13.87
percent in 1998.

For 1999, net interest income on a fully taxable equivalent basis of $400.6
million was up 8 percent from 1998. Net interest margin fell from 2.67 percent
to 2.54 percent in 1999, reflecting a relatively greater use of wholesale
funding sources to support earning asset growth. Average earning assets rose
$1.83 billion or 13 percent to $15.78 billion in the current year, attributable
to an increase of 8 percent or $712 million in average loans and $1.24 billion
in investment securities. Commercial lending was a strong contributor to the
loan growth.

Noninterest income increased $5.0 million to $380.9 million for 1999. The
primary contributors to this revenue growth were trust and investment management
fees, service charges on deposits and income from tax-advantaged investments.
Gains from sales of securities were substantially less in 1999, $13.6 million
compared to $26.5 million in 1998. Money market and bond trading profits
declined $1.9 million in the current year.

Total noninterest expenses were $559.2 million up $28.6 million or 5
percent from 1998. Employment-related expenses totaled $344.5 million up $30.8
million or 10 percent. This increase reflects both salary adjustments and growth
in benefit costs. Employee benefit increases were, in part, a function of lower
discount rates applied to projected retirement liabilities. Net occupancy
expenses totaled $37.1 million, down $3.0 million or 8 percent. Equipment
expenses totaled $55.6 million, up $10.1 million or 22 percent from 1998
primarily due to additional depreciation from a new retail applications system
and a new trust applications system, both placed in service during 1999.
Contract programming and expert service fees were down $11.4 million and $5.3
million respectively, primarily due to limits on new systems development in
order to devote resources to ensuring that all current systems were Y2K
compliant. Amortization of goodwill and other valuation intangibles increased
$1.2 million or 6 percent from 1998.

Income taxes were $39.2 million down $6.1 million from 1998. The 1999 and
1998 effective tax rates are 21.4 percent and 25.9 percent respectively. The
reduction in rate is primarily from the increase in revenue from tax-advantaged
investments compared to 1998.

The 1999 provision for loan losses of $21.7 million was down $3.6 million
from 1998. Net loan charge-offs during the current year were $16.3 million
compared to $16.8 million in 1998.

Nonperforming assets at December 31, 1999 totaled $24 million, or 0.24
percent of total loans compared to $16 million or 0.17 percent a year ago. At
December 31, 1999, the allowance for possible loan losses was $114 million or
1.13 percent of total loans outstanding compared to $108 million or 1.16 percent
of loans at the end of 1998. As a result, the ratio of the allowance for
possible loan losses to nonperforming assets declined from a multiple of 6.9 at
December 31, 1998 to 4.7 at December 31, 1999.

31
33

At December 31, 1999, the Bank's equity capital amounted to $1.25 billion,
down from $1.33 billion at December 31, 1998. The decline is primarily
attributable to unrealized securities losses, net of tax, which were $138
million at December 31, 1999 compared to unrealized securities gains, net of
tax, of $31 million at December 31, 1998. In February 1998, Harris Preferred
Capital Corporation, a subsidiary of the Bank, issued $250 million of
noncumulative preferred stock in a public offering (see Note 15 to Financial
Statements). The preferred stock qualifies as Tier 1 capital for U.S. banking
regulatory purposes.

The Bank's regulatory capital leverage ratio was 7.29 percent compared to
7.50 percent one year earlier. Regulators require most banking institutions to
maintain capital leverage ratios of not less than 4.0 percent. At December 31,
1999, the Bank's Tier 1 and total risk-based capital ratios were 8.68 percent
and 10.77 percent, respectively, compared to respective ratios of 8.57 percent
and 10.77 percent at December 31, 1998. The 1999 year-end ratios substantially
exceeded minimum required regulatory ratios of 4.0 percent and 8.0 percent,
respectively.

1998 COMPARED TO 1997

The Bank's 1998 net income was $129.6 million, up $25.3 million, or 24
percent from 1997. ROE for 1998 was 10.02 percent and ROA was 0.78 percent. For
1997, ROE was 8.47 percent and ROA was 0.69 percent.

Cash earnings were $142.5 million in 1998, a 19 percent increase compared
to 1997. For the year ended December 31, 1998, cash ROE was 13.87 percent
compared to cash ROE of 12.67 percent in 1997.

For 1998, net interest income on a fully taxable equivalent basis of $372.0
million was down 15 percent from 1997. Net interest margin fell from 3.40
percent to 2.67 percent in 1998, reflecting the impact of the credit card
portfolio sale in January 1998 (see Note 19 to Financial Statements). Average
earning assets rose $1.17 billion or 9 percent to $14.01 billion. Average loans
increased 7 percent or $573 million. Excluding the credit card portfolio,
average loans rose $1.37 billion or 18 percent. Commercial and residential real
estate lending were strong contributors to this growth.

Noninterest income increased 21 percent to $375.9 million for 1998. The
primary contributors to this revenue growth were trust and investment management
fees, service charges on deposits, gains on securities, syndication fees, gains
on mortgage loan sales and income from bank-owned insurance investments.

Total noninterest expenses were $530.6 million up $8.1 million or 2 percent
from 1997. Employment-related expenses totaled $313.6 million up $14.9 million
or 5 percent. Net occupancy expenses totaled $40.1 million, down $4.7 million or
10 percent. Equipment expenses totaled $45.4 million, up $5.0 million or 12
percent from 1997. Contract programming and expert service fees were up $9.6
million and $2.4 million respectively, primarily due to Year 2000 compliance
activities. Other expenses, including marketing and communication and delivery
expense, totaled $54.6 million down $15.9 million from 1997 due primarily to the
reduction in costs as a result of the sale of the credit card portfolio.
Amortization of goodwill and other valuation intangibles decreased $3.1 million
or 13 percent from 1997, due to the credit card sale in January 1998. Excluding
the cost associated with the credit card portfolio, expenses increased 7
percent.

Income taxes were $45.3 million down $2.0 million from 1997. The 1998 and
1997 effective tax rates are 25.9 percent and 31.2 percent respectively. The
reduction in rate is primarily from the increase in revenue from bank-owned
insurance investments compared to 1997 (see Note 14 to Financial Statements).

The 1998 provision for loan losses of $25.4 million was down $33.0 million
from $58.4 million in 1997. Net loan charge-offs during the current year were
$16.8 million compared to $67.1 million in 1997, primarily reflecting lower
writeoffs in the charge card portfolio.

Nonperforming assets at December 31, 1998 totaled $16 million, or 0.17
percent of total loans compared to $8 million or 0.10 percent in 1997. At
December 31, 1998, the allowance for possible loan losses was $108 million or
1.16 percent of total loans outstanding compared to $100 million or 1.23 percent
of loans at the end of 1997. As a result, the ratio of the allowance for
possible loan losses to nonperforming assets declined from a multiple of 12.6 at
December 31, 1997 to 6.9 at December 31, 1998.

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34

At December 31, 1998, the Bank's equity capital amounted to $1.33 billion,
up from $1.28 billion at December 31, 1997.

The Bank's regulatory capital leverage ratio was 7.50 percent compared to
6.54 percent at December 31, 1997. Regulators require most banking institutions
to maintain capital leverage ratios of not less than 4.0 percent. At December
31, 1998, the Bank's Tier 1 and total risk-based capital ratios were 8.57
percent and 10.77 percent, respectively, compared to respective ratios of 7.29
percent and 10.36 percent at December 31, 1997. The 1998 year-end ratios
substantially exceeded minimum required regulatory ratios of 4.0 percent and 8.0
percent, respectively.

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JOINT INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

The Board of Directors of Harris Trust and Savings Bank engaged the firms
of KPMG LLP and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP to serve as joint auditors for each
of the years in the three year period ended December 31, 1999.

The Bank's ultimate parent company, Bank of Montreal ("BMO"), has elected
to appoint two firms of independent public accountants to be auditors of BMO and
all significant subsidiaries. The Bank's independent public accountants reflect
the appointments made by BMO.

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT

To the Stockholder and Board
of Directors of Harris Trust and Savings Bank:

We have audited the accompanying consolidated statements of condition of
Harris Trust and Savings Bank and Subsidiaries as of December 31, 1999 and 1998,
and the related consolidated statements of income, comprehensive income, changes
in stockholder's equity and cash flows for each of the years in the three year
period ended December 31, 1999. These consolidated financial statements are the
responsibility of Harris Trust and Savings Bank's management. Our responsibility
is to express an opinion on these consolidated financial statements based on our
audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above
present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Harris Trust
and Savings Bank and Subsidiaries as of December 31, 1999 and 1998, and the
results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the years in the
three year period ended December 31, 1999 in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles.

KPMG LLP PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Chicago, Illinois
January 28, 2000, except for Note 21,
as to which the date is March 10, 2000.

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36

HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK AND SUBSIDIARIES

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CONDITION



DECEMBER 31
--------------------------------
1999 1998
------------- -------------
(IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT SHARE DATA)

ASSETS
Cash and demand balances due from banks..................... $ 1,423,043 $ 1,434,619
Money market assets:
Interest-bearing deposits at banks........................ 239,832 98,929
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreement to resell.................................... 298,000 151,575
Securities available-for-sale............................... 6,265,013 5,295,498
Trading account assets...................................... 66,996 120,668
Loans....................................................... 10,063,801 9,306,607
Allowance for possible loan losses.......................... (113,702) (108,280)
----------- -----------
Net loans................................................. 9,950,099 9,198,327
Premises and equipment...................................... 311,353 284,962
Customers' liability on acceptances......................... 43,599 30,829
Bank-owned insurance investments............................ 772,579 725,302
Goodwill and other valuation intangibles.................... 241,568 257,627
Other assets................................................ 425,983 399,126
----------- -----------
TOTAL ASSETS......................................... $20,038,065 $17,997,462
=========== ===========
LIABILITIES
Deposits in domestic offices -- noninterest-bearing......... $ 3,449,650 $ 3,382,309
-- interest-bearing........... 6,314,523 6,859,778
Deposits in foreign offices -- noninterest-bearing.......... 35,537 69,215
-- interest-bearing.............. 1,329,977 866,394
----------- -----------
Total deposits....................................... 11,129,687 11,177,696
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreement
to repurchase............................................. 4,739,578 3,642,049
Short-term borrowings....................................... 681,097 166,510
Senior notes................................................ 1,500,000 940,000
Acceptances outstanding..................................... 43,599 30,829
Accrued interest, taxes and other expenses.................. 167,465 141,431
Other liabilities........................................... 50,545 90,550
Minority interest -- preferred stock of subsidiary.......... 250,000 250,000
Long-term notes............................................. 225,000 225,000
----------- -----------
TOTAL LIABILITIES.................................... 18,786,971 16,664,065
----------- -----------
STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
Common stock ($10 par value); 10,000,000 shares authorized,
issued and outstanding.................................... 100,000 100,000
Surplus..................................................... 610,512 608,116
Retained earnings........................................... 678,275 593,973
Accumulated other comprehensive (loss) income............... (137,693) 31,308
----------- -----------
TOTAL STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY........................... 1,251,094 1,333,397
----------- -----------
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY........... $20,038,065 $17,997,462
=========== ===========


The accompanying notes to the financial statements are an integral part of
these statements.

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37

HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME



FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31
--------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
---------- -------- --------
(IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)

INTEREST INCOME
Loans, including fees....................................... $ 695,194 $672,648 $699,160
Money market assets:
Deposits at banks......................................... 1,483 10,816 31,431
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreement to resell..................................... 10,894 8,338 12,977
Trading account............................................. 3,973 3,775 3,752
Securities available-for-sale:
U.S. Treasury and federal agency.......................... 330,214 266,979 219,027
State and municipal....................................... 1,906 3,286 4,630
Other..................................................... 1,511 1,386 1,322
---------- -------- --------
Total interest income..................................... 1,045,175 967,228 972,299
---------- -------- --------
INTEREST EXPENSE
Deposits.................................................... 351,384 360,762 344,274
Short-term borrowings....................................... 208,453 170,082 147,207
Senior notes................................................ 69,027 47,689 39,883
Minority interest -- dividends on preferred stock of
subsidiary................................................ 18,437 16,389 --
Long-term notes............................................. 14,405 17,425 20,171
---------- -------- --------
Total interest expense.................................... 661,706 612,347 551,535
---------- -------- --------
NET INTEREST INCOME......................................... 383,469 354,881 420,764
Provision for loan losses................................... 21,732 25,358 58,415
---------- -------- --------
NET INTEREST INCOME AFTER PROVISION FOR LOAN LOSSES......... 361,737 329,523 362,349
---------- -------- --------
NONINTEREST INCOME
Trust and investment management fees........................ 119,133 111,130 102,718
Money market and bond trading............................... 8,484 10,370 7,011
Foreign exchange............................................ 8,314 6,772 5,364
Merchant and charge card fees............................... 30,029 26,519 49,800
Service fees and charges.................................... 104,586 97,033 84,262
Securities gains............................................ 13,582 26,514 12,799
Gain on sale of credit card portfolio....................... -- 12,000 --
Bank-owned insurance investments............................ 41,414 32,339 12,917
Foreign fees................................................ 18,674 19,373 18,022
Syndication fees............................................ 11,531 15,167 9,222
Other....................................................... 25,183 18,719 9,641
---------- -------- --------
Total noninterest income.................................. 380,930 375,936 311,756
---------- -------- --------
NONINTEREST EXPENSES
Salaries and other compensation............................. 288,140 264,503 252,104
Pension, profit sharing and other employee benefits......... 56,318 49,108 46,651
Net occupancy............................................... 37,114 40,139 44,793
Equipment................................................... 55,567 45,434 40,480
Marketing................................................... 28,283 23,279 21,935
Communication and delivery.................................. 23,080 20,792 21,688
Deposit insurance........................................... 2,812 2,602 2,537
Expert services............................................. 26,359 31,660 29,219
Contract programming........................................ 12,195 23,633 14,047
Other....................................................... 6,603 7,972 24,381
---------- -------- --------
536,471 509,122 497,835
Goodwill and other valuation intangibles.................... 22,691 21,494 24,636
---------- -------- --------
Total noninterest expenses................................ 559,162 530,616 522,471
---------- -------- --------
Income before income taxes.................................. 183,505 174,843 151,634
Applicable income taxes..................................... 39,203 45,286 47,319
---------- -------- --------
NET INCOME.................................................. $ 144,302 $129,557 $104,315
========== ======== ========
BASIC EARNINGS PER COMMON SHARE (based on 10,000,000 average
shares outstanding)
Net income.................................................. $ 14.43 $ 12.96 $ 10.43


The accompanying notes to the financial statements are an integral part of
these statements.

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38

HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME



FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31
--------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
-------- -------- --------
(IN THOUSANDS)

NET INCOME............................................... $144,302 $129,557 $104,315
Other comprehensive income:
Unrealized gains/(losses) on available-for-sale
securities:
Unrealized holding (losses)/gains arising during
period, net of tax (benefit) expense of ($106,170)
in 1999, $27,668 in 1998 and $13,838 in 1997...... (160,703) 42,520 26,919
Less reclassification adjustment for gains included
in net income, net of tax expense of $5,284 in
1999, $10,314 in 1998 and $4,979 in 1997.......... (8,298) (16,200) (7,820)
-------- -------- --------
Other comprehensive (loss) income...................... (169,001) 26,320 19,099
======== ======== ========
Comprehensive (loss) income.............................. $(24,699) $155,877 $123,414
======== ======== ========


The accompanying notes to the financial statements are an integral part of
these statements.

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39

HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK AND SUBSIDIARIES

STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY



ACCUMULATED
OTHER
COMPREHENSIVE TOTAL
COMMON RETAINED INCOME STOCKHOLDER'S
STOCK SURPLUS EARNINGS (LOSS) EQUITY
-------- -------- --------- ------------- -------------
(IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT SHARE DATA)

BALANCE AT DECEMBER 31, 1996............... $100,000 $600,377 $ 506,300 $ (14,111) $1,192,566
Contribution to capital surplus.......... -- 650 -- -- 650
Net income............................... -- -- 104,315 -- 104,315
Dividends -- ($3.72 per common share).... -- -- (37,199) -- (37,199)
Other comprehensive income............... -- -- -- 19,099 19,099
-------- -------- --------- --------- ----------
BALANCE AT DECEMBER 31, 1997............... 100,000 601,027 573,416 4,988 1,279,431
Contribution to capital surplus.......... -- 7,089 -- -- 7,089
Net income............................... -- -- 129,557 -- 129,557
Dividends -- ($10.90 per common share)... -- -- (109,000) -- (109,000)
Other comprehensive income............... -- -- -- 26,320 26,320
-------- -------- --------- --------- ----------
BALANCE AT DECEMBER 31, 1998............... 100,000 608,116 593,973 31,308 1,333,397
Contribution to capital surplus.......... -- 2,396 -- -- 2,396
Net income............................... -- -- 144,302 -- 144,302
Dividends -- ($6.00 per common share).... -- -- (60,000) -- (60,000)
Other comprehensive loss................. -- -- -- (169,001) (169,001)
-------- -------- --------- --------- ----------
BALANCE AT DECEMBER 31, 1999............... $100,000 $610,512 $ 678,275 $(137,693) $1,251,094
======== ======== ========= ========= ==========


The accompanying notes to the financial statements are an integral part of
these statements.

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40

HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK AND SUBSIDIARIES

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS



FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31
------------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
------------ ------------ ------------
(IN THOUSANDS EXCEPT SHARE DATA)

OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
Net Income.................................................. $ 144,302 $ 129,557 $ 104,315
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided
(used) by operating activities:
Provision for loan losses................................. 21,732 25,358 58,415
Depreciation and amortization, including intangibles...... 69,014 59,496 57,948
Deferred tax (benefit) expense............................ (4,254) 5,352 2,705
Gain on sales of securities............................... (13,582) (26,514) (12,799)
Gain on sale of credit card portfolio..................... -- (12,000) --
Trading account net cash sales (purchases)................ 53,672 (67,459) 57,146
(Increase) decrease in interest receivable................ (37,595) 20,588 (29,296)
Increase (decrease) in interest payable................... 32,881 18,341 (8,729)
Decrease (increase) in loans held for sale................ 152,521 (167,317) (2,822)
Other, net................................................ 15,955 (58,921) (26,505)
------------ ------------ ------------
Net cash provided (used) by operating activities.......... 434,646 (73,519) 200,378
------------ ------------ ------------
INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
Net (increase) decrease in interest-bearing deposits at
banks................................................... (140,903) 499,133 60,125
Net (increase) decrease in Federal funds sold and
securities purchased under agreement to resell.......... (146,425) (79,850) 244,550
Proceeds from sales of securities available-for-sale...... 693,264 2,307,598 1,234,860
Proceeds from maturities of securities
available-for-sale...................................... 8,487,023 10,499,960 9,897,550
Purchases of securities available-for-sale................ (10,416,675) (14,147,509) (12,208,001)
Net increase in loans and assets held for sale............ (926,025) (1,035,388) (730,964)
Proceeds from sales of premises and equipment............. 542 22,780 24,521
Purchases of premises and equipment....................... (73,256) (116,437) (99,273)
Net increase in bank-owned insurance investments.......... (47,277) (457,839) (36,947)
Other, net................................................ 59,403 28,290 (9,173)
------------ ------------ ------------
Net cash used by investing activities..................... (2,510,329) (2,479,262) (1,622,752)
------------ ------------ ------------
FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
Net (decrease) increase in deposits....................... (48,009) 518,111 933,380
Net increase in Federal funds purchased and securities
sold under agreement to repurchase...................... 1,097,529 948,449 701,534
Net increase (decrease) in other short-term borrowings.... 514,587 (334,517) 156,655
Proceeds from issuance of senior notes.................... 3,460,500 8,347,080 6,710,000
Repayment of senior notes................................. (2,900,500) (7,507,080) (6,960,000)
Proceeds from issuance of long-term notes................. -- -- 15,000
Repayment of long-term notes.............................. -- (100,000) --
Proceeds from the sale of the credit card portfolio....... -- 722,748 --
Proceeds from the issuance of preferred stock of
subsidiary.............................................. -- 250,000 --
Cash dividends paid on common stock....................... (60,000) (109,000) (37,199)
------------ ------------ ------------
Net cash provided by financing activities............... 2,064,107 2,735,791 1,519,370
------------ ------------ ------------
Net (decrease) increase in cash and demand balances due
from banks............................................ (11,576) 183,010 96,996
Cash and demand balances due from banks at January 1.... 1,434,619 1,251,609 1,154,613
------------ ------------ ------------
Cash and demand balances due from banks at December
31.................................................... $ 1,423,043 $ 1,434,619 $ 1,251,609
============ ============ ============
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
Cash paid during the year for:
Interest (net of amount capitalized).................. $ 628,825 $ 594,006 $ 560,264
Income taxes.......................................... $ 45,107 $ 31,991 $ 51,219


The accompanying notes to the financial statements are an integral part of
these statements.

39
41

HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK AND SUBSIDIARIES

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

1. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION AND NATURE OF OPERATIONS

Harris Trust and Savings Bank ("Bank"), is a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Harris Bankcorp, Inc. ("Bankcorp"), a Delaware corporation which is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Bankmont Financial Corp. ("Bankmont"), a Delaware
corporation which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Bank of Montreal ("BMO").
Throughout these Notes to Financial Statements, the term "Bank" refers to Harris
Trust and Savings Bank and subsidiaries.

The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of the Bank and
its wholly-owned subsidiaries. Significant intercompany accounts and
transactions have been eliminated. Certain reclassifications were made to
conform prior years' financial statements to the current year's presentation.
See Note 19 to Financial Statements for additional information on business
combinations and Note 20 for additional information on related party
transactions.

The Bank provides banking, trust and other services domestically and
internationally through the main banking facility, 7 active nonbank subsidiaries
and an Edge Act subsidiary, Harris Bank International Corporation ("HBIC"), in
New York. The Bank and its subsidiaries provide a variety of financial services
to commercial and industrial companies, financial institutions, governmental
units, not-for-profit organizations and individuals throughout the U.S.,
primarily the Midwest, and abroad. Services rendered and products sold to
customers include demand and time deposit accounts and certificates; various
types of loans; sales and purchases of foreign currencies; interest rate
management products; cash management services; underwriting of municipal bonds;
and financial consulting.

BASIS OF ACCOUNTING

The accompanying financial statements are prepared in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles and conform to practices within the
banking industry.

FOREIGN CURRENCY AND FOREIGN EXCHANGE CONTRACTS

Assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies have been
translated into United States dollars at respective year-end rates of exchange.
Monthly translation gains or losses are computed at rates prevailing at
month-end. There were no material translation gains or losses during any of the
years presented. Foreign exchange trading positions including spot, forward,
futures and option contracts are revalued monthly using prevailing market rates.
Exchange adjustments are included with foreign exchange income in the
Consolidated Statements of Income.

DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

The Bank uses various interest rate and foreign exchange derivative
contracts in the management of its risk strategy or as part of its dealer and
trading activities. Interest rate contracts may include futures, forward rate
agreements, option contracts, guarantees (caps, floors and collars) and swaps.
Foreign exchange contracts may include spot, futures, forwards, option contracts
and swaps.

Derivative financial instruments which are used as part of the Bank's
dealer and trading activities are marked to market and the resulting unrealized
gains and losses are recognized in noninterest income in the period of change.
Realized and unrealized gains and losses on interest rate contracts and foreign
exchange contracts are recorded in trading account income and foreign exchange
income, respectively.

Derivative financial instruments which are used in the management of the
Bank's risk strategy may qualify for hedge accounting. A derivative financial
instrument may be a hedge of an existing asset, liability,

40
42

firm commitment or anticipated transaction. Hedge accounting is used when the
following criteria are met: the hedged item exposes the Bank to price, currency
or interest rate risk; the hedging instrument reduces the exposure to risk and
the hedging instrument is designated as a hedge. At the inception of the hedge
and throughout the hedge period, a high correlation of changes in both the
market value of the hedging instrument and the fair value of the hedged item
should be probable. Additional criteria for using hedge accounting for
anticipated transactions are: the significant characteristics and expected terms
of the anticipated transaction are identified and it is probable that the
anticipated transaction will occur.

If hedge criteria are met, then unrealized gains and losses on derivative
financial instruments other than interest rate swaps are generally recognized in
the same period and in the same manner in which gains and losses from the hedged
item are recognized. Unrealized gains and losses on a hedging instrument are
deferred when the hedged item is accounted for on an historical cost basis. The
hedging instrument is marked when the hedged item is accounted for on a mark to
market basis.

Deferred gains and losses on interest rate futures contracts used to hedge
existing assets and liabilities are included in the basis of the item being
hedged. For hedges of anticipated transactions, the Bank recognizes deferred
gains or losses on futures transactions as adjustments to the cash position
eventually taken. Gains or losses on termination of an interest rate futures
contract designated as a hedge are deferred and recognized when the offsetting
gain or loss is recognized on the hedged item. When the hedged item is sold,
existing unrealized gains or losses on the interest rate futures contract are
recognized as part of net income at the time of the sale. Thereafter, unrealized
gains and losses on the hedge contract are recognized in income immediately.

The Bank engages in interest rate swaps in order to manage its interest
rate risk exposure. Contractual payments under interest rate swaps designated as
hedges are accrued in the Statement of Income as a component of interest income
or expense. There is no recognition of unrealized gains and losses on the
balance sheet. Gains or losses on termination of an interest rate swap contract
designated as a hedge are deferred and amortized as an adjustment of the yield
on the underlying balance sheet position over the remainder of the original
contractual life of the terminated swap. When the hedged item is sold, existing
unrealized gains or losses on the swap contract are recognized in income at the
time of the sale. Thereafter, unrealized gains and losses on the hedge contract
are recognized as part of net income when they occur.

Interest rate options are used to manage the Bank's interest rate risk
exposure from rate lock commitments and fixed rate mortgage loans intended to be
sold in the secondary market. Changes in the market value of options designated
as hedges are deferred from income recognition and effectively recognized as
other noninterest income when the loans are sold and the hedge position is
closed. Loans intended to be sold in the secondary market are carried at lower
of amortized cost or current market value. When a hedge contract with an
embedded gain is terminated early, the deferred gain is recorded as an
adjustment to the carrying value of the loans. When a hedge contract with an
embedded loss is terminated early, the deferred loss is charged to other
noninterest income. When the hedged item is sold before the hedge contract is
terminated and the hedge contract has an embedded gain or loss, the deferred
gain or loss is recorded as other noninterest income in the same period as part
of the gain or loss on the sale of the loans. Thereafter, unrealized gains and
losses on the hedge contract are recognized as part of net income when they
occur.

In June 1998, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 133, "Accounting for
Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities." The Statement establishes
accounting and reporting standards for derivative instruments and for hedging
activities. It requires all derivatives to be recognized as either assets or
liabilities in the statement of financial position and to be measured at fair
value. As issued, the Statement is effective for all fiscal quarters of fiscal
years beginning after June 15, 1999. In June 1999, the FASB issued SFAS No. 137,
"Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities-Deferral of the
Effective Date of FASB Statement No. 133." The Statement is effective upon
issuance and it amends SFAS No. 133 to be effective for all fiscal quarters of
fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2000 which for the Bank would be the
quarter ending March 31, 2001. The Bank is in the process of assessing the
impact of adopting the Statements on its financial position and results of
operations.

41
43

SECURITIES

The Bank classifies securities as either trading account assets or
available-for-sale. Trading account assets include securities acquired as part
of trading activities and are typically purchased with the expectation of
near-term profit. These assets consist primarily of municipal bonds and U.S.
government securities. All other securities are classified as
available-for-sale, even if the Bank has no current plans to divest. Trading
account assets are reported at fair value with unrealized gains and losses
included in trading account income, which also includes realized gains and
losses from closing such positions. Available-for-sale securities are reported
at fair value with unrealized gains and losses included, on an after-tax basis,
in a separate component of stockholder's equity.

Interest income on securities, including amortization of discount or
premium, is included in earnings. Realized gains and losses, as a result of
securities sales, are included in securities gains, with the cost of securities
sold determined on the specific identification basis.

LOANS, LOAN FEES AND COMMITMENT FEES

Loans not held for sale are recorded at the principal amount outstanding,
net of unearned income, deferred fees and origination costs. Origination fees
collected on commercial loans, loan commitments, mortgage loans and standby
letters of credit, which are not held for sale, are generally deferred and
amortized over the life of the related facility. Other loan-related fees that
are not the equivalent of yield adjustments are recognized as income when
received or earned. At December 31, 1999 and 1998, the Bank's Consolidated
Statement of Condition included approximately $14 million and $5 million,
respectively, of deferred loan-related fees net of deferred origination costs.

In conjunction with its mortgage and commercial banking activities, the
Bank will originate loans with the intention of selling them in the secondary
market. These loans are carried at the lower of allocated cost or current market
value, on a portfolio basis. Deferred origination fees and costs associated with
these loans are not amortized, and are included as part of the basis of the loan
at time of sale. Realized gains and unrealized losses are included with other
noninterest income.

The Bank engages in the servicing of mortgage loans and acquires mortgage
servicing rights by purchasing or originating mortgage loans and then selling
those loans with servicing rights retained. The rights to service mortgage loans
for others are recognized as separate assets by allocating the total cost of the
mortgage loans to the mortgage servicing rights and the loans (without the
mortgage servicing rights) based on their relative fair values. The capitalized
mortgage servicing rights are amortized in proportion to and over the period of
estimated net servicing income. The capitalized mortgage servicing rights are
periodically evaluated for impairment based on the fair value of those rights.
Fair values are estimated using discounted cash flow analyses. The risk
characteristics of the underlying loans used to stratify capitalized mortgage
servicing rights for purposes of measuring impairment are current market
interest rates, loan type and repricing interval.

Commercial and real estate loans are placed on nonaccrual status when the
collection of interest is doubtful or when principal or interest is 90 days past
due, unless the credit is adequately collateralized and the past due amount is
in process of collection. When a loan is placed on nonaccrual status, all
interest accrued but not yet collected which is deemed uncollectible is charged
against interest income in the current year. Interest on nonaccrual loans is
recognized as income only when cash is received and the Bank expects to collect
the entire principal balance of the loan. Interest income on restructured loans
is accrued according to the most recently agreed upon contractual terms.

Commercial and real estate loans are charged off when, in management's
opinion, the loan is deemed uncollectible. Charge card and consumer installment
loans are charged off when 180 days past due. Accrued interest on these loans is
charged to interest income. Such loans are not normally placed on nonaccrual
status.

Loan commitments and letters of credit are executory contracts and are not
reflected on the Bank's Consolidated Statement of Condition. Fees collected are
generally deferred and recognized over the life of the facility.
42
44

Impaired loans (primarily commercial credits) are measured based on the
present value of expected future cash flows (discounted at the loan's effective
interest rate) or, alternatively, at the loan's observable market price or the
fair value of supporting collateral. Impaired loans are defined as those where
it is probable that amounts due according to contractual terms, including
principal and interest, will not be collected. Both nonaccrual and certain
restructured loans meet this definition. Large groups of smaller-balance,
homogeneous loans, primarily charge card, residential real estate and consumer
installment loans, are excluded from this definition of impairment. The Bank
determines loan impairment when assessing the adequacy of the allowance for
possible loan losses.

ALLOWANCE FOR POSSIBLE LOAN LOSSES

The allowance for possible loan losses is maintained at a level considered
adequate to provide for estimated loan losses. The allowance is increased by
provisions charged to operating expense and reduced by net charge-offs. Known
losses of principal on impaired loans are charged off. The provision for loan
losses is based on past loss experience, management's evaluation of the loan
portfolio under current economic conditions and management's estimate of losses
inherent in the portfolio. Such estimates are reviewed periodically and
adjustments, if necessary, are recorded during the periods in which they become
known.

PREMISES AND EQUIPMENT

Premises and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and
amortization. In March 1998, the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (AICPA) issued Statement of Position (SOP) 98-1, "Accounting for the
Costs of Computer Software Developed or Obtained for Internal Use." The Bank
adopted this statement in January 1998 and it did not have a material effect on
the Bank's financial position or results of operations. Interest costs
associated with long-term construction projects are capitalized and then
amortized over the life of the related asset after the project is completed. For
financial reporting purposes, the provision for depreciation and amortization is
computed on the straight-line basis over the estimated useful lives of the
assets.

BANK-OWNED INSURANCE INVESTMENTS

The Bank has purchased life insurance coverage for certain officers. The
one-time premiums paid for the policies, which coincide with the initial cash
surrender value, are recorded as other assets on the Consolidated Statements of
Condition. Increases or decreases in cash surrender value (other than proceeds
from death benefits) are recorded as other income or other expense. Proceeds
from death benefits first reduce the cash surrender value attributable to the
individual policy and any additional proceeds are recorded as other income.

GOODWILL AND OTHER VALUATION INTANGIBLES

The Bank records specifically identifiable and unidentifiable (goodwill)
intangibles in connection with the acquisition of assets from unrelated parties
or the acquisition of new subsidiaries. Original lives range from 3 to 15 years.
Goodwill is amortized on the straight-line basis. Identifiable intangibles are
amortized on either an accelerated or straight-line basis depending on the
character of the acquired asset. Goodwill and other valuation intangibles are
reviewed for impairment when events or future assessments of profitability
indicate that the carrying value may not be recoverable. When assessing
recoverability, goodwill and other valuation intangibles are included as part of
the group of assets which were acquired in the transaction that gave rise to the
intangibles.

OTHER ASSETS

Property or other assets received in satisfaction of debt are included in
"Other Assets" on the Bank's Consolidated Statements of Condition and are
recorded at the lower of remaining cost or fair value. Fair values for other
real estate owned generally are reduced by estimated costs to sell. Losses
arising from subsequent write-downs to fair value are charged directly to
expense.

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45

RETIREMENT AND OTHER POSTEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS

The Bank has noncontributory defined benefit pension plans covering
virtually all its employees. For its primary plan, the policy of the Bank is to,
at a minimum, fund annually an amount necessary to satisfy the requirements
under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act ("ERISA"), without regard to
prior years' contributions in excess of the minimum.

Postemployment benefits provided to former or inactive employees after
employment but before retirement are accrued if they meet the conditions for
accrual of compensated absences. Otherwise, postemployment benefits are recorded
when expenses are incurred.

CASH FLOWS

As of December 31, 1997, credit card loan balances were reported as assets
held for sale in anticipation of the sale in January 1998. See Note 19 to
Financial Statements. This transfer was a noncash transaction and was excluded
from the Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows.

INCOME TAXES

Bankmont, Bankcorp and their wholly-owned subsidiaries including the Bank
file a consolidated Federal income tax return. Income tax return liabilities for
the Bank are not materially different than they would have been if computed on a
separate return basis.

MANAGEMENT'S ESTIMATES

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with 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 revenues and expenses during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The areas
requiring significant management judgment include provision and allowance for
possible loan losses, income taxes, pension cost, postemployment benefits,
valuation of intangible assets, fair values and temporary vs.
other-than-temporary impairment.

RECLASSIFICATIONS

Certain reclassifications were made to conform prior years' financial
statements to the current year's presentation.

2. SECURITIES

The amortized cost and estimated fair value of securities
available-for-sale were as follows:



DECEMBER 31, 1999 DECEMBER 31, 1998
------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------
AMORTIZED UNREALIZED UNREALIZED FAIR AMORTIZED UNREALIZED UNREALIZED FAIR
COST GAINS LOSSES VALUE COST GAINS LOSSES VALUE
---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
(IN THOUSANDS)

U.S. Treasury............. $1,604,120 $ 47 $ 62,193 $1,541,974 $1,243,878 $39,885 $ 196 $1,283,567
Federal agency............ 4,839,974 1 166,788 4,673,187 3,938,538 10,833 140 3,949,231
State and municipal....... 22,610 468 -- 23,078 33,812 1,599 -- 35,411
Other..................... 26,831 -- 57 26,774 27,337 4 52 27,289
---------- ------- -------- ---------- ---------- ------- ------ ----------
Total securities.......... $6,493,535 $ 516 $229,038 $6,265,013 $5,243,565 $52,321 $ 388 $5,295,498
========== ======= ======== ========== ========== ======= ====== ==========


At December 31, 1999 and 1998, available-for-sale and trading account
securities having a par value of $5.32 billion and $2.65 billion, respectively,
were pledged as collateral for certain liabilities, securities sold under
agreement to repurchase, public and trust deposits, trading account activities
and for other purposes where permitted or required by law. Securities carried at
approximately $3.31 billion and $2.55 billion were sold under agreement to
repurchase at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.

44
46

The amortized cost and estimated fair value of available-for-sale
securities at December 31, 1999, by contractual maturity, are shown below.
Expected maturities can differ from contractual maturities since borrowers may
have the right to call or prepay obligations with or without call or prepayment
penalties.



DECEMBER 31, 1999
-----------------------
AMORTIZED FAIR
COST VALUE
---------- ----------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Maturities:
Within 1 year............................................. $1,842,034 $1,837,009
1 to 5 years.............................................. 1,596,717 1,563,309
5 to 10 years............................................. 1,459,706 1,369,823
Over 10 years............................................. 1,568,247 1,468,098
Other securities without stated maturity.................... 26,831 26,774
---------- ----------
Total securities............................................ $6,493,535 $6,265,013
========== ==========


In 1999, 1998 and 1997, proceeds from the sale of securities
available-for-sale amounted to $693 million, $2.31 billion and $1.23 billion,
respectively. Gross gains of $13.6 million and no gross losses were realized on
these sales in 1999, while gross gains of $27.9 million and gross losses of $1.4
million were realized on these sales in 1998, and gross gains of $12.8 million
and no gross losses were realized in 1997. Net unrealized holding gains on
trading securities included in earnings during 1999 increased by $0.5 million
from an unrealized gain of $0.8 million at December 31, 1998 to an unrealized
gain of $1.3 million at December 31, 1999.

3. LOANS

The following table summarizes loan balances by category:



DECEMBER 31
--------------------------
1999 1998
----------- -----------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Domestic loans:
Commercial, financial, agricultural, brokers and dealers.... $ 8,152,314 $ 7,625,927
Real estate construction.................................. 29,490 53,059
Real estate mortgages..................................... 1,632,458 1,474,893
Installment............................................... 211,393 70,861
Foreign loans:
Governments and official institutions..................... 504 812
Banks and other financial institutions.................... 10,751 52,855
Other, primarily commercial and industrial................ 26,891 28,200
----------- -----------
Total loans............................................ 10,063,801 9,306,607
Less allowance for possible loan losses..................... 113,702 108,280
----------- -----------
Loans, net of allowance for possible loan losses....... $ 9,950,099 $ 9,198,327
=========== ===========


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47

Nonaccrual loans, restructured loans and other nonperforming assets are
summarized below:



DECEMBER 31
-----------------------------
1999 1998 1997
------- ------- -------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Nonaccrual loans............................................ $21,117 $14,507 $ 7,253
Restructured loans.......................................... 2,372 924 --
------- ------- -------
Total nonperforming loans................................... 23,489 15,431 7,253
Other assets received in satisfaction of debt............... 690 366 642
------- ------- -------
Total nonperforming assets................................ $24,179 $15,797 $ 7,895
======= ======= =======
Gross amount of interest income that would have been
recorded if year-end nonperforming loans had been accruing
interest at their original terms.......................... $ 1,097 $ 1,225 $ 667
Interest income actually recognized......................... 86 75 51
------- ------- -------
Interest shortfall........................................ $ 1,011 $ 1,150 $ 616
======= ======= =======


At December 31, 1999 and 1998, the Corporation had no aggregate public and
private sector outstandings to any single country experiencing a liquidity
problem which exceeded one percent of the Corporation's consolidated assets.

MORTGAGE SERVICING RIGHTS

Mortgage servicing rights, included in other assets, of $7.7 million and
$8.2 million were capitalized during 1999 and 1998, respectively. Amortization
expense associated with the mortgage servicing rights was $3.2 million and $1.6
million in 1999 and 1998, respectively. There were no direct write-downs in 1999
or 1998. The net capitalized assets of $16.8 million and $12.3 million at
December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively, are reflective of the fair value of
those rights.

4. ALLOWANCE FOR POSSIBLE LOAN LOSSES

The changes in the allowance for possible loan losses are as follows:



YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31
------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
-------- -------- --------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Balance, beginning of year.................................. $108,280 $ 99,678 $108,408
-------- -------- --------
Charge-offs................................................. (21,164) (25,680) (76,142)
Recoveries.................................................. 4,854 8,924 8,997
-------- -------- --------
Net charge-offs........................................... (16,310) (16,756) (67,145)
-------- -------- --------
Provisions charged to operations............................ 21,732 25,358 58,415
-------- -------- --------
Balance, end of year........................................ $113,702 $108,280 $ 99,678
======== ======== ========


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48

Details on impaired loans and related allowance are as follows:



IMPAIRED LOANS IMPAIRED LOANS
FOR WHICH THERE FOR WHICH THERE TOTAL
IS A RELATED IS NO RELATED IMPAIRED
ALLOWANCE ALLOWANCE LOANS
------------------- -------------------- --------------
(IN THOUSANDS)

December 31,1999
Balance...................................... $ 8,620 $14,869 $23,489
Related allowance............................ 4,582 -- 4,582
------- ------- -------
Balance, net of allowance.................... $ 4,038 $14,869 $18,907
======= ======= =======
December 31,1998
Balance...................................... $13,403 $ 2,028 $15,431
Related allowance............................ 2,596 -- 2,596
------- ------- -------
Balance, net of allowance.................... $10,807 $ 2,028 $12,835
======= ======= =======




YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31
-----------------------------
1999 1998 1997
------- ------- -------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Average impaired loans...................................... $29,283 $25,091 $21,159
======= ======= =======
Total interest income on impaired loans recorded on a cash
basis..................................................... $ 329 $ 88 $ 91
======= ======= =======


5. PREMISES AND EQUIPMENT

Premises and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and
amortization. A summary of these accounts is set forth below:



DECEMBER 31
--------------------
1999 1998
-------- --------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Land........................................................ $ 24,153 $ 24,484
Premises.................................................... 255,359 249,116
Equipment................................................... 318,567 265,903
Leasehold improvements...................................... 28,912 21,060
-------- --------
Total..................................................... 626,991 560,563
Accumulated depreciation and amortization................... 315,638 275,601
-------- --------
Premises and equipment.................................... $311,353 $284,962
======== ========


The provision for depreciation and amortization was $46.3 million in 1999,
$37.1 million in 1998, and $32.3 million in 1997.

6. SECURITIES PURCHASED UNDER AGREEMENT TO RESELL AND SECURITIES SOLD UNDER
AGREEMENT TO REPURCHASE

The Bank enters into purchases of U.S. Treasury and Federal agency
securities under agreements to resell identical securities. The amounts advanced
under these agreements represent short-term loans and are reflected as
receivables in the Consolidated Statements of Condition. There were no
securities purchased under agreement to resell outstanding at December 31, 1999
and December 31, 1998. The securities underlying the agreements are book-entry
securities. Securities are transferred by appropriate entry into the Bank's
account with Bank of New York at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York under a
written custodial agreement with Bank of New York that explicitly recognizes the
Bank's interest in these securities.

The Bank also enters into sales of U.S. Treasury and Federal agency
securities under agreements to repurchase identical securities. The amounts
received under these agreements represent short-term borrowings and are
reflected as liabilities in the Consolidated Statements of Condition. Securities
sold under agreement to repurchase totaled $3.31 billion and $2.55 billion at
December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. Securities sold
47
49

under agreement to repurchase are transferred via book-entry to the
counterparty, if transacted with a financial institution or a broker-dealer, or
are delivered to customer safekeeping accounts.

SECURITIES PURCHASED UNDER AGREEMENT TO RESELL



1999 1998
---------- ----------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Amount outstanding at end of year........................... $ -- $ --
Highest amount outstanding as of any month-end during the
year...................................................... $ 75,969 $ 159,000
Daily average amount outstanding during the year............ $ 6,272 $ 30,954
Daily average annualized rate of interest................... 4.22% 3.59%


SECURITIES SOLD UNDER AGREEMENT TO REPURCHASE



1999 1998
---------- ----------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Amount outstanding at end of year........................... $3,309,961 $2,552,261
Highest amount outstanding as of any month-end during the
year...................................................... $3,309,961 $2,552,261
Daily average amount outstanding during the year............ $2,747,248 $2,081,408
Daily average annualized rate of interest................... 4.58% 5.24%


7. SENIOR NOTES AND LONG-TERM NOTES

The following table summarizes the Bank's long-term notes:



DECEMBER 31
------------------------
1999 1998
---------- ----------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Floating rate subordinated note to Bankcorp due March 31, 50,000 50,000
2005......................................................
Floating rate subordinated note to Bankcorp due December 1, 50,000 50,000
2006......................................................
Fixed rate 6 1/2% subordinated note to Bankcorp due December 60,000 60,000
27, 2007..................................................
Fixed rate 7 5/8% subordinated note to Bankcorp due June 27, 15,000 15,000
2008......................................................
Fixed rate 7 1/8% subordinated note to Bankcorp due June 30, 50,000 50,000
2009......................................................
---------- ----------
Total..................................................... $ 225,000 $ 225,000
========== ==========


All of the Bank notes are unsecured obligations, ranking on a parity with
all unsecured and subordinated indebtedness of the Bank and are not subject to
redemption prior to maturity at the election of the debtholders. The interest
rate on the floating rate notes reprices semiannually and floats at 50 basis
points above 180 day LIBOR. At year-end 1999, 180 day LIBOR was 6.13 percent.

The Bank offers to institutional investors from time to time, unsecured
short-term and medium-term bank notes in an aggregate principal amount of up to
$1.5 billion outstanding at any time. The term of each note could range from
fourteen days to fifteen years. The notes are subordinated to deposits and rank
pari passu with all other unsecured senior indebtedness of the Bank. As of
December 31, 1999, $1.5 billion of senior notes were outstanding with original
maturities ranging from 366 to 385 days (remaining maturities ranging from 18 to
223 days) and stated interest rates ranging from 5.00 percent to 5.85 percent.
As of December 31, 1998, $940 million of senior notes were outstanding with
original maturities ranging from 31 to 182 days (remaining maturities ranging
from 22 to 130 days) and stated interest rates ranging from 5.00 percent to 5.50
percent.

8. FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

Generally accepted accounting principles require the disclosure of
estimated fair values for both on- and off-balance-sheet financial instruments.
The Bank's fair values are based on quoted market prices when available. For
financial instruments not actively traded, such as certain loans, deposits,
off-balance-sheet transactions and long term borrowings, fair values have been
estimated using various valuation methods and

48
50

assumptions. Although management used its best judgment in estimating these
values, there are inherent limitations in any estimation methodology. In
addition, accounting pronouncements require that fair values be estimated on an
item-by-item basis, thereby ignoring the impact a large sale would have on a
thin market and intangible values imbedded in established lines of business.
Therefore, the fair value estimates presented herein are not necessarily
indicative of the amounts the Bank could realize in an actual transaction. The
fair value estimation methodologies employed by the Bank were as follows:

The carrying amounts for cash and demand balances due from banks along with
short-term money market assets and liabilities reported on the Bank's
Consolidated Statements of Condition were considered to be the best estimates of
fair value for these financial instruments. Fair values of trading account
assets and available-for-sale securities were based on quoted market prices.

A variety of methods were used to estimate the fair value of loans. Changes
in estimated fair value of loans reflect changes in credit risk and general
interest rates which have occurred since the loans were originated. Fair values
of floating rate loans, including commercial, broker dealer, financial
institution, construction, charge card, consumer and home equity, were assumed
to be the same as carrying value since the loans' interest rates automatically
reprice to market. Fair values of residential mortgages were based on current
prices for securities backed by similar loans. For long-term fixed rate loans,
including consumer installment and commercial mortgage loans, fair values were
estimated based on the present value of future cash flows with current market
rates as discount rates. A fair-value discount related to nonperforming loans
included in the above categories, along with a discount for future credit risk
throughout the portfolio, was based on an analysis of expected and unidentified
future losses. Accordingly, the fair value estimate for total loans was reduced
by these discounts, which in total approximated the allowance for possible loan
losses on the Bank's Consolidated Statements of Condition. Additionally,
management considered appraisal values of collateral when nonperforming loans
were secured by real estate.

The fair values of customers' liability on acceptances and acceptances
outstanding approximate carrying value due to the short-term nature of these
assets and liabilities and the generally negligible credit losses associated
with them.

The fair values of accrued interest receivable and payable approximate
carrying values due to the short-term nature of these assets and liabilities.

The fair values of bank-owned insurance investments approximate carrying
value, because upon liquidation of these investments the Bank would receive the
cash surrender value which equals carrying value.

The fair values of demand deposits, savings accounts, interest checking
deposits, and money market accounts were the amounts payable on demand at the
reporting date, or the carrying amounts. The fair value of time deposits was
estimated using a discounted cash flow calculation with current market rates
offered by the Bank as discount rates.

The fair value of senior notes approximates carrying value because the
average maturity is less than one year.

The fair value of minority interest -- preferred stock of subsidiary
("Harris Preferred Capital Corporation") approximates carrying value as the
preferred stock has a liquidation preference that equals book value.

The fair value of long-term notes was determined using a discounted cash
flow calculation with current rates available to the Bank for similar debt as
discount rates.

The fair value of credit facilities are presented as an obligation in order
to represent the approximate cost the Bank would incur to induce third parties
to assume these commitments.

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51

The estimated fair values of the Bank's financial instruments at December
31, 1999 and 1998 are presented in the following table. See Note 9 for
additional information regarding fair values of off-balance-sheet financial
instruments.



DECEMBER 31
-----------------------------------------------------------
1999 1998
---------------------------- ----------------------------
CARRYING FAIR CARRYING FAIR
VALUE VALUE VALUE VALUE
-------------- ----------- -------------- -----------
(IN THOUSANDS)

ASSETS
Cash and demand balances due from banks...... $ 1,423,043 $ 1,423,043 $ 1,434,619 $ 1,434,619
Money market assets:
Interest-bearing deposits at banks......... 239,832 239,832 98,929 98,929
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreement to resell............... 298,000 298,000 151,575 151,575
Securities available-for-sale................ 6,265,013 6,265,013 5,295,498 5,295,498
Trading account assets....................... 66,996 66,996 120,668 120,668
Loans, net of unearned income and allowance
for possible loan losses................... 9,950,099 9,906,946 9,198,327 9,204,638
Customers' liability on acceptances.......... 43,599 43,599 30,829 30,829
Accrued interest receivable.................. 148,124 148,124 110,530 110,530
Bank-owned insurance investments............. 772,579 772,579 725,302 725,302
----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Total on-balance-sheet financial
assets................................ $19,207,285 $19,164,132 $17,166,277 $17,172,588
=========== =========== =========== ===========
LIABILITIES
Deposits:
Demand deposits............................ $ 6,667,101 $ 6,667,101 $ 6,401,678 $ 6,401,678
Time deposits.............................. 4,462,586 4,473,839 4,776,018 4,805,625
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under agreement to repurchase.............. 4,739,578 4,739,578 3,642,049 3,642,049
Other short-term borrowings.................. 681,097 681,097 166,510 166,510
Acceptances outstanding...................... 43,599 43,599 30,829 30,829
Accrued interest payable..................... 74,836 74,836 41,955 41,955
Senior notes................................. 1,500,000 1,500,000 940,000 940,000
Minority interest -- preferred stock of
subsidiary................................. 250,000 250,000 250,000 250,000
Long-term notes.............................. 225,000 218,663 225,000 233,628
----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Total on-balance-sheet financial
liabilities........................... $18,643,797 $18,648,713 $16,474,039 $16,512,274
=========== =========== =========== ===========
OFF-BALANCE-SHEET FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
(POSITIVE POSITIONS/(OBLIGATIONS))
Credit facilities............................ $ (13,781) $ (13,781) $ (5,160) $ (5,160)
Interest rate contracts:
Dealer and trading contracts............... 456 456 (352) (352)
Risk management contracts.................. (4) 3,759 (297) (4,701)
Foreign exchange rate contracts:
Dealer and trading contracts............... (315) (315) -- --
Risk management contracts.................. 150 1,198 -- --
----------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Total off-balance-sheet financial
instruments........................... $ (13,494) $ (8,683) $ (5,809) $ (10,213)
=========== =========== =========== ===========


9. FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS WITH OFF-BALANCE-SHEET RISK

The Bank utilizes various financial instruments with off-balance-sheet risk
in the normal course of business to a) meet its customers' financing and risk
management needs, b) reduce its own risk exposure, and c) produce fee income and
trading profits. The Bank's major categories of financial instruments with off-
balance-sheet risk include credit facilities, interest rate, foreign exchange,
equity and commodities contracts,

50
52

and various securities-related activities. Fair values of off-balance-sheet
instruments are based on fees currently charged to enter into similar
agreements, market prices of comparable instruments, pricing models using
year-end rates and counterparty credit ratings.

CREDIT FACILITIES

Credit facilities with off-balance-sheet risk include commitments to extend
credit, standby letters of credit and commercial letters of credit.

Commitments to extend credit are contractual agreements to lend to a
customer as long as contract terms have been met. They generally require payment
of a fee and have fixed expiration dates. The Bank's commitments serve both
business and individual customer needs, and include commercial loan commitments,
credit card lines, home equity lines, commercial real estate loan commitments
and mortgage loan commitments. The Bank's maximum risk of accounting loss is
represented by the total contractual amount of commitments which was $7.4
billion and $7.3 billion at December 31, 1999 and 1998, respectively. Since only
a portion of commitments will ultimately be drawn down, the Bank does not expect
to provide funds for the total contractual amount. Risks associated with certain
commitments are reduced by participations to third parties, which at December
31, 1999, totaled $301 million and at December 31, 1998, totaled $408 million.

Standby letters of credit are unconditional commitments which guarantee the
obligation of a customer to a third party should that customer default. They are
issued to support financial and performance-related obligations including
brokers' margin maintenance, industrial revenue bond repayment, debt repayment,
construction contract performance and trade agreement performance. The Bank's
maximum risk of accounting loss for these items is represented by the total
commitments outstanding of $1.91 billion at December 31, 1999 and $1.64 billion
at December 31, 1998. Risks associated with standby letters of credit are
reduced by participations to third parties which totaled $401 million at
December 31, 1999 and $490 million at December 31, 1998.

Commercial letters of credit are commitments to make payments on behalf of
customers when letter of credit terms have been met. Maximum risk of accounting
loss is represented by total commercial letters of credit outstanding of $91
million at December 31, 1999 and $100 million at December 31, 1998.

Credit risks associated with all of these facilities are mitigated by
reviewing customers' creditworthiness on a case-by-case basis, obtaining
collateral, limiting loans to individual borrowers, setting restrictions on
long-duration maturities and establishing stringent covenant terms outlining
performance expectations which, if not met, may cause the Bank to terminate the
contract. Credit risks are further mitigated by monitoring and maintaining
portfolios that are well-diversified.

Collateral is required to support certain of these credit facilities when
they are drawn down and may include equity and debt securities, commodities,
inventories, receivables, certificates of deposit, savings instruments, fixed
assets, real estate, life insurance policies and seats on national or regional
exchanges. Requirements are based upon the risk inherent in the credit and are
more stringent for firms and individuals with greater default risks. The Bank
monitors collateral values and appropriately perfects its security interest.
Periodic evaluations of collateral adequacy are performed by Bank personnel.

The fair value of credit facilities (i.e. deferred income) is approximately
equal to their carrying value of $13.8 million at December 31, 1999 and $5.2
million at December 31, 1998.

INTEREST RATE CONTRACTS

Interest rate contracts include futures, forward rate agreements, option
contracts, guarantees (caps, floors and collars) and swaps. The Bank enters into
these contracts for dealer, trading and risk management purposes.

51
53

DEALER AND TRADING ACTIVITY

As dealer, the Bank serves customers seeking to manage interest rate risk
by entering into contracts as a counterparty to their (customer) transactions.
In its trading activities, the Bank uses interest rate contracts to profit from
expected future market movements.

These contracts may create exposure to both credit and market risk.
Replacement risk, the primary component of credit risk, is the risk of loss
should a counterparty default following unfavorable market movements and is
measured as the Bank's cost of replacing contracts at current market rates. The
Bank manages credit risk by establishing credit limits for customers and
products through an independent corporate-wide credit review process and
continually monitoring exposure against those limits to ensure they are not
exceeded. Credit risk is, in many cases, further mitigated by the existence of
netting agreements which provide for netting of contractual receivables and
payables in the event of default or bankruptcy.

Market risk is the potential for loss arising from potential adverse
changes in underlying market factors, including interest and foreign exchange
rates. The Bank manages market risk through the imposition of integrated
value-at-risk limits and an active, independent monitoring process.

Value at risk methodology is used for measuring the market risk of the
Bank's trading positions. This statistical methodology uses recent market
volatility to estimate the maximum daily trading loss that the Bank would expect
to incur, on average, 99 percent of the time. The model also measures the effect
of correlation among the various trading instruments to determine how much risk
is eliminated by offsetting positions.

Futures and forward contracts are agreements in which the Bank is obligated
to make or take delivery, at a specified future date, of a specified instrument,
at a specified price or yield. Futures contracts are exchange traded and,
because of exchange requirements that gains and losses be settled daily, create
negligible exposure to credit risk.

Forward rate agreements are arrangements between two parties to exchange
amounts, at a specified future date, based on the difference between an agreed
upon interest rate and reference rate applied to a notional principal amount.
These agreements enable purchasers and sellers to fix interest costs and
returns.

Options are contracts that provide the buyer the right (but not the
obligation) to purchase or sell a financial instrument, at a specified price,
either within a specified period of time or on a certain date. Interest rate
guarantees (caps, floors and collars) are agreements between two parties that,
in general, establish for the purchaser a maximum level of interest expense or a
minimum level of interest revenue based on a notional principal amount for a
specified term. Options and guarantees written create exposure to market risk.
As a writer of interest rate options and guarantees, the Bank receives a premium
at the outset of the agreement and bears the risk of an unfavorable change in
the price of the financial instrument underlying the option or guarantee.
Options and guarantees purchased create exposure to credit risk and, to the
extent of the premium paid or unrealized gain recognized, market risk.

Interest rate swaps are contracts involving the exchange of interest
payments based on a notional amount for a specified period. Most of the Bank's
activity in swaps is as intermediary in the exchange of interest payments
between customers, although the Bank also uses swaps to manage its own interest
rate exposure (see discussion of risk management activity).

The following table summarizes the Bank's dealer/trading interest rate
contracts and their related contractual or notional amounts and maximum
replacement costs. Contractual or notional amount gives an indication of the
volume of activity in the contract. Maximum replacement cost reflects the
potential loss resulting from customer defaults and is computed as the cost of
replacing, at current market rates, all outstanding contracts with unrealized
gains.

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54



DECEMBER 31
--------------------------------------------------
CONTRACTUAL OR MAXIMUM
NOTIONAL AMOUNT REPLACEMENT COST
----------------------- -----------------------
1999 1998 1999 1998
---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Interest Rate Contracts:
Futures and forwards........................ $ 111,710 $ 272,658 $ 284 $ 123
Forward rate agreements..................... -- 146,800 -- 558
Options written............................. -- -- -- --
Options purchased........................... 1,000 -- 3 --
Guarantees written.......................... 531,775 735,221 1,935 91
Guarantees purchased........................ 519,022 735,221 1,240 2,647
Swaps....................................... 2,677,750 2,727,942 23,871 33,909


The following table summarizes average and end of period fair values of
dealer/trading interest rate contracts for the years ended December 31, 1999 and
1998:



1999 1999 1998 1998
------------- ------------- ------------- -------------
END OF END OF
PERIOD AVERAGE PERIOD AVERAGE
ASSETS ASSETS ASSETS ASSETS
(LIABILITIES) (LIABILITIES) (LIABILITIES) (LIABILITIES)
------------- ------------- ------------- -------------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Interest Rate Contracts:
Futures and forwards
Unrealized gains............................. $ 284 $ -- $ 123 $ --
Unrealized losses............................ -- -- -- --
Forward rate agreements
Unrealized gains............................. -- 184 558 192
Unrealized losses............................ -- (184) (558) (192)
Options
Purchased.................................... 3 -- -- --
Written...................................... -- -- -- --
Guarantees
Purchased.................................... (695) 2,006 2,556 2,087
Written...................................... 763 (2,037) (2,556) (2,087)
Swaps
Unrealized gains............................. 23,871 20,942 33,909 43,790
Unrealized losses............................ (23,770) (21,155) (34,384) (42,672)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Total Interest Rate Contracts........... $ 456 $ (244) $ (352) $ 1,118
======== ======== ======== ========


Net gains (losses) from dealer/trading activity in interest rate contracts
and nonderivative trading account assets for the years ended December 31, 1999,
1998 and 1997 are summarized below:



YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31
------------------------------
GAINS GAINS GAINS
(LOSSES) (LOSSES) (LOSSES)
1999 1998 1997
-------- -------- --------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Interest Rate Contracts:
Futures and forwards...................................... $ 542 $ 788 $ (649)
Forward rate agreements................................... 2 -- --
Options................................................... (36) (16) 54
Guarantees................................................ (57) -- (6)
Swaps..................................................... 439 210 42
Debt Instruments............................................ 7,594 9,388 7,570
------ ------- ------
Total Trading Revenue.................................. $8,484 $10,370 $7,011
====== ======= ======


53
55

The following table summarizes the maturities and weighted average interest
rates paid and received on dealer/trading interest rate swaps:



DECEMBER 31, 1999
---------------------------------------------------------------------
WITHIN 1 TO 3 3 TO 5 5 TO 10 GREATER THAN
1 YEAR YEARS YEARS YEARS 10 YEARS TOTAL
-------- -------- -------- -------- ------------ ----------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Pay Fixed Swaps:
Notional amount........... $217,634 $472,434 $504,687 $130,218 $ 61,200 $1,386,173
Average pay rate.......... 5.77% 6.11% 6.07% 6.58% 6.16% 6.09%
Average receive rate...... 6.07% 6.13% 6.02% 5.51% 6.13% 6.02%
Receive Fixed Swaps:
Notional amount........... $209,399 $446,915 $478,529 $101,134 $ 55,600 $1,291,577
Average pay rate.......... 6.05% 6.13% 6.19% 5.68% 6.13% 6.10%
Average receive rate...... 5.77% 6.02% 6.09% 6.59% 6.14% 6.06%
Total notional
amount............... $427,033 $919,349 $983,216 $231,352 $ 116,800 $2,677,750


The following table summarizes the bank's dealer/trading equities and
commodities contracts and their related contractual or notional amounts and
maximum replacement costs.



DECEMBER 31
-----------------------------------------------------------------
CONTRACTUAL OR MAXIMUM
NOTIONAL AMOUNT REPLACEMENT COST
------------------------------- -------------------------------
1999 1998 1999 1998
-------------- -------------- -------------- --------------

Equities Contracts:
Options written...................... $ 15,451 $ 3,702 $ -- $ --
Options purchased.................... 15,451 3,702 2,507 1,032
Commodities Contracts.................. -- 1,596 -- 193


The following table summarizes average and end of period fair values of
dealer/trading equities contracts and commodities contracts for the years ended
December 31, 1999 and 1998:



1999 1999 1998 1998
------------- ------------- ------------- -------------
END OF PERIOD AVERAGE END OF PERIOD AVERAGE
ASSETS ASSETS ASSETS ASSETS
(LIABILITIES) (LIABILITIES) (LIABILITIES) (LIABILITIES)
------------- ------------- ------------- -------------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Equities Contracts:
Options
Purchased...................... $ 2,507 $ 79 $ 1,032 $ 179
Written........................ (2,507) (79) (1,032) (179)
-------- -------- ------- --------
Total Equities Contracts..... $ -- $ -- $ -- $ --
======== ======== ======= ========
Commodities Contracts:
Unrealized Gains.................. $ -- $ 9 $ 193 $ 8
Unrealized Losses................. -- (9) (193) (8)
-------- -------- ------- --------
Total Commodities
Contracts................. $ -- $ -- $ -- $ --
======== ======== ======= ========


There were no net gains (losses) from dealer/trading activity in equities
or commodities contracts for the years ended December 31, 1999 and 1998.

RISK MANAGEMENT ACTIVITY

In addition to its dealer activities, the Bank uses interest rate
contracts, primarily swaps, and foreign exchange contracts to reduce the level
of financial risk inherent in mismatches between the interest rate

54
56

sensitivities and foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations of certain assets
and liabilities. For non-trading risks, market risk is controlled by actively
managing the asset and liability mix, either directly through the balance sheet
or with off-balance sheet derivative instruments. Measures also focus on
interest rate exposure gaps and sensitivity to rate changes. During 1999 and
1998, interest rate swaps were primarily used to alter the character of revenue
earned on certain fixed rate loans. During 1999 foreign exchange contracts were
used to stabilize any currency exchange rate fluctuations for certain senior
notes. The Bank had $256 million notional amount of swap contracts, used for
risk management purposes, outstanding at December 31, 1999 with a fair value of
$5.0 million. At December 31, 1998, the Bank had $152 million notional amount of
swap contracts outstanding with a fair value of $4.7 million. Gross unrealized
gains and losses, representing the difference between fair value and carrying
value (i.e. accrued interest payable or receivable) on these contracts, totaled
$1.0 million and $0.9 million, respectively, at December 31, 1999 and $0.2
million and $4.5 million, respectively, at December 31, 1998. Risk management
activity, including the related cash positions, had no material effect on the
Bank's net income for the year ended December 31, 1999 or 1998. There were no
deferred gains or losses on terminated contracts at December 31, 1999 or 1998.

The following table summarizes swap activity for risk management purposes:



NOTIONAL
AMOUNT
--------------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Amount, December 31, 1997................................... $ 483,032
Additions................................................... 57,517
Maturities.................................................. (388,915)
Terminations................................................ --
---------
Amount, December 31, 1998................................... $ 151,634
Additions................................................... 142,850
Maturities.................................................. 6,576
Terminations................................................ (44,685)
---------
Amount, December 31, 1999................................... $ 256,375
=========


The following table summarizes the maturities and weighted average interest
rates paid and received on interest rate swaps used for risk management:



DECEMBER 31, 1999
------------------------------------------------------------
WITHIN 1 TO 3 3 TO 5 5 TO 10
1 YEAR YEARS YEARS YEARS TOTAL
------- ------- ------- ------- --------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Pay Fixed Swaps:
Notional amount........................ $75,267 $84,960 $20,141 $ -- $180,368
Average pay rate....................... 6.25% 6.01% 6.67% --% 6.18%
Average receive rate................... 6.18% 6.15% 6.17% --% 6.17%
Receive Fixed Swaps:
Notional amount........................ $ -- $ -- $76,007 $ -- $ 76,007
Average pay rate....................... --% --% 5.92% --% 5.92%
Average receive rate................... --% --% 5.15% --% 5.15%
Total notional amount............... $75,267 $84,960 $96,148 $ -- $256,375


At December 31, 1999, swap contracts with BMO represent $19.6 million and
$4.5 million of unrealized gains and unrealized losses, respectively. Guarantee
contracts purchased from BMO represent $0.8 million and $0.2 million of
unrealized gains and unrealized losses, respectively. Guarantee contracts
written with BMO represent $1.8 million and $0.4 million of unrealized gains and
unrealized losses, respectively.

FOREIGN EXCHANGE CONTRACTS

DEALER ACTIVITY

The Bank is a dealer in foreign exchange. Foreign exchange contracts may
create exposure to market and credit risk, including replacement risk and
settlement risk. Credit risk is managed by establishing limits for

55
57

customers through an independent corporate-wide credit approval process and
continually monitoring exposure against those limits. In addition, both
settlement and replacement risk are reduced through netting by novation,
agreements with counterparties to offset certain related obligations. Market
risk is managed through establishing exposure limits by currency and monitoring
actual exposure against those limits, entering into offsetting positions, and
closely monitoring price behavior. The Bank and BMO combine their U.S. foreign
exchange revenues (FX). Under this arrangement, FX net profit is shared by the
Bank and BMO in accordance with a specific formula set forth in the agreement.
This agreement expires in April 2002 but may be extended at that time. Either
party may terminate the arrangement at its option. FX revenues are reported net
of expenses.

At December 31, 1999, approximately 75 percent of the Bank's gross notional
positions in foreign currency contracts are represented by seven currencies:
English pounds, German deutsche marks, Japanese yen, French francs, Swiss
francs, Canadian dollars and Italian lira.

Foreign exchange contracts include spot, future, forward and option
contracts that enable customers to manage their foreign exchange risk. Spot,
future and forward contracts are agreements to exchange currencies at a future
date, at a specified rate of exchange. Foreign exchange option contracts give
the buyer the right and the seller an obligation (if the buyer asserts his
right) to exchange currencies during a specified period (or on a certain date in
the case of "European" options) at a specified exchange rate.

The following table summarizes the Bank's dealer/trading foreign exchange
contracts and their related contractual or notional amount and maximum
replacement cost:



DECEMBER 31
-------------------------------------------------------------------
CONTRACTUAL OR MAXIMUM
NOTIONAL AMOUNT REPLACEMENT COST
------------------------------- -------------------------
1999 1998 1999 1998
---------- ---------- ------- -------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Foreign Exchange Contracts:
Spot, futures and forwards..... $1,563,178 $1,734,546 $22,290 $19,991
Options written................ 168,590 184,615 -- --
Options purchased.............. 168,590 184,615 4,086 3,885
Cross currency swaps........... 324,235 123,906 13,416 2,996


The following table summarizes average and end of period fair values of
dealer/trading foreign exchange contracts for the years ended December 31, 1999
and 1998:



1999 1999 1998 1998
------------- ------------- ------------- -------------
END OF PERIOD AVERAGE END OF PERIOD AVERAGE
ASSETS ASSETS ASSETS ASSETS
(LIABILITIES) (LIABILITIES) (LIABILITIES) (LIABILITIES)
------------- ------------- ------------- -------------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Foreign Exchange Contracts:
Spot, futures and forwards
Unrealized gains....................... $ 22,290 $ 22,531 $ 19,991 $ 35,056
Unrealized losses...................... (22,290) (22,531) (19,991) (35,056)
Options
Purchased.............................. 4,086 7,984 3,885 3,304
Written................................ (4,086) (7,984) (3,885) (3,304)
Cross currency swaps
Unrealized gains....................... 13,416 1,111 2,996 2,913
Unrealized losses...................... (13,731) (775) (2,996) (2,913)
-------- -------- -------- --------
Total Foreign Exchange................... $ (315) $ 336 $ -- $ --
======== ======== ======== ========


At December 31, 1999, spot, futures and forward contracts with BMO
represent $8.2 million and $10.0 million of unrealized gains and unrealized
losses, respectively. Options contracts with BMO represent

56
58

$4.1 million and $4.1 million of options purchased and options written,
respectively. Cross currency swaps with BMO represent $7.8 million and $5.8
million of unrealized gains and unrealized losses, respectively.

Net gains (losses) from dealer/trading foreign exchange contracts, for the
years ended December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997 totaled $8.3 million, $6.8 million
and $5.4 million, respectively, of net profit under the aforementioned agreement
with BMO.

SECURITIES ACTIVITIES

The Bank's securities activities that have off-balance-sheet risk include
municipal bond underwriting and short selling of securities.

Through its municipal bond underwriting activities, the Bank commits to buy
and offer for resale newly issued bonds. The Bank is exposed to market risk
because it may be unable to resell its inventory of bonds profitably as a result
of unfavorable market conditions. In syndicate arrangements, the Bank is
obligated to fulfill syndicate members' commitments should they default. The
syndicates of which the Bank was a member had underwriting commitments totaling
$50 million at December 31, 1999 and $83 million at December 31, 1998.

Security short selling, defined as selling of securities not yet owned,
exposes the Bank to off-balance-sheet market risk because the Bank may be
required to buy securities at higher prevailing market prices to cover its short
positions. The Bank had no short position at December 31, 1999 or 1998.

10. CONCENTRATIONS OF CREDIT RISK IN FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

The Bank had one major concentration of credit risk arising from financial
instruments at December 31, 1999 and 1998. This concentration was the Midwest
geographic area. This concentration exceeded 10 percent of the Bank's total
credit exposure, which is the total potential accounting loss should all
customers fail to perform according to contract terms and all collateral prove
to be worthless.

MIDWESTERN GEOGRAPHIC AREA

A majority of the Bank's customers are located in the Midwestern region of
the United States, defined here to include Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan,
Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio and Wisconsin. The Bank provides credit to these
customers through a broad array of banking and trade financing products
including commercial loans, commercial loan commitments, commercial real estate
loans, consumer installment loans, charge card loans and lines, mortgage loans,
home equity loans and lines, standby and commercial letters of credit and
banker's acceptances. The financial viability of customers in the Midwest is, in
part, dependent on the region's economy. Corporate customers headquartered in
the region and serving a national or international market are not included in
this concentration because their business is broad-based and not dependent on
the region's economy. The Bank's maximum risk of accounting loss, should all
customers making up the Midwestern concentration fail to perform according to
contract terms and all collateral prove to be worthless, was approximately $9.4
billion or 34 percent of the Bank's total credit exposure at December 31, 1999
and $11.4 billion or 44 percent of the Bank's total credit exposure at December
31, 1998.

The Bank manages this exposure by continually reviewing local market
conditions and customers, adjusting individual and industry exposure limits
within the region and by obtaining or closely monitoring collateral values. See
Note 9 for information on collateral supporting credit facilities.

11. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

The Bank has noncontributory defined benefit pension plans covering
virtually all its employees as of December 31, 1999. Most of the employees
participating in retirement plans were included in one primary plan ("primary
plan") during the three-year period ended December 31, 1999. The benefit formula
for this plan is based upon length of service and an employee's highest
qualifying compensation during five consecutive years of active employment. The
plan is a multiple-employer plan covering the Bank's employees as well as
persons employed by certain affiliated entities.
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59

The policy for this plan is to have the participating entities, at a
minimum, fund annually an amount necessary to satisfy the requirements under
ERISA, without regard to prior years' contributions in excess of the minimum.
For 1999, 1998 and 1997, cumulative contributions were greater than the amounts
recorded as pension expense for financial reporting purposes.

The total consolidated pension expense of the Bank, including the
supplemental plan (excluding settlement losses), for 1999, 1998 and 1997 was
$10.9 million, $8.2 million and $7.5 million, respectively.

In addition to pension benefits, the Bank provides medical care benefits
for retirees (and their dependents) who have attained age 55 and have at least
10 years of service. The Bank also provides medical care benefits for disabled
employees and widows of former employees (and their dependents). The Bank
provides these medical care benefits through a self-insured plan. Under the
terms of the plan, the Bank contributes to the cost of coverage based on
employees length of service. Cost sharing with plan participants is accomplished
through deductibles, coinsurance and out-of-pocket limits. Funding for the plan
largely comes from the general assets of the Bank, supplemented by contributions
to a trust fund created under Internal Revenue Code Section 401(h).

The following tables set forth the change in benefit obligation and plan
assets for the pension and postretirement medical care benefit plans for the
Bank:



PENSION BENEFITS POSTRETIREMENT MEDICAL BENEFITS
------------------------------ ---------------------------------
1999*** 1998*** 1997*** 1999*** 1998*** 1997***
-------- -------- -------- --------- --------- ---------
(IN THOUSANDS)

CHANGE IN BENEFIT OBLIGATION*
Benefit obligation at beginning
of year...................... $242,661 $221,496 $205,663 $ 34,829 $ 33,687 $ 32,957
Service cost................... 10,197 8,781 7,928 1,730 1,363 939
Interest cost.................. 16,714 13,772 12,145 2,509 2,374 1,600
Benefits paid (net of
participant contributions)... (22,851) (20,899) (12,816) (2,467) (2,859) (1,031)
Actuarial (gain) or loss....... (19,020) 19,511 8,576 (1,363) 264 (778)
-------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Benefit obligation at end of
year......................... $227,701 $242,661 $221,496 $ 35,238 $ 34,829 $ 33,687
======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ========
CHANGE IN PLAN ASSETS
Fair value of plan assets at
beginning of year............ $215,721 $237,072 $197,350 $ 16,732 $ 15,278 $ 11,710
Actual return on plan assets... 25,539 (7,903) 47,121 1,913 (864) 2,216
Employer contribution.......... 8,040 7,451 5,417 2,377 2,318 1,352
Benefits paid.................. (22,851) (20,899) (12,816) -- -- --
-------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Fair value of plan assets at
end of year **............... $226,449 $215,721 $237,072 $ 21,022 $ 16,732 $ 15,278
======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ========
Funded Status.................. $ (1,252) $(26,940) $ 15,576 $(14,216) $(18,097) $(18,409)
Contributions made between
measurement date (September
30) and end of year.......... -- 8,040 7,451 -- -- --
Unrecognized actuarial (gain)
or loss...................... 11,767 36,764 (7,673) (12,468) (11,402) (13,886)
Unrecognized transition (asset)
or obligation................ (710) (1,022) (1,216) 23,142 24,917 26,842
Unrecognized prior service
cost......................... (4,814) (5,551) (5,729) 1,799 2,030 1,569
-------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Prepaid (accrued) benefit
cost......................... $ 4,991 $ 11,291 $ 8,409 $ (1,743) $ (2,552) $ (3,884)
======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ========


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60



PENSION BENEFITS POSTRETIREMENT MEDICAL BENEFITS
------------------------------ ---------------------------------
1999 1998 1997 1999 1998 1997
-------- -------- -------- --------- --------- ---------
(IN THOUSANDS)

COMPONENTS OF NET PERIODIC
BENEFIT COST
Service cost................... $ 10,197 $ 8,781 $ 7,928 $ 1,730 $ 1,363 $ 1,203
Interest cost.................. 16,714 13,772 12,145 2,509 2,374 2,248
Expected return on plan
assets....................... (20,393) (16,499) (14,293) (1,405) (1,262) (891)
Amortization of prior service
cost......................... (737) (664) (671) 176 176 176
Amortization of transition
(asset) or obligation........ (312) (282) (285) 1,780 1,780 1,780
Recognized actuarial (gain) or
loss......................... 831 50 -- (269) (497) (465)
-------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Net periodic benefit cost...... $ 6,300 $ 5,158 $ 4,824 $ 4,521 $ 3,934 $ 4,051
======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ========


- ---------------
* Benefit obligation is projected for the pension benefits and accumulated for
the postretirement medical benefits.
** Plan assets consist primarily of participation units in collective trust
funds or mutual funds administered by HTSB.
*** Plan assets and obligation measured as of September 30.



PENSION BENEFITS POSTRETIREMENT MEDICAL BENEFITS
--------------------------- ---------------------------------
1999 1998 1997 1999 1998 1997
------- ------- ------- --------- --------- ---------

WEIGHTED-AVERAGE ASSUMPTIONS AS OF
DECEMBER 31
Discount rate*..................... 7.50% 7.00% 7.25% 7.50% 7.00% 7.25%
Expected return on plan assets..... 9.00% 9.00% 9.00% 8.00% 8.00% 8.00%
Rate of compensation increase...... 5.50% 5.50% 5.70% N/A N/A N/A


* Discount rates are used to determine service costs for the subsequent year.

For measurement purposes, a 6.5 percent annual rate of increase in the per
capita cost of covered health care benefits was assumed for 2000. The rate was
assumed to decrease gradually to 6.0 percent in 2001 and remain level
thereafter.

For the postretirement medical care benefit plan, assumed health care cost
trend rates have a significant effect on the amounts reported for the health
care plans. A one-percentage-point change in assumed health care cost trend
rates would have the following effects:



1-PERCENTAGE 1-PERCENTAGE
POINT INCREASE POINT DECREASE
-------------- --------------

Effect on total of service and interest cost components..... $1,006 $ (705)
Effect on postretirement benefit obligation................. $5,945 $(4,803)


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61

Certain employees participating in the primary plan are also covered by a
supplemental unfunded retirement plan. The purpose of this plan is to extend
full retirement benefits to individuals without regard to statutory limitations
for qualified funded plans. The following table sets forth the status of this
supplemental plan:



SUPPLEMENTAL UNFUNDED RETIREMENT
BENEFITS
---------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
--------- --------- ---------
(IN THOUSANDS)

CHANGE IN BENEFIT OBLIGATION
Benefit obligation at beginning of year..................... $ 21,752 $ 17,518 $ 14,245
Service cost................................................ 2,244 1,087 600
Interest cost............................................... 1,312 1,046 743
Benefits paid (net of participant contributions)............ (5,094) (1,493) (2,109)
Actuarial (gain) or loss.................................... (6,487) 3,594 4,039
-------- -------- --------
Benefit obligation at end of year........................... $ 13,727 $ 21,752 $ 17,518
======== ======== ========
CHANGE IN PLAN ASSETS
Fair value of plan assets at beginning of year.............. $ -- $ -- $ --
Actual return on plan assets................................ -- -- --
Employer contribution....................................... 5,094 1,493 2,109
Benefits paid............................................... (5,094) (1,493) (2,109)
-------- -------- --------
Fair value of plan assets at end of year.................... $ -- $ -- $ --
======== ======== ========
Funded Status............................................... $(13,727) $(21,752) $(17,518)
Contributions made between measurement date (September 30)
and end of year........................................... 45 45 48
Unrecognized actuarial (gain) or loss....................... (867) 7,999 4,397
Unrecognized transition (asset) or obligation............... 238 309 457
Unrecognized prior service cost............................. 2,194 2,394 3,179
-------- -------- --------
Prepaid (accrued) benefit cost.............................. $(12,117) $(11,005) $ (9,437)
======== ======== ========
COMPONENTS OF NET PERIODIC BENEFIT COST
Service cost................................................ $ 2,244 $ 1,087 $ 600
Interest cost............................................... 1,312 1,046 743
Expected return on plan assets.............................. -- -- --
Amortization of prior service cost.......................... 500 469 525
Amortization of transition (asset) or obligation............ 114 107 120
Recognized actuarial (gain) or loss......................... 478 353 694
-------- -------- --------
Net periodic benefit cost................................... $ 4,648 $ 3,062 $ 2,682
======== ======== ========
Additional (gain) or loss recognized due to:
Curtailment............................................... $ -- $ -- $ --
Settlement................................................ $ 1,314 $ -- $ 241

WEIGHTED-AVERAGE ASSUMPTIONS AS OF DECEMBER 31:
Discount rate............................................... 6.00% 6.00% 6.00%
Rate of compensation increase............................... 5.70% 5.70% 5.70%


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62

The Bank has a defined contribution profit sharing plan covering virtually
all its employees. The plan includes a matching contribution and a profit
sharing contribution. The matching contribution is based on the amount of
eligible employee contributions. The profit sharing contribution is based on the
annual financial performance of the Bank relative to predefined targets. The
Bank's total expense for this plan was $9.5 million, $8.8 million and $8.5
million in 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively.

12. STOCK OPTIONS

The Bank has two stock-based compensation plans, which are accounted for
under the fair value based method of accounting for stock based compensation
plans and are described below.

HARRIS BANK STOCK OPTION PROGRAM

The Harris Bank Stock Option Program was established under the Bank of
Montreal Stock Option Plan for certain designated executives and other employees
of the Bank and affiliated companies in order to provide incentive to attain
long-term strategic goals and to attract and retain services of key employees.

The Bank granted stock options with a ten-year term which are exercisable
only during the second five years of their term, assuming cumulative performance
goals are met. The stock options are exercisable for Bank of Montreal common
stock equal to the market price on the date of grant. The compensation expense
related to this program totaled $2.4 million, $1.1 million and $0.6 million in
1999, 1998 and 1997 respectively.

The following table summarizes the stock option activity for 1999, 1998 and
1997 and provides details of stock options outstanding at December 31, 1999:



1999 1998 1997
---------------------- --------------------- --------------------
WEIGHTED- WEIGHTED- WEIGHTED-
AVERAGE AVERAGE AVERAGE
EXERCISE EXERCISE EXERCISE
OPTIONS SHARES PRICE SHARES PRICE SHARES PRICE
------- ---------- --------- --------- --------- -------- ---------

Outstanding at beginning of year... 1,751,600 $34.46 932,000 $30.51 784,850 $25.42
Granted............................ 735,700 34.72 814,000 39.06 224,750 46.33
Exercised.......................... -- -- -- -- -- --
Forfeited, cancelled............... (2,500) 39.06 -- -- (77,600) 24.87
Transferred........................ (15,000) 39.06 5,600 22.55 -- --
Expired............................ -- -- -- -- -- --
---------- --------- --------
Outstanding at end of year......... 2,469,800 34.50 1,751,600 34.46 932,000 30.51
========== ========= ========
Options exercisable at
year-end......................... None None None
Weighted-average fair value of
options granted during the
year............................. $ 6.67 $ 7.98 $ 9.53




NUMBER WEIGHTED AVERAGE
RANGE OF OUTSTANDING REMAINING WEIGHTED AVERAGE
EXERCISE PRICES DECEMBER 31, 1999 CONTRACTUAL LIFE EXERCISE PRICE
--------------- ----------------- ---------------- ----------------

$22-30 712,850 6.51 years $25.46
34-42 1,532,200 9.44 36.98
46-50 224,750 7.95 46.33
---------
22-50 2,469,800 8.46 34.50
=========


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63

The fair value of the stock options granted has been estimated using the
Bloomberg Model with the following assumptions:



1999 1998 1997
------- ------- -------

Risk-free interest rate..................................... 6.31% 4.87% 5.81%
Expected life, in years..................................... 7.0 7.5 7.5
Expected volatility......................................... 21.46% 19.82% 15.96%
Compound annual dividend growth............................. 9.02% 8.82% 8.82%
Estimated fair value per option (US $)...................... $ 6.67 $ 7.98 $ 9.53


HARRIS BANK STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS PLAN

The Bank maintains the Harris Bank Stock Appreciation Rights Plan which was
established in January 1995. The rights granted under this plan have either a
three-year or five-year term and are exercisable after the expiration of the
respective term, assuming cumulative performance goals are met. Compensation
expense for the Harris Bank Stock Appreciation Rights Plan totaled $0.3 million,
$0.5 million and $5.1 million in 1999, 1998 and 1997 respectively.

The following table details the rights outstanding at December 31, 1999,
1998 and 1997.



1999 1998 1997
-------- ------- --------

Outstanding beginning of the year........................... 331,700 341,000 528,000
Granted..................................................... -- -- --
Exercised................................................... (273,700) (13,500) (124,000)
Cancelled................................................... -- -- (63,000)
Transferred................................................. -- 4,200 --
-------- ------- --------
Outstanding end of the year................................. 58,000 331,700 341,000
======== ======= ========


13. LEASE EXPENSE AND OBLIGATIONS

Rental expense for all operating leases was $15.0 million in 1999, $13.7
million in 1998 and $16.7 million in 1997. These amounts include real estate
taxes, maintenance and other rental-related operating costs of $2.5 million,
$3.0 million and $4.0 million for 1999, 1998 and 1997, respectively, paid under
net lease arrangements. Lease commitments are primarily for office space.

Minimum rental commitments as of December 31, 1999 for all noncancelable
operating leases are as follows:



(IN THOUSANDS)
--------------

2000........................................................ $ 9,293
2001........................................................ 7,733
2002........................................................ 5,327
2003........................................................ 3,414
2004........................................................ 3,188
2005 and thereafter......................................... 17,956
-------
Total minimum future rentals.............................. $46,911
=======


Occupancy expenses for 1999, 1998 and 1997 have been reduced by $12.7
million, $13.5 million and $13.7 million, respectively, for rental income from
leased premises.

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14. INCOME TAXES

The 1999, 1998, and 1997 applicable income tax expense (benefit) was as
follows:



FEDERAL STATE FOREIGN TOTAL
------- ------- ------- -------
(IN THOUSANDS)

1999: Current............................................ $45,070 $(1,637) $ 24 $43,457
Deferred........................................... (5,511) 1,257 -- $(4,254)
------- ------- ------ -------
Total............................................ $39,559 $ (380) $ 24 $39,203
======= ======= ====== =======
1998: Current............................................ $41,356 $(1,445) $ 23 $39,934
Deferred........................................... 4,474 878 -- $ 5,352
------- ------- ------ -------
Total............................................ $45,830 $ (567) $ 23 $45,286
======= ======= ====== =======
1997: Current............................................ $44,602 $ (16) $ 28 $44,614
Deferred........................................... 1,986 719 -- $ 2,705
------- ------- ------ -------
Total............................................ $46,588 $ 703 $ 28 $47,319
======= ======= ====== =======


Deferred tax assets (liabilities) are comprised of the following at
December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997:



DECEMBER 31
------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
-------- ------- -------
(IN THOUSANDS)

Gross deferred tax assets:
Allowance for possible loan losses........................ $ 45,189 $43,551 $38,319
Deferred expense and prepaid income....................... 10,131 -- 6,759
Deferred employee compensation............................ 1,893 6,208 5,175
Pension and medical trust................................. 5,501 4,321 2,984
Other assets.............................................. 5,646 8,352 9,367
-------- ------- -------
Deferred tax assets.................................... 68,360 62,432 62,604
-------- ------- -------
Gross deferred tax liabilities:
Other liabilities......................................... (10,039) (8,365) (3,185)
-------- ------- -------
Deferred tax liabilities............................... (10,039) (8,365) (3,185)
-------- ------- -------
Net deferred tax assets................................... 58,321 54,067 59,419
-------- ------- -------
Tax effect of adjustment related to available-for-sale
securities................................................ 90,829 (20,625) (3,271)
-------- ------- -------
Net deferred tax assets including adjustment related to
available-for-sale securities............................. $149,150 $33,442 $56,148
======== ======= =======


At December 31, 1999 and 1998, the respective net deferred tax assets of
$58.3 million and $54.1 million included $50.6 million and $45.1 million for
Federal taxes and $7.7 million and $9.0 million for state taxes, respectively.
The Bank has recognized its Federal and state deferred tax assets as management
believes that it is more likely than not that the net deferred tax assets will
be realized. The deferred taxes reported on the Bank's Consolidated Statements
of Condition at December 31, 1999 and 1998 also include a $90.8 million deferred
tax asset and a $20.6 million deferred tax liability, respectively, for the tax
effect of the net unrealized gains or losses associated with marking to market
certain securities designated as available-for-sale.

Total income tax expense of $39.2 million for 1999, $45.3 million for 1998,
and $47.3 million for 1997 reflects effective tax rates of 21.4 percent, 25.9
percent, and 31.2 percent, respectively. The reasons for the

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differences between actual tax expense and the amount determined by applying the
U.S. Federal income tax rate of 35 percent to income before income taxes were as
follows:



YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31
---------------------------------------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
--------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
PERCENT OF PERCENT OF PERCENT OF
PRETAX PRETAX PRETAX
AMOUNT INCOME AMOUNT INCOME AMOUNT INCOME
-------- ---------- -------- ---------- -------- ----------
(DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)

Computed tax expense............... $ 64,227 35.0% $ 61,195 35.0% $ 53,072 35.0%
Increase (reduction) in income tax
expense due to:
Tax-exempt income from loans and
investments net of municipal
interest expense
disallowance.................. (1,718) (0.9) (2,030) (1.1) (2,559) (1.7)
Bank owned insurance
investments................... (14,477) (7.9) (11,319) (6.5) (4,518) (3.0)
Equity ownership in
securitization trust.......... (5,601) (3.1) -- -- -- --
Other, net....................... (3,228) (1.7) (2,560) (1.5) 1,324 0.9
-------- ----- -------- ----- -------- -----
Actual tax expense................. $ 39,203 21.4% $ 45,286 25.9% $ 47,319 31.2%
======== ===== ======== ===== ======== =====


The tax expense from net gains on security sales amounted to $5.3 million,
$10.3 million, and $5.0 million in 1999, 1998, and 1997, respectively.

15. REGULATORY CAPITAL

The Bank, as a state-member bank, must adhere to the capital adequacy
guidelines of the Federal Reserve Board (the "Board"), which are not
significantly different than those published by other U.S. banking regulators.
The guidelines specify minimum ratios for Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets
of 4 percent and total regulatory capital to risk-weighted assets of 8 percent.

Risk-based capital guidelines define total capital to consist of Tier 1
(core) and Tier 2 (supplementary) capital. In general, Tier 1 capital is
comprised of stockholder's equity, including certain types of preferred stock,
less goodwill and certain other intangibles. Core capital must comprise at least
50 percent of total capital. Tier 2 capital basically includes subordinated debt
(less a discount factor during the five years prior to maturity), other types of
preferred stock and the allowance for possible loan losses. The portion of the
allowance for possible loan losses includable in Tier 2 capital is limited to
1.25 percent of risk-weighted assets.

The Board also requires an additional measure of capital adequacy, the Tier
1 leverage ratio, which is evaluated in conjunction with risk-based capital
ratios. The Tier 1 leverage ratio is computed by dividing period-end Tier 1
capital by adjusted quarterly average assets. The Board established a minimum
ratio of 3 percent applicable only to the strongest banking organizations
having, among other things, excellent asset quality, high liquidity, good
earnings and no undue interest rate risk exposure. Other institutions are
expected to maintain a minimum ratio of 4 percent.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991 contains
prompt corrective action provisions that established five capital categories for
all Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC")-insured institutions ranging
from "well capitalized" to "critically undercapitalized." Classification within
a category is based primarily on the three capital adequacy measures. An
institution is considered "well capitalized" if its capital level significantly
exceeds the required minimum levels, "adequately capitalized" if it meets the
minimum levels, "undercapitalized" if it fails to meet the minimum levels,
"significantly undercapitalized" if it is significantly below the minimum levels
and "critically undercapitalized" if it has a ratio of tangible equity to total
assets of 2 percent or less.

Noncompliance with minimum capital requirements may result in regulatory
corrective actions which could have a material effect on the Bank. Depending on
the level of noncompliance, regulatory corrective

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actions may include the following: requiring a plan for restoring the
institution to an acceptable capital category, restricting or prohibiting
certain activities and appointing a receiver or conservator for the institution.

As of December 31, 1999, the most recent notification from the FDIC
categorized the Bank as "well capitalized" under the regulatory framework for
prompt corrective action. Management is not aware of any conditions or events
since December 31, 1999 that have changed the capital category of the Bank.

Effective February 11, 1998, Harris Preferred Capital Corporation ("HPCC"),
a subsidiary of the Bank, issued $250 million of 7 3/8% noncumulative,
exchangeable Series A preferred stock. The preferred stock, which is listed and
traded on the New York Stock Exchange, is nonvoting except in certain
circumstances as outlined in HPCC's Form S-11 Registration Statement ("S-11").
Dividends on the preferred stock are noncumulative and are payable at the rate
of 7 3/8% per annum of the $25 per share liquidation preference. The preferred
shares can be redeemed in whole or in part at HPCC's option on or after March
30, 2003 or upon the occurrence of a tax event as defined in the S-11. Upon the
occurrence of specific events described in the S-11, including the Bank becoming
less than "adequately capitalized", the Bank being placed into conservatorship
or receivership or the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
directing such an exchange, each preferred share would be exchanged
automatically for one newly issued Bank preferred share.

The following table summarizes the Bank's risk-based capital ratios and
Tier 1 leverage ratio for the past two years as well as the minimum amounts and
ratios as per capital adequacy guidelines and FDIC prompt corrective action
provisions.



TO BE WELL CAPITALIZED
FOR CAPITAL UNDER PROMPT CORRECTIVE
ACTUAL ADEQUACY PURPOSES ACTION PROVISIONS
-------------------- ------------------------------ ------------------------------
CAPITAL CAPITAL CAPITAL CAPITAL CAPITAL CAPITAL
AMOUNT RATIO AMOUNT RATIO AMOUNT RATIO
---------- ------- ---------- ------- ---------- -------
(IN THOUSANDS)

As of December 31, 1999:
Total Capital to Risk-Weighted Assets.... $1,740,498 10.77% * $1,292,849 * 8.00% * $1,616,061 * 10.00%
Tier 1 Capital to Risk-Weighted Assets... $1,401,796 8.68% * $ 645,989 * 4.00% * $ 968,983 * 6.00%
Tier 1 Capital to Average Assets......... $1,401,796 7.29% * $ 769,161 * 4.00% * $ 961,451 * 5.00%
As of December 31, 1998:
Total Capital to Risk-Weighted Assets.... $1,626,429 10.77% * $1,208,118 * 8.00% * $1,510,148 * 10.00%
Tier 1 Capital to Risk-Weighted Assets... $1,293,206 8.57% * $ 603,597 * 4.00% * $ 905,395 * 6.00%
Tier 1 Capital to Average Assets......... $1,293,206 7.50% * $ 689,710 * 4.00% * $ 862,137 * 5.00%


16. INVESTMENTS IN SUBSIDIARIES AND STATUTORY RESTRICTIONS

The Bank's investment in the combined net assets of its wholly-owned
subsidiaries was $777 million and $526 million at December 31, 1999 and 1998,
respectively.

Provisions of both Illinois and Federal banking laws place restrictions
upon the amount of dividends that can be paid to Bankcorp by its bank
subsidiaries. Illinois law requires that no dividends may be paid in an amount
greater than the net profits then on hand, reduced by certain loan losses (as
defined). In addition to these restrictions, Federal Reserve member banking
subsidiaries require prior approval of Federal banking authorities if dividends
declared by a subsidiary bank, in any calendar year, will exceed its net profits
(as defined in the applicable statute) for that year, combined with its retained
net profits, as so defined, for the preceding two years. Based on these and
certain other prescribed regulatory limitations, the Bank could have declared,
without regulatory approval, $172 million of dividends at December 31, 1999.
Actual dividends paid, however, would be subject to prudent capital maintenance.
Cash dividends paid to Bankcorp by the Bank amounted to $60 million and $109
million in 1999 and 1998, respectively.

The Bank is required by the Federal Reserve Act to maintain reserves
against certain of their deposits. Reserves are held either in the form of vault
cash or balances maintained with the Federal Reserve Bank. Required reserves are
essentially a function of daily average deposit balances and statutory reserve
ratios
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prescribed by type of deposit. During 1999 and 1998, daily average reserve
balances of $191 million and $193 million, respectively, were required for the
Bank. At year-end 1999 and 1998, balances on deposit at the Federal Reserve Bank
totaled $215 million and $184 million, respectively.

17. CONTINGENT LIABILITIES

The Bank and certain subsidiaries are defendants in various legal
proceedings arising in the normal course of business. In the opinion of
management, based on the advice of legal counsel, the ultimate resolution of
these matters will not have a material adverse effect on the Bank's financial
position or results of operations.

18. FOREIGN ACTIVITIES (BY DOMICILE OF CUSTOMER)

Income and expenses identifiable with foreign and domestic operations are
summarized in the table below:



FOREIGN DOMESTIC CONSOLIDATED
-------- ----------- ------------
(IN THOUSANDS)

1999
Total operating income................................... $ 46,974 $ 1,379,131 $ 1,426,105
Total expenses........................................... 14,803 1,227,797 1,242,600
-------- ----------- -----------
Income before taxes...................................... 32,171 151,334 183,505
Applicable income taxes.................................. 12,786 26,417 39,203
-------- ----------- -----------
Net income............................................... $ 19,385 $ 124,917 $ 144,302
======== =========== ===========
Identifiable assets at year-end.......................... $322,297 $19,715,768 $20,038,065
======== =========== ===========
1998
Total operating income................................... $ 53,747 $ 1,289,417 $ 1,343,164
Total expenses........................................... 11,627 1,156,694 1,168,321
-------- ----------- -----------
Income before taxes...................................... 42,120 132,723 174,843
Applicable income taxes.................................. 16,741 28,545 45,286
-------- ----------- -----------
Net income............................................... $ 25,379 $ 104,178 $ 129,557
======== =========== ===========
Identifiable assets at year-end.......................... $219,883 $17,777,579 $17,997,462
======== =========== ===========
1997
Total operating income................................... $ 60,823 $ 1,223,232 $ 1,284,055
Total expenses........................................... 12,884 1,119,537 1,132,421
-------- ----------- -----------
Income before taxes...................................... 47,939 103,695 151,634
Applicable income taxes.................................. 19,053 28,266 47,319
-------- ----------- -----------
Net income............................................... $ 28,886 $ 75,429 $ 104,315
======== =========== ===========
Identifiable assets at year-end.......................... $716,548 $15,083,379 $15,799,927
======== =========== ===========


Determination of rates for foreign funds generated or used are based on the
actual external costs of specific interest-bearing sources or uses of funds for
the periods. Internal allocations for certain unidentifiable income and expenses
were distributed to foreign operations based on the percentage of identifiable
foreign income to total income. As of December 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997,
identifiable foreign assets accounted for 2 percent, 1 percent and 5 percent,
respectively, of total consolidated assets.

19. BUSINESS COMBINATIONS AND DISPOSITIONS/INTANGIBLES

At December 31, 1999 and 1998, intangible assets, including goodwill
resulting from business combinations, amounted to $242 million and $258 million,
respectively. Amortization of these intangibles amounted to

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$22.7 million in 1999, $21.5 million in 1998, and $24.6 million in 1997. The
impact of purchase accounting adjustments, other than amortization of
intangibles, was not material to the Bank's reported results.

On January 29, 1998, the Bank sold its credit card portfolio to Partners
First Holdings, LLC ("PFH") a corporation owned by BankBoston Corporation, First
Annapolis Consulting, Inc. and Bankmont. At the time of the sale, the credit
card portfolio had a carrying value of $693 million, representing less than 5
percent of the Bank's total consolidated assets. Upon completion of the sale,
the Bank received cash and an equity interest in PFH, which it immediately sold
for cash to Bankmont. The Bank recorded a pretax gain of $12.0 million on this
transaction.

20. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

During 1999, 1998 and 1997, the Bank engaged in various transactions with
BMO and its subsidiaries. These transactions included the payment and receipt of
service fees and occupancy expenses, purchasing and selling Federal funds,
repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements, long-term borrowings, interest
rate and foreign exchange rate contracts. The purpose of these transactions was
to facilitate a more efficient use of combined resources and to better serve
customers. Fees for these services were determined in accordance with applicable
banking regulations. During 1999, 1998 and 1997, the Bank received from BMO
approximately $14.6 million, $17.1 million and $20.9 million respectively,
primarily for trust services, data processing and other operations support
provided by the Bank.

The Bank and BMO combine their U.S. foreign exchange activities. Under this
arrangement, the Bank and BMO share FX net profit in accordance with a specific
formula set forth in the agreement. This agreement expires in April 2002 but may
be extended at that time. Either party may terminate the arrangement at its
option. FX revenues are reported net of expenses. 1999, 1998 and 1997 foreign
exchange revenues included $8.3 million, $6.8 million and $5.4 million of net
profit, respectively, under this agreement.

21. SUBSEQUENT EVENT

On February 1, 2000, Bankcorp announced the sale of its corporate trust
businesses. In separate and unrelated transactions, the indenture trust business
is being sold to a subsidiary of The Bank of New York Company, Inc., and the
shareholder services business to Computershare Limited. The combined sales will
result in an estimated pre-tax gain to Bankcorp of approximately $50 million in
first quarter 2000, not including revenue contingent upon the outcome of certain
events, expected in second half 2000, (of that gain approximately 95 percent
will be recorded by the Bank). The sales are subject to regulatory approval and
are expected to close during the first quarter of 2000. In 1999, noninterest
revenue from the corporate trust business amounted to $51.7 million. The
Corporation does not believe that the sale of these businesses will have a
material impact on the results of operations for future periods.

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